New York, June 3, 2026, 17:11 (EDT)
- Transocean shares fell about 1.2% to $6.18 after the regular U.S. session, with volume near 36 million shares.
- Oil rose as Middle East tension lifted crude, but RIG did not follow the stronger energy tape.
- A fresh Transocean Equinox rig booking in Australia added a demand signal, while the Valaris merger and debt reduction remain the bigger equity story.
Transocean Ltd. shares slipped on Wednesday even as oil prices climbed, leaving the offshore driller out of step with a crude-led move in parts of the energy market. RIG was last at $6.18, down 7.5 cents, with about 36.0 million shares traded after the regular New York session.
That matters now because offshore drillers depend on oil companies keeping long-cycle projects alive. Brent crude settled up 1.89% at $97.81 as global stocks fell, with the S&P 500 down 0.74%, Reuters reported, after renewed Middle East hostilities hit risk appetite and lifted oil.
The freshest company-linked item was not from Transocean itself but from Carnarvon Energy, which said it had secured the Transocean Equinox semi-submersible rig for a 2027 drilling campaign in Western Australia’s Bedout Sub-basin. Carnarvon CEO Philip Huizenga called the contract a “critical step” toward its return to drilling and said the company expects at least one, and possibly two, high-impact wells next year. OE Digital
The Carnarvon release did not give a value for Transocean, so investors had little hard revenue math to work with. Still, the booking adds another data point for rig demand, especially for semi-submersibles, floating rigs used in deeper or harsher offshore waters.
The larger question is backlog — work already signed but not yet performed. Transocean reported first-quarter contract drilling revenue of $1.08 billion, net income of $71 million and adjusted EBITDA of $440 million; adjusted EBITDA is earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, with some items stripped out. The company also said it added $1.6 billion of contract backlog at a weighted average dayrate of about $410,000, with dayrate meaning the daily fee paid to hire a rig.
The stock also trades around the pending Valaris deal. Transocean agreed in February to buy Valaris in an all-stock transaction valued at $5.8 billion, a tie-up meant to create a 73-rig offshore drilling fleet; Chief Executive Keelan Adamson said then that Transocean’s debt level “negatively impacts our equity value.” Reuters
Peers were soft too. Noble fell about 1.0%, Valaris dropped about 0.7% and Seadrill lost about 3.3%, suggesting the day’s move was not just a Transocean tape.
Analyst positioning remains mixed but has turned less hostile than earlier in the year. Benzinga data show Barclays upgraded Transocean to Overweight on May 7 and set an $8 price target, while TD Cowen and Morgan Stanley were the other two most recent firms listed with targets of $6 and $7, respectively; Overweight means the analyst expects the stock to outperform a benchmark or peer group.
But the risk case is plain. Oil prices could retreat, customers could delay offshore spending, or the Valaris deal could take longer, cost more, or deliver fewer savings than promised; Transocean and Valaris also warned that approvals, customer reactions, integration and debt-reduction targets could all differ from expectations.
For now, RIG is caught between two facts. Offshore contracting has improved enough to keep investors watching the stock, but the equity still has to prove that higher dayrates and the Valaris combination can turn into steadier cash flow, lower leverage and a cleaner multiple.