While a battered pound eroded Rs 2,296 crore from its profit, adverse commodity derivatives blew a hole of Rs 167 crore.
As the pound took a beating -- sinking to a 31-year-low following the Brexit vote on June 24 -- the company's cash cow JLR took a 14 per cent forex hit at Rs 2,296 crore, offsetting the higher income arising from better volumes, Tata Group CFO C Ramakrishnan told reporters here this evening.
He said the overall numbers were driven down by lower market incentives in the quarter. The numbers would have been still lower but for the one-time income of Rs 478 crore, or 50 million pounds, from claims arising out of the Tianjin (China) fire last financial year.
"Operating performance of JLR reflects the overall higher wholesales, offset by adverse forex impact of 207 million pound, including revaluation of 84 million pound, mainly euro payables resulting from depreciation in the pound following the Brexit vote," Ramakrishnan said.
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For the quarter, consolidated revenue rose to Rs 67,056 crore from Rs 61,510 crore, driven by improvement in the businesses of both the parent as well as JLR on the back of strong sales in Britain, Europe, North America, China, whose volume share declined to 14.1 per cent in the reporting quarter from 20.5 per cent a year ago.
(REOPENS BOM 21)
JLR sales numbers were driven by strong demand for the Discovery Sport, XE and the new F-Pace models in North America.
On a standalone basis, the company reported a net profit of Rs 25.75 crore for the June quarter, down 91.11 per cent, year on year.
Standalone sales rose 10.21 per cent to Rs 11,311.24 crore, from Rs 10,262.76 crore earlier. Sales, including exports of commercial and passenger vehicles, stood at 1,26,839 units, representing a growth of 8 per cent.
JLR wholesales (excluding China JV) stood at 1,20,776 units, he said, adding that China JV wholesales for the quarter came in at 13,558 units.
On a standalone basis, the company saw its net income diving more than 90 per cent to a paltry Rs 26 crore despite all the segments witnessing growth -- M&HCV expanded by 7.8 per cent, LCV 11.6 per cent, passenger vehicles 6.3 per cent and car segment 15.1 per cent, driven by the demand for its new launch Tiago.
The strong growth in all segments along with ongoing cost reduction and other margin improvement initiatives led to the improvement of 60 bps in the Ebitda margin of the standalone business, he said.
The company netted other income such as dividend from subsidiaries of Rs 568 crore in the first quarter, up from Rs 481 crore a year ago.