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Tata Motors' quarterly profits plunge as tariffs and slow sales bite

Tata Motors, an Indian automaker, posted a 63% drop in profit for the first quarter on Friday. This was due to U.S. Tariffs that hurt their business which was already struggling with weak sales in India and its luxury car division.

Tata Motors is India's largest seller of commercial and electric vehicles. However, its luxury division Jaguar Land Rover, which drives the company's profits, has seen a 11% drop in sales overseas. This was due to a temporary suspension of U.S. imports as well as the phase out of older Jaguar models.

The latest U.S. tariffs on imports have squeezed the margins further, adding pressure to the business.

Tata Motors announced on Friday that the U.S. tariff of 27.5% on UK and EU made cars and the planned phase out of legacy Jaguar models before a new launch had a negative impact on quarterly volumes and revenue.

Jaguar Land Rover reported a profit for the year of 39.24 billion rupies ($447.8million), down from restated 105.14 bn rupees from last year. This includes a 49.75 billion rupies one-time gain, resulting from its sale of financing to non-bank lender Tata Capital.

Tata Motors has not changed its JLR guidance, citing a U.S./UK trade agreement signed in May that will reduce the tariffs. The agreement allows the UK to export 100,000 cars per year to the U.S. for a 10% tariff, as opposed the 25% that other countries face.

(source: Reuters)