Auto stocks see selling pressure; down up to 3% on Supreme Court order

Auto stocks see selling pressure; down up to 3% on Supreme Court order

Shares of Hero MotoCorp went down by 3.15 percent, Ashok Leyland lost 2.78 percent, Bharat Forge (1.30 percent), Tata Motors (0.70 percent), Mahindra & Mahindra (0.66 percent) and Maruti Suzuki (0.58 percent) on BSE.

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Auto stocks see selling pressure; down up to 3% on Supreme Court order

New Delhi: Auto stocks today fell by up to 3 percent after the Supreme Court banned the sale and registration of vehicles which are not compliant with BS-IV emission norms from April 1 across the country.

Representational image, Reuters

Shares of Hero MotoCorp went down by 3.15 percent, Ashok Leyland lost 2.78 percent, Bharat Forge (1.30 percent), Tata Motors (0.70 percent), Mahindra & Mahindra (0.66 percent) and Maruti Suzuki (0.58 percent) on BSE.

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Led by the weakness in these stocks, the BSE IT index too fell by 0.49 percent to end at 21,921.77.

“Market had started on a positive note but volatility emerged during the day due to verdict of Supreme Court banning sale and registration of BS-III vehicles,” said Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Financial Services Ltd.

“The passenger vehicle manufacturers have already started to manufacturer BS-IV compliant vehicles hence we do not expect any big impact on passenger vehicle manufacturers,” said Shrikant Akolkar, Research Analyst- Auto & Auto Ancillary, Angel Broking.

The apex court observed that the “health of the people is far far more important than the commercial interest of automobile manufactures”.

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A bench of Justices Madan B Lokur and Deepak Gupta prohibited registration of any vehicles which do not meet the Bharat Stage-IV emission norm standards from April 1.

The top court yesterday had reserved its verdict on pleas seeking ban on the sale and registration of BS-III compliant vehicles after April 1.

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The Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM) had earlier submitted data on manufacturing and sale of BS-III vehicles on a monthly basis from January 2016 and told the court that the companies were holding stock of around 8.24 lakh such vehicles including 96,000 commercial vehicles, over six lakh two-wheelers and around 40,000 three-wheelers.

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