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Tata Motors Q3 Net Profit Triples on Jaguar Land Rover Sales

* Q3 net 48.05 bln rupees vs 33.89 bln consensus

* JLR sales, one time accounting gain propped up profit

* JLR operating margin up 390 bps at 17.9 pct (Adds context, comment from CFO, more details on earnings)

By Aradhana Aravindan

MUMBAI, Feb 10 (Reuters) - Tata Motors Ltd, India's biggest automaker by revenue, saw third-quarter net profits triple to their highest in a year-and-a-half on strong demand for its luxury Jaguar Land Rover vehicles and a one-time accounting gain.

British luxury carmaker JLR, which Tata Motors bought in 2008, has been propping up profits at its parent for the past two years. The unit sold a record 425,006 saloons and sports utility vehicles in 2013 in countries including Brazil, China, India and the United States.

The company beat forecasts and posted on Monday a 195 percent increase in net profit for the October-December quarter of 48.05 billion rupees ($770.53 million), its highest quarterly profit since March 2012.

Tata's domestic operations posted a net profit of 12.5 billion rupees for the quarter, while profit from JLR more than doubled to 619 million pounds ($1.01 billion).

The domestic net profit was boosted by a 19.5 billion rupees gain the company made from selling its stake in its Korean subsidiary to its Singapore subsidiary. With the exception of the June quarter, the company's domestic unit had been stacking up losses since the third-quarter of 2012, according to Thomson Reuters data.

 

 

SALES SEEN SUBDUED

Tata Motors has been suffering at home as its passenger vehicles have fallen out of favour with consumers, who are struggling with high fuel costs and rising interest rates in a slowing economy. Sales of Tata trucks and buses have also plunged on the back of weak economic activity.

Chief Financial Officer C. Ramakrishnan said the slowing economy was expected to keep domestic sales weak, even after Tata Motors unveiled its first new models in four years last week in a bid to reverse the decline.

Rating agency Moody's, however, said the new vehicles' styling, features and petrol engines would help put Tata Motors in a much better position to compete with its rivals.

The vehicles' launch was part of a turnaround plan that investors fear may be delayed after the company's managing director Karl Slym, who was spearheading the revival, died in Bangkok in what police said may have been suicide.

The company has set up a panel, headed by Tata Sons Chairman Cyrus P. Mistry, to oversee its operations and strategy as an interim measure after Slym's death.

JLR has said it expects capital expenditure of about 3.5 billion pounds to 3.7 billion pounds in fiscal 2015 from an estimated 2.75 billion pounds in fiscal 2014, raising worries that the increased spend would hurt free cash flow.

Of the 51 Tata Motors analysts tracked by Thomson Reuters StarMine, 42 recommend the stock as they expect continued strong sales at JLR. The company's shares have has risen by a quarter over the last 12 months.

Operating margins at JLR stood at 17.9 percent, up 390 basis points from a year ago. ($1 = 0.6100 British pounds) ($1 = 62.3600 Indian rupees) (Reporting by Aradhana Aravindan; Additional reporting by Patturaja Murugaboopathy in BANGALORE; Editing by Miral Fahmy)