SUMMARY
The past six weeks have been a masterclass in how geopolitical events translate into market moves, and how quickly the narrative can reverse. West Asia went from crisis to ceasefire in the span of a month, and Indian energy stocks rode both waves. If you've been watching your gas stock holdings with a mixture of excitement and anxiety, here's a grounded framework to help you think through what to do next.
The US-Iran ceasefire is two weeks old. Nobody has serious visibility on whether it holds, whether Hormuz reopens fully, or whether Qatar LNG flows normalise on schedule. Global energy markets have had the kind of shock, a 45% collapse in India's monthly LNG imports in March 2026 alone, that takes months to fully work through supply chains. Policymakers, refiners, and traders are all still repositioning.
What this means for you: don't make binary bets. Don't go all-in assuming the crisis is over, and don't panic-sell assuming the worst is still ahead. The fundamentals favor a position of thoughtful, diversified exposure to the energy sector.
Not all oil and gas stocks are the same, and the current environment affects them very differently. Here's a rough framework:
Unlike most sectors, gas distribution in India is deeply intertwined with government policy. The Natural Gas Supply Regulation Order 2026, the PNG Drive 2.0 extension, the LPG allocation framework for industries, all of these are government actions that materially affect which companies grow and at what pace. As an investor, you need to track policy signals as closely as quarterly earnings.
One concrete indicator: monthly PNG connection data released by PNGRB. If the industry moves toward 20,000+ connections per day consistently, that's a strong leading indicator for CGD company volume growth. If the connection pace falters, it suggests execution challenges that will eventually show up in revenue.
India is in the middle of a genuine, decade-long energy transition, from LPG cylinders to PNG pipelines, from coal to gas in industrial heating, from petrol/diesel to CNG and eventually hydrogen. The West Asia crisis, for all its disruption, has actually accelerated this transition by demonstrating the risks of import dependence. That structural story doesn't change based on a two-week ceasefire.
Stay invested in the story. Just manage your position size sensibly, and let the quarterly numbers guide your rebalancing.

After the West Asia Conflict: Which Sectors Bounce Back Fastest – and Which Have a Longer Road?
3 min Read Apr 10, 2026
Bonds Are Finally Simple - Here’s How Ventura Is Changing Fixed Income Investing
3 min Read Apr 13, 2026
FY26 Annual Results: 2026 IPO Firms Report First Full-Year Performance in Q4
3 min Read Apr 13, 2026
Holding Steady, Staying Ready
3 min Read Apr 13, 2026
War and peace and the year-end V-Theory
3 min Read Apr 13, 2026
After the West Asia Conflict: Which Sectors Bounce Back Fastest – and Which Have a Longer Road?
3 min Read Apr 10, 2026