Car Orders Worth Rs 15,000 cr: Uber, Ola the New Saviours for Automakers
In September last year, Mahindra and Ola had tied up for 40,000 vehicles over two years.
In the first nine months of this financial year, Maruti Suzuki India sold a little over 60,000 cars to cab aggregators, six per cent of sales.
For all of 2015-16, it had sold 48,000 units to these entities. This
segment, still nascent, appears on course to account for 15-17 per cent
of passenger vehicle volumes by 2019-20, says ICRA.
Original equipment makers (OEMs) are keen to tap this. Maruti, Tata
Motors, Mahindra and even German luxury carmaker BMW have tied up with aggregators Ola and Uber. In FY16, 5.8 per cent of Maruti sales came from the taxi segment; for Tata Motors, it was 35 per cent; for Toyota, 23.9 per cent. For Mahindra, around 20 per cent, says an ICRA report. In all, it says, fleet sales, including to cab aggregators, accounted for about nine per cent of passenger vehicle (PV) volume. This should approximately double by FY20.
Subrata Ray, senior group vice-president at ICRA, says taxi segment
volumes will see double-digit growth in FY17, resulting in their share
in domestic PV sales rising from nine per cent in FY16 to 11 per cent.
A Maruti spokesperson says: “In the first nine months of FY17, we have
seen growth of about 67 per cent over the previous year in sales to cab aggregators.
It is difficult to estimate the size of the market. But, given the
running cycles of cabs, we foresee shorter replacement cycles for cars,
triggering more demand (for cars).” The company now has a product
offering in the form of the Dzire Tour for this segment.
Shekar Viswanathan, vice-chairman, Toyota Kirloskar Motor, says when a specific car model sees traction in the taxi segment, it is a testimonial of quality and durability. “On an average, taxis are in use for 16 hours a day; private cars are used for about an hour a day or so.
Last December, Tata Motors decided to market its Bolt hatchback to taxi aggregators. Mayank Pareek, president, passenger vehicle business
unit, had said they could not ignore aggregators, in contrast to what
it had sid in 2014. The Bolt was launched in January 2015 but did not
take off as the company would have expected. A company spokesperson
later said, “We are finding tremendous potential in this new emerging
segment of app-based cab aggregators and
are receiving an encouraging response with them to the Bolt, Zest,
Indica and Indigo. Tata Motors will continue to focus on
customer-centricity to offer transport solutions, led by technology and
design, whether for the personal or commercial segment.”
In sum, taxi aggregators,
once seen as a threat to carmakers, are now being seen as saviours. It
is estimated that Ola and Uber have signed purchase orders with OEMs
worth Rs 15,000 crore. In September last year, Mahindra and Ola had tied
up for 40,000 vehicles over two years.
Some companies have also begun developing separate sales and marketing
units for catering to this segment. Abdul Majeed, partner at consultancy
PwC, feels OEMs might also look at developing dedicated service
infrastructure for fleet operators and also sell through channels other
than dealers.
Viswanathan says Toyota already has an institutional sales team in place, which they plan to strengthen.
Reference - http://www.business-standard.com/article/companies/car-orders-worth-rs-15-000-cr-uber-ola-the-new-saviours-for-automakers-117030500705_1.html
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