As Middle East simmers, Indian refiners stare at higher logistics costs & war insurance

As Middle East simmers, Indian refiners stare at higher logistics costs & war insurance


The elimination of Iran’s key top leaders in a joint US-Israel offensive and fears that blockade of the Strait of Hormuz will continue in the short term threatens to push up India’s oil and gas import bill, which was more than $144 billion in FY25.

Indian government and refiners are reviewing the deteriorating geopolitical scenario in West Asia, particularly the uncertainty arising out of the killing of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

“It’s a fluid scenario. We are in touch with refiners, Foreign & Commerce Ministries and Prime Minister’s Office. We are told vessels carrying crude, LNG, fertilisers, etc are not entering the Strait (Hormuz) but lining up in the Persian Gulf. More clarity will come once an interim government is in place in Tehran,” a senior government official said.

An official with a refiner explained that import bill will rise as logistics and war premium is going up. Protection and Indemnity (P&I) club is notifying clients that liability cover will become expensive due to additional protection (AP).

Navigating blockade

“Diversification is there, but it comes at a cost. A comparatively cheaper alternative could be Russian crude at sea. We expect Brent to now surge and on Monday it can easily breach the $80 per barrel mark. The next 3-4 days will give a better view of the situation in West Asia and the fate of the blockage of Hormuz,” he added.

Global real time data and analysis provider Kpler’s tracking indicates continued availability of Russian cargoes in the Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea region, including volumes in floating storage.

JM financial in a note said “Brent has already moved to a 7-month high of around $72.8 a barrel, and scenario analysis suggests that Hormuz disruption could push prices above $90, while a broader regional conflict could take crude beyond $100. For India, the impact is direct—every $1 rise in crude increases the annual import bill by around $2 billion, putting pressure on the trade balance.”

Painting a similar scenario, V K Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Investments pointed out that the near-term impact will be negative.

“Crude has spiked and if the crude price remains high for an extended period of time, our balance of trade and balance of payments will be impacted since we import around 85 per cent of our oil requirements. OPEC Plus will scale up production and try to stabilise prices,” he added.

If the strait of Hormuz is closed (there are unconfirmed reports of this), crude price can spike further. Trump may forcefully reopen this. But that requires boots on the ground which will escalate tensions further, Vijayakumar emphasised.

Sumit Ritolia, Kpler’s Lead Research Analyst for Refining & Modeling said that roughly 2.5–2.7 million barrels per day (mb/d) of India’s crude imports transit Hormuz, largely from Iraq, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Kuwait.

“Over the past 2-3 months, India’s dependence on Middle Eastern barrels has increased as refiners pivoted away from a portion of Russian volumes. As a result, the relative weight of Gulf-origin crude in India’s import basket has risen, increasing short-term sensitivity to any disruption in Hormuz transit,” he added.

Prashant Vasisht Co-Group Head Corporate Ratings at ICRA, said that any attack on oil and gas production facilities of other major Middle East producers would further aggravate supply concerns.

The bigger vulnerability, pointed out by Ritolia, is LPG. India imports around 80–85 per cent of its LPG needs, with the majority sourced from Gulf suppliers—almost entirely transiting Hormuz. Unlike crude, India does not maintain strategic LPG reserves of comparable scale, making LPG flows more logistically sensitive in a disruption scenario.

Inflation fears

JM Financial noted that nearly 20 per cent of global oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz and over 40 per cent of India’s crude imports transit this route, creating material exposure.

“While media reports indicate disruption to shipping activity in the Strait, confirmation of a complete and sustained closure remains unclear, making the probability and duration of supply interruption the key variable,” the brokerage added.

Prolonged tensions may increase logistics and marine insurance costs, disrupt Gulf shipping routes and pressure the trade balance.

“Indian Rupee faces near-term depreciation bias, with potential RBI intervention through FX reserves. The transmission channel is clear: higher crude increases inflation risk; higher inflation pushes bond yields up; rising yields compress equity multiples,” JM Financial said.

Aditi Nayar, Chief Economist at ICRA, said “The situation in West Asia is unfolding and the extent that it prolongs and widens, would have a bearing on India’s macros, including things like the impact of fuel prices on inflation and the twin deficits, as well remittances.”

Published on March 1, 2026



Source link

War Tension का असर: Gold-Silver बनेंगे Superhit Investment?| Paisa Live

War Tension का असर: Gold-Silver बनेंगे Superhit Investment?| Paisa Live


Geopolitical tension के चलते gold और silver में तेज़ी expected है। Comex पर strong weekly close मिला है, जो market sentiment को bullish दिखाता है। Digital gold platforms पर भी 5-5 हज़ार तक का jump देखा गया, जिससे साफ है कि investors safe haven assets की तरफ shift कर रहे हैं। Strait of Hormuz से लगभग 20% oil supply गुजरती है। अगर यह route block होता है तो global oil prices बढ़ सकते हैं और महंगाई में और इज़ाफा हो सकता है। ऐसे माहौल में uncertainty बढ़ती है और risk assets पर pressure आता है। Experts का मानना है कि अगर war scenario लंबा चलता है तो gold नए record levels touch कर सकता है, जबकि silver भी strong rally दिखा सकता है।



Source link

Adani confirms Israel-based Haifa Port fully secure, operational

Adani confirms Israel-based Haifa Port fully secure, operational


A general view shows Haifa Port in Haifa, Israel July 24, 2022.
| Photo Credit:
REUTERS

The Adani group on Sunday said its Haifa port in Israel is fully secure and operational amid heightened military conflict in Iran.

In a statement, Adani Ports & Special Economic Zone said all employees are safe, and all port assets and infrastructure are fully secure.

The US and Israel on Saturday launched a military operation against Iran, killing its Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. In retaliation, Iran has launched missile and drone attacks on Israel, including at Haifa.

“Haifa Port Company confirms that all its employees are safe, and all port assets and infrastructure are fully secure and in operational condition,” the statement said.

It, however, did not say if any of the Iranian drones or missiles had hit the port.

The port authority continues to monitor the situation and is in close coordination with the Ministry of Transport and Road Safety of Israel, and is operating as per their instructions.

“We remain committed to ensuring the safety of our people and the continuity of operations, maintaining stability for Israel’s supply chain and international trade,” it added.

Published on March 1, 2026



Source link

How would Middle East tensions rattle Indian markets? Srude spike raises near-term risks

How would Middle East tensions rattle Indian markets? Srude spike raises near-term risks


Indian equity markets are bracing for heightened volatility as escalating tensions in the Middle East push crude oil prices higher and revive concerns over inflation, trade balances and fiscal stability.

Brokerage JM Financial said the coordinated US–Israel strikes on Iran mark a sharp escalation in regional hostilities, significantly raising the risk of supply disruptions. The brokerage noted that Brent crude has already climbed to multi-month highs and warned that any sustained disruption in shipping activity through the Strait of Hormuz could drive prices well beyond current levels.

Nearly 20 per cent of global oil flows and over 40 per cent of India’s crude imports pass through the Strait of Hormuz, making it a key vulnerability for the domestic economy. JM Financial said that every $1 per barrel increase in crude prices could raise India’s annual import bill by roughly $2 billion. While upstream oil and defence companies may see relative support, sectors such as oil marketing companies, paints, aviation and chemicals could come under pressure from higher input costs. The brokerage added that the sustainability of Brent above $80 per barrel and the duration of any supply disruption would be critical variables for Indian equities.

Dr. V K Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Investments Limited, echoed concerns over the immediate fallout. “The near-term impact will be negative. Crude has spiked and if the crude price remains high for an extended period of time, our balance of trade and balance of payments will be impacted since we import around 85 per cent of our oil requirements. OPEC Plus will scale up production and try to stabilise prices. If the strait of Hormuz is closed (there are unconfirmed reports of this), the crude price can spike further. Trump may forcefully reopen this. But that requires boots on the ground which will escalate tensions further, he added.

On the medium-term outlook, Vijayakumar said, “Medium-term impact on the market will depend on how long the conflict lasts. We don’t know the answer to this question. After crippling Iran, US and Israel may make a strategic withdrawal. The market will react very negatively. In a weak market, upstream oil companies and defence stocks will do well.”

Market participants expect a gap-down opening if tensions intensify further, with risk-off sentiment dominating trade. Investors will closely track crude price movements, developments around shipping routes in the Gulf region and any signals of de-escalation, as these factors are likely to dictate the trajectory of Indian equities in the near term.

Published on March 1, 2026



Source link

OPEC+ debates oil output boost as US war on Iran disrupts shipments

OPEC+ debates oil output boost as US war on Iran disrupts shipments


OPEC+ will consider a larger-than-expected oil output increase on ​Sunday, two OPEC+ sources said after the US-Israeli war on OPEC+ ‌member Iran and Tehran’s retaliation led to shipment disruptions ​in the Middle East.

OPEC+ has a history of raising ⁠oil output to cushion disruptions but analysts said the group currently has very little spare capacity to meaningfully add to supply, except for its ‌leaders, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Riyadh has been raising oil production and exports in ‌recent weeks in preparation for US strikes on Iran, ‌sources ⁠have told Reuters.

Oil, gas and other shipments from the ⁠Middle East via the Strait of Hormuz have come to a halt since Saturday after shipowners received a warning from Iran saying the area was closed ​for navigation.

OPEC+ will debate ‌a production hike of 411,000 barrels per day or more at a meeting on Sunday, sources told Reuters, larger than the original expectations of 137,000 bpd.

Oil prices jumped on Friday ‌to $73 per barrel, the highest level since July, on ​fears of a wider conflict in the Middle East and supply disruptions through Hormuz, the world’s most ⁠important oil route amounting to over 20 per cent of global oil transit.

Middle East leaders have warned Washington that a war on Iran could ‌lead to oil prices jumping to over $100 per barrel, said veteran OPEC analyst Helima Croft from RBC. Analysts from Barclays also said prices could rise to $100.

Croft said the market impact from any large OPEC output increase will be limited due to a lack of actual production capabilities outside Saudi Arabia.

The ‌meeting on Sunday will start at 1100 GMT and will involve only ​eight members of OPEC+ – Saudi Arabia, Russia, the UAE, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Iraq, Algeria and Oman. OPEC+ ⁠groups the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies like Russia but ⁠most production changes in the past years have been done by the eight members.

The eight members raised ‌production quotas by about 2.9 million bpd from April through December 2025, roughly 3 per cent of global demand, before pausing ​increases for January to March 2026 due to seasonal weakness.

Published on March 1, 2026



Source link

Stock markets to react negatively amid escalating crisis in Middle East: Analysts

Stock markets to react negatively amid escalating crisis in Middle East: Analysts


Stock markets will react negatively on Monday due to the escalating crisis in the Middle East, and the impact on equities will depend on how long the conflict lasts, analysts said.

The US and Israel attacked Iran on Saturday. Iranian state media confirmed early Sunday that Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in the attack.

Besides, geopolitical situation, macroeconomic data announcements, global market trends, and trading activity of foreign investors would also influence investors’ sentiment in a holiday-shortened week ahead.

Equity markets would remain closed on Tuesday for Holi.

Sentiment has turned even more fragile after fresh geopolitical escalations over the weekend in the Middle East, Santosh Meena, Head of Research at Swastika Investmart Ltd, said.

“For an oil-importing economy like India, sustained elevated crude prices pose risks to inflation, fiscal balance, and rate-cut expectations. This external shock has emerged at a technically vulnerable moment for the market,” Meena said.

Looking ahead to Monday’s trade, markets are likely to open with a cautious to negative bias amid geopolitical overhang and elevated crude prices, he noted.

“Investors will simultaneously react to Q3 GDP data and monthly auto sales figures, while upcoming IIP and PMI numbers will further shape domestic macro expectations.

“Globally, key economic releases from the US and China, along with the trajectory of crude prices, will influence risk appetite. The direction of FII flows will remain the primary driver for index movement in the near term,” Meena added.

Brent Crude, the global oil benchmark, jumped 2.87 per cent to $72.87 per barrel.

“The simmering tensions between the United States, Israel, and Iran escalated sharply on February 28, 2026, significantly affecting global energy security and economic stability.

“For India, which relies heavily on imported crude oil, the immediate consequence has been rising inflationary pressure triggered by higher energy prices,” Manoranjan Sharma, Chief Economist at Infomerics Ratings, said on the US-Iran-Isreal conflict.

He further said that benchmark indices are expected to open lower, accompanied by heightened volatility as investors reassess geopolitical and commodity-related risks.

“The near-term impact will be negative. Crude has spiked, and if the crude price remains high for an extended period of time, our balance of trade and balance of payments will be impacted since we import around 85 per cent of our oil requirements,” VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist, Geojit Investments Limited, said.

Over the medium term, the impact on the market will depend on how long the conflict lasts, Vijayakumar said.

“The market will react very negatively,” he added.

Equity markets ended the last week under notable pressure as persistent geopolitical tensions and weakness in technology stocks weighed on sentiment, Ajit Mishra, SVP, Research, Religare Broking Ltd, said.

Last week, the BSE benchmark tanked 1,527.52 points or 1.84 per cent, and the Nifty declined 392.6 points or 1.53 per cent.

“Domestically, investors will look to manufacturing and services PMI readings, industrial production data and monthly auto sales for evidence of demand resilience,” Ponmudi R, CEO of Enrich Money, an online trading and wealth tech firm, said.

Published on March 1, 2026



Source link

YouTube
Instagram
WhatsApp