The Government’s decision to hike diesel, domestic cooking gas and kerosene prices and cut customs and excise duty will not be adequate to alleviate the concerns over the credit profile of state-owned retailers, credit rating agency ICRA has said.
The ICRA Senior Vice-President & Co-Head, Corporate Ratings, Mr K. Ravichandran, said “concerns remain” on the Government compensating retailers for the losses incurred on selling auto and cooking fuel below cost.
“Uncertainty on diesel price deregulation and indirect control on the pricing of petrol” were also a concern.
The rating agency said diesel price deregulation looks unlikely in the near term because of soaring inflation.
“Consequently, regulatory risk will continue to weigh heavily on the credit risk profiles of PSU OMCs,” it said.
“Because of the significant delay in the release of cash compensation, liquidity position of the public sector oil marketing companies (OMCs) has been negatively affected, resulting in increased reliance on short-term borrowings.
“Moreover, such high level of borrowings result in higher interest expenditure, which are not compensated in the existing under-recovery sharing mechanism,” ICRA said.
In response to soaring oil prices, the Government on Friday announced a Rs 3 per litre hike in diesel, Rs 50 per cylinder increase in domestic LPG and Rs 2 per litre raise in kerosene rates. Also, it slashed the import duty on petrol and diesel by 5 per cent, did away with the import duty on crude oil and reduced the excise duty on diesel to Rs 2 per litre from Rs 4.60 a litre.
“As a result of these measures, while the gross under-recoveries (or revenue loss) will fall by a modest amount (Rs 49,000 crore), the absolute level of gross under-recoveries will still remain sizeable (about Rs 120,000 crore) for FY2011-12,” it said.
It said the “final under-recovery sharing mechanism that the Government will be announcing during the course of the year will be critical to determine the profitability of the PSU oil marketing companies.”
Because of the sheer size of the revenue loss, the share of government compensation (which till now has been around 50 per cent) and that from upstream companies (that has hovered around 33 per cent) will have to be higher than usual as the absorptive capacity of OMCs is limited by the modest profits.
“On the brighter side, import duty changes will translate to marginally higher import duty differential, leading to higher Gross Refining Margins (GRM),” it said.
Consequently, retailers with a higher product cover for marketing, such as IOC and BPCL, will stand to gain and will be able to partly mitigate the pressure on marketing profits.