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CARE Ratings Revises Auto Sales Growth Outlook To 5-7% For FY20

Auto sales in the same period last year registered a double-digit growth at 14.5 percent.

 A Honda Motor Co. BR-V sports-utility vehicle (SUV) sits on display. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)
A Honda Motor Co. BR-V sports-utility vehicle (SUV) sits on display. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)

Automobile sales, excluding tractors is expected to grow 5-7 percent this fiscal owing to factors such as higher vehicle prices, financing issues and higher insurance cost among others, CARE Ratings said on Friday.

The agency revised its outlook after industry volume witnessed sharpest decline at 13.3 percent in April-August over the year-ago period.

The auto sales in the same period last year registered a double-digit growth at 14.5 percent, it said.

Such double-digit drop was witnessed during the same period in the fiscal 1993, when sales declined by over 21 percent year-on-year, it said.

The decline in sales in FY20 was led by a 15-20 percent price hikes due to new safety norms, higher insurance and ownership costs, liquidity crisis in the NBFC sector and increased load carrying capacity for medium and heavy commercial vehicles that led to high inventories causing slow movement in movement of vehicles, Care Rating said.

“We have therefore revised our outlook for overall auto sales (excluding tractors) to 5-7 percent for FY20,” it said.

However, in August, the sales of passenger cars and three wheelers have witnessed growth of about 1.8 percent and 9 percent, respectively, on month-on-month basis, while the decline in sales of commercial vehicles and two wheelers have narrowed down to 7.4 percent and 0.3 percent month-on-month, respectively, as against a decline of 17.5 percent and 6.6 percent during the previous month, the rating agency said.

The sales growth during the period was largely restricted on account of weak demand for commercial vehicles and passenger vehicles registering a double-digit decline of 21.5 percent and 18.8 percent year-on-year while decline in sales of two and three wheelers segment was restricted to 12.2 percent during the month.

“Going forward, we expect demand to continue to remain muted during Q2FY20 and pick up only by Q3FY20 and continue in Q4FY20 with various planned product launches, festival demand and pre-buying of automobiles before the implementation of BS-VI norms from April 1, 2020,” Care said.

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