Tuesday, June 1, 2021

India's Mahindra expects car sales to take two years to rebound after COVID shock

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An employee walks past a Mahindra TUV300 car at a showroom in Mumbai, India, August 30, 2016. Picture taken August 30, 2016. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui/File Photo

India’s Mahindra & Mahindra (MAHM.NS) expects it will take at least another two years for car sales to return to their pre-pandemic peaks, but a slow pace of vaccinations could hurt recovery prospects, its chief told Reuters in an interview.

Battered by the pandemic in 2020 and an economic slowdown in 2019, passenger vehicle sales in India fell to 2.7 million units in the last fiscal year – their lowest level in six years and well below the peak of 3.4 million units in fiscal year 2019. read more

Mahindra Chief Executive Officer Anish Shah said sales would rebound by fiscal year 2023 if a majority of the country’s population is inoculated and new COVID-19 cases ease, helping the economy recover.

“Getting back to full normal is going to depend on vaccinations … (else) we will always have the fear of the next wave coming in and disrupting things again,” Shah

The world’s second-most populous country has recorded 28 million cases so far, second only to the United States. Infections have surged in recent weeks, and in May India recorded its highest monthly COVID-19 death toll since the pandemic began.

Yet, only about 3% of India’s 1.3 billion people have been fully vaccinated, the lowest rate among the 10 countries with the most cases.

Car sales had started to pick up in the January-March period but a second, more deadly wave of infections forced lockdowns again. This time consumer sentiment has taken a hit and discretionary spending is likely to take longer to recover.

The virus is also spreading to rural India, which was relatively protected during the first wave and had offset the low demand automakers saw in urban centres.

Mahindra, which has 6% share of India’s passenger vehicles market and is the country’s biggest tractor maker, saw robust growth in its farm sector revenues last year but sales in the hinterlands have dipped in May, Shah said.

This time, urban and rural buyers are holding back until the crisis passes.

“This year we have seen our customers also worry about putting up money and buying anything, saying what happens in case someone (in the family) gets COVID,” he said.

Shah expects the pace of vaccinations in India to pick up in June but said if that does not happen it would be concerning.

“It is about reaching a certain point where we don’t have to get into lockdowns once more,” he said. “If that happens, we will continue to be in this phase of two steps ahead and one step back.”

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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