""FLASH NEWS""

"" Listing of state general insurers may be staggered.""...""" New India Assurance launches “New India Premier Mediclaim Policy” with exclusive features and Sum Insured upto Rs. 1 crore""".... “The tentative decrease in D.A. Slabs is 9 for the months from February,2017 to April,2017 - The net number of slabs for Feb.,2017 stands at 469"".."" ALL MEMBERS OF NFGIE/GICEU: PL ENSURE PAYING LEVY ON WAGE REVISION IMMEDIATELY ON RECEIPT OF ARREARS TO THE RESPECTIVE STATE /REGIONAL UNITS TO STRENGTHEN FINANCIAL POSITION OF NFGIE AS WELL AS STATE UNITS OF GICEU""....."" WAGE ARREARS WILL BE PAID ON 05th FEB.,2016""...."" WAGE REVISION FILE WAS CLEARED BY FINANCE MINISTRY ON THURSDAY 14TH JAN.,2016 ONLY. EXPECTING NOTIFICATION AT ANY TIME. HOWEVER, ON TUESDAY 19TH JAN.2016 GIPSA GOVERNING BODY MEETING HELD AT 'GOA'. PAYMENT DATE MAY BE DECIDED BY GIPSA AUTHORITY.""..."" NEXT ROUND OF DISCUSSIONS WITH GIPSA ON 04TH, 5TH & 6TH nOV., 2015 AT HOTEL GOLCONDA,HYDERABAD- NFGIE SLOT FOR DISCUSSIONS ON WAGE REVISION WITH GIPSA AT 2 PM ON 04.11.2015""...""Received a call from Mr A K Singhal, Advisor, GIPSA to our National Federation General Secretary, Mr P S Bajpai regarding the next round of Wage Talks on 29th October 2015 (Thursday) at Mumbai. Detailed Circular follows.""..."" We have been informed by Mr. Vasant Khande,Mumbai that Mr. Ashish Shelar,MLA and BJP President of Mumbai is going to attend our NFGIE conference on 1st October,2015 in Chennai""...""Wage revision and Pension Option – Programme of Agitation::: 1. Lunch Hour demonstrations in all centres on 15th and 23rd September.2. Signature campaign (memorandum addressed to Finance Minister) to complete by 23rdSeptember.;3. No late sitting in offices and no work on Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays w.e.f. 23rd September, 2015;4. Joint Employees meetings in all offices to campaign;5. Perspective of strike actions in October ""......"23RD JULY IS NEW INDIA'S FOUNDATION DAY(23RD JULY, 1919). ON THIS HAPPY OCCASSION, LET ALL NEW INDIANS TO RE-DEDICATE THEMSELVES ONCE AGAIN TO BRING BACK IT'S GLORY AND TO RETAIN NO.1 POSITION WITH PROFITS




""NEW INDIA ASSURANCE BEATS COMPETITION, GETS $9.5 BILLION AIR INDIA DEAL. One of India’s biggest public sector general insurer, New India Assurance (NIA) led consortium of public sector insurance companies has been awarded the contract to insure Air India’s huge fleet of 126 aircrafts worth 9.5 billion dollars. The consortium outbid the tender submitted by private general insurance companies, for this contract floated by Air India. NIA will insure Air India for 9.5 billion insurance cover for a premium of $22.5 million, which would be a one of the biggest aircraft insurance deals in the whole of Southeast Asia. PSU insurers continue to insure Air India for 4th year in a row"".....""Thank u all for staging a successful DHARNA today (06.7.2015) all over India as part of JFTU programme. At Mumbai we met Chairman GIPSA who informed that ministry is insisting on wage settlement on bank line only. Still they are pursuing with the ministry for getting sanction for a better package for PSGI Companies citing various factors. Due to this GIPSA is delaying resumption of wage negotiation. More stringent TU action is needed by JFTU against Ministry of Finance stand. JFTU will decide its further programme....Than 'Q'...Sujit Bagchi,General Secretary, "NFGIE""...""


TOTAL WEB VIEWERS

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Ultra low-cost cars to wait as Tata, Hyundai, Maruti, Ford, GM focus on small car segment

Dear Members & Viewers,
The Tatas swear by it, the Detroit giants have for now given up on it, and the top 2 in the Indian car bazaar see a future beyond it. Don't look now, but blueprints for an ultra low-cost car (ULCC) under Rs 2 lakh - championed by the Tatas with the much-touted Nano - are under various stages of modification at the research centres of various manufacturers.
Even as it attempts to push up sales of the Nano, Tata Motors is working on Plan B: it is close to showcasing a car positioned a step above the Nano and below compact bestseller, the Indica. No 2 in India Hyundai is working on a model that will be priced below its cheapest car in the country, the Santro, but above the Nano.
And leader Maruti Suzuki has two irons in the fire -a revamped Maruti 800 that will be pitted directly against the Tatas' ULCC; and another - the first indigenous car Maruti will develop fully in India -that will occupy the space between the Nano and the Alto.
Meantime, Ford and General Motors have taken the ULCC off their drawing boards; and Renault India, which had plans to build an affordable car with Bajaj Auto and Nissan, is in no hurry to launch anything soon. The foreign majors feel they're better off concentrating on what they know better - premium compacts. For, this is a segment first-time customers are aspiring for and, in the process, bypassing the no-frills space.
There's clearly plenty of activity and jostling for space at the lower half of the auto pyramid. Manufacturers are spending sleepless nights figuring out price points, features and positioning tactics in the low-cost segment.
Their biggest dilemma: Should one attempt to make ultra low-cost cars, or should the focus be on affordable but snazzy cars that will be driven out by consumers with higher disposable incomes and burgeoning purchasing power?
"The aspirations of car buyers are moving the Indian car market upwards to bigger hatchbacks, but there will always be demand for ultra low-cost cars," says Hormazd Sorabjee, editor, Autocar India. Sorabjee adds that cost targets in building an ULCC are extremely challenging which makes this segment the most difficult to enter.

HOLY GRAIL FOR CAR MAKERS

"But the bottom of the pyramid has huge volumes and very few players, which is why it's still the holy grail for carmakers," he explains. Carmakers like Maurti are taking no chances, preferring not to err on either the side of engineering frugality or consumer aspirations.
Maruti is working on revamping its one-time mainstay, the 800, to make it comply with the latest emission norms and more spacious; this model will be priced under Rs 2 lakh, and pitched headon against the Nano, whose various models are priced between Rs 1.5 lakh and Rs 2.11 lakh ex-showroom in Mumbai. (Currently the Maruti 800 is only available in tier 2 towns where emission norms are less stringent.)
But Maruti also has another small car in the works that will straddle the space between the Nano and the Alto (whose base model has a price tag of well under Rs 3 lakh).
"It is not a replacement for the Maruti 800 but a totally new car with a new shape and design," points out a senior Maruti executive on the condition of anonymity. Korean major Hyundai has similar designs; it is set to launch an 800 cc small car branded 'HA' in November in the price band of Rs 2.3-2.8 lakh. The HA will compete against the Alto and be priced below the Hyundai Santro.
The Santro has a price tag in the range of Rs 3.25 lakh to Rs 4.34 lakh. "We do not have the technology for a ULCC and we do not think it will be viable. Our new car will not compete with the Nano," says Arvind Saxena, director, sales & marketing, Hyundai Motors India.
So where does that leave the Nano, which has still to get its act together? After sales peaked at around 10,000 in April 2011, they had once again dipped to 3,260 in July. This makes Tata Motors' expectation of sales of 20,000 per month by December almost a pipedream. Officials of Tata Motors are hopeful that the Nano will pick up once interest rates and fuel prices fall; and once the distribution part of the game is figured out.
Executives working on the Nano project point out that the company is focusing on increasing the car's reach in tier-II and III markets. Some 300 exclusive Nano dealerships will be set up in the current fiscal. A diesel version with high fuel efficiency that is on the cards will also help boost sales.
"The Nano has a lot of potential and the Tatas have the first-mover advantage. They are going through a learning curve and have to focus on understanding the Nano consumer," says Sorabjee. Yet, the Tatas might well have a fallback plan in place. Industry experts point out that Tata Motors has started work on a platform that is larger than the Nano called Dolphin.
"Tata is close to showcasing a car bigger than the Nano," says an Ahmedabadbased supplier of Tata Motors. Company officials declined to comment. The global majors in India for their part have put their ULCC plans in cold storage.
The view at Ford is that since more than half of its buyers of premium hatchback Figo in July were first-time buyers, consumers may well be in a position to bypass the ULCC segment.
"We do not have any immediate plans to bring products in the ultra low-cost segment. A significant proportion of our products to come will be positioned in the volumes segment that contributes to 70% of industry sales," says Michael Boneham, MD, Ford India. Ford's Detroit neighbour feels the same way.
"We are not working on the project anymore and there are no plans to introduce any ultra low-cost car now," says Karl Slym, MD, General Motors India. In mid-July, reports surfaced that Bajaj Auto had shelved a project to develop a ULCC in India with Renault, saying it was commercially unviable.
"We have not seen the car or any prototype yet and there has been no confirmation from the Indian company on any ultra low-cost project. If in case there is any product developed and shown to us, we will only move ahead if it confirms to Renault's global standards and if the quality of the product matches our DNA," Renault India managing director Marc Nassif had recently told ET.
One little known local player, International Car & Motors Ltd (ICML), which makes multi-utility vehicles, has also bid adieu to its ULCC dream. "We shelved our plans to make a micro car as the initial feasibility reports suggested that customers do not have a fancy for low-priced cars. They want premium features; rather than price, they are fixated on quality, styling and luxury," says L D Mittal, Chairman, ICML.
It's now up to Ratan Tata to prove to the world that the ULCC still has a worthy place in the sun. For now the priority is to clear unsold Nano stocks. To that end, many leading Tata Motors dealers across the country have started offering schemes to customers over and above the ones offered by the company.
"We started offering lower monthly instalments and down payments to lure customers. We had no choice as we are losing sales and interest costs on the inventory," says a leading Mumbai-based dealer.
Tata Motors can do with some help from its dealer network but in the longer run it has to prove that Indian consumers - tens of thousands of them - want to drive an ULCC. For the moment, they are alone on that road.
.......edior

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