India's state-run oil marketing companies (OMCs) are bleeding cash on every litre of fuel they sell, and brokerage Emkay warns that a retail price hike of up to ₹20 per litre on petrol and diesel may be unavoidable if crude oil stays above $100 per barrel over the next three to six months.
India's crude basket is currently trading around $110 per barrel. At that level, OMCs are losing roughly ₹18, 20 on every litre of petrol and diesel they sell at the pump, a gap called an under-recovery. Crucially, this shortfall persists even after the government cut excise duty by ₹10 per litre on March 27, 2026, which was meant to cushion the blow.
Why OMCs Are Under Pressure
OMCs like Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum, and Hindustan Petroleum buy crude at global prices but sell fuel domestically at government-influenced retail rates. When crude surges well above what those retail prices can cover, the companies absorb the difference. At $110 per barrel, that gap has grown large enough that the excise cut alone cannot close it. The longer retail prices stay frozen while crude stays elevated, the deeper the losses mount on their books.
Emkay has flagged specific stocks as being at risk under this scenario, though the direction of risk is clear: sustained under-recoveries compress margins, strain balance sheets, and could force write-downs or limit capital spending at these companies.
What Could Happen Next
The two levers available to ease the pressure are a crude price pullback below $100 per barrel, or a retail price hike passed on to consumers. Emkay's base case implies the hike route becomes likely if crude remains elevated for another quarter or two. A ₹20 per litre increase would be among the steeper single adjustments seen in recent years and would directly raise transport and logistics costs across the economy.
For the broader market, OMC valuations are directly tied to the spread between crude costs and retail prices. A prolonged squeeze at current crude levels would weigh on earnings estimates for the sector. Conversely, any confirmed price hike would signal margin relief for OMCs but add to headline inflation, complicating the Reserve Bank of India's rate calculus. Watch for any government signal on retail price revision, further excise adjustments, or a sustained move in Brent crude below $100 as the key triggers that will resolve this standoff.