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Home » Business » Third-party insurance premium hike for 2-wheelers unlikely to impact demand: ICRA

Third-party insurance premium hike for 2-wheelers unlikely to impact demand: ICRA

The increase in third-party insurance premiums is, therefore, unlikely to materially impact the two-wheeler demand, ICRA said.

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Third-party insurance premium hike for 2-wheelers unlikely to impact demand: ICRA

The upward revision in the third-party insurance premium for two-wheelers, which has come into force from June 1, is unlikely to materially impact the demand, credit rating agency ICRA said on Friday.

ICRA said it expects a 7-10 percent year-on-year volume growth in the two-wheeler industry this fiscal, despite inflationary pressures and elongated semiconductors shortage due to the Russia-Ukraine war.

After a two-year moratorium due to the COVID-19 pandemic, third-party insurance premium rates have been hiked between 15-20 percent for the premium category (more than 150 cc category).

However, the entry-level motorcycles and scooters (75 cc-150 cc), which account for 89 percent of the overall two-wheeler volume, has been spared any hike.

The increase in third-party insurance premiums is, therefore, unlikely to materially impact the two-wheeler demand, ICRA said.

Moreover, given the fact that the less than 1 percent increase in road price for the premium segment on account of the rate hike is also not significant, the rate hike is unlikely to have a major impact on consumer sentiments and comes as a relief for the industry, which has been grappling with muted demand, it stated.

Domestic two-wheeler industry volumes contracted for a third consecutive year in FY2022, with the consumer sentiments remaining muted. The cost of ownership of a two-wheeler has been steadily increasing over the years, thereby impacting affordability, said Rohan Kanwar Gupta, Vice President, Corporate Ratings, ICRA.

”Original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) have been forced to hike prices on account of multiple factors such as raw material hardening, transition to stringent emission norms, and changes mandated by regulations, especially with regards to safety standards.

”In FY2022, even as there was no impact of regulatory notifications on prices, the OEMs had to pass on raw material hardening impact through multiple price hikes. As a result, enhanced cost of acquisition coupled with heightened crude prices have led to a significant increase in the cost of the ownership,” said Gupta.

Noting that aided by a recovery in rural sentiments post a healthy rabi harvest and pent up demand for festivals and weddings, wholesale volumes of motorcycles posed a recovery in April and May; ICRA said, reopening of education institutes and reversal in work-from-home trends in corporate India also supported the scooter offtake, thereby raising hopes of recovery in prospects of the two-wheeler industry.

As demand remains fragile, a further increase in the cost of acquisition could have constrained demand recovery for 2Ws in the near term, the rating agency said, adding, that the fact that the entry-level two-wheeler segment has been left out of the insurance price hike, comes as a relief for the industry.

Even as inflationary pressures and elongated semiconductor chip shortage due to the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict continue to remain headwinds for the industry, a broader vaccination coverage, reopening of education institutes and corporates; and expectations of normal monsoon, all coupled with a low base, are expected to drive a 7-10 percent year-on-year volumes growth for the industry in FY2023.

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