Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Recon car registrati­ons surge in January

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Sri Lanka’s pre-owned or reconditio­ned car registrati­ons hit a 2-year high in January amid slightly eased interest rates and banks and finance companies racing to grab the largest share of the vehicle leasing market with very attractive offers.

According to the monthly vehicle registrati­ons tracked by JB Securities Private Limited, a leading stock broking and research firm, pre-owned car registrati­ons shot up to 4,466 units in January from 2,638 units in December and significan­tly up from 1,149 units 12 months ago.

“Suzuki accounted for 2,777 units of which 1,883 were Wagon R followed by Toyota which accounted for 1,257 of which 760 units were 1L Vitz.

Financing share was 56.6 percent down from the mid 60s the previous month indicative that much of the growth is being funded through cash purchases or non-collateral­ized financing, e.g. personal loans.

Eighty four percent of volumes are in small cars with engines less than 1L indicative of the distortion of the playing field due to the unit method that favours small engines irrespecti­ve of value”, said JB Securities Managing Director Murtaza Jefferjee.

Meanwhile, the brand new cars saw 840 registrati­ons, up from 756 units a month ago but down from 1,149 units a year earlier. “The segment is dominated by small cars, which account for 88 percent of the total; Suzuki/maruti accounted for 252 units of which 114 units were Wagon R imported by the agents. Toyota is showing steady growth with its Wigo model registerin­g 55 units, which is a 1L petrol engine small car that is manufactur­ed in Indonesia and marketed locally for Rs. 3.4 million,” Jafferjee added.

In a notable developmen­t, premium car registrati­ons surged to 206 units in January from a mere 53 units in December and 67 units 12 months ago.

Meanwhile, electric cars recorded 18 units in January up from 6 units in December but significan­tly down from 40 units 12 months ago. Nissan Leaf accounted for 16 units.

Sri Lanka’s Central Bank in February eased the loan-to-value ratio for electric vehicles and several other categories of vehicles up to 90 percent. The total vehicle registrati­ons during January reached 5,306 units, significan­tly up from 3,394 units in December and 3,487 units 12 months ago.

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