New Delhi: The ban on BS-III vehicles imposed by the Supreme Court will cost commercial vehicle and two-wheeler makers nearly Rs3,000 crore, according to market research firm Crisil.
In a report, Crisil Research said the ban would also result in commercial vehicle makers taking a hit of up to Rs2,500 crore while the same for two-wheeler makers could be Rs460-480 crore. It said commercial vehicle (CV) makers disposed of over half their stock of BS-III vehicles before the Supreme Court-set 1 April 2017, deadline.
“The discounts and incentives on vehicles sold till March 31, 2017, are expected to have cost them about Rs1,200 crore. Additionally, Rs1,300 crore would be incurred to dispose of the unsold inventory,” Crisil Research said.
The impact of this on the EBIDTA margins of listed truck makers (Ashok Leyland and Tata Motors’ standalone) will be around 2.5% of their revenues, it said.
“The impact would be staggered across fiscals 2017 and 2018, because the unsold inventory will have to be brought back from dealerships and then dealt with,” the report added.
It further said leading CV makers had continued manufacturing BS-III vehicles all the way to March in anticipation of strong buying in the closing weeks of the fiscal year, given price hikes of 8-10% expected on BS-IV vehicles.
Indeed, for want of clarity on ban on production or registration, the industry had expected some BS-III trucks to be sold even in April, the report added.
“This had bloated up inventories. When the Supreme Court ruling came, CV dealers’ inventory at risk was around 97,000 units (equivalent to 1.7 months of sales) valued at Rs11,600 crore,” it said.
The industry is expected to have sold around 55% of this in the last three days of March by offering discounts of 20-40% on the sticker price compared with around 10% before the ruling.
Out of the additional discounts and incentives, the manufacturers are likely to bear about 80% and their dealers the rest, it said.
On the unsold inventory, the report said: “We estimate the remaining 40,000-45,000 units of unsold inventory to be returned in the upcoming months, mainly comprising less-popular models since there were instances of supply shortage in some popular BS-III models.”
The companies may upgrade them for resale or dismantle vehicles for spares or incur higher working capital for holding the inventory until it is exported, which could take 5-6 months, it added.
On the two-wheeler front, Crisil Research said when the ruling came, inventory at risk was at 670,000 units, amounting to Rs3,800 crore (half-a-month of sales).
However, discounts and freebies of 10-30% on the vehicle price helped the dealers clear most of the stock in the last three days of March.
While OEMs provided for the incentives, dealers also sweetened the deals by providing free insurance.
“The total discounts provided work out to nearly Rs600 crore, where the manufacturers would be sharing the bulk of the impact (over 70% of the incentives), taking a total hit of Rs460-480 crore,” it said.
This would cause a 150-200bps erosion in the aggregate fourth-quarter EBITDA margins of listed players (Hero, Bajaj and TVS) in fiscal 2017, with the industry leader taking a higher impact due to its large BS-III inventory, the report said.
“As for three-wheeler makers, since the BS-III inventory could not be cleared due to the limited number of permits, we expect a marginal impact for Piaggio and TVS. Bajaj would be unscathed as it had already transitioned to BS-IV,” Crisil Research said.
For passenger vehicles, it said with the BS-III inventory at just 16,000 units, as players had transitioned to BS-IV much earlier, the impact was always expected to be marginal.
“On top of it, given the steep discounts offered in the last three days of the month, much of this stock is expected to have been cleared,” it said.
On 29 March, observing that health of the people is “far, far more important” than the commercial interests of the manufacturers, the Supreme Court banned sales of BS-III vehicles in the country from 1 April. The ban impacted over 8 lakh vehicles.