Apollo Tyres to hike prices by 6% from April

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Jan 20 2013 | 1:57 AM IST

Apollo Tyres today said it will hike prices of its products by up to 6% from April to offset spiralling raw material costs.

The market leader also cautioned that the tyre industry could be in red unless there is a substantial increase, a minimum of up to 10%, in product prices.

"From April onwards we will be increasing tyre prices as the overall raw material costs have gone beyond manageable levels," Apollo Tyres Chief (India Operations) Satish Sharma told PTI.

From the first quarter of the next fiscal, Sharma said prices of bias commercial vehicle tyres will go up by 3% while that of truck and bus radial tyres will be dearer by 6%.

"For the passenger cars, we had increased in February by about 3% and again we will raise it by another 3%," he added.

The prices of the company's passenger vehicle tyres vary between Rs 2,150 and Rs 12,500 per unit. The radial tyres of truck and bus are available for Rs 16,900-Rs 20,200.

In the ongoing fiscal, raw material prices have gone up about 35-36% against which the company has raised tyre prices by 16-17%, he added.

Sharma said the domestic tyre industry is facing a tough situation as competition and market forces are preventing it from hiking prices beyond three %.

"Globally, since January Michelin and Bridgestone have increased prices by 8-12%, while Goodyear has upped by 15%. In India we also need to take a cue from them," he said.

Citing the company's internal study, he said in the first quarter of the next fiscal the raw material cost are expected to be 20% higher than the last quarter of the ongoing financial year.

"Our understanding is that it will remain at that level. If nothing is done, the industry will be in the red. It will require a minimum price hike of 10% for the tyre makers to be in black," he said.

For Apollo Tyres, the margins have shrunk in this fiscal he said, stating it has gone down to 10.5% in the third quarter of this fiscal as compared to 16.5% in the whole of the previous fiscal.

"The graph has been going down and one can easily guess what it will be like it the fourth quarter of this fiscal," Sharma said.

Considering the present circumstances, he said it would be helpful to the tyre industry if the government allows duty free import of good rubber.

Currently, natural rubber attracts 20% import duty, while finished product is at 10%, he added.

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First Published: Mar 30 2011 | 2:29 PM IST

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