Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

PV sales decline 8% in November

- Amit Panday amit.p1@livemint.com ■

MUMBAI: Car sales in India are expected to have fallen 8% yearon-year (y-o-y) in November, contractin­g from an uptick seen during the festival month of October.

Sales data issued by Maruti Suzuki India Ltd, Hyundai Motor India Ltd, Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd (M&M), Tata Motors Ltd, Honda Cars India Ltd and Volkswagen India showed combined sales of 218,166 cars last month, falling from 236,276 units sold by the same companies a year earlier.

Sales are measured as wholesales or factory dispatches to dealership­s. The sales performanc­e was, however, better than analysts’ expectatio­ns of a 10-12% decline.

Sales at market leader Maruti fell 3% y-o-y to 139,133 units last month from 143,890 units a year earlier.

Maruti, which sold 144,277 vehicles in the local market in October, fared better-than-expected in November, said analysts. Sales of Maruti’s mini and compact small cars grew 2% y-o-y to 104,319 units last month. The growth has been largely driven by demand for models such as Swift, New WagonR and the Baleno premium hatchback.

“November wholesales are better than expected. There is a slight revival for the BS-IV diesel cars as the demand continues to be driven by discounts and promotiona­l offers, which were given during the festive season,” said Gaurav Vangaal, country lead, light vehicle production forecastin­g, IHS Markit. “This has worked well to reduce inventory for Maruti Suzuki. Meanwhile, incrementa­l growth is coming on the back of new launches such as the XL6, S-Presso, New WagonR”.

New models helped Hyundai, the second-largest carmaker, post a 2% y-o-y growth in domestic sales last month at 44,600 vehicles. “Hyundai’s performanc­e is primarily driven by the demand for its new products such as the Venue compact sport-utility vehicle and i10 Nios hatchback,” said Vangaal.

M&M reported total domestic passenger vehicle sales of 14,637 units, a 10% decline y-o-y. Veejay Ram Nakra, chief of sales and marketing, automotive division, M&M, expects December to pan out better. “The month post festive season is historical­ly a lean month for the automotive industry. Consumer demand, especially for passenger vehicles, typically picks up in the yearend that is in December,” he said.

Vangaal, however, cautioned that annual plant shutdowns for maintenanc­e at all major car manufactur­ers would impact December sales.

 ?? Source: Company data ??
Source: Company data

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