Govt may cut petrol, diesel price by Rs 3-5 per litre around Diwali

This cut should mostly happen via reduction in excise duty and/or VAT given OMCs are losing on the auto-fuel marketing business at the current high crude price

New Delhi: Following the recent cut in domestic LPG prices, the Central government may cut petrol, diesel price by Rs 3-5 a litre around Diwali given that key state elections start from November-December, JM Financial Institutional Securities said in a report.

Last week, the government cut the price of the domestic 14.2 kg LPG cylinder by Rs 200 per cylinder for all 330 million consumers. This was to give relief to the common man from the recent surge in inflation.

OMCs marketing segment earnings could come under risk if crude price sustains above $85 per barrel or OMCs are forced to cut petrol/diesel price in the next few months, the report said.

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The burden of this LPG price cut will be borne by the government; however, this may increase OMCs’ working capital given the usual lag in government compensation. Further, there is high expectation that government may also cut petrol/diesel price by Rs 3-5 per litre around Diwali given key state elections start from November-December. This cut should mostly happen via reduction in excise duty and/or VAT given OMCs are losing on the auto-fuel marketing business at the current high crude price, the report said.

However, we cannot rule out a scenario whereby the government may nudge OMCs to cut petrol/diesel prices as their balance sheets have largely got repaired due to likely strong profits in first half of FY24, the report added.

Sharp rise in Brent crude price to $90 per barrel, driven by OPEC+ supply cuts, and surge in diesel cracks has led to OMCs’ blended spot auto-fuel gross marketing margin (GMM) declining to negative Rs 0.1 per litre vs. +Rs 8.8 per litre in Q1 of FY24 and vs. historical GMM of + Rs 3.5 per litre.

Our calculation suggest OMCs break-even Brent price (to earn historical GMM) is significantly lower at nearly $80 per barrel. Weak marketing margin is being partly offset by jump in GRM aided by strong diesel cracks; however, rise in Chinese oil product export quota and narrowing of Russian crude discount is likely to cap GRMs. OMCs’ 2QFY24E EBITDA is likely to decline to Rs 345 billion vs. Rs 483 billion in 1QFY24 but it is still higher vs. normalised quarterly EBITDA of INR 160 billion; HPCL will see the sharpest decline given its leverage to the marketing business, the report said.

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