XF sedan, Freelander SUV top prospects

Jaguar Land Rover studying India production, report says

XF sedan, Freelander SUV top prospects

A Freelander 2 SUV travels along the production line at Jaguar Land Rover's assembly plant in Halewood, United Kingdom, last month. The company is mulling light-vehicle output in India.
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MUMBAI/LONDON (Reuters) -- Jaguar Land Rover is investigating the potential of manufacturing cars in India, company sources said, as the British luxury carmaker looks to build on its growth in emerging markets with the help of Indian parent Tata Motors.

Jaguar Land Rover, which has ridden a wave of surging demand in China and other emerging markets to post record profits over the past year, is "actively exploring the possibility" of building cars from scratch in India, said one company source.

"The idea is being looked into, with the [Jaguar] XF and [Land Rover] Freelander the obvious candidates," said another source with knowledge of the matter.

The British brands, which already assemble two models in India using parts and engines shipped from factories in the United Kingdom, will also begin assembling its popular Range Rover Evoque in the country soon, the first source said without providing details.

Building cars in India, which has developed into an emerging market export hub for many global carmakers, would allow Jaguar Land Rover to skirt high import taxes on luxury cars, which the country's finance minister proposed raising to 100 percent from 75 percent in his budget speech last week.

"Jaguar Land Rover has ambitious plans to expand its manufacturing footprint and increase production in markets outside Britain," Del Sehmar, a Mumbai-based spokesman for the company, told Reuters. "We continue to examine options to expand our range of locally assembled products," he said, referring to India.

Jaguar Land Rover will exhibit an Evoque with a new 9-speed automatic transmission and an electric-powered version of the Land Rover Defender at the Geneva Motor Show this week.

Investment drive

Jaguar Land Rover, which was bought by Tata for $2.3 billion from Ford Motor Co. in 2008, has defied those skeptical of its future under Indian ownership to roar back into profit over the past three years as the main growth driver for its now-struggling parent.

Continued growth in emerging markets such as India and China, which accounted for 22.3 percent of its sales in the December quarter, is key for the automaker as it embarks on an expensive overhaul of its production and product clout. The carmaker is investing $1.7 billion with local partner Chery Automobile Co. to build a factory in China.

Jaguar Land Rover lags rivals BMW AG, Volkswagen AG's Audi and Daimler AG's Mercedes-Benz in assembling cars in India, where the luxury market is expected to swell by around six times by 2020 to 300,000 cars a year, according to business consultancy Frost & Sullivan.

The company, known for its sleek performance sedans favored by British prime ministers and luxury SUVs born of the desert and jungle combat, has factories working around the clock in England to meet demand, bucking the trend of sluggish demand for European automakers.

The company has repeatedly stressed that its overseas ambitions will not lead to job losses in Britain. Jaguar Land Rover employed close to 24,000 people at the end of March last year.

Earlier this year the company started the assembly of the 2.2-liter (0.58 gallon) diesel version of the Jaguar XF sedan at a plant in Pune, west India, tucked away in a corner of a sprawling production site where Tata builds its heavy duty trucks and hatchbacks.

The company has also been assembling its Land Rover Freelander 2 in Pune since May 2011, using engines and components shipped from the company's Castle Bromwich plant in Birmingham, in central England.

The XF and the Freelander 2 are Jaguar Land Rover's best-selling models in India, where it sold 2,288 cars in the year ending March 2012, up 157 percent from the previous year.

The carmaker, which warned in January of negative free cash flow next year as it invests in production facilities, is also exploring the feasibility of a factory in Saudi Arabia. After the signing of a deal with the automaker in December, the Saudi commerce and industry ministry said the $1.2 billion plant would start making vehicles by 2017.

"At the moment, we've signed a letter of intent to do a study," Kenneth Gregor, Jaguar Land Rover's chief financial officer, said last month. "That is and remains a study."

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