India's Maruti Suzuki warns of price hikes as Gulf war raises costs
FILE PHOTO: Maruti Suzuki Celerio cars are parked beside an in-plant railway siding at Maruti Suzuki's plant in Manesar, Haryana, India, June 17, 2025. REUTERS/Bhawika Chhabra/File Photo
NEW DELHI/BENGALURU, April 1 : India's top carmaker, Maruti Suzuki, said on Wednesday that it will likely raise prices as the Middle East war has pushed up commodity prices, wiping out gains from last year's consumption tax cuts.
The Iran war has driven up the prices of everything from oil and gas to key metals used in manufacturing vehicles.
The carmaker, majority-owned by Japan's Suzuki Motor, said it has not faced any supply disruptions, but acknowledged potential disruptions in the future.
"We will be taking a call, but unfortunately the commodity prices are going very high, we need to pass it on, so we will come back very soon on that," Partho Banerjee, Maruti's sales chief, told reporters during a monthly sales call.
The price hike could hit a demand upswing for Maruti's small cars, following India's sweeping tax cuts in September that drew price-sensitive customers back to dealerships.
The automaker's domestic sales dropped 5.8 per cent between April and September, but jumped 12 per cent between October and March, with demand for small cars outpacing supply and wait times for deliveries stretching to a month.
On Wednesday, Maruti reported a 10 per cent year-on-year rise in domestic sales to dealers during March and a 43 per cent jump in exports.
Shipments to the Middle East, which account for 12.5 per cent of Maruti's annual export volume, are expected to be delayed, Rahul Bharti, senior executive officer for corporate affairs, said.
Meanwhile, Hyundai Motor India reported a 10 per cent drop in its overseas shipments in March. The Middle East contributes 40 per cent of the firm's total exports, making it the Indian carmaker most exposed to the region.
Hyundai Motor India posted a 6 per cent rise in domestic sales.