Transocean stock price steadies in premarket as RIG heads into earnings and Valaris deal scrutiny

Transocean stock price steadies in premarket as RIG heads into earnings and Valaris deal scrutiny

February 17, 2026

New York, Feb 17, 2026, 06:16 EST — Premarket

Transocean Ltd (RIG) dipped 0.1% to $6.53 ahead of Tuesday’s open, trimming a penny from its previous close of $6.54.

The offshore driller is set to release its fourth-quarter numbers after the bell on Feb. 19, with a fleet status update coming out alongside those results, according to the company. The conference call happens the following morning.

Oil is back in focus. Brent lost ground, dipping to roughly $68 a barrel during Asian hours, while U.S. crude saw a modest uptick as the market tracked U.S.-Iran nuclear negotiations and considered potential threats to supply.

Earlier this month, Transocean said it would acquire Valaris in an all-stock transaction worth roughly $5.8 billion. The combination would boost their fleet to 73 rigs. Chief Executive Keelan Adamson described the timing as “well-timed to capitalize on an emerging, multi-year offshore drilling upcycle.” Deepwater

The company flagged fresh business in Norway as well. On Feb. 11, it reported securing a seven-well contract extension for the Transocean Encourage, plus two additional one-well options for the Transocean Enabler. The deals tack on roughly $184 million in firm contract backlog. That backlog, the company notes, represents work already locked in by contract; drillers collect a “dayrate”—a set daily payment—when the rig is active. Deepwater

Norway’s rigs won’t come online just yet, but for investors, the immediate concern remains: will Transocean actually convert a tighter rig market into more stable cash flow—and cut down on idle rigs?

Thursday brings the first unclouded update since the Valaris deal. Traders want to see specifics on contract flow, expenses, and any early hints at how the merged balance sheet might shape up.

The setup isn’t one-sided. According to Citi, geopolitics have kept oil prices buoyant for now, but the bank also sees Brent slipping toward $60-$62 if tensions subside. That would put pressure on offshore budgets and could dampen appetite for risk among drillers.

The Valaris deal isn’t over the finish line yet—approvals and execution still hang in the balance. Transocean is pushing a fast-track deleveraging plan for after the deal wraps up. Any hiccup in timing, or a slip in Thursday’s results, could hit the stock hard, given it’s been trading near its recent highs.

First comes Feb. 19, post-close. Then, on Feb. 20 at 9 a.m. EST, management faces the numbers—time to back up the fleet narrative.

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