« Back to article | Print this article |
The much hyped 'world's cheapest' car Nano has failed to live up to the expectations as it witnessed a massive decline in sales to 509 units in November this year compared to 3,065 units sold in the previous month.
The decline came during the month when the company had asked customers to bring back the people's car to add safety devices to prevent it from catching fire.
While the company had insisted it was not a 'recall', it said that the addition of safety devices, a lesson learnt from some of its brand new Nanos catching fire, was optional.
Addtional inputs: PTIInterestingly, Nano's sales stood at 5,520 units in September this year, up 61 per cent from the same month last year.
Even on a year-on-year basis, Nano's sales during November were down by 85 per cent over the same period last year.
In August, the sixth incident of a Nano catching fire since the car was commercially launched in March 2009, was reported in the national capital, three months after a company probe declared the car was "absolutely safe".
Click NEXT to read on
However, the company witnessed a marginal increase of one per cent in its total sales at 54,622 units the month compared to 54,108 units sold in the year-ago period.
Its total passenger and commercial vehicle sales in the domestic market stood at 50,419 units in November, a jump of one per cent from the sale of 50,114 units in November last year, according to the company statement.
Click NEXT to read on...
The number of passenger vehicles sold in November by the top seven carmakers - they constitute over 90 per cent of all sales - was 203,505, compared with 187,825 in the corresponding period last year.
Click NEXT to read on...
Tata Motors reported a 28 per cent drop in domestic sales at 16,365 vehicles in November, with most models taking a major hit.
Worst off was its Nano small car, whose sales dropped by a staggering 85 per cent over last year. Only 509 Nanos were sold in November.
Analysts say Tata's announcement inviting customers to bring in their cars for retrofits to safeguard against fire was one key reason for the poor sales figures.
In October, Tata had sold 3,650 Nanos. Indica sales fell by 37 per cent to 5,716 vehicles, while the Indigo range recorded only a marginal increase.
Click NEXT to read on
To a question as to why Nano sales dropped so precipitously, the company hinted at the fact that open sales of the vehicle were limited to only five states through most of November.
"Sales of the Tata Nano in states where we have begun open sales are increasing every month," a company official said.
As a result, the company recorded a 19 per cent decline in overall sales. This, despite the fact that domestic sales grew by 12 per cent in the month.
Click NEXT to read on
However, the company has been seeing a steady fall in exports because its key European market has not rebounded.
Click NEXT to read on
It saw a healthy growth in overall sales, which went up by 28 per cent in November despite a 12.2 per cent decline in exports.
Click NEXT to read on
"I don't see the export market - especially Europe - reviving this year. So, we have been shifting to newer markets. But the domestic market has been booming, so we have nothing to complain about," said R C Bhargava, chairman, Maruti Suzuki.
Click NEXT to read on
"The cumulative sales numbers have been good so far, but going ahead there will be moderation in the growth rates the industry has been registering. While consumer confidence stands high, there could be a liquidity squeeze in the economy because of inflation, which may affect auto sales," he said.
Click NEXT to read on
Mahindra & Mahindra reported a 12 per cent growth in passenger vehicle sales at 12,323 units in November.