Indian battery maker Exide’s quarterly profit rises 22% on auto demand

A customer looks at an Exide solar charge controller for purchase at a shop inside a wholesale electronics market in Kolkata, India, March 19, 2024. REUTERS
May 4 (Reuters) – India’s Exide Industries reported a 22.7% rise in fourth-quarter profit, as ​buoyant automotive demand and the continued ‌tailwind from India’s tax cuts last September boosted demand for its batteries.
Here are some details:
  • The ​company’s standalone profit after tax ​rose to 3.12 billion rupees ($32.8 million) ⁠in the quarter ended March 31, ​from 2.55 billion rupees a year earlier
  • Revenue ​from operations climbed 9.4% to 45.51 billion rupees
  • Tax cuts continued to drive demand across the ​automotive sector, with two-wheeler, three-wheeler and ​four-wheeler segments growing in double digits year-on-year in the ‌fourth-quarter
  • The ⁠firm’s export business posted a double-digit decline as geopolitical conflicts closed multiple shipping routes and created container shortages
  • Exide’s auto ​business grew ​more ⁠than 25% year-on-year
  • MD & CEO Avik Roy said the company expects ​auto, auto replacement and inverters ​businesses “to ⁠continue their strong growth momentum into Q1 of current financial year”
  • Sustained depreciation of ⁠rupee ​would put further pressure ​on costs, Roy said
($1 = 95.0363 Indian rupees)

Reporting by Pranav ​Kashyap in Bengaluru; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala

 

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