Mahindra began making scooters six years ago after buying Kinetic Motor. Photo: Bloomberg
An announcement may be made soon, two of the people said, declining to be identified because the discussions are private.
Ruzbeh Irani, head of group communications at Mahindra, declined to comment, as did Jean-Baptiste Thomas, a spokesman for Paris-based Peugeot.
Scooter sales in the country surged 23% in the year ended March.
Production cut
“This shows that Tavares is willing to get rid of Peugeot’s remaining peripheral and loss-making activities in order to focus on its core business,” said Juergen Pieper, a Frankfurt-based analyst at Bankhaus Metzler. “Plus, they still need some liquidity.”
Part of its turnaround plan was the three-wheeled Metropolis, which was introduced last year. The original target of making 7,000 units a year has been scaled back to 4,000, spokesperson Frederic Bart said.
Tavares said on French radio RTL on 14 September that the scooters business was a drag on the group and a solution to end the burden was in the works.
Mahindra shares rose 0.2% to Rs1,372.35 in Mumbai, reversing earlier declines. Peugeot pared losses and was down 1.8% at €10.61 at 12.26pm in Paris.
Village transport
Scooter sales in India have been rising as demand for personal transportation increases in Indian villages, especially for women. Mahindra’s two-wheeler sales almost doubled in the year ended March.
Hero MotoCorp and Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India Pvt. Ltd (HMSI) together control two-thirds of India’s two-wheeler market, the world’s biggest after China.
To tap growing demand, Honda is building a dedicated scooter factory in the state of Gujarat to be completed in the year ending March 2016, Keita Muramatsu, the head of the company’s Indian motorcycle business, said in New Delhi last week. Bloomberg
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