Titan sees Rs. 500 crore hit on sales this fiscal

The watch-making giant says it is the impact of govt’s move to lower transaction threshold of quoting PAN to Rs 2 lakh from Rs 5 lakh earlier.

January 07, 2016 04:50 pm | Updated September 22, 2016 10:43 pm IST - New Delhi

Jewellery and watches major Titan Co expects to take a hit of up to Rs. 500 crore this fiscal due to government’s move to lower the >transaction threshold of quoting PAN to Rs 2 lakh from Rs 5 lakh earlier .

“We would have of around Rs 400 crore to Rs 500 crore effect on our turnover. This would be loss of turnover. This is our estimate,” said Titan Co Managing Director Bhaskar Bhat.

The company has already taken a hit due to the previous limit at Rs. 5 lakh, he added without quantifying the loss.

Last month, the company had stated that it expected cash sales of jewellery items between Rs 2 lakh and Rs 5 lakh to be impacted to some extent after the government move.

Claiming that the company has not resorted to means to circumvent the rule by breaking up bill, he said: “We are suffering on account of that. We do not break up bill as one lakh, one lakh and then sell.”

In December last year, the Finance Ministry had lowered the purchase limit for quoting PAN to Rs 2 lakh per transaction from Rs 5 lakh as part of measures to curb domestic black money generation.

In Financial Year 2014-15, Titan Co had reported revenue of Rs. 11,903.21 crore.

At present, jewellery constitutes around 73 per cent, 25 per cent is from watches and rest is from eye-wear and precision engineering segment.

Titan’s watch segment is having a year-on-year growth of around 10 per cent.

“People are buying; luxury segment and premium segment is growing... However, mass market has got affected,” Bhat said.

Titan has collaborated with global information technology major HP to offer a range of smart watches.

“Our smart watches would be well designed and very good looking, you would see them in next 15—20 days,” said Bhat.

He further added that still smart watch segment in India is very small and would grow gradually.

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