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Old April 17th, 2013, 09:02 AM   #4001
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BMW to produce MINI at Chennai plant
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Old April 17th, 2013, 06:21 PM   #4002
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BMW to assemble Mini cars in India

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BMW is to begin building the Mini in India, in a move that suggests confidence in the country's emerging car market.

The German carmaker said Mini Countryman models would be rolling off the production line at its plant in the port city of Chennai later this year.

It described India as an "increasingly significant market" for the BMW Group,

Car sales in India have grown rapidly in recent years, attracting investment from major brands.

BMW has operated its own sales company in India since 2007, and began selling the Mini in the country in 2012.

It sold just over 300 Minis in the first year.

Savings on tariffs
BMW said the decision to move production there was in line with its "production follows the market" strategy.

Analysts suggest the move will help BMW save on import duties.

India charges 100% tariffs on the import of fully built cars, but just 30% on cars assembled domestically from imported parts.

Currently, the Mini is built in the UK and Austria, while BMW's Chennai plant already makes several BMW models for the Indian market.

Weaker market
Mini's move suggests growing confidence in the Indian market, where car ownership is just 1.5 cars per 100 people in one of the world's fastest growing economies.

But although sales have risen strongly in recent years, the latest figures suggest the market is experiencing a sharp slow-down.

Figures released last week by the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers showed sales fell by 6.7% over the last 12 months - the first fall in a decade.

That has forced some domestic brands to cut production and showroom prices.
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BMW Starts Production of Mini in India

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NEW DELHI--Bayerische Motoren Werke has started assembling the Mini in India as part of its strategy to sell the premium small car at lower prices and expand its sales.

The German auto maker assembles the car at its factory near the southern port city of Chennai. India is the third country, after the U.K. and Austria, where it builds the Mini.

BMW also assembles the 3 Series and 5 Series sedans, as well as the X1 and X3 sport-utility vehicles in Chennai. It plans to also build the 7 Series and the 1 Series cars at the same location later this year.

Building cars in India helps BMW and other foreign auto makers save on local taxes. India recently increased the import tax on fully built imported cars to 100% of their cost from 75%. Cars made by companies such as BMW, which import engines and gear boxes, attract a 30% duty, while vehicles assembled from both imported and locally produced parts attract a 10% tax.

Other companies such as Daimler AG's DAI.XE -1.94% Mercedes-Benz luxury car unit, Audi AG and Tata Motors Ltd.'s Jaguar Land Rover also assemble some of their cars and SUVs in India.

In a press release Wednesday, BMW said producing the Mini locally will help the company meet "the steadily increasing demand" for the car in India.

The company introduced the Mini in India in 2012 and it sold 302 units of the car in the first year. The car is sold through five outlets in the cities of New Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore and Hyderabad and its price ranges from 2.35 million rupees ($43,559) to 3.75 million rupees.

The Mini Countryman will be the first variant of the car that will be produced in Chennai. It will make its debut in India with two diesel-engine options. A gasoline variant will also be produced in Chennai.

In India, the company will also import as fully built units the gasoline-engine versions of the Mini Countryman, Mini as well as the Mini Convertible.
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Old April 27th, 2013, 08:17 AM   #4003
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These are the Famous Cars in India.

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Old April 27th, 2013, 05:18 PM   #4004
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HYDERABAD: Industries minister J Geeta Reddy announced on Friday that the state had decided to reduce the Value Added Tax ( VAT) on the automobile sector from 14. 5% to 5%.

Addressing the media after a meeting of the State Industrial Promotion Board (SIPB), she said the decision was taken to encourage investments in the sector. The meeting was chaired by chief minister N Kiran Kumar Reddy.

Stating that the investment climate was looking up in the state, the minister said automobile projects to the tune of Rs 2,400 crore with a potential to create 1600 jobs were in the pipeline. Refuting reports that the state was losing investments, Geeta Reddy said the state stood third with Rs 70,339 crore as far as investment intentions in terms of Industrial Entrepreneur Memoranda filed, Letters of Intent issued, Direct Industrial Licences granted were concerned.

"During 2012, Andhra Pradesh was ahead of Maharashtra, Orissa, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu but next only to Gujarat and Chhattisgarh. As far as Industrial Entrepreneurs Memorandum (IEMs) Part B filed is concerned, AP stood first during 2012 followed by Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh," she said.

She also said the government had approved 69 projects since 2011 with investments worth Rs 1,33,343 crore creating employment opportunities for 1,48,568 people.

In all, 25 projects with an investment of Rs 40,379 crore had been approved since June 2012 creating employment opportunities for 41,180 people, the minister added. Out of these, she said, 24 projects commenced production, four are ready for production and 36 under implementation, while five are yet to take off. She said the chief minister had directed the discoms to separate the domestic connections from industrial feeders at the earliest as well as remove production curbs placed on captive power generation.

The meeting decided to set up exclusive industrial parks for women in every district. In the first phase, they will be set up in Naidupeta (Nellore), Koparthy (Kadapa) and Jadcherla (Mahbubnagar).
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Old April 28th, 2013, 04:13 PM   #4005
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Amid intensifying competition from Honda’s Amaze, country’s largest car maker Maruti Suzuki India has responded by conducting “mileage drive rally” for its entry level sedan Dzire across 31 cities on Sunday.
“Competition is in all segment of the cars we sell. We welcome all competition. Our cars speak for themselves by their performance. We are celebrating the 5th year of the Dzire and so we thought of conducting such a mileage rally to connect with our customers,” Maruti Suzuki India Vice President (Marketing) Manohar Bhat told PTI.
He said in the last five years since its launch Dzire has been the largest selling sedan in India and the company intends to maintain the leadership position. The Dzire has sold a total of 5.5 lakh units of the model so far.
Dzire’s dominance, however, is witnessing competition from Honda Cars India’s newly launched Amaze which is coming at a price range of Rs 4.99 lakh to Rs 7.60 lakh (ex-showroom, Delhi).
The model is Honda’s first diesel offering in India.
While the diesel option is priced between Rs 5.99 and Rs 7.60 lakh, the petrol version is tagged at a price range of Rs 4.99 lakh to Rs 7.50 lakh.
Dzire, on the other hand, is priced between Rs 4.92 lakh and Rs 6.74 lakh for the petrol option and between Rs 5.99 lakh and Rs 7.5 lakh for the diesel variant.
Honda has been promoting the Amaze claiming it to be the most fuel efficient model in India, with the diesel variant delivering mileage of 25.8 kilometre per litre (kmpl), while the petrol variant delivers 18 kmpl.
By contrast, Dzire has a certified fuel efficiency of 19.1 kmpl for the petrol option and 23.4 kmpl for the diesel engine.
Earlier this month, immediately after the launch of Amaze, MSI had introduced Swift Dzire Regal, a limited edition variant.
The mileage rally is the second in the series of what MSI described as “celebrations to mark the 5th anniversary of the launch of Swift Dzire”.
“Dzire remains the most economical model in its class in terms of overall cost of ownership. What we offer is luxury, mileage and value for money,” Mr. Bhat said.
MSI said over 2,100 participants took part in the Dzire mileage rally held across 31 cities to contest how economically they could drive their cars. In Delhi, 105 people took part and the average mileage in diesel option was 30.9 kmpl, while in petrol it was 26.63 kmpl. In Mumbai the average mileage of 62 participants in diesel was 32.4 kmpl and in petrol it was 30.6 kmpl.
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Old April 29th, 2013, 04:28 PM   #4006
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Volkswagen launches Polo petrol variant at Rs 7.99 lakh
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Volkswagen on Monday launched a petrol variant of its popular hatchback Polo.The 1.2-litre new Polo is priced at Rs 7.99 lakh (ex-showroom Delhi), said Arvind Saxena, Managing Director for passenger cars, Volkswagen Group Sales India after the launch in Mumbai.The company has not offered the price range for the Mumbai market.“Fuel efficiency has become vital for every customer looking at purchasing a new car and the Polo GT TSI is an answer to this demand offering maximum power and minimum consumption,” Mr. Saxena said, adding that the TSI is a pioneering technology of petrol engines by Volkswagen.Volkswagen, the largest European car maker, sells the Polo, Vento, Jetta, Passat and the Touareg in the domestic market.
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Old April 30th, 2013, 03:54 PM   #4007
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Eicher Motors to further expand its two-wheeler capacity
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Automobile maker Eicher Motors Ltd plans to increase its two-wheeler production capacity to 250,000 units in its second phase of expansion, a top company official said Tuesday. The company expects the waiting time for its Bullet range of motorcycles to reduce with the commissioning of the Rs.150 crore plant at Oragadam near here, managing director and CEO Siddartha Lal told reporters here. Speaking about the Oragadam plant, Lal said: "The plant will initially roll out 150,000 units and production will be ramped up to 175,000 units by the end of this year." He said that during the second phase of expansion, the capacity will be increased to 250,000 units. The company's two-wheeler division Royal Enfield that makes the Bullet range of bikes rolled out its first motorcycle out of its new plant. Eicher Motors already has a two-wheeler plant here that rolled out around 110,000 units last year. "We can bring down the waiting period to six to seven months from eight months now if the demand continues at this level," Lal said. According to him, the new plant is crucial for the company to meet its global markets and also to improve the margins.
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Old April 30th, 2013, 03:57 PM   #4008
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Royal Enfield rolls out first motorcycle from Oragadam plant

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Royal Enfield, the premium motorcycle maker and part of the Eicher Motors Group, on Tuesday rolled out its first bike from its second manufacturing facility in the country at Oragadam near here.

The company has invested Rs 150 crore for first phase of the facility spread on a 50 acre land, situated 45 km from here. Its first facility is located at Thiruvottiyur near Chennai, which is spread over 10 acres.

After rolling out the first motorcycle from the plant, Eicher Motors Managing Director and CEO Siddhartha Lal told reporters that the first commercial production commenced on Tuesday.

“...The plant was in trial production for few months. We have completed the construction of the plant in a record time of 11 months...,” he said.

Stating that the plant would initially produce 1.50 lakh motorcycles, he said the capacity will be ramped up to 1.75 lakh motorcycles towards the end of this year.

Terming this facility’s inauguration as a “nucleus of our global ambitions”, in second phase, the company plans to produce 2.50 lakh motorcycles in 2014, he said, adding, it produced 1.13 lakh units last year.

The new facility would initially produce the Desert Storme and Thunder 350 and 500 cc models.

The company would be able to see some decline on the waiting period of some of its models from eight months to six months with the inauguration of new plant, he said.

Despite the company experiencing a difficult period during 1990s, “we stuck to our guns and pursued our goals. Now, over a decade, we have been able to become the largest two-wheeler brand in India and globally, registering a 50 per cent growth year-on-year,” he said.

Besides serving the domestic market, the company also exports to 40 countries, Lal said.

The US was the largest export market for Royal Enfield, with 600 motorcycles being shipped every month, he said, adding, the company last year shipped about 3,500 units to the country from the total of 1,13,000 units.

Stating that the new plant would be utilised for production of motorcycles, Mr. Lal said the existing Thiruvottiyur plant would be used to produce engines along with some models.

The Thiruvottiyur plant produced 12,000 units last month.

At present, the company employs 200 people with 20 per cent constituting women workforce at the new plant.

The employee base would be increased to 500 towards this year end, he said.

On expansion of retail networks, he said they were planning to increase it this year adding that Tamil Nadu alone would have an addition of nine outlets to the existing 20.
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Old May 3rd, 2013, 12:22 PM   #4009
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Details of all the Ford Ecosport variants are out



Link to the source for all the variant details : Ford Ecosport variants
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Old May 7th, 2013, 08:23 AM   #4010
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Ford Ecosport reviews are out.

Here is the review from Autocar India

Autocar India Ford Ecosport Review
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Old May 10th, 2013, 06:58 PM   #4011
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New Mercedes S Class brochure leaked



Source and more pictures of the full brochure: AutocarIndia Forum
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Old May 15th, 2013, 09:10 PM   #4012
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FORBES: Aerospace Engineering Firm Quest Global's Changing Lanes

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Image: Mallikarjun Katakol for Forbes India
Quest Global Inc’s aerospace facility on the outskirts of Belgaum


Aerospace companies move from manufacturing to services. But Quest Global has taken the opposite route. Can one feed into the other to beat competition?

The skies over Bangalore’s Yelahanka airbase thundered with the sound of fighter planes, helicopters, turboprops and other aircraft. As the biennial air show—its 2013 edition in February is considered Asia’s biggest-ever aviation event—was in action, one aircraft had a different flight path: Business jet Embraer Phenom-100 made chartered flights to Belgaum. Perhaps it was the right time for Quest Global Inc to show potential customers that the aerospace hub it has been building is ready for take-off.

On the outskirts of Belgaum, nearly 500 km from Banglaore, is the 300-acre special economic zone (SEZ) set up by Quest. Driving through the beautiful landscape, it is difficult to believe it could soon be the most sophisticated industrial belt in the region. It is already notified as the state’s first precision engineering region. “You can walk away from this place with a finished [aerospace/automotive] product without stepping out of this facility,” says Aravind Melligeri, co-founder and chief executive of Quest Global Inc, the manufacturing arm of Quest Global Engineering.


No other facility in India, other than state-owned Hindustan Aeronautics, can claim such a design-to-build capability in aerospace. “It is built very neatly, in a graded manner,” says Ashok Baweja, former chairman of Hindustan Aeronautics.

Over the past four years, Quest has developed essential capabilities of an aerospace cluster, such as machining, surface treatment, forging and assembly. It has done some on its own; for others, it formed joint ventures with overseas partners: Magellan Aerospace of Canada, Saab of Sweden and Aubert & Duval of France. The ventures are to serve the global supply chain, although India’s share in the $100 billion commercial aerospace manufacturing is a paltry $100 million.

It was the 2005 defence offsets policy that turned things on its head. Most industrial groups, including the Tatas, Mahindras and L&T, formed partnerships and talked big investments. Looking back, it appears they moved opportunistically. “Even the human resource deployment was convenience-based,” says a public sector aerospace official who saw automotive professionals handling aerospace projects. Three SEZs, two in Hyderabad and one in Bangalore, were also announced.

This February, Karnataka announced a 10-year aerospace policy, which will target $10 billion in investment. It also announced a 1,000-acre industrial park near its SEZ. Even if one considers all this to be hot air, it remains plausible for states to roll out the red carpet for big companies.

Additionally, the conglomerates are finally getting a hang of this high compliance industry. Mahindra Aerospace’s first greenfield project is nearing completion in Kolar. With competition soaring, can Quest create an aerospace cluster in Belgaum, like Toulouse near Paris or Wichita near Kansas City?

Melligeri has bet his life he can.

The Bug of Business

As a child, Melligeri knew he had to get higher engineering degrees from the US. No sooner did he get there that he knew he had to start his own business, even abandoning his PhD programme. It took him a while to find an entrepreneurial young engineer to team up with. Ajit Prabhu, co-founder and chief executive of Quest Global Engineering, was also looking for a like-minded partner.

Prabhu landed himself at the GE R&D centre near New York soon after graduating. He had to pay off the debt he incurred on his credit card while paying for his parents’ US visit. At GE, the engineer in him felt like a “kid in a candy store”, but the businessman in him kept bugging him. Every time his manager cribbed how contract agencies couldn’t find the right skills for the company, Prabhu knew his business idea lay right there: An engineering services company.

At GE, Prabhu did structural analysis of gas turbine rotors; Melligeri modelled the impact of automotive crash at Ford in Detroit. Just over two years into their jobs, in 1997, they decided to borrow money on their credit cards and register Quest Engineering in New York. It was registered in India the following year. In the first year, Quest made $300,000. All the projects that Prabhu had worked on at GE eventually came to Quest, even though his manager thought starting a company “was the stupidest idea”.

By 2001-02, the company was grossing $20 million. Prabhu, who sold incense sticks as a schoolboy to get a sense of business, found more projects coming his way than he could handle. And then Enron—the energy trading giant—collapsed. Several GE power generation contracts got cancelled. Quest, which got 80 percent of its revenue from GE, saw revenue dip to $14 million, and GE’s share in it fell from $18 million to $6 million.

“We shrank that year, first time in our 16-year history,” grimaces Prabhu. To lay off people who had helped build the business was painful. “I lost lot of my hair, I grew up that year.”

But the experience was a turning point. In 2004, Quest decided to diversify and made its first five-year plan. It got other customers, like Pratt & Whitney, Rolls Royce, Boeing, Airbus and others. According to the plan, the business had to grow from $20 million in 2005 to $100 million in 2010. Coming out of the near-death experience of 2003, many thought “I was smoking”, guffaws Prabhu. But the entire team came around it. Quest totalled $98 million in 2010.

The scorching growth rate continues. From $235 million in 2013, it hopes to gross $500 million in 2015. More than half of Quest’s services business comes from aerospace. According to Nasscom data, most Indian IT services companies are growing this business at 18 to 20 percent, but Quest is clocking 40 percent.

Reasons for its performance are many. It has a few customers, but its relationships are strategic. Company processes are geared towards understanding these customers. Quest even recruits from among customers. “We are not order takers,” says senior vice president Raman Subramanian. For instance, when Quest saw Pratt & Whitney and a few other companies build a backlog—new products waiting to get into manufacturing—it invested in strengthening its supply chain management expertise. “We saw the pattern, took this call and told the customers we can do it,” says Subramanian.

To serve global customers, Quest has adopted merger-and-acquisition-based growth. The market is worth $70 billion, but is severely fragmented. In future, Prabhu believes, customers will not only outsource more, but consolidate their buy with a few companies who have the “technical competence to do bigger things”. Its acquisitions in the US, Spain, and Australia are in response to these trends, and have been integrated into Quest’s core business. No engineering services company has done it so early in its life cycle; those who have acquired overseas, did it as a late reaction. It’ll be apt to say its middle name ‘Global’ symbolises its ‘DNA’, a metaphor Prabhu is fond of.

But Prabhu says he has more questions than answers. Like many first-generation entrepreneurs, he sheds the corporate veneer when deep in conversation. “It’s possible that I am blind-sided… not seeing what could disrupt [the business].” Truth is it is organisational development he obsesses about. If an organisation grows at 5 to 10 percent, people adapt; but if it grows at 100 percent every two years, how do you make employees grow that fast? He thinks training programmes don’t work. “You have to have experiential development which may, in normal course, take 10 years. How do you do that in two years? If you get people from outside, it works for two years and then they face the same challenge.”

Growing the pie



Around mid 2000s, when Quest made its first five-year plan, the founders went through a painful process of diversification. Manufacturing, though different, provided some synergy with engineering services. Melligeri was also passionate about it. But it was perplexing to many, including their private equity investor Carlyle, whose equity Quest bought back later. But Prabhu and Melligeri invested $2 million in a “small shop”. Today the business has $50 million in investment, mostly the promoters’ money. The manufacturing arm earned $12 million in 2013 and will close 2014 with $22 million in revenue. It has twice that amount as committed investments from joint venture partners. By 2016, when Singapore-headquartered Quest Engineering plans to go public, Quest Global Inc expects to clock $100 million in revenue.

That’s impressive, because most companies that started at the same time have had teething, and tooling, issues, which Baweja calls “cultural”, because the Indian industry is not used to strict rules of operation that aerospace requires. The Tata-Sikorsky joint venture in the Hyderabad SEZ, designed to supply cabins to S-92 helicopters, has had a backlog. The manufacturing has recently gathered speed. “It took us 10 months to produce one cabin, now we are producing three a month,” says Air Vice Marshall (retd) Arvind Walia, executive vice president for India and South Asia, Sikorsky. Components were initially imported; now 80 percent is produced by the joint venture.




Image: Mallikarjun Katakol for Forbes India

While he worked at GE, the businessman in Ajit Prabhu kept bugging him

Another reason for the sluggish start is that most government defence acquisitions have been delayed; so, contracts aren’t really awarded. Also, says Nidhi Goyal, director at Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu India, business in this sector requires approvals and licences from various ministries before and after awarding the contract.

Quest, meanwhile, is listing itself as offsets partners of large aerospace companies. It has listed with Dassault and Safran, which, between them, form nearly 65 percent of the medium multi-role combat aircraft Rafale that India is buying from France for $10 billion. Till offsets start flowing, Quest is stitching other deals.

Magellan Aerospace was on the verge of ending sub-contracting of machine parts to India. It needed a surface treatment plant but the question was where to build or find one. Belgaum was a perfect fit. The location might be remote, but Quest makes “everything so easy”, says Konrad Hahnelt, vice president of North American Operations at Magellan. “They have their own municipality, customs… it mimics a Western set-up of an aerospace business,” says Hahnelt. He thinks more Western companies would come to Belgaum when they see what it has to offer. Two automotive companies have come in and many others, including the Tatas, are sending their parts to Belgaum for treatment.

Hahnelt thinks some of the “large joint ventures [in India] have taken big risks”. “Aerospace is not about setting up million square-feet facilities, but getting it right for the severe quality restrictions that this industry has.” Magellan has been in India for 10 years. It took two years to ship its first component; today it ships 150,000 to 200,000.

To address all this, Melligeri has two strategies: Form horizontal joint ventures to build new capabilities, like casting and composites; and vertical partnerships to scale manufacturing, such as that of aero structures and aero systems. He knows that once the structures reach a certain size, shipping cost would become prohibitive. “We’d then acquire companies overseas and do back-end work in Belgaum,” says Melligeri, replicating what the parent company has done in services. It has bought a small facility in Houston for making oil and gas components. Unlike China, where in-country manufacturing adds only 5 to 10 percent in value, Quest, and other Indian companies, will have to do 50 to 60 percent value addition.

It was the same high value addition that Quest did in engineering services. Nearly 80 percent of its customers in manufacturing are also customers in engineering services. One follows the other. For instance, in Toshiba and Baker Hughes, manufacturing contracts came first; for Airbus, engineering came first.

What if this model gets disrupted? What if the government rolls out the red carpet to big companies, in Bangalore or Hyderabad?

“The government has no red carpet to roll,” Melligeri says, half-smiling. He narrates how a customer, who could have brought nearly $1 billion in revenue, wanted to come to Belgaum but needed some cushion to save it from transition costs. The Karnataka government could only offer reimbursement of apprentice cost. But Malaysia rolled the red carpet out and the customer went there. “My facility guarantees 100 percent uptime; a building to one’s specification on lease which a company can operationalise in six months… Which SEZ can offer these?” he asks.

To grow the aerospace pie further, Prabhu and Melligeri floated yet another company in January: Quest Global Defence. Purely looking at offsets opportunities, it will expand the engineering services business in aerospace and defence from the original equipment manufacturers. With none other than erstwhile HAL chairman Baweja as its head, the new entity has already signed his first modest contract.

Strong tail winds are expected. Deloitte forecasts growth in commercial aircraft manufacturers’ revenues will reach record levels in 2013. It is also the third consecutive year of global production levels above 1,000 aircraft per year.

“We have plenty of runways,” says Prabhu. For Melligeri, the path he wants to walk down is laid: “I grew up in [north Karnataka] and I will retire there. That’s why I want to grow the Belgaum facility. This is the biggest differentiator between other SEZs and ours.”

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Old May 17th, 2013, 04:53 AM   #4013
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Mercedes to invest Rs 250 cr to double India capacity
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NEW DELHI: German luxury carmaker Mercedes Benz plans to infuse a fresh investment of Rs 250 crore into its Indian arm to double its production capacity to 20,000 vehicles by the end of this calendar.


"We are enhancing our production to cater to the increasing demand for luxury sedans and SUV in the domestic market," Mercedes Benz India MD & CEO Eberhard Kern said. The cumulative investment for the Indian market would be raised to Rs 850 crore, he said.

"If needed and depending on the market expansion we would add more capacity to the Pune plant to meet our future sales projections," Kern said at the launch of GL Class sports utility vehicle in New Delhi on Thursday.

Mercedes Benz plans to assemble the GL Class at its Pune plant September onwards to take the tally of locally made cars to five. Sedans like C-Class, E-Class, S-Class and the ML Class are already made at the plant.

The firm plans to add few more models later this year including the A Class hatchback, which would debut in the country later this month. Local assembling helps increase price competitiveness as such vehicles invite lower taxation than those imported.

Mercedes Benz, which once ruled the Indian luxury car market, has been struggling to keep pace with German rivals Audi and BMW in recent years. It sold 7,015 vehicles in India last fiscal year ended March while Audi sold 9,350 vehicles. BMW's Indian subsidiary has not released any sales figures for the same period.

Kern said 2013 is the 'Year of Offensive' for Mercedes Benz India. "We plan to launch more hatchbacks and SUVs to suit the taste of the growing number of offroading aficionados in India," he said.

Its latest launch — the GL Class — comes with an aggressive price of Rs 77.5 lakh (ex-showroom Delhi). It is powered by a 2,987 cc, V6 diesel engine and would be pitted against BMW's X6 and Audi's Q7 in the Indian market.

The company said that it has already sold out on the initial quota of 100 units of the launch edition of the GL Class.When the Pune plant starts rolling out the new SUV from September, India would be only the second international market after the the US to locally roll out the GL Class vehicle.
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