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Indian Company Investor Calls

HOEC Targets 10,000–11,000 bbl by June Despite Monetization Delays

June 19, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Hindustan Oil Exploration Company Limited (HOEC) — Q4 FY2025-26 Earnings Call (quarter/year ended Mar 31, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Neutral to Optimistic

  • Management is confident about a “transformational” 3-year period (“next 3 years are expected to be transformational for HOEC”).
  • However, they repeatedly acknowledge material execution/monetization constraints in FY26: “delays in certain monetization initiatives”, “infrastructure constraint, especially in the East”, and HPCL crude sale reversal/working-capital overhang.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Strategic positioning / portfolio thesis
  • HOEC highlights a “rare combination” of stable cash flows + near-term development opportunities and 3P reserves >100 MMBOE.
  • Operational efficiency + execution culture
  • Focus on “high-performance execution culture”, “uncompromising safety standards”, and “disciplined capital allocation”.
  • Near-term production growth is pipeline- and execution-dependent
  • Dirok gas constrained by pipeline connectivity; management targets ramp once DNPL/NRL/IGGL linkage is completed.
  • B-80 revival depends on workovers + drilling, but FY26 monetization delays and financing constraints pushed workovers.
  • Monetization friction / working capital
  • FY26 impacted by HPCL crude sale reversal and subsequent resale to third parties with proceeds arriving over 2–3 months.
  • Reserves and growth targets
  • Management cites 2P reserves ~60 MMBOE and 3P ~109 MMBOE (P10/P50/P90 framing).
  • Production trajectory targets (BOE basis) are explicitly stated (see Guidance section).

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Production targets & field-by-field ramp (FY27 / near-term)

  • Core questions
  • Target net production for FY27 and split by fields (Kharsang, B-80, PY-1, Dirok).
  • How quickly production ramps given drilling/workovers and constraints.
  • Management response
  • FY27 target: “10,000 to 11,000 barrels by June of next year” (also reiterated as “above 8,000” with planning to reach 11,000).
  • Field mechanics:
    • PY-1: 2 wells + coiled tubing intervention; expects incremental ~1,500–2,000 bbl.
    • B-80: 2 workovers + 3 wells; incremental ~1,500–2,000 bbl; also ties to rig availability/weather.
    • Assam/Dirok: pipeline constraints may delay some wells; hopes to triple gas from current levels to 45 MMscfd.
    • Kharsang: drilling 9 more wells; expects doubling again (range-based).
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • Debt/EBITDA outlook for FY27/FY28 was deferred: “let’s leave it to understand a little more… In the next quarter, we’ll give you the details.”
  • Several answers are range-based and explicitly qualified by financing, rig availability, and weather.

Theme B: HPCL crude sale reversal / revenue realization timing & accounting

  • Core questions
  • When will HOEC receive HPCL revenues / resolve the HPCL issue?
  • Any future loss due to inventory valuation and derecognition effects?
  • Accounting treatment: fair value gain (INR ~32 cr) vs cash flow impact; compensation/claims with HPCL.
  • Management response
  • HPCL issue status:
    • Invoice reversed; crude resold to third parties; trucks picking up crude from HPCL storage.
    • Revenue realization expected over “2 to 3 months”; “we’ve already started realizing as we speak.”
  • Pricing/discount:
    • Sales are Brent-linked (“Brent minus X”), near to prior realization but with significant discounts to Brent (and transport/diesel-related pain borne by buyers).
  • Inventory valuation / loss risk:
    • CFO claims valuation methodology includes downside: “valuation methodology… is a discount to Brent, and we have factored in a downside.”
  • Compensation:
    • Management says no further commercial interaction after credit note; conciliation process remains under COSA.
  • Notable / unusually strong or partial answers
  • They repeatedly say no cash flow for the INR 32 cr fair value gain (valuation only), but disclosure rationale was contested by an analyst and management responded with auditor/disclosure-process explanations (somewhat technical and not fully satisfying).
  • On “loss vs no loss,” management avoided a firm number: “let this quarter get over… better understanding.”

Theme C: Gas evacuation / pipeline connectivity (DNPL–IGGL, Dirok)

  • Core questions
  • When will national grid connectivity for Dirok be solved?
  • What production can be expected once connected?
  • Whether DNPL becomes a common carrier and implications for HOEC’s gas share.
  • Management response
  • DNPL linkage:
    • Pipeline physically laid; remaining is connection back to main line and operational steps.
    • Management hopes flow start in “1 or 2 months”; also says completion could be “2 months maybe.”
  • Production:
    • Dirok theoretical 1.1–1.2 mmscmd potential; management expects 0.8–0.9 due to shared capacity.
    • Target national grid gas: “70 million SCFs” (with upsides from North/Greater Dirok).
  • Common carrier:
    • Management frames it as capacity utilization rather than ownership: “who owns it is not of immediate concern.”
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • They cannot give a date for regulatory/common-carrier aspects and repeatedly qualify with “my view” / “need to qualify.”

Theme D: Capex funding, rig availability, and timeline firmness

  • Core questions
  • Debt/financing plan for FY27/FY28; possibility of equity raise.
  • Rig availability risk: could timelines slip by 3–6 months?
  • Management response
  • Funding:
    • internal accruals and… facilities… from the banks”; equity not ruled out but not committed (“whatever makes commercial sense… we will definitely do that”).
  • Rig availability:
    • Acknowledges rig shortages: “rigs are in short supply.”
    • For workovers: Plan A/B/C approach; refused to quantify delay risk.
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • Debt/EBITDA outlook deferred to next quarter.
  • Timeline risk is acknowledged but not quantified.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Production targets (BOE basis)
  • By 2027: 10,000–11,000 boe
  • By 2028: 22,000 boe
  • By 2029: 32,000 boe
  • Near-term production mechanics
  • PY-1: 2 wells + coiled tubing intervention; incremental ~1,500–2,000 bbl
  • B-80: 2 workovers + 3 wells; incremental ~1,500–2,000 bbl
  • Dirok gas: target 70 MMscfd (line of sight), with current 0.3–0.4 MMSCM/day and pipeline-driven ramp.
  • Dirok connectivity timing (qualitative but time-bounded)
  • Flow start hoped in “1 or 2 months” / “2 months maybe” (not a formal guidance number).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Execution dependencies
  • Workovers and drilling are contingent on financing, rig availability, and weather (“nature has to be kind”).
  • Monetization is improving but not fully normalized
  • HPCL proceeds expected over 2–3 months, implying continued working-capital volatility.
  • Capital discipline
  • Repeated emphasis on avoiding unnecessary dilution and maintaining “sharp capital discipline.”

5. Standout Statements (direct quotes where useful)

  • Transformational framing
  • the next 3 years are expected to be transformational for HOEC
  • Reserves strength
  • Our 3P reserves… are over 100 MMBOE
  • Production trajectory
  • by 2027, we want to get to 10,000 to 11,000… by 2028, 22,000… by 2029, to 32,000
  • HPCL monetization timeline
  • our best guess is 2 to 3 months, we should be able to sell all the crude
  • Pipeline flow timing (DNPL linkage)
  • I hope in 1 or 2 months, we are able to start flowing
  • B-80 workover delay reason
  • Workovers delayed due to “financial constraints” and “INR 260 crores tied up in invoices for our crude sales
  • Common-carrier stance
  • who owns it is not of immediate concern… capacity should be completely utilized
  • Rig/timeline risk management
  • Plan A, Plan B, Plan C” (for subsea workover uncertainties)

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Guidance is heavily qualified by financing, rig availability, and weather; multiple answers are range-based.
Working capital / monetization overhang is still active (HPCL proceeds over 2–3 months; prior reversal).
Regulatory uncertainty remains for gas evacuation (common carrier / pro-rated capacity).
Debt/EBITDA outlook deferred—suggests limited visibility or unwillingness to commit.

Positive signals
Clear, field-specific operational plan (workovers, well counts, interventions).
Reserves confidence with independent certification and detailed reservoir management approach.
Management team strengthening (new CFO/offshore ops/reservoir consultant/CTO narrative).
Opex discipline claim: lifting cost stable around $28/bbl (standalone).


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior 3 calls)

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Earlier calls (Q1/Q2 FY26, Nov 2025, Feb 2026): tone was more “grid will be operational soon” with stronger confidence and fewer “transformational” reserve/portfolio framing.
  • Current call (Q4 FY26): tone is more “portfolio + execution culture + 3-year transformation”, but with more explicit admission of monetization delays and infrastructure constraints.
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic on strategy, but more cautious on execution/money timing.
  • Example shift: from “grid to be operational within FY26” (earlier) to current “hope in 1 or 2 months” for flow, and explicit HPCL monetization disruption.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Northeast grid connectivity timeline
  • Past statement (Nov 2025 / Feb 2026): grid operational by end of FY26 / March 2026; DNPL linkage expected by end of March 2026.
  • Current call: DNPL linkage still being tied/connected; flow hoped in 1–2 months (implying delay vs earlier “by March”).
  • Flag:Delayed
  • B-80 workover timing
  • Past (Nov 2025): workover delayed “by one, one and a half months” and expected around Q4 FY26 / post-monsoon.
  • Current (Q4 FY26): workovers were delayed due to financial constraints and tied to HPCL invoice blockage; now planned post-monsoon with “liquidated by June next year.”
  • Flag:Delayed
  • HPCL issue resolution
  • Past (Nov 2025 / Feb 2026): expected amicable resolution; earlier implied earlier resolution and payment realization.
  • Current: still not fully resolved; proceeds over 2–3 months and conciliation process ongoing.
  • Flag:Delayed / ongoing
  • Production ramp confidence
  • Past (Feb 2026): Dirok expected to triple once grid connected; B-80 expected to improve after workover.
  • Current: still qualified by pipeline capacity sharing and rig/weather; Dirok expected 0.8–0.9 vs theoretical 1.1–1.2.
  • Flag:Partially qualified (less certain than earlier)

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “grid will unlock demand” → “execution culture + capital discipline + monetization fixes”
  • Current call emphasizes internal capability build and disciplined capital allocation more than earlier calls.
  • HPCL issue becomes central
  • Earlier calls treated HPCL as an overhang; current call provides mechanics of resale, discounts, and timing, indicating it is still materially affecting operations/financing.
  • Gas evacuation narrative becomes more capacity-sharing focused
  • Earlier: “anyone can consume once in grid.”
  • Current: explicit expectation of pro-rated portion and shared capacity.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium
  • Strength: management provides more operational detail now (pipeline steps, workover dependencies, resale mechanics).
  • Weakness: repeated timeline deferrals (grid connectivity, workovers, HPCL monetization) and reliance on “hope” / “my view” language for key catalysts.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/macro (gas grid)
  • Direction: Deteriorating certainty (timelines slipped vs prior expectations).
  • Margins/cost
  • Direction: Stable cost discipline (lifting cost stable), but profitability impacted by incidents and monetization timing.
  • Expansion
  • Direction: Improving narrative (more wells planned, reserve confidence), but execution risk remains.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • The company’s growth plan increasingly depends on two “gates”:
    1) Gas evacuation capacity (DNPL linkage + regulatory/common-carrier + pro-rated allocation)
    2) Cash/working capital (HPCL monetization blockage delaying B-80 workovers)
  • This dual dependency suggests that even if reservoir performance is strong, financial and midstream bottlenecks can still delay production realization—consistent with the pattern of timeline slippage across calls.