Automobile dealers are touted to clock their fastest revenue growth in three fiscals—with sales accelerating 20%-25% on-year on the back of 12%-14% volume growth, rating agency CRISIL says in a note. CRISIL attributes this imminent record growth on five cylinders which have been firing well— increasing preference for personal mobility, higher economic activity, easing supply-side constraints, shift in product mix towards higher priced vehicles, and price hikes of 5%-7%.

“Higher vehicle sales and greater contribution of the more-profitable ancillary revenue (service, spare parts, and insurance) to 10%-12% of total income in fiscal 2023 from 8%-9% last fiscal will help stabilise operating margin at 3%-5% (4% in fiscal 2022),” say analysts at CRISIL. This could lead to healthier credit risk profiles, a study of 113 automobile dealers rated by CRISIL Ratings shows. Recovery in revenue, however, will not be uniform across dealership segments. While passenger vehicle (PV) dealers will continue to show robust recovery, commercial vehicle (CV) and two-wheeler (2W) dealers will grow on a lower base due to subdued sales over the last two to three fiscals.

“With the strong recovery in sales, the operating profitability of PV and CV dealers will climb back to pre-pandemic levels of 4%-5%, while the margins of 2W dealers will rise gradually to 3%-4% this fiscal (against 4% pre-pandemic),” says Gautam Shahi, director, CRISIL Ratings. PV dealers will see strong volume growth of 17%-19% in the current fiscal in line with improved original equipment manufacturer (OEM) growth outlook and increasing average realisation per vehicle due to a higher proportion of higher-priced utility vehicle sales, leading to overall revenue growth of 24%-26%. For CV dealers, volume growth will be 20%-22%, on the back of a revival in economic activity, higher replacement demand, and the government’s infrastructure push. Price hikes of 4%-5%, following higher input costs, will push overall revenue growth in the CV segment to 25%-27%.

Though reopening of educational institutes and offices have been tailwinds for 2W sales growth this fiscal, slower recovery in rural demand, price hikes, and competition from electric two-wheelers will continue to constrain volume growth to 9%-11%, leading to modest revenue growth of 15%-18% on a low base of fiscal 2022. “Better revenue and profitability growth should increase cash accrual of auto dealers in fiscal 2023 which, along with an expected reduction in inventory following higher demand, will help auto dealers reduce working capital costs. Higher cash flows, lower inventory cost and strengthening balance sheets will improve debt metrics of auto dealers this fiscal,” says Sushant Sarode, associate director, CRISIL Ratings.

Retail auto registrations—which plunged in fiscal 2021 and revived partially in fiscal 2022—continued to recover in the first five months (April-August) of this fiscal with a recovery in retail demand and the easing of semiconductor shortages. However, CRISIL says that volume, monsoon trend, and inventory of dealers remain key monitorables. Cumulatively, auto retail registration volumes, which declined by 3.1% in FY20, crashed to degrowth of 29.7% in FY21. In FY22, it grew by 7%, albeit on a lower base. Between April and August, auto retail registration volumes grew by 39.5%.

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