London, July 8, 2026, 18:05 BST
- BP PLC LON:BP rose about 3.5% in London while the FTSE 100 fell 1.7%, a rare defensive win on a broad risk-off day.
- Brent crude jumped 8% to $80.09 a barrel after fresh U.S.-Iran tension revived Strait of Hormuz supply risk.
- The stock still trades about 19% below its March 31 high, so the rally looked more like oil-risk repricing than a clean rerating.
- BP’s July 14 second-quarter trading statement is the next test of whether volatility is helping cash flow enough to offset debt and buyback concerns.
BP PLC LON:BP rose against a falling London market on Wednesday, as crude’s jump gave traders a fresh reason to buy a stock still priced like a repair case rather than a finished turnaround. The London quote showed BP up 3.53% at 491.30 pence after the close, while the FTSE 100 fell 1.66% to 10,489.04.
The day’s tape was clear. Oil risk lifted BP and Shell PLC LON:SHEL, while most of the index sold off. Reuters said more than 80% of FTSE 100 names closed lower, with energy the top boost and industrial metal miners the biggest drag. BP rose 3.5% and Shell rose 2.3%, among the FTSE 100’s best performers.
| London close / late quote | Price or level | Day move | Market read-through |
|---|---|---|---|
| BP PLC LON:BP | 491.30p | +3.53% | Oil beta plus trading-desk optionality, but still below March high |
| Shell PLC LON:SHEL | 3,079.50p | +2.27% | Peer bid helped by oil and Shell’s stronger Q2 trading update |
| FTSE 100 | 10,489.04 | -1.66% | Broad risk-off session; energy was the offset |
| Brent crude | $80.09/bbl | +8.0% | Strait of Hormuz risk premium returned fast |
This was not a company-specific rally in the pure sense. It was a crude shock filtered through BP’s balance sheet, its trading book and the market’s memory of a weak shareholder-return reset. Brent gained $5.93 to $80.09 a barrel and WTI rose $5.25 to $75.69 after U.S. President Donald Trump said an interim accord with Iran was “over” and threatened fresh strikes. Reuters also reported that a fifth of global oil supply passed through the Strait of Hormuz before the Iran war began. Reuters
“Fundamentally, oil should trade higher,” SEB Research’s Ole Hvalbye said. Jorge Leon, head of geopolitical analysis at Rystad, said “the events of the last few days significantly weaken any confidence” that the current 60-day truce can become a permanent peace deal. Saul Kavonic, head of research at MST Marquee, said Trump’s comment raised the prospect of “a re-closing of the Strait.” Reuters
For BP, that matters because the market has recent proof that war-driven volatility can feed earnings. In April, BP reported first-quarter underlying replacement cost profit of $3.2 billion, beating a company-provided analyst consensus of $2.67 billion, after its customers and products unit, which includes oil trading, recorded profit before interest and tax of $3.2 billion. CEO Meg O’Neill told Reuters then: “We’re controlling what we can control, which is trying to increase production in other parts of the world.” Reuters
The equity read-across is less generous than the crude screen. BP’s London shares remain about 19.38% below their 52-week high of £6.09, reached on March 31. Volume was also above normal, with MarketWatch reporting 44.7 million shares against a 50-day average of 42.4 million, so the bounce was not just a thin late-day mark-up.
| BP valuation and trading screen | Latest data | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| 52-week range | 381.90p–609.40p | The stock is closer to mid-range than to recovery highs |
| Market value | £73.32 billion | BP is far smaller than Shell’s roughly £167 billion market value |
| Dividend yield | 5.08% | Income support is high, but buybacks remain the bigger sentiment gap |
| Beta | 1.13 | The stock still trades with high market and crude sensitivity |
| Volume vs 65-day average | 44.67 mln vs 42.9 mln | Buying was modestly above normal turnover |
That gap is why Wednesday’s gain may be fragile. BP suspended share buybacks in February to cut debt and refocus spending on oil and gas. Reuters reported then that BP targeted net debt of $14 billion to $18 billion by 2027, down from $22 billion at the time, while RBC and Barclays analysts said scrapping buybacks was the right move given the debt burden.
The first quarter did not remove that burden. Net debt rose to $25.3 billion at the end of the quarter, from just over $22 billion in the prior quarter, partly because of working-capital effects tied to the Iran war. RBC analysts said after the results that BP’s priorities looked “pretty straightforward” — “pay down the debt, get the house in order and put the company on firmer footing.” Reuters
Shell is the useful comparator because the market is paying it for cleaner execution. Shell gained on Tuesday after it raised its second-quarter gas production forecast and flagged much stronger gas trading versus the prior quarter; BP rose 1.4% that day as a peer beneficiary. On Wednesday, Shell again rose, but BP’s bigger percentage gain was a catch-up trade in a stock with more balance-sheet torque.
Macro investors are not treating the oil jump as a straight return to the March shock. Hamad Hussain, climate and commodities economist at Capital Economics, said oil prices would be “volatile over the coming months” and face upward pressure, though he expects Brent near current levels by year-end if some ceasefire holds and flows recover. Fiona Cincotta at City Index said the peace process was “very fragile” and that oil prices could rise further if the Strait closes again. Reuters
That leaves BP as a split trade. Higher Brent and shipping disruption can help trading income and upstream cash, but higher inflation risk also lifts yields, hurts broad equity risk appetite and can hit refining margins. BP itself said in April that fuel margins were expected to “remain sensitive” to supply costs and Middle East conditions. Reuters
The next hard company date is July 14, when BP is due to release its second-quarter trading statement at 7 a.m. BST. The stock’s Wednesday rally says the market is willing to buy BP when crude risk returns; the statement has to show whether that risk is turning into enough cash to cut debt before shareholders can price in a return of buybacks.