Maruti Suzuki profit disappoints on costs, tax hit

Reuters 

By Jessica Kuruthukulangara

(Reuters) - Suzuki, India's top-selling car maker, posted a quarterly profit that missed estimates even though sales grew steadily, as a rise commodity prices and the impact of a new nationwide sales ate into earnings.

The company, majority-owned by Japan's Motor Corp, announced on Thursday a profit of 15.56 billion rupees ($242.66 million) for the first quarter ended June 30, up 4.4 percent from the year-ago quarter.

That was below the 17.01 billion rupees average estimate of analysts, according to Thomson data. (http://bit.ly/2eQcEmf)

Maruti, which provides the bulk of Motor's revenues, sold a total of 394,571 vehicles during the quarter, up 13.2 percent from the year-ago period. Total income jumped 17 percent to 204.60 billion rupees.

dominates the small car market and has been expanding its net by launching more premium vehicles to compete better with newer and planned entrants such as Kia Motors and SAIC Motor Corp. Higher sales of premium models such as the Brezza SUV and Baleno hatchback helped its bottomline the March quarter.

the latest quarter, the company absorbed a one-time cost paid to dealers to compensate for the loss incurred on vehicles stock during the transition to the Goods and Services Tax, which introduced on July 1. The amount was not disclosed with the quarterly

also said its profit was hit by higher commodity prices and costs from sales promotion and marketing.

The automaker also incurred a deferred expense of 1.85 billion rupees, more than four times the amount it spent last year.

Shares of were largely flat after the is valued by the market at more than $35 billion, compared to Motor's market capitalisation of about $21 billion. The Japanese company owns 56.2 percent of

($1 = 64.1225 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Jessica Kuruthukulangara Bengaluru; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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