GM India hopes to break even in four years

Tags: News
General Motors (GM) India, which started operations in the country nearly 17 years ago, is hoping that it would financially break even within four years.

"Our operations in the country are not profitable at the moment. We hope to break even in two to four years time," chief financial officer of GM India Anil Mehrotra said.

Launching the Chevrolet SAIL sedan here today, he said that in 2011, the company's sales figure crossed the one-lakh figure mark, but dipped to 94,000 units in 2012.

"We are planning a good growth in the current year. We expect to grow between 40 per cent to 50 per cent with the launch of SAIL sedan and multi-purpose vehicle Chevrolet Enjoy (to be launched in three months)," he said.

Developed jointly by SAIC of China and GM India, the SAIL sedan would be initially manufactured with a capacity of 48,000 units per annum and ramped up month by month.

Mehrotra said that in China, the car's sales volume was 41,000 units per month.

"The SAIL sedan car has a potential sales volume of 40,000 units per month in India," Vikas Jain, director (sales) of GM India said.

Post new comment

E-mail ID will not be published
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

FC NEWSLETTER

Stay informed on our latest news!

EDITORIAL OF THE DAY

  • CCI’s landmark Rs 6,300 crore fine against cement firms is right in spirit

    On the face of it, last Friday’s ruling by the Competition Apellate Tribunal (Compat), the appellate body for cases before the Competition Commissio

INTERVIEWS

GV Nageswara Rao

MD & CEO, IDBI Federal Life

Timothy Moe

Goldman Sachs

Chander Mohan Sethi

CMD, Reckitt Benckiser India

COLUMNIST

Urs Schöttli

Why Malaysia needs change

A few days ago, Malaysia’s ruling coalition claimed another ...

Parvez Imam

How we are being timed to perfection

Are we timed to perfection yet? Precision of time is ...

Bubbles Sabharwal

Talk things out, laugh together, live together

This article is prompted by my friend Neerja’s e-mail which ...