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India market no joyride

Mumbai - For global automakers, the dusty backroads of rural India could be the new El Dorado.

As economic torpor suffocates demand for new cars in India's megacities, incomes are growing faster in small towns and country areas. That's pushing the likes of General Motors and Honda Motor Co to fan out in search of buyers in places where fewer than 20 people in every thousand own a car - for now.

Standing firmly in the way are strong home-grown brands. With local services plentiful and repairs cheap, Maruti Suzuki India, Mahindra and Mahindra and Tata Motors dominate the rural vehicle market where foreign automakers are seen as expensive and distant.

Foreign companies which showed cars at the recent Delhi auto show have already poured billions of dollars into factories, product development and marketing in India's once-booming car market.

Still, no foreign car maker has a share of more than 6% in India's passenger vehicle market, aside from South Korea's Hyundai Motor Co with 15%.

Car makers see success in rural areas as vital, as slow economic growth, high interest rates and rising fuel prices mean overall sales are headed for their second straight year of decline. Though the need for rural sales has been recognised, success could yet prove illusory.

Japan's Honda entered India nearly two decades ago but will still have only 170 dealerships by end-March, compared with market-leading Maruti's current 1 300. Of the 60 sales outlets Honda plans to open in India in the fiscal year that starts in April, 43 will be in small towns.

"It's very easy to travel once in three-four years to a place 100 kilometres away to buy," said Jnaneswar Sen, senior vice-president of sales and marketing at Honda India. "It becomes a bit of a hassle for the customer to travel 100 or 150 kilometres every few months to get the car serviced."

Like most foreign carmakers in India, however, Honda is seen as a premium brand, beyond the reach of price-sensitive rural buyers. To expand its potential market, Honda last year launched the entry-level Amaze sedan, which starts at about 520 000 rupees ($8 300) and has helped it nearly double its market share to 4.7%.

Smaller towns and cities account for nearly two-thirds of Amaze sales, the company said.

"Smaller towns and rural areas are a gold mine that foreign automakers are yet to tap efficiently," IHS Automotive analyst Anil Sharma said.

"One of the prerequisites for any automaker to be successful in rural areas would be availability of after-market services. Since the population is more dispersed in rural areas, what we probably need is services like mobile workshops."

Selling foreign cars to rural India remains tough. Deepanshu Rai, who lives in Raigad, a small town about 100 km from Mumbai, said he never considered buying a foreign model when he bought his first car about 10 months ago, an Alto 800 hatchback made by Maruti.

"If you buy a foreign brand, it won't have a service centre everywhere. You may have to travel far even for a small issue," said the 22-year-old Rai, who works for a mapping company.

Mighty Maruti

For Maruti, the opposite is true. Founded in Gurgaon, outside the Indian capital of New Delhi in 1982, Maruti accounts for nearly one in two new cars sold in India.

Though it has drawn on the small-car knowhow of Japan's Suzuki Motor, its majority shareholder, Maruti is seen as so home-grown that in the 1980s, the word "Maruti" was used generically to mean any car.

On narrow rural roads, its cheap small cars jostle for space with Mahindra's sturdy utility vehicles, tractors, motorbikes and bullock carts, with foreign models scarce. Spare parts, including fakes, are cheap and ubiquitous, and mechanics everywhere can fix a Maruti, keeping maintenance costs down.

Maruti's deep rural penetration has helped it defend its market share amid the industry's two-year downturn. That's despite the onslaught of new models launched by foreign rivals.

Next in line will be Nissan Motor Co's relaunched low-end Datsun brand. At the Delhi auto show Datsun showcased a hatchback to compete with Maruti's Alto 800, which starts at 280 000 rupees.

Areas with populations of less than 10 000 people account for 31% of Maruti's sales so far in the fiscal year that ends in March, said Mayank Pareek, Maruti's chief operating officer for marketing and sales, adding the company began a heavy push to target rural buyers five years ago.

"Unlike urban markets, in the rural markets customers are very loyal. So you get a big first-mover advantage," he said.

General Motors has been selling cars in India since 1996. It has a market share of just 3.5% and 273 dealerships, increasing to 300 by the end of the next fiscal year. Most of the new outlets will be in smaller towns and rural areas, said P Balendran, vice-president at GM India.

"With higher growth expected in rural areas as compared with the metros, we expect the share of rural markets in our overall sales increasing in the future," he said.

One thing that is certain in the push by global car makers beyond India's big cities is more choice for the growing number of rural buyers. Until a few years ago, many rural buyers essentially had just one choice to make - the colour of their Maruti 800, the hatchback predecessor to the Alto.

Krishnakant Shinde, a farmer in Gove, a village about 250 km from Mumbai, says he was the first in his village to buy a Volkswagen AG when he upgraded last October to a Vento sedan from a Maruti Swift Dzire entry-level sedan.

Volkswagen, which has market share of just 2.25% in India, said it doesn't plan new outlets in the country this year. But it opened a dealership in Satara, a regional hub about 15 km from Shinde's home, about two years ago.

"Volkswagen the company wasn't new to me, but I didn't buy earlier as I was worried about spare parts and servicing," said Shinde, a sugar cane and dairy farmer.

"Now, since they have opened a showroom and service centre in Satara, I decided to buy."

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