All in all, the
wholesales (dispatches to dealers) of PVs reached 3,38,341 units in April
(3,32,468 units), a year-on-year growth
of 1.77 per cent.
“We have started on a
very high base this year...right now, the country is going through elections
and there is a model code of conduct. During the elections, the markets are a
little muted. Once elections are over, I
think we will be seeing a different market,” Partho Banerjee, Senior
Executive Officer, Marketing & Sales, MSIL, told reporters.
The country’s
second-largest PV maker HMIL reported domestic sales of 50,201 units (49,701
units) in April, a marginal (1 per cent) y-o-y growth.
“The numbers are as
expected. Although it is very difficult to predict, this flattish to 2-3 per cent growth will continue month on month.
This is very much in line with what we said in the end of January because there
were uncertainties on account of geopolitics, interest rates and elections. So
while these (numbers) are unpredictable, they were all anticipated,” Tarun
Garg, Chief Operating Officer, HMIL, said.
He added that there
are new launches on a regular basis, so there wouldn’t be any negative impact
in the market. “In 2022-23, we grew 20 per cent after Covid. And then we grew 8
per cent over that last year...so India has had exceptional two years of growth
and there are still so many countries in the world which have not yet reached
the pre-Covid level,” Garg ad
In the two-wheeler
segment, TVS Motor Company grew 29 per cent year on year in its domestic sales
to 3,01,449 units (2,32,956 units) in April. Suzuki Motorcycle India also
reported a y-o-y growth of 31 per cent in its domestic sales to 88,067 units
(67,259 units).
Royal Enfield,
however, reported single-digit growth (9 per cent) to 75,038 units (68,881
units) in April. In the commercial
vehicle segment also, most of the manufacturers have reported growth