Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) on Thursday reported a more than four-fold surge in its third-quarter net profit, as gains in refining and marketing margins offset weakness in the petrochemicals segment.
Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) on Thursday reported a more than four-fold surge in its third-quarter net profit, as gains in refining and marketing margins offset weakness in the petrochemicals segment.
Its standalone net profit of Rs 12,125.86 crore in October-December - the third quarter of April 2025 to March 2026 fiscal year - compared with Rs 2,873.53 crore earnings in the same period a year back, according to a stock exchange filing by the company.
Refining margins surged on low prices of crude oil, the raw material IOC uses to make fuels like petrol and diesel. Fuel sales also rose 5 per cent in the quarter.
Without giving quarterly numbers, IOC said it earned USD 8.41 on turning every barrel of crude oil into fuels during April-December 2025 against a cross-refining margin of USD 3.69 per barrel.
The company, which sells domestic cooking gas at government-controlled rates, accounted for Rs 2,414.34 crore in subsidy receipts.
The government had, in October last year, approved a one-time compensation to cover losses IOC and other state-owned fuel retailers suffered on selling LPG at below market price. For IOC, Rs 14,486 crore of subsidy to be paid in 12 equal monthly instalments was approved, starting from November 2025.
In accordance with this, the firm said it has recognised Rs 2,414.34 crore instalments for November 2025 and December 2025 as revenue from operations. It, however, did not say if the subsidy had actually been received.
Fuel sales rose to 26.015 million tonnes in Q3 from 24.78 million tonnes in the previous year.
Its revenue from operations rose to Rs 2.31 lakh crore from Rs 2.16 lakh crore in Q3 of the previous 2024-25 fiscal.
Pre-tax earnings from fuel sales jumped four times to Rs 16,836.08 crore, while income from gas business also increased 34 per cent to Rs 596.45 crore. Weakness in the petrochemical business, however, continued with a loss more than doubling to Rs 361.51 crore.
For the first nine months of the current fiscal, its net profit surged to Rs 25,424.91 crore from Rs 5,696.72 crore in April-December 2024.
"Improvement in net profit is mainly on account of higher refining and marketing margin," IOC said without giving details.
IOC and other state-owned fuel retailers Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd (BPCL) and Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd (HPCL) have not revised retail petrol and diesel prices in line with cost since May 2022, except for a pre-election rate cut of Rs 2 per litre in March 2024, despite crude prices softening. A freeze on retail rates has meant bumper profits for the companies.
For the nine months ended December 31, 2025, revenue from operations rose to Rs 6.53 lakh crore from Rs 6.27 lakh crore a year back. Domestic fuel sales were up 4.3 per cent. Petrochemical sales volume rose 3 per cent to 2.411 million tonnes.