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Auto retail sales rise 3% in April after two months of decline: Fada
All categories, except commercial vehicles (CV), closed in the green, with two-wheelers, three-wheelers, passenger vehicles, and tractors up 2.25 per cent, 24.5 per cent, 1.5 per cent, and 7.5 per cent, respectively. However, CVs saw a 1.05 per cent year-on-year decline following OEM-led price increases against stagnant freight rates and fleet utilisation.
This comes after overall automobile retail sales declined for the second consecutive month (0.7 per cent) in March. The fall was attributed to a 2 per cent slide in two-wheeler sales, a 6 per cent drop in three-wheeler sales, and a 6 per cent decline in tractor sales.
Dealers indicate that advance purchases in March resulted in elevated carryover stocks, while holiday calendars dampened fresh enquiries and delayed conversions — particularly in the small commercial vehicle (SCV) cargo category, where price and product gaps have weighed heavily.
"In addition to the festivals, pause on the tariff war and sharp pullback by stock markets also helped in the recovery of sales in April," said C. S. Vigneshwar, president, FADA. In the PV segment, Maruti Suzuki led the surge with 138,021 units with a 39.4 per cent market share. On the other hand, Mahindra & Mahindra came in second (14 per cent), followed by Tata Motors (13 per cent), and Hyundai Motor (12.5 per cent).
'This reflects a discount-led market and elevated inventories—approximately a 50-day supply—amid cautious consumer sentiment that tempered enquiry-to-sale conversions,' he said. "Sustained SUV demand underpinned volumes even as entry-level customers remained cautious, underscoring the need for OEMs to recalibrate production and reduce stock levels to mitigate deeper discounts and carrying costs at dealerships," he added.
The rise in two-wheelers was attributed to buoyant enquiry growth in rural areas post-Rabi harvest, driven by strong crop yields, healthy reservoir levels, and a favourable monsoon outlook, while wedding-season tailwinds sustained rural offtake.
FADA expects improved numbers going ahead, as May's agricultural cycle is concluding on a strong note. 'The IMD's forecast of an above-normal southwest monsoon bodes well for rural incomes, farm-sector growth, and downstream demand, while a well-distributed rainy season is critical to containing food inflation. At the same time, Kantar's Rural Barometer and GroupM data signal heightened consumer selectivity in rural India—household spending has outpaced income growth, and inflationary pressures are tempering discretionary purchases,' Vigneshwar said.
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