US-Iran War Impact: Oil Price Surge Benefits Energy, Defence Stocks

A sustained rise in crude oil prices due to US-Iran tensions is projected to benefit upstream oil exploration companies, energy infrastructure, and select refineries. Conversely, oil-sensitive sectors like aviation, paints, chemicals, and logistics will face margin pressure from higher fuel and raw material costs. The report recommends overweight positions in defence and infrastructure while maintaining holdings in less sensitive sectors like banking and IT. It warns that oil price increases significantly impact India's import bill, current account deficit, and inflation, though policy measures have historically helped manage such shocks.

Key Points: US-Iran War: Oil Price Rise Benefits Energy, Defence Sectors

  • Upstream oil firms gain from higher prices
  • Aviation, paints, chemicals face margin pressure
  • Defence & infrastructure recommended overweight
  • Logistics hit by rising diesel costs
  • Inflation & current account deficit risks rise
2 min read

Upstream energy, defence, select refineries to benefit from US-Iran war: Report

Report highlights winners & losers from crude surge: upstream energy, defence gain; aviation, paints, logistics face pressure. Investment opportunities outlined.

"crude price volatility should not be viewed purely as a risk. It can also create sectoral opportunities - Axis Securities"

New Delhi, March 9

A sustained rise in crude oil prices due to the US-Iran war will benefit upstream oil exploration companies, energy infrastructure companies and select refineries while pressuring oil‑sensitive sectors such as aviation, paints, tyres, chemicals and logistics, a report said on Monday.

Apart from these sectors, the report from Axis Securities recommended overweight positions also in defence and infrastructure, adding that stocks in less oil-sensitive sectors such as banking, IT services, and healthcare can be maintained unchanged.

"For investors, crude price volatility should not be viewed purely as a risk. It can also create sectoral opportunities and enable disciplined portfolio positioning aligned with macro cycles," the brokerage said.

Aviation is highly exposed to oil price changes as fuel accounts for roughly 30-40 per cent of operating costs, the brokerage said, adding that petroleum‑based raw material inflation will squeeze margins across paints, chemicals and plastics.

Logistics and transportation companies are impacted by higher diesel costs, increasing freight expenses, and reduced margins. Cement producers also face pressure due to rising energy costs, as the industry relies heavily on fuel such as pet coke, the firm forecasted.

The firm said impact on oil marketing companies will depend on government pricing policies, while upstream producers like ONGC and Oil India benefit directly from higher crude prices through improved realizations per barrel.

A sustained increase in crude oil prices influences multiple macro variables, including inflation, interest rates, currency movement, the current account deficit, and overall corporate profitability, the report warned.

Every $1 increase in crude oil prices raises India's annual import bill by roughly $1.5-2 billion. A $10 rise in oil prices can widen the current account deficit by around 0.35-0.5 per cent of GDP, while a 10 per cent increase in crude prices can push inflation higher by nearly 20 basis points, according to the report.

However, the firm maintained that "India has historically managed oil shocks through policy measures and supply diversification."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As someone who works in the paints industry, this is worrying news. Our raw material costs are already high. Another price hike in petroleum products will squeeze margins further. Hope companies have hedging strategies in place.
R
Rohit P
Defence sector getting a boost is the only silver lining here. Geopolitical tensions always lead to increased spending. Maybe it's time to look at stocks like BEL or HAL. Jai Hind!
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Sarah B
The report mentions India has managed shocks before, but the scale is different now. With elections around the corner, the government will be under pressure to absorb some of the price rise. Fuel prices directly impact voter sentiment.
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Vikram M
Respectfully, while the brokerage's sectoral advice is useful, it feels a bit opportunistic. War profiteering shouldn't be the main takeaway. The human cost of conflict is immense. We should be advocating for peace and stable energy supplies, not just portfolio positioning.
K
Karthik V
The aviation sector is going to get hit hard again. Just when air travel was recovering post-pandemic, fuel costs will make tickets expensive. Time to stick to trains for a while, I guess. 🚂
N
Nikhil C
The numbers

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