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Private players were not behind in the race to increase prices. An official from JSW Steel said the company had raised prices by 4-5 per cent across its range of steel products. Ankit Miglani, director (commercial), Uttam Galva, too, confirmed the price rise his firm had taken. "We have raised prices by Rs2,500-3,000 per tonne," he said.
Delhi-based auto and consumer durables steelmaker, Bhushan Steel's director (finance) Nittin Johari said the company had followed peers and raised prices by Rs 1,500 per tonne.
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Even after the price rise, the analyst said, Indian prices are at a discount to international peers. "India might see another round of price rise in steel," he said.
Steelmakers, meanwhile, blame the increase in coking coal and iron ore prices for the surge in steel prices. An industry official said, "Coking coal prices for the current quarter have gone up by 8 per cent to $225 per tonne and is expected to touch $250 per tonne in the next few quarters."
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Arun Malhotra, senior V-P (sales and customer care), Mahindra & Mahindra said, "We will increase the price across our range of passenger and commercial vehicles shortly.
The rise will be in the range of 0.5-1.5 per cent, which translates into a weighted average increase of 1 per cent. The hike is done mainly on account of high raw material prices."Click NEXT to read on
German car company Volkswagen has already increased the prices of its Polo hatchback by a minimum of 2.9 per cent.
However, the quantum of hike is not uniform across variants could be higher on more expensive variants of the Polo.Click NEXT to read on
Tata Motors raised prices of some of its passenger vehicles, including the Indica, Indigo, Sumo Grande Safari and Xenon, in the range of Rs 3,000-15,000. The company also raised commercial vehicles prices by Rs 1,500-30,000 from January 1.
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Hyundai, on the other hand, is all set to raise its prices by 1-2 per cent across its entire offering. The company's dealers stated that the company has already intimated them about the raise, which would happen in the next two or three days.
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Korean chaebol LG is not indicating its pricing strategy yet even as rival Samsung has decided to take a 1.5-3 per cent hike in refrigerators, and a 1.5-2 per cent hike in semi-automatic washing machines with immediate effect.
Air conditioning major Voltas will also take a 5 per cent hike this month, says the company's senior vice-president for unitary products, Pradeep Bakshi.Executives at Videocon, Godrej, Sony and Panasonic couldn't be reached for their comments. But Onida's vice-president, sales and marketing, K Sriram said, he doesn't see an impact yet of the steel price rise on products.
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Samsung is also considering a price rise in air conditioners, but the quantum is being worked out.
After copper, a major constituent for most consumer durable makers, the next key component is steel, used to make metal cabinets, frames, compressors etc.
So categories that are directly impacted due to a price rise include air conditioners, refrigerators, washing machines and micro-wave ovens.
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In the last few months, most consumer durable majors have been raised prices, thanks to the upward movement in copper prices, which in the last one year has jumped from $3,500 per tonne to $9,300 per tonne on the London Metal Exchange (LME).
The average price rise across categories has been about 2-5 per cent in the last few months, say industry sources.
(Inputs from Swaraj Baggonkar & Viveat Susan Pinto)