By Aftab Ahmed and Krishna N. Das
JAIPUR/NEW DELHI, India (Reuters) – Indian businesses are stocking up more ahead of this year’s big festival season than at any time in the last five years, expecting people whose earnings were relatively unaffected by the pandemic to spend the money they saved during months of lockdowns.
India’s biggest shopping season is at the time of the festivals of Durga Puja and Diwali, which fall 20 days apart in October-November each year. Traditionally, this is a time when houses are re-decorated, big-ticket items purchased, feasts held and gifts exchanged.
Businesses and shopkeepers expect more purchases than usual this year, beginning with Durga Puja on Thursday, because the months of lockdowns have resulted in pent-up demand.
Recent data shows that demand for diesel, power and cars has already picked up, and any resurgence of retail buying of everything from phones to furniture would bode well for India’s economy that shrank 23.9% in the quarter ended June – its steepest decline.
Brokerage firm Nomura said its India business-resumption index for the week that ended on Oct. 18 hit its highest level since the country first imposed a lockdown in late March to contain the coronavirus.
Big retailers such as Croma and Vijay Sales, both dealing mainly in electronics and home appliances, told Reuters sales in recent days indicated that this holiday season could be better than last year and that they were actually worried about tightening inventory in certain categories like entry-level laptops and high-end televisions.
The Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT) said its 70 million small businesses on average were planning for a buffer stock of around 14% this season compared with last year’s 10%, to ensure they don’t run out of goods should demand surge.
“In the last two months, despite facing a financial crunch, we have been procuring goods in anticipation that in the festive season we will have considerable footfalls,” said Praveen Khandelwal, the group’s secretary general, seated in his home-fittings shop in Delhi’s Karol Bagh area.
“Our expectation is that this will be the best Diwali for us in at least five years. Naturally, our stocks levels will be as high too.”
Customer arrivals this month have already been the highest in about seven months, hovering around 10 per shop on average – still only about a third of the normal level but expected to rise, Khandelwal said.
“CAUTIOUSLY OPTIMISTIC”
But not everyone is as enthusiastic. Shops and factories in the city of Jaipur, typically bustling with local and foreign tourists, did little business on a warm afternoon this week.
Traders there said they had laid off staff as the city’s key income source of tourism was still feeble and it did not have as many salaried people as places like Delhi.
“Until a vaccine is out, I think we will keep operating at 30-35% of pre-COVID levels,” said Suresh Tak, owner of four clothes shops and factories printing designs on fabrics.
Even Google’s mobility data from last week for West Bengal, India’s fourth-most populous state where Durga Puja is the main festival, showed that people were mainly visiting supermarkets and pharmacies, not retail and recreation facilities.
Thousands of miles away in the rural district of Satara in India’s west, Nilesh Kadam says he is trying to save as much as he can, having returned to work only recently.
“From June to August the company had given me a break as there wasn’t much work at the factory,” said the 35-year old, whose company makes steel products. “This year I am not planning to make any big-ticket purchase.”
Still, CAIT estimates Indians have amassed about 1.5 trillion rupees ($20 billion) in savings since April, a chunk of which could now be directed to holiday shopping.
Online retailers Amazon
Hindustan Unilever Ltd
“We believe the worst is behind us and we are cautiously optimistic on demand recovery,” Chairman Sanjiv Mehta said on an earnings call.
(Reporting by Aftab Ahmed and Krishna N. Das; Additional reporting by Savio Shetty, Chandini Monnappa and Rajendra Jadhav; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)