With weak passenger
vehicles retail demand in February, Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEM) are
expected to increase discounts on their product offerings starting in March. On top of the discounts automobile dealers will
likely offer additional benefits to the consumers to clear passenger vehicle
inventory that has been piling up at their end. “We started to see the dip in
sales towards the end of January after the price hike was implemented. The
present discounts on specific models start from ₹2,000 and go upto ₹30,000.
However, the discounts will increase in March. We are also offering additional freebies to consumers to promote
vehicle sales and clear inventory,” said an automobile dealer. According to
analysts, pre-buying of passenger vehicles and the fall in stock markets have
resulted in the softness in demand. In February discounts on major models
across companies have ranged from ₹2,500-75,000, some of them showing
substantial increase from January, according to analyst data.
“The sales and walk-ins in February in the first two weeks have been
subdued. The response has been less than what was anticipated by the dealers.
With the tax relief, we expect the passenger vehicle sales to pick up in March
and April,” C S Vigneshwar, Federation Of Automobile Dealers Association (FADA)
President told businessline.
Discounts include cash discounts, exchange
discounts and other incentives.
While inventory levels have come off the peak of
80-85 days seen after the festive season, at current levels of 40-plus days,
dealers are struggling to get the inventory moving off their showrooms.
Indian automobile
companies implemented price hikes of up to 3 per cent on passenger vehicles in
January 2025. The automobile
industry reported a tepid increase in wholsesales in February at 3,81,000 units
as compared to 3,72,000 units in the same month last year, according to the
data released so far by individual companies. “The February retail sales are
one of the weakest over the past few years with a double-digit decline across
segments,” Nomura said in a note. According to its channel checks it has
estimated 14 per cent fall in passenger vehicle, 12 per cent fall in 2-wheelers
and 11 per cent decline in sales of trucks. Its dealer surveys showed that
underlying retail demand was slow. Pointing out that dealer margins were under
pressure, it said, “we see a risk of rising discounts from March-2025 onwards.”
“We believe there was
pre-buying with heavy discount-led sales by OEMs in December 2024, followed by
price hikes from January/February 2025, a fall in stock markets could have
impacted consumer sentiment,” it pointed out.
Earlier in 2024, automobile dealers had offered
discounts upto ₹70,000 on passenger vehicles amid high inventory stocks.