BP Stock Climbs as Oil Rises Past $80 on Fresh Iran Truce Fears

BP Stock Climbs as Oil Rises Past $80 on Fresh Iran Truce Fears

June 19, 2026

London, June 19, 2026, 10:03 BST

  • BP traded at 497.5 pence in a delayed quote, up 1.5%. The FTSE 100 was barely changed.
  • Brent crude gained around 0.5% to trade back above $80 as talks between the U.S. and Iran in Switzerland were scrapped. Oil is still down sharply this week.
  • BP shares dropped 2.9% to 490.05 pence on Thursday, the lowest in 15 weeks. The stock goes into Friday at that level.

BP shares bounced at the open in London on Friday, trimming some of Thursday’s drop. The stock traded near 498.35 pence, or £4.98, after starting at 498.65 pence. Brent crude traded back above $80 a barrel.

The rebound didn’t make up for Thursday’s 2.9% drop, so BP is still close to 20% down from its 52-week high marked on March 31. The shares continue to move as a quick-trading stand-in for oil supply risk premium — traders are still pricing in the risk that crude deliveries could be interrupted.

Shell ticked up around 1% in London, a sign Friday’s action was mostly driven by the sector and not new BP news. BP’s bigger percentage gain pointed to how the stock has been reacting lately to moves in oil prices and news from the Middle East.

Brent added 0.6% to $80.36 after Switzerland announced Friday’s planned U.S.-Iran talks were off. Despite the gain, Brent and U.S. crude remained down about 8% for the week. Vandana Hari at Vanda Insights said prices “may have bottomed out.” KCM’s Tim Waterer said traders were looking for “hard evidence” of normal traffic in the Strait of Hormuz. Reuters

BP’s first-quarter underlying replacement-cost profit jumped to $3.2 billion, with help from its best oil trading since 2022. That figure, which matches up with adjusted net income, more than doubled on the back of the oil move. Oil and gas production came in a bit short of forecasts. BP also said fuel margins are still at risk if Middle East supply shifts.

Chief Executive Meg O’Neill is moving ahead with a company overhaul starting this month. BP is breaking down into an upstream division for oil and gas production and a downstream arm for refining, fuels, and customer units. The company now faces the challenge of delivering on the new structure, rather than planning another shake-up.

BP is looking to sell minority stakes in its Kaskida and Tiber Gulf of Mexico projects, according to people familiar with the matter. Both projects are each set up for around 80,000 barrels per day in capacity. BP is aiming for first oil at Kaskida in 2029 and Tiber in 2030. Any sale would raise cash for BP’s larger U.S. plans but would mean giving up some of the returns from what are currently two major developments.

There’s risk in both directions. If the U.S. and Iran hold to a deal and traffic through Hormuz picks up, the market could see extra crude, which might hit BP’s production earnings. Goldman Sachs sees Gulf exports nearing pre-conflict marks by the end of July, but says ongoing shipping and political threats could slow that. On the other hand, a flare-up would likely push oil prices up but create new supply snags and push BP’s costs higher.

BP’s move up on Friday mainly tracked oil prices, not a major jump in how the market values the company. For BP to keep climbing, investors want to see the company cut debt more, stick to stricter capital spending, and show that its reorganisation and asset disposals are actually helping cash flow. Last quarter’s numbers had some financial progress, but net debt still went up.

Mateusz Brzeziński

Mateusz Brzeziński is a financial and technology journalist at Bez-kabli.pl, covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global market developments. He graduated from the Prague University of Economics and Business in the Czech Republic and previously worked in financial analysis before moving into business journalism. His reporting focuses on the companies, technologies and market trends shaping the global economy.

Stock Market Today

  • ASX Runners of the Week: Norwood, Cauldron, 1414 Degrees & Red Metals Amid SpaceX IPO Surge
    June 19, 2026, 5:13 AM EDT. Norwood Systems leads ASX runners following the explosive SpaceX IPO debut, with shares soaring well beyond the US$135 issue price to US$230 in after-hours trading. The IPO added over US$1 trillion in market value, propelling Elon Musk to the status of the world's first trillionaire. Australian mining magnate Gina Rinehart's US$1 billion investment in SpaceX highlights strong local investor interest. Meanwhile, the US-Iran peace deal eased concerns in the oil market, with prices plunging over 10%, easing inflation worries and boosting risk appetite among global equities. Despite market optimism, the Reserve Bank of Australia held rates steady while the US Federal Reserve signaled potential further tightening, emphasizing caution among policymakers.