US-Iran War Threatens $100 Oil, Spells Trouble for India's Economy

A US-Iran conflict could disrupt the Strait of Hormuz, pushing Brent crude above $100 per barrel and severely impacting the Indian economy. Every dollar increase in oil adds roughly $2 billion to India's annual import bill, worsening the trade balance and inflation risks. This scenario would shift market focus from earnings to oil, benefiting upstream energy and defence stocks while pressuring oil-sensitive sectors like aviation and chemicals. The resulting inflation could push bond yields higher, compressing equity valuations and putting depreciation pressure on the Indian rupee.

Key Points: US-Iran Conflict Could Push Brent Crude Above $100/Barrel

  • Strait of Hormuz disruption risks 20% of global oil
  • India's import bill soars with crude price
  • Inflation and bond yields may rise
  • Defence and upstream oil sectors could gain
  • Oil-sensitive sectors face margin pressure
2 min read

US-Iran war could push Brent above $100 per barrel

Brent crude may surge past $100 if US-Iran war widens, adding billions to India's import bill and pressuring inflation, equities, and the rupee.

"Every $1 rise in crude increases India's annual import bill by about $2 billion - JM Financial Report"

New Delhi, March 1

Brent crude could climb above $90 per barrel with Strait of Hormuz disruption or exceed $100 per barrel in a broader regional conflict, a report said on Sunday.

The report from JM Financial Institutional Securities said the crude has already climbed to about $72.8 per barrel and limited retaliation could add $5-10 per barrel, while direct damage to Iranian oil infrastructure could add $10-12 per barrel.

Every $1 rise in crude increases India's annual import bill by about $2 billion, putting pressure on the trade balance, the report further said.

Around 20 per cent of global oil flows transit the Strait of Hormuz, with over 40 per cent of India's crude imports using the route.

Markets are likely to move from earnings-driven to oil-driven trading in the near term, it said.

Upstream energy and defence may see relative support, while oil-sensitive sectors such as OMCs, paints, tyres, aviation and chemicals face margin pressure, the brokerage forecasted. Crude remains the key macro variable for Indian equities under the current escalation scenario.

"INR 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," the brokerage explained the crude price's relation to equity markets.

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

Upstream oil producers such as ONGC and Oil India may benefit from stronger realisations, while defence names including HAL and BEL could see sentiment support, the firm said.

The US-Israel strikes killed Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and many senior IRGC, intelligence and national security officials.

On Saturday, the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, missile infrastructure and command centres. Iran has since retaliated by launching missile and drone attacks on US bases across the Middle East.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Time to seriously look at electric vehicles and solar power. We can't keep getting hit by global conflicts we have no part in. Petrol prices are already too high for the common man.
D
David E
Working in the paints industry. This is a direct hit to our input costs. Margins will be crushed if crude stays high. Hope the RBI has a solid plan to manage the rupee and inflation.
A
Aditya G
The strategic petroleum reserve needs to be filled up immediately. Also, we must diversify our import sources more aggressively. 40% via Hormuz is a massive vulnerability. Jai Hind!
S
Sarah B
While the focus is on oil, let's not forget the human cost of this conflict. So many lives lost. Hope diplomacy prevails soon. The economic fallout is secondary to that tragedy.
K
Karthik V
The report mentions defence stocks might get support. While true, it feels a bit cynical to talk about market gains when instability is causing so much suffering and economic pain for millions of Indians.
N
Nikhil C
Aviation, tyres, chemicals... all will suffer. My small business depends on logistics, and higher diesel prices will be the final nail. Government should consider temporary fuel subsidies for critical sectors.

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