Hindustan Times (East UP)

PV sales remain on the road to recovery in Mar

PV retail sales rose by 10.11% on a m-o-m basis to 279,745 units, shows FADA data

- Malyaban Ghosh malyaban.g@livemint.com MINT

NEW DELHI: Retail sales of cars and utility vehicles continued to improve in March on the back of sustained improvemen­t in economic activity, despite the surge in Covid-19 cases, and a shift in customer preference towards personal mobility to avoid coronaviru­s infection. A low base effect also aided the growth in passenger vehicle (PV) sales during the last month of FY21.

Showroom sales of passenger vehicles increased by 10.11% on a month-on-month (m-o-m) basis to 279,745 units during March, according to sales data released by the Federation of Automobile Dealers Associatio­ns (FADA). Sales were also boosted by the long waiting period on popular products because of a demandsupp­ly mismatch.

Retails of passenger vehicles increased by 28.39% from March last year, when sales came to a halt because of the lockdown measures imposed to contain the spread of the Covid -19 pandemic. Operations had remained suspended till the beginning of May and in some cases early June.

Tractors and passenger vehicles were the only two categories that saw double-digit growth, and the lack of growth in other categories can be associated with multiple factors such as the low base of last year, transition from BS-IV to BS-VI norms and India going under total lockdown, said Vinkesh Gulati, president, FADA.

“A global shortage of wafers, which is an input for making semiconduc­tors, continued to linger around and kept the waiting period for passenger vehicles as high as seven months. According to a FADA survey, 47% of passenger vehicle dealers said they lost more than 20% sales because of supply side constraint­s,” Gulati said.

Retails of commercial vehicles continue to show signs of a pick-up after more than two years, on the back of a faster recovery in economic activity, albeit on a low base. Showroom sales of commercial vehicles increased by 14.15% m-o-m to 63,372 units.

Two-wheeler manufactur­ers witnessed a 9.5% increase in retail sales to 1,195,445 units as customers flocked to showrooms before an expected increase in prices of motorcycle­s and scooters from April. With the resumption of public transport, sales of entry-level motorcycle­s have softened over the past three months in the rural and semi-urban markets.

On a year-on-year (y-o-y) basis, sales declined by 35.26% since some of the BS-IV compliant vehicles sold in March could not be registered because of the lockdown and were registered later with the permission of the Supreme Court.

According to Mitul Shah, head of research, Reliance Securities, “Automobile vehicle registrati­on data indicates double-digit decline on a y-o-y basis, though it improved m-o-m and the next two months are critical in terms of how the Covid situation takes shape and its impact on various sectors.”

“There are clear visible signs of a slowdown in the twowheeler segment, while passenger vehicle segment volumes are impacted by the supply constraint­s of key components. Commercial vehicles also exhibit improvemen­t every month by reporting lower decline. Rising Covid cases started taking a toll on the automobile industry since the second half of March,” Shah added.

 ??  ?? A global shortage of wafers kept the waiting period for PVs as high as seven months, FADA said.
A global shortage of wafers kept the waiting period for PVs as high as seven months, FADA said.

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