Energy sectors diverge amid Middle East conflict; refiners, LNG seen outperforming while utilities and cleantech lag: Goldman Sachs
New Delhi, [India] March 16 (ANI): Energy markets have seen sharp divergence across subsectors following the escalation of the Middle East conflict, with refining, LNG-linked and certain upstream segments outperforming, while utilities, metals and parts of the clean technology space lagging, according to a recent report by Goldman Sachs.
The report noted that market positioning has increasingly reflected concerns over supply disruptions and geopolitical uncertainty in the region.
According to the report, refining companies have benefited from higher margins amid disruptions to fuel supplies passing through the Strait of Hormuz.
It said the outperformance is linked to "exposure to elevated refining crack spreads, driven by supply disruptions for middle distillate through the Strait of Hormuz," adding that higher jet fuel prices and tighter regional fuel markets have supported profitability.
"Global LNG prices have moved significantly higher as a result of the effective closure of Qatari exports... while US gas prices are mostly flat," the report noted, adding that companies with exposure to the global gas-US gas spread could see significant margin upside.
Within oilfield services, companies with stronger exposure to North American onshore drilling activity have performed better than those reliant on Middle East offshore activity.
Power utilities have held up relatively better than several other sectors as investors rotate into defensive assets during geopolitical volatility. The report noted that the sector's relative stability and predictable earnings profiles have attracted investors amid uncertainty.
The report highlighted that petroleum-based inputs remain key components in several manufactured products, increasing the risk of cost inflation.
"Oil and/or petroleum represent a key input cost... particularly the plastics involved in many of the components," report noted, warning that higher transport and shipping costs could also weigh on profitability.
Looking ahead, the report noted that volatility could persist as the market reacts to developments around energy flows through key shipping routes and the broader geopolitical environment. (ANI)
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