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State-run oil marketing companies (OMCs) continue to face intense pressure on margins despite the latest increases in petrol and diesel prices, with under-recoveries on fuel sales remaining at unsustainably high levels, according to ICRA.
The latest revision in retail fuel prices — the fourth hike since May 15 — has pushed petrol prices above ₹100 per litre in Delhi and brought diesel prices in several cities close to the three-digit mark. However, analysts believe the recent increases are still inadequate to fully compensate OMCs for mounting losses caused by elevated crude prices, domestic LPG subsidies and a weak rupee.
“Despite the latest hike in retail prices of auto fuels, oil marketing companies' under-recoveries remain stubbornly high due to increasing losses in domestic LPG sales and a high premium to the crude marker,” said Prashant Vasisht, Senior Vice President and Co-Group Head, Corporate Ratings, ICRA Ltd.
ICRA estimates that at crude oil prices of $120-125 per barrel, OMCs are currently losing around ₹700-800 crore per day on the sale of petrol, diesel and domestic LPG, even after factoring in the latest fuel price hikes.
“This high level of under-recoveries is unsustainable,” Vasisht added.
Petrol and diesel prices have now risen cumulatively by nearly ₹7.5 per litre over the past two weeks. In Delhi, petrol prices climbed to ₹102.12 per litre, while diesel rose to ₹95.20 per litre after the latest revision.
Mumbai continued to record the highest fuel rates among metros, with petrol priced at ₹111.21 per litre and diesel at ₹97.83 per litre. In Kolkata, diesel prices edged closer to the ₹100 mark at ₹99.82 per litre, while Chennai saw diesel prices rise to ₹99.55 per litre.
Brokerages believe additional retail fuel price hikes may be inevitable if global crude oil prices remain elevated over the coming months.
According to a recent report by Systematix, the latest increase in fuel prices offsets only 7-8% of the cumulative under-recoveries accumulated during nearly three months of unchanged retail prices. The brokerage estimated total industry-wide losses at ₹1.7-1.8 lakh crore.
Emkay Global also expects further upward revisions in fuel prices, estimating that petrol and diesel prices could rise by another ₹18-20 per litre over the next three to six months if crude oil sustains above $100 per barrel.
Meanwhile, Brent crude was trading around $98.83 per barrel, down nearly 5% over the past week amid hopes of easing geopolitical tensions and improved stability in global energy supply routes.