Heightened risk in Strait of Hormuz threatens pet coke supply to India

Heightened risk in Strait of Hormuz threatens pet coke supply to India


US and Israeli strikes on Iran have heightened disruption risk to Persian Gulf petroleum coke flows through the Strait of Hormuz, threatening exports to India and China, and potentially tightening supply, said Kpler.
| Photo Credit:
Dado Ruvic

The joint US-Israel offensive on Iran has heightened fears of a disruption in shipments of petroleum coke—a key input for the cement and steel sectors—from the Persian Gulf to India, a key consumer and importer.

India’s consumption of the carbonaceous product obtained during final cracking in oil refining has been rising in the past few years on the back of rising production of cement and steel as India’s industrial and commercial demand rises.

US and Israeli strikes on Iran have heightened disruption risk to Persian Gulf petroleum coke (pet coke) flows through the Strait of Hormuz, threatening exports to India and China, and potentially tightening supply, said Kpler.

The global data and analytics provider pointed out that increased geopolitical risk across the Strait of Hormuz has raised concerns for pet coke flows and the market will now price higher freight risk and lack of insurance for vessels transiting the world’s most critical energy choke point.

Cement producers to feel heat

“India sits as the largest single destination for Gulf pet coke, particularly fuel grade coke. Indian cement producers run on pet coke as a primary fuel. A prolonged supply disruption exceeding a few weeks from Hormuz forces either a switch to domestic or imported coal or a sourcing pivot to the US Gulf pet coke, which will come with a price premium,” Kpler warned.

The Indian cement sector runs on thin margins. A sustained freight or availability shock feeds through to cement production costs rapidly. The combined monthly volume flowing through Hormuz from the above ports runs at around 400,000–600,000 tonnes in normal months with India absorbing the majority of this, it added.

Pet coke output around the Persian Gulf region is reserved for two distinct pet coke streams, fuel grade and anode-grade supply, which is typically sought by cement and aluminium industries, respectively.

“Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Oman export most of their pet coke production to Asia, with China and India taking the largest share. If vessel owners refuse to transit the strait or insurers withdraw cover, exporters will struggle to move cargoes,” Kpler pointed out.

India consumed around 20.32 million tonnes (mt) of petroleum coke in FY24, which rose to 22.06 mt in FY25. During the April-January period in FY26, the consumption stood at 16.85 mt. It produced 15.1 mt, 15 mt and 12.3 mt of petroleum coke in FY24, FY25 and 10M FY26, respectively.

The country imported almost half of its requirement for the carbonaceous product in the last few years. Its imports stood at 10.96 mt, 13.15 mt and almost 10 mt during FY24, FY25 and 10M FY26, respectively.

US pet coke demand to spike

Kpler explained that producers cannot defer shipments for an extended period. Refineries need to clear pet coke stocks to maintain operating rates. A prolonged disruption would reduce effective supply to Asia and force buyers into the spot market.

Breaking up the market dynamics, it explained that coal markets would absorb part of the impact. However, lower pet coke availability from the Gulf would increase competition for alternative solid fuels, particularly the US pet coke and thermal coal from the US, Indonesia and Australia.

Indian and Chinese buyers would lead that emerging demand given their exposure to Middle Eastern supply, it added.

Coal already trades at competitive levels against pet coke in most consuming regions. Current price spreads limit additional switching capacity, especially where plants optimise blends for technical reasons. As a result, incremental coal demand would likely remain moderate unless pet coke prices spike sharply or physical shortages emerge, Kpler said.

On the coal side, firm gas and oil prices strengthen overall fuel price sentiment. The region does not account for material coal supply, so direct physical impact remains limited. Price direction will depend more on substitution flows and cross fuel spreads than on any loss of coal production, it added.

Published on March 4, 2026



Source link

Russia prepared to divert oil to India as West Asia conflict disrupts flows, source says

Russia prepared to divert oil to India as West Asia conflict disrupts flows, source says


Russia is ready to divert oil to India to ‌offset Middle East supply disruptions, with
about 9.5 million barrels of Russian crude in ​vessels near
Indian waters and able to arrive within weeks, an industry
source with direct ⁠knowledge told Reuters.

The source declined to say where the non-Russian fleet
cargoes were originally headed but said they could deliver to
India within weeks, giving refiners rapid relief.

India is vulnerable to supply shocks, with crude stocks
covering only about ‌25 days of demand, while refiners hold
similarly limited inventories of gasoil, gasoline and liquefied
petroleum gas.

An Indian government source said New Delhi was scouting for
alternative supply to prepare for ‌continuing conflict in the
Middle East beyond 10–15 days.

FORCED TO SEEK ALTERNATIVE SUPPLY

The disruption has immediate ‌market ⁠consequences, with about
40% of India’s crude imports moving through the Strait of
Hormuz, the ⁠world’s most vital oil export route, the source
said, and the near-closure of the route has compelled the No.3
oil consumer to seek alternatives.

Indian refiners process about 5.6 million barrels per day of
crude. The Strait has become inaccessible after vessels were
struck by ​Iranian attacks that followed U.S. and Israeli ‌strikes
on Iran-based targets that commenced on Saturday.

The industry source, speaking on condition of anonymity,
said Russia was ready to help India meet up to 40% of its crude
needs.

India’s imports of Russian crude fell to about 1.1 million
barrels per day in January, the lowest since November 2022, as
New ‌Delhi sought relief from U.S. tariffs, pushing Moscow’s
share of overall oil imports down to ​21.2%, industry data
showed. The source said the share climbed back to around 30% in
February.

Indian refiners are in regular contact with traders selling
Russian crude, but any increase ⁠in intake from Moscow would
depend on guidance from the government as trade talks with the
United States continue, two refining sources said.

U.S. President Donald Trump last month agreed to drop
punitive tariffs levied on imports from ‌India over its purchase
of Russian oil, saying New Delhi had agreed to “stop buying
Russian oil.”

India has not done so, insisting its strategy was to
diversify supply in line with market conditions and “evolving
international dynamics.”

India’s foreign and oil ministries, as well as the Russian
embassy in New Delhi, did not immediately respond to a request
for comment on any higher purchases from Russia. An Indian
source said days before the Iran war that Indian companies had
not been told to shun Russian oil.

‘A SELLER’S MARKET’ FOR OIL

While Russian oil ‌has been sold at a discount to global
prices since the country invaded Ukraine in 2022, that will now
narrow as “it’s ​become a sellers’ market,” the industry source
with knowledge of Russian oil trade said.

The source said Russia was also ready to sell liquefied
natural gas to India after top ⁠supplier Qatar halted production
on Monday as the conflict widened.

Indian companies have reduced gas supplies to some
industrial customers to ⁠manage the shortfall, Reuters has
reported.

Both China and India, Asia’s biggest energy consumers,
source about half their crude imports from the Middle East, but
India holds far less in storage than ‌China and is more exposed
to regional supply shocks as Russian purchases fell under U.S.
pressure.

Trump said on Tuesday the U.S. Navy could escort oil tankers
through the Strait of Hormuz if necessary, and ​ordered the U.S.
International Development Finance Corporation to provide
political risk insurance and guarantees for Gulf shipping.

Published on March 4, 2026



Source link

AIBOA says IDBI Bank land parcels should revert back to government before divestment

AIBOA says IDBI Bank land parcels should revert back to government before divestment


All-India Bank Officers’ Association (AIBOA) has urged Finance Minister Nirmala Sitaraman to revisit proposed disinvestment of Government and LIC stake in IDBI Bank and shelve the same in ‘larger national interests.’

S Nagarajan, General Secretary, AIBOA, has opened a new front in the ongoing trade union campaign against divestment, saying, IDBI, then developmental financial institution, was allotted immovable assets and land parcels on lease basis for 99 years as it was owned by the Government of India. 

Rebranding of IDBI

It was in 2005 that Industrial Development Bank of India (IDBI) merged with its subsidiary commercial division, IDBI Bank, to form a single entity, IDBI, later rebranded as IDBI Bank. This strategic merger allowed the development financial institution to transition into a retail-focused commercial bank.

In an identical communication to Arunish Chawla, Secretary, DIPAM, Nagarajan said IDBI was reportedly allotted valuable lands under Land Acquisition act of 1894 in various parts of country. It has been specifically mentioned IDBI Bank is wholly owned by Government of India and governed as public sector financial institution. 

Secure lands back

The AIBOC stand is that several of the land parcels were acquired under the land Act on the premise that such acquisition was for a ‘public purpose’ as defined in Section 3(f)(iv) as for a company wholly owned/controlled by the government. In other words, if IDBI Bank were to slip into hands of a private company, all such lands should revert to the government, as otherwise it would imply an outright violation of that statutory provision. The bid documents make no mention of this, AIBOA argued.

Nagarajan said as immovable assets/land parcels allotted to erstwhile IDBI are not secured back to the control of the Government of India before exercise of disinvestment, it will certainly lead to questionable sale and subject to lot of future complications involving various officials in this connection, Nagarajan said.

Sole eligible bidder

“It is reliably learnt there were initially three interested purchasers of proposed divestment stake from Government as well as from LIC. But at present, it is understood that Emirates NBD Dubai, is sole bidder eligible to pick up the stake. Emirates NBD Dubai is majority-owned and controlled by Government of Dubai. The primary shareholder is the Investment Corporation of Dubai that holds a 40.92 per cent stake, while Dubai Holding holds a 14.84 per cent stake, making it a state-owned entity.”

The process of partial disinvestment is in active consideration and the shortlisted bidders have foreign origin, Nagarajan said. Even as Government of Dubai, through their extended arms, has direct interest/control on Emirates NBD Dubai, back home, DIPAM is in fast-forward mode to complete the process without addressing an important issue, he added.

Published on March 4, 2026



Source link

Why Sensex fell nearly 1,795 pts today: 5 reasons for stock market crash

Why Sensex fell nearly 1,795 pts today: 5 reasons for stock market crash


Equity markets tumbled sharply on Wednesday, as escalating geopolitical tensions, rising crude prices, weak global cues and a strengthening US dollar triggered broad-based selling. The BSE Sensex plunged nearly 1,795.65 points from the previous close, while the NSE Nifty 50 fell 560 points.

Analysts believe India’s heavy reliance on oil imports raises concerns over inflation, a widening trade deficit, a depreciating currency, and slower economic growth, which could impact corporate earnings if the conflict drags on.

Escalating geopolitical tensions sparked broad market sell-off.

Strengthening US dollar pressured investor sentiment.

Global commodity prices corrected, weighing on key sectors.

Profit-booking and technical selling intensified the decline.

Coal India, Infosys, Bharti Airtel led gainers of Nifty 50, while Tata Steel, L&T, TMPV led the sharp losses.

At 12.50 pm, Sensex traded 1422.02 pts or 1.77 per cent lower at 78,816.83, hitting an intraday low of 78,443.20 from the previous close of 80,238.85. Nifty 50 dragged 477.70 pts or 1.92 per cent to 24,388.

Both midcap and smallcap indexes declined nearly 3 per cent, with sectoral indices across the board in the red, led by metal, realty and PSU bank stocks, which dropped 4–5 per cent, amplifying the market weakness.

Metal, realty, PSU Bank stocks drag

Among the Nifty 50 pack, Coal India, Infosys and Bharti Airtel led the gainers, while Tata Steel, L&T, TMPV and JSW Steel fell sharply up to 8 per cent.

A total of 3,195 stocks were traded on the National Stock Exchange, with 445 advancing, 2,664 declining, and 86 remaining unchanged. Among these, 11 stocks reached their 52-week highs, while 535 hit their 52-week lows. Market volatility was evident as 29 stocks hit the upper circuit limits, but a significantly larger number, 134 stocks, touched their lower circuit limits.

Under the midcap segment, Oil India, Swiggy, Persistent Systems, PB Fintech and MphasiS posted modest gains, while SAIL, Bank of India, Indian Bank, NMDC and ITC Hotels fell 5-7 per cent.

Among the smallcap basket, Sagility, Zen Tech, Ola Electric and CreditAccess gained 2-7 per cent, while MGL, Aegis Vopak, PGEL and Hindustan Copper depreciated 5-8 per cent.

On the BSE, Bajaj Holdings, Sagility, Poly Medicure and Shree Renuka Sugars soared 6-9 per cent, while on the flip side, Petronet LNG, MGL and Lumax plunged up to 9 per cent at the time of writing.

Dr. VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Investments, advised investors to consider buying high-quality stocks in sectors like banking, pharmaceuticals, automobiles, and defense for long-term opportunities.

Published on March 4, 2026



Source link

India shows 'renewed interest' in buying more Russian crude: Deputy PM

India shows 'renewed interest' in buying more Russian crude: Deputy PM


Russia on Tuesday claimed that India has signalled “renewed interest” in importing larger volumes of Russian crude oil amid disruptions in energy supplies following the closure of the Strait of Hormuz after US and Israeli strikes on Iran.

The Strait of Hormuz is the world’s most critical oil shipping chokepoint. It is facing disruptions after Iranian actions in response to US and Israeli strikes.

“Yes, we are getting signals of renewed interest from India,” Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak told the state-run TV Rossiya 1 on the sidelines of an event in Moscow.

Nearly a fifth of the world’s oil supply and a significant share of liquefied natural gas exports pass through the narrow waterway linking the Persian Gulf with global markets.

Any prolonged restriction on traffic through Hormuz threatens to disrupt energy supplies to major importers, including India, China and Japan, and drive up global crude prices.

Novak, who oversees Russia’s energy sector, did not rule out the possibility that the European Union could also ease its decision to curtail imports of Russian hydrocarbons in view of the unfolding energy crisis.

Meanwhile, Russia’s NTV channel, owned by energy giant Gazprom, said the escalation of hostilities and Iran’s strikes on oil and gas infrastructure in Gulf countries could help Moscow reduce the “deep discounts” it has been offering to Asian buyers, including India.

Published on March 4, 2026



Source link

OpenAI eyes NATO deal following Pentagon agreement

OpenAI eyes NATO deal following Pentagon agreement


OpenAI is considering a contract ​to deploy its AI technology on North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s (NATO) “unclassified” networks, ‌a person familiar with the matter said on Tuesday, ​days after the ChatGPT-owner struck a deal with ⁠the Pentagon.

The Wall Street Journal first reported that OpenAI was considering an agreement with NATO. The newspaper said the OpenAI CEO, Sam Altman, ‌had initially said in a company meeting that it was looking to deploy on all NATO classified networks, ‌but a company spokeswoman later clarified to the Journal ‌that ⁠Altman misspoke and the contract opportunity was for NATO’s “unclassified ⁠networks.”

NATO, a 32-member military alliance, did not immediately respond to a request for comment outside regular business hours.

OpenAI, which is backed by Microsoft, ​Amazon and others, announced a deal ‌late last week to deploy its technology in the Pentagon’s classified network, after U.S. President Donald Trump directed the government to stop working with rival Anthropic.

MASS SURVEILLANCE

Anthropic’s removal followed ‌a standoff in contract talks with the Pentagon over ​the use of the firm’s technology.

Anthropic CEO, Dario Amodei, had stressed the company’s opposition to the Pentagon ⁠using its AI models for mass domestic surveillance or to power fully autonomous weapons. The Pentagon has said previously it had ‌no interest in using AI to conduct mass surveillance of Americans or using AI to develop weapons that operate without human involvement, but wanted any lawful use of AI to be allowed.

In an updated statement on Monday after striking a deal on Friday, OpenAI said its AI systems “shall not ‌be intentionally used for domestic surveillance of U.S. persons and nationals,” adding that ​the Pentagon also affirmed that AI services would not be used by intelligence agencies such as the ⁠National Security Agency (NSA).

“I think this was an example of a complex, ⁠but right decision with extremely difficult brand consequences and very negative PR for us in the short term,” ‌Altman said in a company meeting on Tuesday, referring to the Pentagon deal, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Published on March 4, 2026



Source link

YouTube
Instagram
WhatsApp