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Honda Motorcycle & Scooter India, Pvt. Ltd., abbreviated as HMSI, is the wholly owned Indian subsidiary of Honda Motor Company, Limited, Japan. [4] Founded in 1999, [4] it was the fourth Honda automotive venture in India, after Kinetic Honda Motor Ltd (1984–1998), Hero Honda (1984–2011) and Honda Siel Cars India (1995–2012). [5]
Two wheelers Kolar: Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India: Two wheelers Bengaluru [11] Mahindra Reva: Passenger vehicles Bidadi: Toyota Kirloskar Motor Private Limited: Passenger vehicles Kolara [12] Scania Commercial Vehicles India Private Limited: Commercial vehicles Doddaballapura [9] TAFE Tractors: Commercial vehicles Dharwad [10] Tata Motors ...
Honda, wanting to focus only on its independent fully owned two-wheeler subsidiary, Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India (HMSI), exited Hero Honda at a discount and get over ₹ 6,400 crore (equivalent to ₹ 140 billion or US$1.7 billion in 2023) for its stake. The discount was between 30% and 50% to the current value of Honda's stake as per the ...
Kinetic and Honda parted ways in 1998 when the Firodias bought the majority stake of the joint venture from Honda. In 2008, Kinetic entered into a joint venture with Mahindra Automobiles, where Mahindra held an 80% stake. [1] By this joint venture, Mahindra acquired the two-wheeler manufacturing facilities as well as the then selling brands of ...
The T. V. S. family is an Indian business family, based in Chennai, India. The TVS Group has its principal headquarters in Madurai and international headquarters in Chennai. It has more than 50 subsidiaries across sectors.
The following is a list of motorcycle manufacturers worldwide, sorted by extant/extinct status and by country. These are producers whose motorcycles are available to the public, including both street legal as well as racetrack-only or off-road-only motorcycles.
Kinetic Honda was a joint venture between Kinetic Engineering Limited, India and Honda Motor Company, Japan. Kinetic was the first company to have a joint venture with HMSI . The partnership operated from 1984 to 1998, manufacturing two-stroke scooters in India.
On 26 January 2025, Autocar India and Ultraviolette Automotive broke the record for the Fastest Speed Achieved by an Indian Motorcycle (EV) using the Ultraviolette F99. The F99 set a record-breaking top speed of 258 kmph at the National Automotive Test Tracks (NATRAX) and the spectacle was verified and recognized by the India Book of Records. [24]