In his address to the shareholders in the 70th annual report, Mistry said, "Our strategy hinges on leveraging the long-term growth opportunity both in the domestic as well as global market. Our country is forecast to witness multi-fold increase in motorisation and we are strongly investing in product and technologies to meet the demand arising from that and also to make Tata Motors future ready."
A new executive team and a revamped service back-up have also helped the company turnaround its domestic operations under the HorizoNext strategy, which its late president Karl Slym had launched two years ago.
Tata Motors has been reporting heavy losses for the past three years and in the fourth quarter of FY 2014-15 it reported a massive 56.2 per cent plunge in the net profit at Rs 1,716 crore due to huge asset write-downs, 220-million pound forex loss and poor show by its cash-cow British arm Jaguar Land Rover (JLR).
Tata Motors consolidated net profit for FY 2014-15 inched down to Rs 13,986 crore from Rs 13,991 crore despite a 13 per cent jump in revenue at Rs 2,62,796 crore, out of which JLR contributed around 85 per cent.
For the second quarter in a row, even its marquee JLR reported a massive 32.7 per cent fall in net at 302 million pounds from 449 million pounds during the same period of FY 2013-14.