1. At a Glance – PSU with a Six-Pack, But Also Knee Pain
₹91,346 crore market cap. Stock chilling at ~₹429. Dividend yield of 2.45% like a disciplined PSU uncle who always brings mithai. P/E of 5.9 — so low that even value investors are suspicious.
Q3 FY26 slapped the table with ₹4,011 crore PAT, up 57.7% YoY, while sales grew a modest 4.1%. GRMs cooled to $4.73/bbl in 9M FY25 (from a heroic $9.08 in FY24), reminding everyone that refining is cyclical and not a Netflix subscription.
ROCE at 10.5%, ROE 13.8%, Debt/Equity 1.11 — respectable, not jaw-dropping. HPCL is that government-backed heavyweight lifter who can lift, but only when crude behaves and the Ministry doesn’t change rules mid-set.
Question: cheap valuation or value trap with capex indigestion?
2. Introduction – Oil, Politics, and the Art of Surviving India
HPCL is not just a company; it’s an institution. Born in PSU land, raised on administered pricing trauma, and still standing. It refines crude, sells petrol, diesel, LPG, ATF, lubes — basically anything that smells flammable and keeps India moving.
The company owns India’s largest lubricant refinery, runs the 2nd-largest retail fuel & LPG network, and controls the 2nd-largest product pipeline network. Translation: if fuel flows in India, HPCL has