Giving a break-up of the impact on CV makers, research firm Crisil said the companies which have sold a little over half of their BS-III inventory by March 31, have lost Rs 1,200 crore on discounts and incentives and Rs 1,300 crore more to dispose of the unsold inventory.
On the impact of this on the Ebidta margins of listed truck makers (Ashok Leyland and Tata Motors' standalone), the report says this is equal to 2.5 per cent of their revenue.
For the just concluded fiscal 2017, the BS-III discounts to crimp Ebitda margins by 100 bps.
On the day of the final ruling the CV industry was left with inventories of around 97,000 units (equivalent to 1.7 months of sales) valued at Rs 11,600 crore.
"The industry is expected to have sold around 55 per cent of this in the last three days of March by offering discounts of 20-40 per cent on the sticker price compared with 10 per cent before the ruling. These discounts and incentives are expected to have cost about Rs 1,200 crore of which the truck makers are likely to bear about 80 per cent and their dealers the rest.
In fiscal 2016, margins peaked at 7.3 per cent and were trending 200 bps below in fiscal 2017 owing to subdued sales and rising raw material prices.
"We estimate that the remaining 40,000-45,000 units of unsold inventory to be returned in the upcoming months, mainly comprising less-popular models. This will entail an additional Rs 1,300 crore loss on them," says the report.
But recalling the unsold inventory from dealers and upgrading to BS-IV is expected to cost north of 12-15 per cent of the vehicle price, excluding the cost and hassle of reverse logistics and additional labour costs.
Assuming truck makers would incur an additional Rs 3-4 lakh per vehicle on reverse logistics and remodelling to BS-IV, it would mean an additional expense of Rs 1,300 crore, it says.
April sales will be hit as dealers return their BS-III inventory and exchange them for BS-IV vehicles. With the pre- buying momentum gone and BS-IV vehicles priced higher, sales will be subdued in April despite dealers looking to stock up to normal levels.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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