BP share price set for another test after buyback halt: debt targets and dividend dates in focus

February 11, 2026
BP share price set for another test after buyback halt: debt targets and dividend dates in focus

London, Feb 11, 2026, 07:57 GMT — Premarket

BP shares (BP.L) resumed trading after closing Tuesday at 448.35 pence, down 6.13%. Investors reacted to the company’s move to pause share buybacks.

The selloff puts BP’s cash-return story to the test, coming as oil prices dip from last year’s peaks and investors grow less tolerant of major shifts. Tuesday’s trading will reveal if the market sees this as a one-time adjustment or the beginning of a sustained downgrade.

Buybacks matter because they represent a straightforward way to return money: companies repurchase their shares, reduce the share count, and usually boost earnings per share. When buybacks disappear, the focus shifts to balance-sheet repair and future cash flow — which can be tougher to justify during a market downturn.

BP announced it would halt its quarterly share buybacks, choosing instead to channel that money into paying down debt and investing in oil and gas after writing off roughly $4 billion in renewables and biogas. The company said net debt dropped to $22 billion from $26 billion and reaffirmed its $14 billion-$18 billion target for 2027. However, it abandoned its previous commitment to return 30%-40% of operating cash flow via dividends and buybacks, unsettling investors focused on yield. BP’s fourth-quarter underlying replacement cost profit — its favored metric excluding one-offs — came in at $1.54 billion. Finance chief Kate Thomson admitted on the call, “I really don’t like taking impairments.” Reuters

Oil provided early support to the sector Wednesday, with Brent rising 57 cents to $69.37 a barrel as traders kept an eye on U.S.-Iran tensions and hints of stronger demand. Still, BP remains vulnerable—any drop in crude prices tends to hit earnings and cash flow at integrated oil companies quickly.

Hargreaves Lansdown’s Derren Nathan noted that BP is taking “firm action” to strengthen its balance sheet amid falling prices, highlighting a net debt of $22.2 billion and a capital spending plan of $13 billion to $13.5 billion for 2026. BP also expects to sell assets worth $9 billion to $10 billion and maintain roughly flat production by 2026, Nathan wrote. Hargreaves Lansdown

Maurizio Carulli, global energy analyst at Quilter Cheviot, described the buyback pause as “a prudent step” given the softer commodity-price environment. He noted investors will be watching for strategic updates as the new leadership team settles in. Carulli also pointed out that buybacks had already been scaled back last year before this latest halt. Quilter

However, there’s a catch. If oil prices remain low or expenses rise, BP’s effort to cut debt could drag out, delaying share buybacks and widening the dividend gap with competitors actively returning cash to shareholders.

Traders will be keeping a close eye on BP’s performance once the London market opens on Wednesday, watching to see if the focus shifts from “cut returns” to “cut risk.” The key date coming up is the dividend schedule: BP announced an interim dividend of 8.320 cents per share. The ex-dividend date for ordinary shareholders is set for Feb. 19, with payments expected on March 27. Tradingview

Technology News Today

  • Pixel Watch the most accurate in 3,000-step test vs Apple Watch and Oura Ring
    April 10, 2026, 3:23 PM EDT. Three wearables were tested for a 3,000-step sequence: the Apple Watch, the Google Pixel Watch, and the Oura Ring. In Brooklyn's Prospect Park, the author wore all three on the same arm and counted to 1,000 three times, ending the tests after walking and running segments. The Pixel Watch emerged as the most accurate, though the author stresses the test isn't scientific. The piece notes that Apple's workout-step data is harder to view inside the Health app, unlike the Oura Ring and Pixel Watch after workouts. It also frames step tracking as a long-running obsession, driven by reminders, and highlights that manufacturers invest heavily to refine counters and calorie estimates. The takeaway: real-world accuracy varies; Pixel Watch led in this informal test.