The fifth reason is that when carmakers and dealerships offer high discounts and price cuts to clear stock for an extended period of time, consumers tend to postpone their buying decisions and instead wait in anticipation of prices falling further, or deeper discounts in the future.
That too tends to have a spiralling impact on consumer demand.
As a result of some or all of these factors, dealerships are now reporting surging inventory levels that are hitting new highs with every passing month. According to data collected by the Federation of Automobile Dealers Associations (FADA), inventory levels at car dealerships, which touched an all-time high of 67 days in June, surged to 72 days in July, and to 75 days in August.
Last month, inventories worth an estimated Rs 77,000 crore or higher were sitting idle at auto dealerships, with a number of these dealers reporting problems in moving vehicles from their yards to customers’ hands, according to FADA.
For auto dealers, inventory pile-ups have a carrying cost, given that limited stock yards at the dealerships are filled up with cars that are not selling. At the same time, they do not have space to accommodate the newer and faster-moving models dispatched by carmakers. It is only a matter of time that the stockyard inventory problem gets transferred to carmakers from the dealerships.
To clear stocks, carmakers are offering steep discounts on models that were facing long waiting times only some months ago. High-demand SUVs such as Mahindra’s XUV700 and ScorpioN, Tata’s Harrier and Safari, Maruti Suzuki's Grand Vitara and even best-selling MPVs such as the Suzuki Ertiga are now readily available at most locations, depending on dealer inventory, and often with heavy discounts.