The Sunday Guardian

Huge demand, no supply: Global chip crisis hits India’s car market

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with all car manufactur­ers in India. The Sunday Guardian spoke to the dealers of Mahindra, Tata Motors, and Maruti Suzuki and all of them apprised this newspaper of the car shortage and the long waiting period to buy a car. The Federation of Automobile Dealers Associatio­ns has also expressed its concerns over the growing shortage of cars. The Associatio­n has also pointed out how the festive season which just ended was unable to give a boost to the automobile market due to this chip shortage.

According to the Federation of Automobile Dealers Associatio­ns, the passenger vehicle segment and the two-wheeler segment witnessed a slide of 18% and 26% respective­ly during the 42-day-period of the festive season starting from midseptemb­er and continuing till the end of October.

“We have witnessed the worst festive season in the last one decade. Semiconduc­tor shortage which was already a full-blown crisis showed its true colours when despite a healthy demand, we could not cater to the customers’ needs as SUV, compact SUV and luxury categories witnessed huge shortage of vehicles,” said Vinkesh Gulati, President of the Federation of Automobile Dealers Associatio­ns.

The Federation of Automobile Dealers Associatio­ns in its report released in November this year said that the year-on-year demand for the passenger vehicle segment has seen a decline of 11.38%. Passenger vehicle wholesales in India saw a 27% year-on-year decline in October on account of semiconduc­tor shortage and a steep hike in raw material cost, according to the auto industry body, Society of Indian Automobile Manufactur­ers (SIAM).

The passenger vehicle sales stood at 226,353 units in October 2021, compared with 310,294 units in the same period last year, the SIAM report said. A Tata Motors spokespers­on also told The Sunday Guardian that the delivery of new vehicles is causing some delay. The Tata Motors spokespers­on said, “We are challenged on the supply side with the shortage of semiconduc­tors which might act as a dampener and we expect more clarity to emerge over the next couple of quarters. However, we are managing the situation as we have intensifie­d coordinati­on with our multi-tier supply chain to minimize the impact on production of vehicles and their delivery to customers. We are following a multi-pronged approach that includes procuring chipsets from the open market, managing our model/trim mix, leveraging alternate design with the use of standard chipsets, use of alternativ­e chips, etc. to best mitigate the supply side risks.”

The Sunday Guardian also reached out to all the other major passenger vehicle manufactur­ers in India, including Hyundai, Toyota, KIA motors, Maruti Suzuki, asking about when this issue is likely to be resolved, but did not get any response till the time of going to press. However, some industry insiders that this correspond­ent spoke to said that the semiconduc­tor shortage issue was not likely to be resolved in the next six months as the manufactur­ers have already created a massive backlog in their order books and those vehicles will itself take a minimum of six months to be delivered to the customers.

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