LONDON, July 4, 2026, 15:04 BST
- Shell Plc (LON:SHEL) ended Friday at 2,891.50p, down 0.26%, and about 0.2% lower on the week.
- Shell’s two confirmed asset-sale items last week total $3.0 billion, the same headline size as the buyback programme now paused during the ARC deal process.
- ARC Resources Ltd (TSE:ARX) holders vote July 14; ISS and Glass Lewis have advised a “FOR” vote. ARC Resources
- Q2 results are due July 30, with Shell already guiding to lower Integrated Gas volumes.
The London Stock Exchange was shut on Saturday, its normal weekend break, leaving Shell Plc’s (LON:SHEL) Friday close as the last price for the week. The stock closed at 2,891.50 pence, down 0.26% on the day, versus 2,898.00 pence at the previous Friday close. That left the shares down about 0.2% for the week, while the FTSE 100 ended Friday up 0.25%.
The cleaner read for investors was not the share move. It was the cash line. Shell completed or agreed two disposals last week worth a combined $3.0 billion, exactly matching the size of its current buyback programme, which the company has paused because of securities law requirements tied to its takeover of ARC Resources. The comparison is numeric, not a funding instruction from Shell’s statements.
| Shell item | Amount/date | Investor issue |
|---|---|---|
| Jiffy Lube International and Premium Velocity Auto sale to Monomoy Capital Partners | $1.3 billion; completed July 1 | Shell exits a non-core lubricants asset but keeps key brands and a long-term supply deal. |
| Na Kika and Coulomb Gulf of America sale to Talos Energy NYSE:TALO and Ridgewood Energy | $1.7 billion; agreed June 30 | Shell sells mature assets that produced 37,000 boe/d in 2025 and were not seen as meaningful by 2030. |
| Current Shell buyback programme | $3.0 billion; contract can run to July 24 | Buybacks are suspended through the ARC shareholder meeting process. |
| ARC shareholder vote | July 14; voting deadline July 10 | Proxy advisers ISS and Glass Lewis have backed the deal. |
The $3.0 billion disposal tally is just over Shell’s first-quarter free cash flow of $2.9 billion and equal to about 57% of the $5.3 billion the company returned to shareholders in the quarter. Shell’s net debt rose to $52.6 billion at the end of the first quarter from $45.7 billion three months earlier.
ARC shareholders are due to receive 0.40247 Shell ordinary share and C$8.20 in cash for each ARC share, a mix ARC described as 75% Shell stock and 25% cash. The consideration was valued at C$32.80 per ARC share when the deal was announced. That makes Shell’s share price part of the ARC vote math, even before the deal reaches closing.
Shell upstream president Peter Costello said on the Gulf sale: “We remain focused on sustaining our material liquids production into the next decade.” The company said buyers would assume some decommissioning obligations, while Shell Trading would keep offtake rights from the assets. Shell
Oil did little to help Shell’s week. Brent settled around $71.94 a barrel on Friday and was only 5 cents below the prior Friday level, according to Reuters. The prompt Brent curve briefly flipped into a discount to later months, a sign of looser near-term barrels. “The front of the curve is taking the hit,” said David Jorbenaze, global oil markets lead at ICIS. Reuters
Rory Johnston, founder of Commodity Context, said Middle Eastern supply was “outpacing our initial expectations,” as Reuters reported higher Gulf loadings after the Israel-Iran ceasefire. That matters for Shell because the company’s cash return case still leans on upstream cash generation, even as the board spends more capital on LNG and gas. Reuters
LNG remains the larger swing factor before second-quarter results. Reuters reported Shell’s view that global LNG trade could be flat in 2026 after disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz shut in about one-fifth of monthly supply. Shell integrated gas president Cederic Cremers said the LNG industry had proved “resilient and able to adapt.” Reuters
A separate Reuters report showed less than half of U.S. LNG exports went to Europe in June for the first time in nearly two years, as Asian prices pulled cargoes east. Asian JKM averaged $17.33 per mmBtu in June against Europe’s TTF at $13.19, Reuters reported. “The fear of paying too much prevails,” said Hans van Cleef, head of energy research at Eqolibrium. Reuters
| Shell Q2 2026 marker | Company outlook | Why it matters for the stock |
|---|---|---|
| Integrated Gas production | 580,000-640,000 boe/d | Lower volumes set the bar for the group’s most watched division. |
| LNG liquefaction volumes | 6.8 million-7.4 million tonnes | Trading and supply timing will sit beside volume weakness. |
| Upstream production | 1.62 million-1.82 million boe/d | A wide range leaves room for maintenance-driven variance. |
| Refinery utilisation | 91%-99% | Downstream margins face a volume test after crude curve pressure. |
The week ahead has two dated checks. ARC votes are due by July 10 at 10:00 a.m. Mountain Time, before the July 14 meeting. Shell then reports second-quarter results on July 30 at 07:00 BST.