The sharp deviation is due to a sharp rise in non-operating expenses. During the quarter, finance costs rose 72 per cent year-on-year and six per cent quarter-on-quarter, while depreciation expenses rose 33 per cent year-on-year and 10 per cent on a sequential basis.
Analysts aren't concerned, as JLR's volumes have been hit by capacity constraints, which are expected to ease in the second half of FY15. Surjit Arora of Prabhudas Lilladher expects JLR to report volume growth of 12-13 per cent in FY15. However, this will be back-ended, as capacity constraints will take time to ease. In the first half of this financial year, he expects JLR to report volume growth of five-six per cent. Analysts also expect JLR to launch new models in the second half.
While JLR will continue to drive Tata Motors' profitability and growth, the domestic business is expected to remain a drag for at least a couple of quarters. The domestic business reported volumes of 130,337 units, a fall of 36 per cent year-on-year and 14 per cent quarter-on-quarter. A fall of 25 per cent in the commercial vehicles sector and about 30 per cent in Tata Motors' volumes hurt the company's operating leverage. The company's loss in domestic business was significantly higher than the Rs 312-crore loss in the corresponding quarter last year.
Analysts expect the stock to remain range-bound in the first half of FY15, as there are no immediate catalysts for growth. While JLR's volume growth will be in single digits, the domestic business will continue to report heavy quarterly losses till the commercial vehicle cycle improves. The company might see an improvement in the second half of FY15, once JLR volumes pick up and the domestic business shows signs of a revival.