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Indian refiner HPCL's Q4 revenue falls on higher expenses

India's stateowned refiner Hindustan Petroleum Corporation (HPCL) reported a fall in its fourthquarter revenue on Thursday, hurt by higher raw material costs and selling fuel below market value.

India has been purchasing low-cost Russian oil considering that the war with Ukraine started however discounts have actually narrowed from $30 per barrel in 2022 to less than $10 this year.

Refiners also cut fuel costs at pumps ahead of the country's basic elections that started mid-April and will go on until early June.

Petroleum costs jumped nearly 14% in January-March.

Hindustan Petroleum's standalone net revenue for the quarter ended March 31 fell 11.8% from a year earlier to 28.43 billion rupees ($ 340.6 million), sending its shares down 4.2% on Thursday.

Sale of items grew 6% from a year previously to 1.21 trillion rupees during the quarter.

Overall expenses increased about 7% to 1.19 trillion rupees due to an 18% jump in basic materials costs.

Hindustan Petroleum's average gross refining margin - the profit from making refined items from one barrel of oil - for the year ended March 31 was $9.08 per barrel, compared to $ 12.09 per barrel a year earlier.

Larger state-run peer Indian Oil Corp also reported a fall in its quarterly earnings on inventory losses and lower pump costs.

Hindustan Petroleum approved a bonus offer issue of shares in the ratio of 1:2 and stated a last dividend of 16.5 rupees per share.

(source: Reuters)