London, July 14, 2026, 09:37 (BST)
BP PLC LON:BP stock jumped almost 3% in London early Tuesday after the company’s Q2 update flagged a $3.5 billion to $4.2 billion boost to sequential earnings, as better oil and gas prices and stronger refining margins offset a projected 5% to 7% drop in upstream output.
The bigger figure is on the balance sheet. BP is guiding for net debt to drop by $2.3 billion to $3.3 billion, putting it at $22 billion to $23 billion. Net debt, hybrid bonds and Gulf of Mexico settlement liabilities combined are set to fall by $6.3 billion to $7.3 billion.
The broader cleanup totals $4 billion more than the headline net-debt shift. BP spent $2.9 billion to buy back perpetual hybrid bonds — which don’t have a fixed maturity and are counted between debt and equity — and paid $1.1 billion toward old Gulf settlement dues.
BP said its price effects are measured against underlying replacement-cost profit before interest and tax. That’s a non-IFRS metric that leaves out inventory-value shifts and one-off charges. “Realizations” refers to the prices the company actually got for oil and gas. The figures do not add up to reported net income. BP also pointed to about $500 million of exploration write-offs and $1 billion of post-tax impairments, both missing from its underlying calculation. DirectorsTalk Interviews
| Second-quarter signal | BP estimate versus first quarter | Calculated change |
|---|---|---|
| Oil-production realizations | +$1.8 billion to +$2.1 billion | Added to segment earnings |
| Gas realizations | +$500 million to +$700 million | Lifted segment earnings |
| Realized refining margins | +$1.2 billion to +$1.4 billion | Segment earnings also got a boost |
| Combined positive price-and-margin effect | +$3.5 billion to +$4.2 billion | Excludes trading, taxes, and other costs |
| Upstream production | 2.170 million–2.220 million barrels of oil equivalent a day, down from 2.339 million | Off 5.1%–7.2% |
| Brent marker price | $103.85 a barrel, up from $81.13 | Jumped 28% |
| BP refining indicator margin | $29.60 a barrel, up from $16.90 | Rose 75% |
BP is set to finish the quarter still $4 billion to $5 billion over the top of its $14 billion to $18 billion net-debt target for the end of 2027. The Q2 cut gets BP about 32% to 45% from March’s $25.3 billion down to that $18 billion mark. For divestments, BP sees $9 billion to $10 billion in proceeds this year, mostly coming in the second half and with around $6 billion tied to the Castrol deal.
BP was ahead of its main London rival and outpaced the broader market in delayed morning trading, according to early quotes.
| Security or index | Delayed quote | Session move | BP’s relative move |
|---|---|---|---|
| BP PLC LON:BP | About 519.2 pence | +2.8% | — |
| Shell PLC LON:SHEL | About 3,162.5 pence | +1.7% | BP beat Shell by 1.1 points |
| FTSE 100 | — | -0.5% | BP outperformed by 3.3 points |
The spread hints investors saw more at play than just Tuesday’s crude rally. Brent gained 3.3% to $86.04 a barrel after fresh U.S.-Iran tensions pushed up concerns over shipments through the Strait of Hormuz. Still, Brent stayed about 17% under BP’s Q2 marker average. ANZ analyst Soni Kumari said “the peak of the escalation is behind us,” but added that ongoing disruption could keep prices high. Gabelli portfolio manager Simon Wong said more Houthi attacks would add “further uncertainties” to the region’s crude flows. Reuters
Debt reduction hands new CEO Meg O’Neill a quick win in her effort to tighten capital allocation. “We need to make fewer, better choices and hold ourselves to account,” O’Neill said last week, laying out a focus on costs, cash, and discipline in operations. Reuters
The risk is plain. If regional shipping routes stay open, crude prices could fall. That would hurt price swings and trim trading gains. The U.S. Energy Information Administration predicts Brent will average $74 a barrel in Q3 and drop to $65 by 2027 as stockpiles climb. BP’s output is already down, and that could slow its debt paydown and put it at risk for a hit to earnings.
BP will report its full second-quarter results on August 4. Investors want to see operating cash flow, the net-debt figure, and whether gains on the balance sheet hold up after a strong quarter for prices and refining.