1. Introduction to Rubber & Tyre Industry in India
  • Rubber Industry Overview

The rubber industry in India dates back to 1921 when the first rubber goods manufacturing plant was established in Kolkata and since then the rubber industry has been growing and expanding. After 1947, that is, the year of India’s independence, the quantity and range of rubber products increased and slowly the industry saw technological evolution as well. Export front of the industry has seen tremendous growth in the last few years along with covering all kinds of domestic demands. The factors responsible for the exponential growth in 21st century are vast internal market, rapid industrialisation, on-going economic reforms, and improved living standards of the masses.

India is the

  • 4th largest producer of natural rubber
  • 2nd largest consumer of natural rubber;
  • 5th largest consumer of natural rubber and synthetic rubber together in the world.
  • India is also the world’s largest manufacturer of reclaim rubber.

Kerala, Punjab and Maharashtra have highest production of rubber making India 1st in productivity all over the world. The per capita consumption of rubber in India is only 990 gms against 9 to 16 kilos in Japan, USA and Europe. Therefore there are enormous development prospects of the business in the future.

A wide range of rubber products are manufactured by the Indian rubber industry that serve industries like the three wings of defence, civil, aviation, aeronautics, railways, agriculture, transport as also textiles, engineering industries, pharmaceuticals, mines, steel plants, ports, family planning programmes, hospitals, sports, i.e. practically to every field under the sun.


  • Rubber Industry Performance:

The industry saw a price crash in 2014-15 but the performance in 2015-16 has been better. ICRA predicted 9-10% growth in domestic tyre volumes during 2015-16. In 2014-15, production of natural rubber dropped to 17.33% while its imports saw an increase upto 24.89%. The quantity of rubber consumed during the first nine months of the current fiscal was up 4.32%. According to Rubber Board estimate, the production of natural rubber for 2015-16 is projected at 7.50 lakh tonnes with a growth rate of 16.28% and the consumption is projected at 10.56 lakh tonnes with a growth of 3.44%.

  • Rubber Industry Classification:

The industry can be classified as:

  • Tyre
  • Non-tyre

The tyre sector produces all types of auto tyres, conventional & radial tyres and exports to foreign nations. The non-tyre sector comprises of different sized units that produce hi-tech industrial items.

The yardstick to measure the growth rate of the industry is rubber consumption – natural, synthetic and reclaims rubber.

  • Rubber Manufacturing Process:

Manufacturing of rubber is divided into two steps:

  • Production of rubber
  • Making of different rubber products
  • Tyre Industry Overview:

The Indian Tyre Industry originated in 1926 when Dunlop Rubber Limited set up the first tyre company in West Bengal followed by MRF in 1946. Tyre Industry is predominantly ruled by organized sector while the unorganized sector consists of bicycle tyres. Indian tyres are made such that they are compatible for kutcha village roads as well as new pakka roads. Also they are meant and expected to perform in hot, cold as well as wet climatic conditions.

Tyre Industry is raw-material intensive. Raw materials cost is 63% of industry turnover and 72% of production cost. Obviously, the foremost among the raw materials is rubber of which 80% is natural rubber and 20% is synthetic rubber. Thus, tyre and rubber market are totally inseparable. Tyre Industry is not very price sensitive. The tyres produced are almost homogeneous in functionality, quality and price excepting a few foreign players, like Bridgestone. Tyres are produced for –

  • passenger cars
  • buses and light, medium, and heavy duty trucks
  • cycles/motorcycles and other two-wheelers
  • go-karts
  • racing cars
  • industrial rolling stock
  • off-the-road and all-terrain vehicles
  • aircrafts
  • graders/earthmovers/loaders
  • mining/logging equipment
  • high performance or speed-rated tyres for passenger cars, and
  • Agricultural and forestry equipment.




Table 1.1 Overview of Tyre industries

Key Figures
No. of Tyre Companies: 39
No. of Tyre Plants: 60
Industry Turnover 2014-15 (est.): Rs. 50000 crore (US$ 8.5 Bn)
Exports 2014-15 (est.): Rs. 10500 crore (US $ 1.7 Bn)
  • Tyre Industry Performance:

Indian tyre industry is an essential part of the auto segment and its fortunes are reliant on those of the auto segment. With the progressing lull of the auto segment, the tyre industry saw only moderate development in the current financial year.

  • Tyre Industry Classification:

Tyre Industry is classified as:

  • Unorganized Sector
  • Organized Sector

Unorganized Sector is small and consists mainly of bicycle tyres while organized sector covers all other major tyre types. The organized sector players supply the tread material to the unorganized sector players, who in turn re-tread the tyres.

On a volume basis, there are 3 major classifications of the tyre industry:

  • Two-wheeler tyres
  • Passenger Car tyres
  • Truck and Bus (T&B) tyres
  • Tyre Manufacturing Process:

Tyre manufacturing process consists of several steps/processes that are explained below:

  • Mixing, Milling, Extruding, Calendaring, Bead Making, Cementing and Marking, Cooling and Culture, Tyre Building, Lubricating, Curing, Tyre Finishing
  1. Companies in Rubber & Tyre Industry
    • Key Companies in Tyre & Rubber Industry

Some of the major companies in tyre & Rubber industry which has its operations in India are listed below:

Table 2.1 Tyre & Rubber Companies & Their Market Capitalization

Tyre Companies Rubber Companies
Company Name Market Cap
(Rs. cr)
%Percentage Company Name Market Cap
(Rs. cr)
%Percentage
MRF 16,396.77 39.9 Apar Ind 1971.03 50.61
Apollo Tyres 7,622.65 18.55 Indag Rubber 547.31 14.05
Balkrishna Ind 6,254.29 15.22 Apcotex Ind 471.79 12.11
Ceat 4,061.19 9.88 S R K Ind 236.93 6.08
JK Tyre & Ind 2,401.95 5.84 Rubfila Intl 185.4 4.76
TVS Srichakra 2,087.16 5.08 GRP 126.7 3.25
Goodyear 1,222.52 2.97 Somi Conveyor 80.1 2.06
PTL Enterprises 661.89 1.61 Pix Transmis 76.71 1.97
Modi Rubber 152.37 0.37 Cosco India 71.61 1.84
Elgi Rubber 142.39 0.35 Eastern Treads 52.31 1.34
Govind Rubber 51.1 0.12 Mahalaxmi Rub 39.74 1.02
Krypton 30.86 0.075 Rishiroop 19.72 0.51
Tirupati Tyres 13.88 0.034 Vamshi Rubber 15.19 0.39
MM Rubber 7.61 0.2
Cochin Malabar 5.16 0.13
South Latex 3.33 0.09

Fig. 2.1 Major Tyre Companies & Their Market Share

  • Tyre plants in India

On the map below the production plants of major companies of Tyre are marked. This is the representation of all the 11 major companies which are member of Automotive Tyre Manufacturers’ Association (ATMA).

tyre plant Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

Fig. 2.2 Tyre Manufacturing Plants in India

The colour code used in the above map is for the companies listed in the below image:

tyre-ccompanies

  1. Tyre & Rubber Industry and its impact on GDP

 

There’s a direct correlation between the size of a country’s gross domestic product, or GDP, and its automotive industry and automotive industry directly impacts the tyre and rubber industry. GDP accounts for the consumption, investments, net exports, and government spending during a given time period.

The Indian auto industry is one of the largest in the world with an annual production of 23.37 million vehicles in FY 2014-15, following a growth of 8.68 per cent over the last year.

The automobile industry accounts for 7.1 per cent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).

The Two Wheelers segment with 81 per cent market share is the leader of the Indian Automobile market owing to a growing middle class and a young population. Moreover, the growing interest of the companies in exploring the rural markets further aided the growth of the sector. The overall Passenger Vehicle (PV) segment has 13 per cent market share.

India is also a prominent auto exporter and has strong export growth expectations for the near future. In FY 2014-15, automobile exports grew by 15 per cent over the last year. In addition, several initiatives by the Government of India and the major automobile players in the Indian market are expected to make India a leader in the Two Wheeler (2W) and Four Wheeler (4W) market in the world by 2020.

Vehicle sales growth over the period 2009 to 2013 has been shown below:

vehicle-sales-growth

  1. Government Investment & Initiatives
  • Investments by Government:

The kind of investment by government in the tyre sector in 2015-16 is unprecedented in India. Capacity creation for tyre industry will in turn increase capacity of rubber and tyre sector as well.

Table 4.1 Summary of Investment in Tyre Industry in India by vehicle type (2015-16)

Project(s) TBR (in units) PCR+LT (in units) OTR (in MT) 2W (in units) Others (in units)
Recently completed 466000 1826000 450000 4167
Greenfield 102500 952000 729200 86400
Brownfield 171000 642000 6310 66750
Total 739500 3420000 1179200 92710 70917

Table 4.2 Total Investment in Tyre Industry (2015-16)

Projects Total Investment in Crores
Recently completed ₹ 11,579
Greenfield ₹ 7,760
Brownfield ₹ 6,530
Total ₹ 25,869
  • Government Initiatives
  • Under Free Trade Agreements Government has reduced customs duty in tyres with no corresponding reduction in basic rate of customs duty on Natural Rubber.
  • Government to allow import of limited quantity of NR (say 200,000 MT) under a Tariff Rate Quota (TRQ) basis for FY 2014-15 at a concessional rate of duty of 7.5% or Rs. 10 per kg, whichever is lower.
  • In Dec.`10, Finance Ministry has allowed 40,000 MT of NR at 7.5% concessional duty on TRQ basis, a provision that was expected to continue on an annual rolling basis but was discontinued without any valid reasons/justification.
  • Reduction in customs duty on EPDM rubber would reduce the input costs for the auto industry, tyres, rubber profile manufacturers.
  • Government of India can increase the customs duty on tyres from existing rate of 10% (to a higher rate of duty) without any corresponding action/explanation to the WTO.
  • Under Para 4.1.4 of Foreign Trade Policy, Government has granted exemption from payment of all kind of duties on Carbon Black under Advance License Authorization imports.
  • Rate of Interest for delayed payment of excise duty/ service tax should be restored back to 13% p.a. from existing 18%.
  • All categories of tyres can be exported freely.
  • All categories of new tyres can be imported freely. No WTO Bound Rates for tyres and tubes.
  • Imports of Second hand/Retreaded tyres (major categories) are restricted under EXIM Policy and can be done against an import licence.
  • Tyres imports under Regional Trade Agreements (Asia Pacific Trade Agreement, Indo-Sri Lanka, SAFTA, India-Singapore, ASEAN, India-Malaysia etc) allowed at preferential rates of import duty.
  • All tyre industry related raw-materials can be imported freely (under OGL).
  • Tyre Industry de-licensed in September, 1989.
  • Natural Rubber (NR) principal raw material of Tyre Industry, is in the ‘Negative List` (i.e. not eligible for any concession in Custom duty) under various Trade Agreements, i.e. India ASEAN Free Trade Agreement, India Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement, South Asian Free Trade Agreement (SAFTA), India Malaysia Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA), India-Singapore Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement and India-South Korea Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA).
  • The Government of India has announced highway projects worth US$ 93billion, which include government flagship National Highways Development Project (NHDP) with total investment of US$ 45billion over next three years.
  • The Union government has approved a plan for construction of around 1,000 km of expressways at an estimated cost of Rs 16.68 crore on a design-build-finance-operate-transfer (DBFOT) mode. The corridors approved for the development of expressways include DelhiChandigarh (249 km), Bengaluru-Chennai (334 km), Delhi-Jaipur (261 km), Vadodara-Mumbai (400 km).
  1. Sectoral Analysis
  • Tyre Production, Export & Imports in India

Table. 5.1 Current Production & Exports

Category Production Exports
Yr. 2013-14 Yr. 2014-15 %Change Yr. 2013-14 Yr. 2014-15 %Change
Truck & Bus Tyre 164.74 171.12 3.872769212 2426579 2202653 -9.228053156
LCV Tyre 93.45 102.02 9.170679508 1648362 1529358 -7.219530661
Passenger Car (Incl. Jeep) Tyre 316.66 357.43 12.87500789 2208832 2654207 20.16337141
Total Tyre Production 1288.78 1461.5 13.40182188 9003607 8680641 -3.587073492

 

Picture1 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

Fig 5.1 Total Tyre Production in India

Table 5.2 Category-wise yearly Production of Tyre

Type 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08
Truck & Bus Tyre 86.12 84.74 98.63 108.21 110.92 119.41 123.67 131.37
LCV Tyre 21.08 23.52 28.44 32.71 39.45 45.29 48.2 53.19
Passenger Car (Incl. Jeep) Tyre 79.68 87.28 99.28 113.99 134.24 148.77 156.31 179.04
Farm/Tractor (Incl. Front, Rear and Trailer) Tyre 23.15 22.55 24.2 24.05 28.15 31.13 38.73 39.34
2/3 Wheeler Tyre 207 209.57 257.14 261.3 282.43 306.27 357.22 395.25
OTR Tyre 0.38 0.46 0.51 0.74 0.89 1.06 1.15 1.41
Other Categories 10.3 7.02 7.65 5.9 5.74 8.39 10.16 11.43
Total Tyre Production 427.71 435.14 515.85 546.9 601.82 660.32 735.44 811.03
Type 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 CAGR (%)
Truck & Bus Tyre 128.39 152.83 156.68 160.85 165.32 164.74 171.12 5.026711601
LCV Tyre 52.98 57.4 60.29 66.88 82.04 93.45 102.02 11.92196763
Passenger Car (Incl. Jeep) Tyre 180.39 214.49 277.01 287.36 320.75 316.66 357.43 11.31664786
Farm/Tractor (Incl. Front, Rear and Trailer) Tyre 39.15 49.23 54.23 56.67 56.31 67.23 59.84 7.018791419
2/3 Wheeler Tyre 410.31 492.2 632.58 670.51 590.85 634.42 759.89 9.73406208
OTR Tyre 1.36 1.61 1.91 1.96 3.62 4.66 4.27 18.86281734
Other Categories 8.49 8.32 9.26 9.74 8.89 7.62 6.93 -2.790914421
Total Tyre Production 821.07 976.08 1191.96 1253.97 1227.78 1288.78 1461.5 9.173646249

Interpretation from Production Data:

 

  • Bus & Truck tyre production declined slightly in March 2015 through the production went up by 4% in the fiscal.
  • Passenger Car tyre production grew by 13% during the fiscal though the production saw the growth moderating in March 2015.
  • Motorcycle tyre production showed a declining trend in the last quarter though March production saw an upswing.
  • Overall tyre production went up by 13% in the FY15. The double digit growth came after three years of moderate growth.
5.1.1.     Tyre Exports Trends (ATMA Members only)

Picture2 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

Fig. 5.2 Total Tyre Exports

Table 5.3  Category-wise yearly Export of Tyre

Type 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08
Truck & Bus Tyre 1742264 1805203 2141438 2231295 2503956 2408759 2276049 2431545
LCV Tyre 423418 610692 700868 962372 1130908 1390814 1599230 1621880
Passenger Car (Incl. Jeep) Tyre 86147 287587 364534 591714 1024880 1053759 967466 1099176
Other Categories 192915 207363 236825 316614 407294 534170 606815 941515
Total Tyre Exports 2444744 2910845 3443665 4101995 5067038 5387502 5449560 6094116
Type 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 CAGR (%)
Truck & Bus Tyre 1933959 2052946 2008859 2247268 2361490 2426579 2202653 1.688940633
LCV Tyre 1630483 1465991 1454027 1692673 1806549 1648362 1529358 9.607067927
Passenger Car (Incl. Jeep) Tyre 1001821 852634 1209548 1684096 1753862 2208832 2654207 27.74247634
Other Categories 1022780 916909 1781951 2297071 2489214 2719834 2294423 19.34594781
Total Tyre Exports 5589043 5288480 6454385 7921108 8411115 9003607 8680641 9.47336247

Interpretation from Export Data:

  • Bus & Truck tyre were particularly on the receiving end of the slowdown in the export markets and fierce competition from China, it went down by 9%.
  • Exports of passenger car tyres however saw a healthy growth of 20% during the fiscal.
  • Radialization heavy commercial vehicle segment has reached an estimated 33% in FY15.
  • Total tyre exports contracted by 4% in FY15.
  • Tyre Import Trends

Picture3 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

Picture4 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

Picture5 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

Interpretation from Import Data:

  • Occurrence of large scale import of cheap automobile tyres, especially from China. The reasons for increase of such import is reported due to significant increase in capacity creation and slowdown of domestic market in China and imposition of anti-dumping/safeguard duty by some countries like USA, Brazil, South Africa etc.
  • DGAD has recently received two petitions from domestic industry for imposing anti-dumping and countervailing duty on imports of Bus and Truck Radial Tyres from China PR.
  • China, Vietnam and South Korea are the major country from where the tyres are imported.

Natural Rubber Demand, Supply Trends

Picture6 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

Picture7 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

Picture8 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

Picture9 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India Picture10 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

Interpretation from Natural Rubber Data:

  • While domestic natural consumption has increased by 3.5% YOY in FY 14-15 (Apr-Oct), on other hand domestic Natural Rubber production has declined by (-)9.5% in the corresponding period.
  • Though still trailing last year’s numbers, NR Production in July increased sequentially and the gap with production figure of July ’14 narrowed to 4%. In the first four months of current fiscal, the production is down by 14%.
  • NR Consumption too went up sequentially in July but stood marginally lower than July ’14 figures. In the year-to-date period, the consumption was almost static.
  • NR Imports in July declined by 15% over a year ago period. NR Exports continue to dwindle. First four months of current fiscal saw export of just 42 MT.
  • NR Stock position improved in July. NR Price has continued to trail previous year􀀚s prices in view of softness in commodities
  • International Scenario
  • Major Supplier Countries

Table 5.7 Automobile Tyre – Major Supplier Countries

Automobile Tyre – Major Supplier Countries
Country Total Value in USD %Percentage
France 192211 50.71%
Thailand 157287 41.50%
China 16117 4.25%
Germany 10705 2.82%
Japan 2519 1.35%
Spain 195 0.66%
  • Global Natural Rubber Overview (ANRPC Countries)

Picture11 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India Picture12 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India Picture13 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

Interpretation from Global Natural Rubber Data:

  • NR Production in ANRPC countries went up by a subdued 3% in July after two successive months of 6% growth. Total NR production till July however stood 2% lower than previous calendar in view of steep fall of more than 11% witnessed in February.
  • NR Consumption by ANRPC countries went up by 6% in July, highest during the current calendar year. Total NR consumption growth till July stood at 3%.
  • India’s NR consumption during first seven months of current calendar stood marginally lower than corresponding period in the previous year. China’s NR consumption was however up by 5% even on a higher base.
  • Global Market Outlook of Vehicles

The market of tyres is dependent on the two important aspects, on is the rubber industry and on the automobile industry.

  • Global Truck Market : Outlook
  • Global Truck production expected to grow to 6.25 million units by 2020
  • Asia expected to account for >60% of global Truck production
  • Production expected to continue to grow at a higher pace in India, South East Asia, Eurasia and South America.
  • European and North American designed products expected to be introduced in developing markets.

Picture14 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

  • Present & Future Scenario of Global Truck Market

Picture15 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

  • Worldwide Car Market in 2015

Picture16 Sector Analysis - Rubber & Tyre Industry in India

  • Chinese Slowdown – Impact on India:

The key factors that indicated that there is a slowdown in China are:

  • Total foreign trade dropped 6.9%YoY to 11.53 trillion yuan ($1.89 trillion) in the first six months of 2015
  • Industrial profits dropped to 0.3%YoY in June 2015
  • Auto sales dropped to 2.3% YoY in June 2015
  • Trade Deficit between India and China reached 34% YoY
  • Imports from China increased to 18% YoY Exports to China decreased to 19% YoY

     Impact on India:

Positives:

  • India can profit from fall in commodity prices. Oil is the largest import of India and India has already profited due to price fall.
  • Drop in demand in China can positively affect India

            Negatives:

  • Steel, Aluminium, Copper and Metal Investment has been revisited by major Indian companies due to demand fall
  • India cannot avoid all imports from China. Indian imports account for 21% only from China.
  • ‘Make in India’ initiative may disrupt essential imports and cause an erosion of India’s supply chain
  • Due to slowdown Chinese players will increase their exports which can negatively affect other economies.
  • Imports at lower prices can change operating margins and volumes for Indian players as well

China is the second-largest economy in the world, therefore the slowdown will impact global economy as a whole.

  • Other Global Events in Tyre Industry:
  • Australian Company has discovered a way to recycle tyres in an environment friendly manner.
  • Morphing tyres are being developed that change shape to adapt to different road and climatic conditions.
  • Challenges Faced by Indian Tyre & Rubber Industry
  • Growth of Indian Tyre Industry
  • Trade agreements
  • Production fall in India
  • Technology upgradation
  • Environment friendly tyres
  • Supply chain problems
  • Managing Inventory
  • Storage and Handling
  • Manage shortened order-to-delivery cycles
  • Better control and visibility, on a real time basis
  • Cross borders handling and safety issues for global manufacturers
  • Extreme road conditions
  • Natural Rubber and Crude oil price fluctuation
  • Product Diversification
  • Intensive competition in Industry
  • Subdued global demands
  • Threat of tyre imports
  • Muted demand from Motorcycle and tractor OEM segments
  • Custom duty on tyres and raw materials
  • Cheap Imported Tyres from China
  • 2 year demand slowdown because of weak economic activity, rising inflation, poor consumption and tight liquidity constraints
  • Tyre is perhaps the only finished product (vis-a-vis its basic raw material) on which ‘duty inversion’ not only continues but has actually aggravated in recent years.
  • Low import tariffs encourage more imports
  • Service Tax ( Finance Act, 1994 & Rules There under) – Reverse Charge Mechanism – imposes burden of transaction cost and compliance issues
  1. References: