New Delhi: Mahindra Logistics saw a "significant" impact on its business in the last two months due to lockdowns in various states, but now it is back on "stronger" recovery path and expecting this momentum to further consolidate during the second half of this fiscal, a top company official has said. With COVID-19 lockdowns and restrictions being eased in various states, the company is optimistic of carry on the positivity in business outlook gathered in June to the third and fourth quarter of FY2022.
As far as its preparedness for the likely third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic is concerned, the company has taken up several programmes internally to tackle and mitigate the impact of a new wave of coronavirus infections. "Even now as we talk today, I think as lockdowns have eased, we have seen a surge in demand both in terms of physical distribution networks as well as online market places. So hopefully we will be optimistic that we will come back to that sharper, growth in the second quarter onwards and therefore we will be able to recover between the second and fourth quarter," Rampraveen Swaminathan, MD and CEO of Mahindra Logistics, said in an interview with media.
Explaining challenges in recent months, he said that the company saw an impact because of lockdowns in terms of demand beyond many geographies. He further said that e-commerce for example was restricted to only essential services. "So non-essential categories like television or cell phones etc were highly controlled and therefore we did see a very difficult, strong drop in April and May, a significant impact in April and May, but I think now we are coming back. June is obviously coming back to a stronger recovery trend," Swaminathan said.
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From the second quarter onwards at least, the situation will improve with the second pandemic wave coming under control, according to Swaminathan. "We will probably see wave three impact, but with the higher level of preparedness across the country, the impact we are hoping will not be as widespread or as limiting as wave two was," he said. "So given that context of a broad recovery from second quarter onwards, we are fairly confident that we will come back, we are coming back to that strong run rate," he he added.