The agency
expects the credit profile of downstream companies to remain stable during the
year, driven by healthy demand for petroleum products and healthy marketing
margins that would offset compressed Gross Refining Margins (GRMs), yielding
healthy overall EBITDA.
Credit profile may
see an addition of debt on account of under-construction refinery expansion
projects for all the major oil marketing companies (OMCs). The credit profile
of upstream oil companies shall remain dependent on crude oil prices, Ind-Ra
said in the FY26 Oil and Gas Outlook.
EBITDA
generation for upstream companies may fall with a moderation in oil prices and
a reduction in production from legacy fields. However, the impact of low crude
oil prices is expected to be offset by the removal of special excise on the
production of crude and an increase in production expected from new
discoveries. "Indian oil and gas
demand is expected to remain strong in FY26, leading to an expansion in the
refinery and petrochemical capacities. India's refinery capacity is expected to
increase by 22 per cent in the next two-three years. Ind-Ra expects the
strong demand to be driving oil and gas investment decisions in India,"
said Bhanu Patni, Associate Director, Corporates, Ind-Ra.
Ind-Ra expects the
City Gas Distribution (CGD) sector's credit profile to remain stable in FY26
post-reduction of low-cost domestic gas allocation. Return on invested capital
could moderate, however it would remain healthy.
New
geographical areas could see some pressure on capex execution as internal
accruals for funding capex may come down. The performance of standalone
petrochemical players may improve during FY26 as they benefit from an
improvement in the crack spreads and easing of the oversupply situation created
due to the rampant capacity addition during FY19-FY24, especially in China.
The agency expects
GRMs to remain subdued during FY26 like in 1HFY25, on account of a slowness in
global consumer and industrial demand, especially in China, and additional
supply flowing from refinery capacity additions seen globally. However, demand for
petroleum products in India is expected to remain strong during FY26, with bulk
demand coming from diesel, petrol and LPG. EBITDA for Indian integrated OMCs
was supported by healthy marketing margins during 1HFY25 on account of
declining crude oil prices, subdued crack spreads and stable retail prices...Oil
prices averaged USD 78.7 per barrel during 2QFY25 and declined to USD 75.2
during October 2024 and USD 73.02 in November 2024. Crude prices will remain dependent on global geopolitical developments,
including demand pickup and production targets announced by the OPEC+, it said,
adding for domestic producers, some relief from the impact of a decline in oil
prices on account of the removal of windfall profit tax on crude is expected.
The
government had announced a reduction in the overall share of domestic gas
allocation to CGD companies. The demand increase in the CGD segment coupled
with the declining production of Administered Price Mechanism (APM) gas has led
to the decline in the priority allocation of APM gas to the CGD sector
especially for CNG. Ind-Ra said the
reduced allocation will expose the players in the sector to the risk of
managing long-term supply contracts.