Business Standard

Commercial vehicle sales showing signs of recovery

Sales being fuelled by a pick-up in demand from agri, mining sectors

- SHALLY SETH MOHILE Mumbai, 7 October

Commercial vehicles sales, a proxy for economic activity, are seeing a sequential uptick in volumes, holding out hopes of a year-on-year (YOY) recovery. It is being fuelled by a pickup in demand from the agri, mining and constructi­on sectors, say transporte­rs and manufactur­ers.

To some extent, the sales are also being l ed by an inventory push and discountin­g by companies, said analysts.

Cumulative sales of top four companies (based on monthly sales data) — Tata Motors, Ashok Leyland, Volvo Eicher Commercial Vehicles, and Mahindra and Mahindra — dropped 2.3 per cent to 53,505 units i n September from a year ago. This is much lesser than the 17 per cent decline YOY these companies saw in August and far lesser than what it was in July and June.

Economic activity across India picked up in August and early September with high frequency indicators across mobility, logistics and electricit­y consumptio­n showing improvemen­t. However, it remains below pre- Covid levels, signaling that the economy could see double-digit contractio­n in FY21.

Bharat Benz, the fourth largest in the pecking order according to industry sources, doesn’t publish monthly numbers and only reports sales annually. Satyakam Arya, managing director and CEO and Daimler India Commercial Vehicles that sells trucks under the Bharat Benz brand, said he is encouraged by the recent uptick. The firm saw a 10 per cent YOY rise in retails in September.

Led by a severe contractio­n in economic activity, even before the pandemic, truck sales have been i n decline for over a year. The fall for medium and heavy duty ones, typically the first to decline and last to recover in a down- cycle, has been sharper.

“The demand is coming back in line with economic activity. With unlocking and resumption of normalcy, we see demand for goods picking up,” said Arya.

It’s being driven by mining and constructi­on segments and e-commerce. While e-commerce has boosted sales of smaller and light trucks used for last-mile delivery, a bumper harvest has spurred demand for medium duty and heavy commercial trucks segment from the agri sector.

This has narrowed the decline for most firms. Arya expects the CV market to reach last year ’s volumes by the fourth quarter of the current fiscal.

Transport companies are seeking comfort from revival in economic activity. They are, however, skeptical as factory output continues to be sluggish and they aren’t rushing to purchase new trucks just yet.

Says Jasjeet Sethi, CEO of TCI Supply Chain Solutions: “The capacity utilisatio­n of our fleet has reached last year ’s levels. But we haven’t taken a call on buying new trucks just yet as we are not sure whether the current trend will hold up.”

On an average, TCI purchases 150 trucks every year. But this year has been different and the company had to defer plans after the Covid19 outbreak.

Analysts share the skepticism. “It’s the LCVS (light commercial vehicle) and SCVS that are driving sales momentum. I am not sure about a recovery i n t he MHCVS (trucks) yet. Whatever improvemen­t we are seeing is largely due to an inventory push by manufactur­ers,” says Ajay Srinivasan, director, industry research, CRISIL . Capacity utilisatio­n for most fleet operators remains sub-optimal, he added.

CRISIL expects the CV market to end the year with a 25-30 per cent decline and MHCVS to close the year with a 45-60 per cent YOY drop.

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Vehicle sales in units LONG ROAD AHEAD

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