Business Standard

Covid-19 washes out 6 years of growth in auto sales: SIAM data

- SHALLY SETH MOHILE Mumbai, 12 April

Automobile (auto) sales across segments in India — the world’s fifth largest market — slipped to a six-year low in the year ended in March, auto industry body Society of Indian Automobile Manufactur­ers (Siam) said on Monday. Besides the pandemic which exacerbate­d sluggish sales, a structural slowdown, led by a slew of regulatory changes, coupled with a sputtering economy, had put auto sales in the slow lane in 2019-20. Auto companies are now readying for yet another tough year — the third in a row — amid the raging virus and restrictio­ns.

The five-year (2015-16 to 2020-21, or FY21) compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of the overall auto industry is now negative at 2 per cent, against 5.7-per cent growth it saw in the previous five years (from 201011 to 2015-16).

The decadal growth in the auto industry has now slowed from 12.8 per cent to 1.8 per cent, indicating there is a lot more to the slowdown, and that pandemic alone cannot be blamed for the multi-year lows each segment has seen in FY21.

“On the sales front, a deep structural slowdown in the industry even before the pandemic, combined with the impact of Covid-19 in FY21, has pushed all vehicle segments back by many years. Recovery from here will require time and effort by all stakeholde­rs,” said Kenichi Ayukawa, president, Siam, in a statement.

There is uncertaint­y in the value chain owing to shortage of semiconduc­tors, lockdowns, and raw material, he said, adding that, “in an environmen­t of uncertaint­y, instead of trying to predict the future, we will all work hard to create it”.

But analysts remain positive about the road ahead. They believe the fundamenta­ls of the market remain strong. “Growth has been choked by the pandemic and this has also impacted CAGR,” says Mahantesh Sabarad, head retail research at SBICAP Securities. This has to be seen in the context of the emission norm change which took effect from April 2020, he said. The manufactur­ers entered the year with a higher cost structure and lower volumes as the BS-IV models had to be phased out and BS-VI models had to be ramped up gradually, he added. Sabarad expects volume recovery to quicken as the low-base effect of the past two years catches up.

FY21 was one of the worst years for the industry, with sales in each segment touching multi-year lows. With sales of 2,711,457 units in the domestic market, passenger vehicle sales touched a six-year low. Similarly, with a volume of 15,119,000 units, motorcycle and scooter sales in the domestic market were pushed back to the 2014-15 volumes. Threewheel­ers, with unit sales of 216,000, were battered the most, as volumes got dragged to a 19-year low. Commercial vehicles sales, too, declined to the lowest in 11 years.

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