New York, Feb 20, 2026, 07:18 EST — Premarket
- Transocean climbed roughly 2% before the bell, with the offshore driller posting its 2025 results and giving fresh numbers on its rig contract backlog.
- The company pointed to reduced debt and stronger free cash flow for 2025, while also outlining its revenue and cost targets for 2026.
- The fleet status report revealed roughly $610 million in additional backlog, tied to 10 new fixtures logged since October.
Transocean Ltd shares edged up 1.9% to $6.36 in Friday’s premarket, with the offshore driller releasing both its fourth-quarter and full-year numbers alongside an update on rig contracts.
The company reported a jump in 2025 contract drilling revenues to $3.965 billion. Adjusted EBITDA landed at $1.37 billion, serving as a read on cash earnings, and free cash flow reached $626 million. Debt was down, now sitting at $5.686 billion. For 2026, management is forecasting contract drilling revenues between $3.8 billion and $3.95 billion, with operating and maintenance expense projected from $2.25 billion to $2.375 billion. CEO Keelan Adamson pointed to progress on the balance sheet, highlighting $1.3 billion in debt principal retired.
Transocean, in its latest fleet status update, said it has secured 10 new contract fixtures since October, tacking on roughly $610 million to its backlog and pushing the total up to around $6.1 billion. Highlights include a Deepwater Mykonos contract with bp in Brazil, plus multiple options and extensions on other rigs. Some dayrates topped $400,000.
Oil’s run to its highest levels in half a year has set the tone for offshore drillers, as crude prices shape spending plans and spur longer-cycle projects. Still, news flow doesn’t always cooperate. On Friday, Reuters said oil prices were headed for their first weekly advance in three weeks, driven by escalating U.S.-Iran tensions.
Analysts are starting to show more restraint on valuation, despite rising estimates. Barclays cut Transocean to “Equalweight” from “Overweight” on Feb. 18, but still bumped its price target up to $6, Investing.com reported. Investing
The earnings release comes as Transocean pushes deeper into consolidation. Just earlier this month, the company announced a $5.8 billion all-stock agreement to acquire Valaris, with both sides expecting to seal the deal in the back half of 2026.
Early action saw peers ticking higher as well. Valaris climbed 1.7%, with Noble Corp ahead 2.4% in premarket trading.
Execution remains the near-term hurdle. Rigs sit idle, shipyard schedules drift, and that so-called “backlog” isn’t locked in if clients push work out. Dayrates? Those can fade fast if oil prices dip or operators clamp down on budgets—pressuring cash flow at the very moment Transocean needs to keep chipping away at its debt.
Investors want specifics on the 2026 bridge—utilization, downtime, any hints around pricing—along with news about the Valaris partnership and what kind of synergies are actually expected there. Transocean’s results call comes up next, set for 9 a.m. EST on Friday.