
Jaguar XJ
With every automotive manufacturer posting record sales figures, you wouldn't believe that just 12 months ago they were buckling over from the proverbial kick in the gonads. Today they are falling over themselves to add fresh capacities and churn out more cars for the insatiable Indian car buyer.
The Auto Expo in January will give the clearest indication yet of how big India is set to be on the world's automotive map. In fact, the Auto Expo is set to rival some of the glitziest auto shows for size and scale, dwarfing the likes of the Tokyo Motor Show and setting the tone for 2010: a year that's expected to be the best ever as far as the Indian automotive story is concerned. So what will we be driving in 2010?
Compact MPVs



Of greater significance is the emergence of the compact-MPV. VW, Toyota and Nissan will follow up on their hatchbacks with not just a sedan based on the same platform but also create a new segment, the C-MPV. Smaller than the Innova, but with three rows of seats, the C-MPV is suited to Indian needs (and families). In fact, the pioneer in this segment, Maruti--forgotten the Omni and Versa?--will also have a replacement for the Versa, with better styling and a diesel engine.
Hatchbacks
When all is said and done, India is still a market driven by hatchbacks, and 2010 will see the two biggest manufacturers in the world--Toyota and Volkswagen--join the party.

We have driven the Polo on its launch, in Sardinia, Italy, and initial impressions are of a solidly built car that feels rock steady at full speed and pampers occupants with good ride quality.
The Polo will be built at VW's new plant at Chakan, near Pune, and on the same lines as the Skoda Fabia. The 1.2-liter three-cylinder petrol is carried over from the Fabia while on the diesel front it will get a brand new 1.2-liter Turbocharged Direct Injection common-rail diesel (which will make its way into the Fabia). In fact, the main challenge VW will face is pricing vis-Ã -vis the Fabia; Skoda will have to reduce its price to make way for the Polo over it.
Toyota, on the other hand, has been massively hit by the recession. Last year it posted its first loss in 70 years: a staggering $1.7 billion. The only new investment Toyota has committed has been India and at the Auto Expo the wraps will be taken off Toyota's first small car for India.
Code-named Project EFC, it will be sold in BRIC countries, but India will be the lead market. Engineers have benchmarked it against the Maruti Suzuki Swift. Details are sketchy but Toyota insists the car will not start a price war; instead it will have space and quality to justify its premium. The expected launch date is set for late in 2010.

Further headaches for established players in this segment--Maruti, Hyundai and Tata Motors--will come courtesy of two price warriors: the Ford Figo and the Chevrolet Beat. The Figo is based on the current Ikon/Fiesta/Fusion platform (which will give the car a great cost advantage) but with better space efficiency and improved ride and handling.
GM's Indian dealers will have a lot to cheer about with Beat, the next-generation Spark/Matiz developed by the erstwhile Daewoo in South Korea, sporting aggressive styling and much better interiors. However, in the best Maruti-inspired tradition, the Beat will not replace the current Spark. Instead, the Spark will get a smaller 800cc engine and prices will be chopped to slot in below the Alto, taking the price excruciatingly close to the Nano! The Spark will also have an electric variant, jointly developed with Reva.
Luxury Cars

Jaguar and Land Rover might be operating out of a solitary showroom in Mumbai, but Tata Motors has huge plans for its crown jewels. Taking on the might of Germany will be the new XJ. Why buy an XJ over an Audi, BMW or Mercedes? Only one reason: its unique and refreshing Britishness, which contrasts sharply with the steadfast Germanic aura of its rivals. The XJ is massively into visual drama. It's a look-at-me car with no subtlety, interiors that are pure theatre designed to mimic Riva speedboats, and jewel-like fittings that will make your eyes pop.

But if this baby is too cheap for you, Bentley will happily relieve you of more Rs: You'll fork over 4 crore (more if you go mad with the options list) for the Mulsanne. It's Bentley's Rolls-Royce Phantom rival and they justify the price with two words: "hand made." As you'd expect, it lacks for absolutely nothing: not in the engine (it's got a monumental 6.75-liter V8, assembled by hand), the interiors (everything is bespoke and handmade), or the body (again finished by hand and polished to mirror sheen). It's the gold standard if you're being chauffeur-driven.

If you like your cars sporty, but also a touch mainstream, the new BMW 5 Series will do perfectly well for you when it comes to India in July 2010. Its designers have gone all conservative: no controversial elements to stoke endless pub debates. Instead, you get the design genes of the new 7 Series: clean sides with a tightly pinched shoulder line and a subtle interplay of light and shadows, a very sophisticated front suspension setup for even better driving dynamics, better engines, an exceedingly handsome cabin and even more space at the rear. Perfect place to see what fellow Forbes India rich listers are up to.
D-segment Sedans
The ix35 isn't the only expensive Hyundai you'll be able to buy. Early in the year, there'll be an all-new Sonata. "All-new" really means all new: The styling is radical and overflowing with design flourishes, unlike anything else sporting the Hyundai badge: better-quality interiors and better petrol and diesel engines. And this Sonata can take corners with some authority. A rather fetching proposition, provided you can get over the lack of snob value from that Hyundai badge.

It's a problem that Volkswagen will not face, now that every media channel is being bombarded with VW advertising. No, the only problem the new Passat and new Jetta will face when they come next year is a weak dealer network. And the premium every VW demands over a Skoda.
Sports Utility Vehicles

Ditto for the BMW X1, a scaled-down X3 that has absolutely no off-road pretensions. A good thing, that; when was the last time you saw a Rs. 25 lakh SUV being off-roaded? And Audi will follow the same logic by shrinking the Q5 and giving us the Q3.

Land Rover will open more showrooms and make its entire range of acclaimed SUVs--Discover 4, Freelander 2, Range Rover and Range Rover Sport--available to Forbes India readers across the country. Hyundai, too, will try to horn in, with the ix35, while the Santa Fe is also under evaluation. Their only stumbling block: Hyundai is now firmly perceived as a hatchback company, which means the affluent won't spend big money on the brand here.
Green Cars
For obvious pricing- and infrastructure-related issues, electric cars haven't been a success in India. Reva is more famous, and sells more cars, in Europe than it does in India. The next-generation Revas--the NXG and NXR--won't change that, but with their improved styling (no longer looking like something Herbert would drive down Sesame Street), packaging (four might just about fit in) and range, and the noises the government is making about reducing taxes and duties on eco-friendly vehicles, we might just see more Revas on the road.

Supercars
India now has a Forbes rich list; by extension, we ought to have a Ferrari showroom. That will come next year. Ferrari has been mulling an Indian launch for some time now and their discussions with their Indian partner, Tata Motors, are in the final stages, paving the way for the prancing horse to gallop into India. The entire Ferrari range will be sold here: the 612 Scaglietti (two of which were driven around the country two years ago to introduce India to Ferrari); the 599 GTB Fiorano (one of the best grand touring cars money can buy); the California (the softest car in the range with a folding hardtop, very popular with women) and the 458 Italia that's just been launched. The Italia is arguably the most desirable supercar on the planet, mating jaw-dropping styling with neck-snapping performance. The Ferrari badge
just adds to the aura.

Sports Cars

source: forbes