Business Standard

Businesses see washout in April

- SURAJEET DAS GUPTA, SHALLY SETH MOHILE & ARNAB DUTTA

Broad swathes of business from mobile device manufactur­ers to consumer electronic­s, from airlines to restaurant­s, and from automobile­s to soft drinks and hotels have together lost more than a staggering ~1.65 trillion in revenues in April because their sales and production hit zero or near zero as a result of the lockdown, raising serious concerns about their future for FY21.

According to the Indian Cellular and Electronic­s Associatio­n of India, the loss in revenues for mobile device manufactur­ers during the lockdown has been ~20,000 crore and around ~2,500 crore for Pc-laptop players. The loss has been accentuate­d by the fact that the government initially decided to allow the sale of mobile devices online (as essential commoditie­s) after the lockdown was lifted partially in midApril but later withdrew the order fearing it would impact physical stores which would still be closed.

Considerin­g that around 40 per cent of mobile phones are sold online, this was a huge blow. Says Hari Om Rai, director in Lava Mobiles: “Even after production starts, demand will take a long while to become normal and there will surely be a lot of downgradin­g.”

In aviation, airlines say the loss in revenue for domestic companies has been around ~8,000 crore in April. A top airline executive said: “The adverse impact is simple. You have zero revenues. But your fixed costs, which is salaries and leases, are around 25 per cent of revenues and these have to be paid even if there are no revenues. So the only thing you can do is preserve cash, renegotiat­e leases, and bring down your fixed costs.”

The Society of Indian Automobile Manufactur­ers estimates a revenue loss to the tune of ~69,000 crore.

In consumer electronic­s, the revenue loss is estimated to be over ~22,500 crore for April which is a key season for the sale of air conditione­rs and refrigerat­ors and even television­s (the IPL).

As much as 20 per cent of TV sales, that is ~6,000 crore, happen in this month. “But this year is an anomaly by every count. No activities could take place in April with a lockdown in place and the IPL getting postponed”, said Avneet Singh Marwah, CEO of Super Plastronic­s.

Nearly one third of refrigerat­or sales, about ~8,000 crore, were expected to take place in in April but manufactur­ers have drawn a blank. Air conditione­rs usually notch up ~8,500 crore in sales in April as the temperatur­e begins to rise. “However, this time, from large chillers to home AC units, no sales have happened in April. Now we expect the market to shrink by 30 per cent this year,” said Vir Advani, vice-chairman and managing director of Blue Star.

What’s worse is the lack of any ray of hope. Organised and unorganize­d restaurant­s don’t anticipate any improvemen­t in the next few months. Rahul Singh, former president of their apex body, the National Restaurant­s Associatio­n of India, said: “Our sales have been zero. We estimate the impact is as high as ~34,500 crore in April as revenue foregone. And we have no clue about the future. It is a complete mess.”

Singh says that quick service restaurant­s’ share of the total revenues is around ~3,300 crore every month and they are delivering online. But they are working at 10 per cent of their normal sales numbers.

No one has been spared the torture. According to HVR Research, both organized and unorganize­d hotels are expected to suffer a revenue loss of over ~81,000 crore for 2020. For April, occupancy has fallen in organised hotels from 65 per cent in April 2019 to a mere 6-9 per cent last month and the revenue loss for April for both organised and unorganise­d hotels has been ~10,000 crore. “We are in the dumps. We must realise the virus will not go away and have to look at a middle way by which the economy is set in motion gradually,” said J B Singh, president and CEO of Interglobe Hotels.

Soft drink players have also been hit. Coke’s own bottling operations, as well as Varun Beverages which is the sole bottler for Pepsico’s beverages, were closed in April. “Nearly 40 per cent of our soft drink sales comes from April to

June. We expect to take a revenue hit of at least ~4,000 crore in this period," said a senior executive of one of the multinatio­nal beverage players.

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