"Despite the Ubers and the Olas, individual buyers of city and commuter cars are not going to become extinct," Mahindra said in a video message at the launch of the company's compact SUV here.
Though he conceded that overall volumes of commuter and city users may drop because of the "sharing economy", there will "indeed remain many buyers who would want to own a car and enjoy the experience of driving".
It can be noted that Mahindra was among the leading auto industry chieftains to flag concerns around taxi aggregating apps in September last year.
"The ease of access being offered by taxi-hailing apps like Uber and Ola is the biggest potential threat to the auto industry. Since these apps operators have made transportation a commodity, (auto) sales could be hit and volumes may be impacted," he said.
The onus, Mahindra said, is on the auto industry to build cars "passionately" to ensure demand for cars doesn't go away.
Uber is keen to increase its India presence from the current 18 cities. Industry estimates peg Uber's daily rides at around 2,00,000.
Despite initial hiccups in India, the US-based taxi-hailing app is investing USD 1 billion to ramp up its operations by March next year.
Its domestic rival Ola, which leads the market in terms of number of taxis, drivers and users by a wider margin, is also getting millions of dollars of investments to increase its market share.
