Shareholder value considerations influenced corporate procurement strategy shifts among Indian refineries in 2025, particularly for publicly listed companies facing investor scrutiny. While US crude imports to India increased by 65.6% to $8.2 billion during April-December 2025, Russian crude imports contracted by more than 17%, falling from $40 billion to $33.1 billion in the same period.
December 2025 procurement decisions reflected shareholder interests. Russian crude shipments to India declined by 15.15% to $2.71 billion from $3.2 billion in December 2024, influenced by concerns that controversial sourcing might affect company valuations, international investor perceptions, and access to global capital markets.
Alternative suppliers aligned better with shareholder value protection. Saudi Arabia’s 61% growth to $1.75 billion in December 2025 proceeded without investor concerns. The United States’ 31% increase to $569.30 million supported positive investor relations. Iraq and the UAE, supplying $2.37 billion and $1.65 billion respectively, raised no shareholder value issues.
Shareholder considerations intensified following the US imposition of a 25% punitive tariff on Indian goods on August 27, 2025. Publicly traded refineries evaluated how procurement strategies might affect international investor perceptions, particularly among ESG-focused funds and Western institutional investors. Protecting shareholder value through prudent sourcing became a board-level consideration. Russian crude imports declined from $3.62 billion in July 2025 to $2.71 billion in December 2025.
India’s total crude oil imports from all sources reached $11.29 billion in December 2025, up 9.1% from $10.34 billion in December 2024. Cumulative imports for April-December 2025 totaled $105.10 billion, compared to $109.33 billion in the corresponding period of 2024. The shareholder value focus demonstrates corporate governance influence on procurement.
