GOLDEN RULES FOR TRADING

Oil Stocks Outlook for the week – 17 to 21.11.2014

Oil Stocks Outlook for the week – 17 to 21.11.2014

Stocks of state-owned oil marketing companies may recover from this week's
slide but are likely to trade in a range next week due to lack of immediate
triggers. Crude oil prices and rupee-dollar movement will continue to provide
direction to the stocks of Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd, Indian Oil Corp Ltd and
Hindustan Petroleum Corp Ltd in the near term.

The Oil and Natural Gas Corp Ltd counter may garner some buying interest early
next week after the company reported better-than-estimated numbers for Jul-
Sep post market hours Friday. However, declining oil prices and increasing
subsidy burden could weigh on sentiments and cap upsides. Crude prices
continue to decline and the Indian basket of the commodity hit a four-year low
of $77.19 a barrel today.

Global investment banking and broking firm J.P. Morgan Chase and Co said this
week that crude oil prices are likely to soften further and may bottom out only in
Jan-Mar. Even a recovery, in the latter part of 2015, will be moderate. We see
more downside risks to oil prices as we go into 2015.

Operationally, all the three refining companies turned out poor numbers for Jul-
Sep. All three reported very weak refining margins. However, given their
marketing strength and falling oil prices, the situation may improve going
forward.

Falling crude prices and deregulation of diesel improve earnings prospects for
OMCs (oil marketing companies) with only uncertainty being the subsidy sharing
pattern. Reliance Industries' stock may continue its muted performance next
week as the global refining margin environment is still not very encouraging and
may remain under pressure due to capacity growth in west Asia. On the other
hand, lower crude oil prices could weigh on its upstream earnings.

Further, friction between RIL and the government seems to be increasing with
the company telling the Supreme Court on Friday that the new gas pricing
formula is not acceptable to it and it has already initiated arbitration against the
government on the issue. Hopes of an amicable solution are only getting dimmer

and that may continue to weigh on investor sentiments.