India to beat China as fastest growing Asian petro product market: Moody's

Moody's said the outlook for the Asian oil refining and marketing sector is stable

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Oil, petrol
A worker walks atop a tanker wagon to check the freight level at an oil terminal on the outskirts of Kolkata. Photo: Reuters

will surpass as the fastest-growing petroleum product market in Asia with rising 6 per cent in 2018, Moody's Investors Service said today citing EIA data.

As economic activity in dials back, Moody's said it expects its refined product demand growth will moderate to 2.5 -3 per cent in 2017-18, compared with compounded annual growth rate of 5 per cent in 2012-16.


"Nonetheless, in absolute terms, the EIA says will account for 48% of Asias R&M sectors demand growth in 2018. In comparison, will surpass as the fastest-growing product market in Asia with petroleum consumption growing 6 per cent in 2018," it said.

Moody's said the outlook for the Asian and marketing sector is stable, with the of rated companies growing a modest 5 per cent through 2018.

"Driven by China's and India's appetite for petroleum products and continued capacity rationalisation, we believe refining margins will remain firm, thereby supporting the growth in earnings," says Rachel Chua, a Moody's Assistant Vice President and Analyst.

It expected the average Asian refining margins to be largely in line with the average of USD 6.2 per barrel for the last three years, but better than USD 5.1 per barrel in 2016.

"The recent forced closure of about a quarter of US refining capacity has created an undersupply situation, causing fuel prices -- including gasoline, diesel and jet fuel -- to surge. Nonetheless, we expect the recent spike in crack spreads and refining margins to temper and normalise as the supply crunch eases gradually," Chua said.

In its report, "Refining and marketing -- Asia, Outlook stable on modest growth and firm refining margins", Moody's said it expects the fundamental business conditions in the sector to continue over the next 12-18 months and have been stable since October 2014, when Moody's initiated its outlook opinion.

Supply and demand will vary by country, but for the region as a whole, Moody's estimates that Asia's incremental growth in demand for fuel of around 0.7 million barrels per day (bpd) will outpace net refining capacity additions of 0.4 -0.5 million bpd over the next 12-18 months.

At the same time, the bulk of the incremental growth in refining capacity will come from and

"Still, with demand growth surpassing capacity additions over the last five years, Asia is likely to remain a net importer of refined petroleum products over at least the next three years," it said.

Asian refiners, it said, continue to be exposed to the economic slowdown in China, industry cyclicality and geopolitical risks, despite our stable outlook.

"We could change our outlook to negative if net refining capacity additions and increasing refinery output in Asia materially outpace growth in demand, such that our projected for the industry declines by more than 10 per cent; or if demand from and contracts; or if geopolitical developments materially alter operating conditions," it said.

Moody's said it would consider a positive outlook if regional demand overwhelms capacity additions such that refining margins exceed USD 8 per barrel on a sustained basis, leading to raising the EBITDA-growth forecast above 10 per cent.

First Published: Tue, October 03 2017. 21:32 IST