NEW YORK, July 12, 2026, 14:05 (EDT)
Transocean Ltd. NYSE:RIG ended Friday at $5.20, which means the stock being offered for Valaris Limited NYSE:VAL is worth $79.22 per share using the set 15.235-to-one exchange rate. Valaris settled at $77.57. That leaves a $1.65 deal spread, or 2.1%, between Valaris’s price and Transocean’s proposed value.
The slight discount stands out after a choppy week for oil. RIG climbed 2.8% since July 2, about the same as Valaris, though it lagged Noble Corp. NYSE:NE and Brent crude. That points to merger timing, not just crude moves, as setting Transocean’s short-term price.
| Friday snapshot | July 10 close | Change from July 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Transocean | $5.20 | up 2.8% |
| Valaris | $77.57 | up 2.9% |
| Noble | $39.97 | up 5.2% |
| Brent crude | $76.01 a barrel | up 5.5% |
The merger spread tightened a bit, moving from around 2.3% on July 2 to 2.1% by Friday. Since the deal pays in stock instead of cash, a 1% swing in RIG shifts Valaris’s implied takeover value by the same 1%. Merger-arb funds hedge that by shorting the RIG shares they’ll get.
| Deal math at Friday’s close | Value |
|---|---|
| RIG closed at | $5.20 |
| Exchange rate | 15.235 RIG shares |
| Implied price per VAL share | $79.22 |
| VAL last price | $77.57 |
| Gross spread | $1.65, or 2.1% |
| Annualised spread to Sept. 29 | About 10.0% |
The annualized number is based on RIG staying at $5.20, the deal finishing on Sept. 29 and leaves out trading, borrowing and tax expenses.
The spread has come into focus because of the regulatory calendar. Valaris said the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States gave a green light to the deal on June 29. But the Justice Department put out a “second request” for more information as part of its antitrust review. The companies agreed not to certify compliance before July 31, and if there’s no early end, they can’t close until 60 days after both certify. That means Sept. 29 is the earliest close if they move fast. Shareholders still have to vote.
Wall Street pulled back a bit last week. Susquehanna’s Charles Minervino lowered his Transocean price target to $7 from $8 on Wednesday but maintained his Positive rating. The new target is about 35% higher than where shares closed Friday.
Operations are helping to balance things. Transocean said June 30 it reached a conditional deal with Equinor ASA NYSE:EQNR valued at more than $1 billion for seven rig-years, with an effective starting dayrate above $400,000. That’s the daily fee Equinor pays to use the rig. CEO Keelan Adamson said the win shows the strength of Norway’s high-spec harsh environment market and the company’s ties to Equinor.
Valaris is looking to use the deal to help shore up its balance sheet. “We know that our debt level negatively impacts our equity value. This transaction addresses that,” Adamson said when announcing the deal. The two firms expect a combined fleet of 73 rigs, see more than $200 million in added savings, and forecast a leverage ratio near 1.5 times inside two years of closing. Reuters
The 2.1% spread isn’t a flat return. If RIG drops 10% to $4.68, the deal value for a Valaris holder without a hedge would slide to about $71.30—8% under Valaris’s Friday close. A drawn-out antitrust review, a no from shareholders, or softer oil could push the discount wider. Hedging will dampen price moves but eats into gains and doesn’t fully protect against deal risk.
U.S. markets will open again Monday, with Transocean not set to post results until Aug. 5. That day, the company plans to release a new fleet-status report. Consumer price data for June is coming up Tuesday and producer prices hit Wednesday, but the stock probably hinges more on crude headlines, shifts in the RIG-Valaris spread, and any new merger filings this week.