TOKYO -- Japanese small car maker Suzuki Motor said it will target 4.2 million vehicles in global sales in five years' time - an increase of nearly a third - with most of its expansion concentrated in its main market of India.
It expects 60 percent of those sales to be in India, adding that the world's most populous nation would also receive 60 percent of the two trillion yen ($13 billion) it plans to invest by the 2030 financial year.
The company aims to boost manufacturing capacity there to meet expected local demand while expanding India's role as an exports hub to markets in Africa and the Middle East.
"India is Suzuki's most important market where we are putting the most effort," President Toshihiro Suzuki said at a strategy briefing in Tokyo.
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Cars are seen parked at the Hungarian plant of Japanese car maker Suzuki in Esztergom, Hungary, October 19, 2022. Photo: Reuters |
The automaker has invested heavily in India since the early 1980s and Maruti Suzuki, majority-held by the Japanese automaker, commands roughly 40 percent of the country's car market.
It said, however, that it now expects to launch four battery electric vehicles in India by fiscal 2030, scaling back a previous goal of rolling out six.
Suzuki also said it will target an operating profit margin of at least 10 percent by 2030, up from 9.2 percent in the past financial year. It is aiming for return on equity of 15 percent or more, up from 12.6 percent.
The automaker is also targeting revenue of eight trillion yen by the 2030 financial year, a jump of 49 percent.
($1 = 150.6600 yen)