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For refineries it's marginal benefit

February 27, 2010 15:48 IST

The hike in custom and excise duty on crude oil and petroleum products will be passed on by the refineries as well as oil marketing companies.

Budget provisions

Budget impact

The global gross refinery margins are very thin, on sluggish demand.  Meanwhile, the simultaneous hike in customs duty on crude oil and refinery products by 5% will be marginally beneficial for refineries as the benefit is on crude oil + refinery margin, while the cost increase is on the crude oil prices only.

Apparently, the petrol and diesel prices are set to be increased by Rs 2.67 per litre and Rs 2.58 litre per litre respectively factoring in the increase in custom duty and excise duties. So, there wont be any adverse impact on either refineries or the oil marketing companies, at least for the time being.

Future changes depend critically on the crude oil price movements, and how sooner and to what extent Kirti Parikh recommendation for deregulation of petroleum product prices will be implemented.

Stocks to watch

Indian oil, BPCL, HPCL, RIL, Essar oil

Outlook

Union Budget 2010-11 proves to marginally positive for the refinery sector with increase in custom duty and excise duty on crude oil and petroleum products. Even marginal improvement is welcome at the current juncture when global gross Refining margins are at very low levels.

Operating rates remained suppressed during Q3FY'10– Europe averaged at 75%, US remained in the sub-80s and Asia remained at around 82%. Product cracks too have remained low.  Overall, the budget is neutral with marginal positive bias for refineries.

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