Exclusive: Indian state oil firms have stopped taking
margin hit on petrol and diesel sales
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[January 02, 2019]
By Aftab Ahmed and Nidhi Verma
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Indian state-owned
fuel retailers have stopped absorbing a government-mandated cut of 1
rupee (0.014 U.S. cents) a liter in their marketing margins on the sale
of petrol and diesel due to a steep fall in global oil prices, sources
said.
In October, India's finance ministry had cut its production tax on the
two fuels by 1.50 rupees a liter and had asked state-owned fuel
retailers to reduce their marketing margins by 1 rupee a liter to
insulate consumers from a surge in global oil prices at the time.
But oil prices have slumped in recent weeks allowing the marketing
margin to be restored to its former levels, said a source privy to the
matter.
In October, companies were told to gradually recover the reduction in
the margins if crude prices fell, two finance ministry officials said.
"Now that the oil prices have come down they are now able to compensate
the losses," one of the officials said.
It means that India's state-owned oil refiners, who are also its main
fuel retailers, will not be passing on all the benefits of the drop in
crude prices to consumers as they seek to recoup the margin hit they
have been taking.
This is reflected, at least in part, by the relative difference in the
recent declines of Indian fuel prices and global benchmarks. The price
of Brent crude, Singapore gasoline and Arab Gulf Diesel have declined
between 37-40 percent since October 1 while Indian petrol and diesel
prices have been reduced by about 17-18 percent, according to Reuters
calculations.
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An attendant holds a petrol nozzle at a petrol pump in the
northeastern Indian city of Siliguri January 4, 2008. REUTERS/Rupak
De Chowdhuri
That loss of margin should be full reversed by the March end of the current
fiscal year, the official added.
The sources declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the subject.
The state-owned retailers - Indian Oil Corp, Hindustan Petroleum Corp and Bharat
Petroleum Corp - control most of the fuel retail business in India.
Shares of fuel retailers pared losses in a falling Mumbai market after the
Reuters report about the margins. From the day's lows, shares of IOC rose about
2.83 percent, HPCL about 5 percent and BPCL gained 3.79 percent.
The three companies did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for
comment.
Petrol and diesel prices in India are linked to Singapore gasoline prices and
Arab Gulf diesel prices, which mostly track movements in crude oil prices.
(Editing by Martin Howell)
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