Maruti Suzuki, which sells
almost one in two cars in India, is betting a new version of its
bestselling model will help it retain a stranglehold on the budget
market, even as it courts wealthier buyers to fend off a slowdown in
sales.
Maruti on Monday
unveiled a new version of its entry-level Alto -- India's most popular
car last year -- with automatic gear shift technology, a feature usually
reserved for pricier cars in the Indian market.
Automatic cars are still rare in
India but they have the potential to be popular in a country where
roads are often in poor condition and traffic snarl-ups are a daily
feature of urban driving.
At
380,187 rupees ($6,190), the Alto K10 is the Indian market's cheapest
automatic car -- a position previously held by Maruti's compact sedan
Celerio at about 410,000 rupees.
"Definitely,
Maruti is moving up the price ladder and that is obviously in tune with
the expectation of the urban consumers," said Puneet Gupta, associate
director at consultants IHS Automotive.
"On
the other hand, we have 70 percent of the population living in rural
(areas) and with the network that Maruti has, definitely they are not
losing sight of that consumer also."
Maruti Suzuki is preparing for
what it has said will be a period of slower sales in the coming months.
Sales of Maruti's passenger cars fell 1.1 percent in October from a year
ago, breaking five consecutive months of increase.s
It
warned last week of slower growth in the second half, dampening
expectations of a rapid recovery in an auto market that is hobbling back
after two weak years.
"NEW CARS, BETTER TECHNOLOGY"
Part
of the effort to counter that slow return to health is a move
up-market, to cash in on India's growing urban middle class and
improving consumer sentiment under Prime Minister Narendra Modi's
government, elected earlier this year.
Best
known as the brand that made cars affordable for Indian families with
the Maruti 800 in the 1980s, Maruti took a second stab at the premium
sedan market with the launch of the Ciaz car in October and has set an
aggressive sales target for itself.
It
plans to launch its first sports utility vehicle (SUV) between April
and June 2015 to capitalise on one of the fastest-growing car
categories, dominated by Ford Motor Co and Renault SA, in Asia's
third-largest economy.
But it
hopes to hold on to its historic area of strength at the budget end
too, the company said, thanks to innovations like the new automatic
Alto.
"People are trying to
come into the right products because the small car (market) is now
getting crowded," said Maruti CFO Ajay Seth said last week after the
company reported quarterly earnings.
"We have to bring in new products, better technology," said Seth, adding automatic cars and SUVs were two such examples.
That, it hopes, will help it
keep customers even as their wealth rises -- rather than watch them
trade in their Maruti for Honda Motor Co and Hyundai Motor Co.
Passenger
car sales in India, expected to be the third-largest market by 2018,
are forecast to rise between 5 and 10 percent this fiscal year, after
two years of declining sales.
(1 US dollar = 61.4200 Indian rupee)

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