'Govt will not ask OMCs to further subsidise petrol, diesel prices'

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Allaying concerns about the return of fuel subsidy regime, a top Thursday said the government asking PSUs to subsidise petrol and diesel prices by Re 1 per litre was a "one-time thing" and it does not intend to ask them to do it again.

Just last week, the government had cut excise duty on petrol and diesel by Rs 1.50 per litre and asked state-owned oil marketing companies (OMCs) to subsidise the two fuels by another Re 1 a litre.

But most of the Rs 2.50 per litre reduction in rates effected from October 5 has been lost in increases in selling prices on subsequent days, giving rise to the suspicion that the government may again ask to subsidise fuel.

"The Re 1 absorption by in their was a one-time thing," the said.

The government, he said, has no intention of asking them to do that again.

Following the comments, shares of surged by as much as 19 per cent intra-day, defying the broader market trends. Shares of surged 19 per cent to hit a high of Rs 215.40, jumped 7 per cent to Rs 284.80 and gained nearly 8 per cent to Rs 134 in intra-day trade.

The benchmark Sensex fell 759.74 points to close at 34,001.

The cut in excise duty and OMCs absorbing some prices had led to a drop in the of petrol from a record high of Rs 84 per litre to Rs 81.50 in and that of diesel from an all-time high of Rs 75.45 to Rs 72.95 a litre on October 5. But rate hikes on subsequent days have pushed prices up.

Petrol has risen by 86 paise per litre since then and diesel by Rs 1.67, negating the entire excise duty reduction in less than a week.

Petrol in Thursday stood at Rs 82.36 per cent while diesel was priced at Rs 74.62.

The said the government is also not looking at bringing back the subsidy sharing mechanism where upstream firms like ONGC subsidised cooking fuels LPG and kerosene by giving discounts on crude oil they sold to refiners.

Oil and shares surged to Rs 159.60 during intra-day trade on the before ending at Rs 152.90, up 2.86 per cent.

Oil producers ONGC and had till June 2015 made good as much as 40 per cent of the under-recoveries or subsidy arising out of selling fuel at below market It was speculated that the same subsidy sharing in some form may be brought back.

According to Moody's Investors Service, share prices of state-owned oil companies have declined around 20 per cent on average since the government on October 4 announced a reduction in the country's fuel prices.

The aggregate market capitalisation of the six largest listed government owned/linked oil companies had fallen by Rs 1.2 lakh crore since then, it said.

"The share price decline is credit negative for the oil companies because of the high level of cross-shareholdings in one another. The market values of their respective investments have declined, reducing their financial flexibility," it said in a report Thursday.

Shares of closed up 14.70 per cent at Rs 207.15. was up 5.11 per cent at Rs 278.65 and ended 5.39 per cent higher at Rs 131 on the

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, October 11 2018. 16:50 IST