NEW YORK, July 17, 2026, 17:04 EDT – Shares of Transocean NYSE:RIG lagged behind a 16% weekly surge in oil prices, as the merger spread remained close to 2.3%.
- Transocean ended the week at $5.14, down 1.2%. Brent crude advanced 15.9%.
- Valaris Ltd. NYSE:VAL closed around 2.3% under its fixed-share merger value.
- Noble Corp. NYSE:NE advanced 3.8% for the week, while Seadrill Ltd. NYSE:SDRL increased by 6.4%.
Transocean Ltd. closed Friday nearly flat at $5.14. Over the week, its shares slipped 1.2%. Brent gained close to 16%.
The discrepancy is significant. Rising crude prices typically boost expectations for offshore spending. In this case, the anticipated acquisition was the more influential factor on prices.
Valaris ended the session at $76.54. The fixed exchange ratio offers 15.235 Transocean shares per Valaris share. Based on Friday’s closing price, that equates to $78.31.
The $1.77 gap represents about 2.3% of implied value. The gross spread stood at roughly 2.1% one week earlier, showing only a marginal increase.
| Instrument | July 10 close | July 17 close | Weekly move |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transocean | $5.20 | $5.14 | -1.2% |
| Valaris | $77.57 | $76.54 | -1.3% |
| Noble | $39.97 | $41.50 | +3.8% |
| Seadrill | $40.49 | $43.10 | +6.4% |
| Brent crude | $76.01 | $88.10 | +15.9% |
Friday trading figures were used for stock closes, while company and S&P Global histories reflect data as of July 10. Transocean Ltd. Brent crude settlements are sourced from Reuters.
Noble and Seadrill gained as oil prices climbed, while Transocean and Valaris declined. The two companies involved in the deal traded in near unison.
The pattern reflects typical merger positioning, rather than indicating the probability of deal completion. The spread is also influenced by hedging expenses, stock borrowing, and timing considerations.
The main limiting factor continues to be regulatory timing. CFIUS approved the deal on June 29, while the Justice Department’s second request is still pending.
The companies agreed not to confirm substantial compliance before July 31. Unless regulators conclude the review sooner, the closing can only proceed 60 days following both certifications. Shareholder approvals are also still pending.
Chief Executive Keelan Adamson described the agreement as a step toward fixing leverage. “We know that our debt level negatively impacts our equity value. This transaction addresses that,” he said in February. Reuters
As of March 31, Transocean reported principal debt totaling $5.137 billion. Free cash flow for the first quarter was $136 million, with backlog amounting to $7.1 billion.
This balance highlights why investors are focused on these factors. Lowering debt can carry more weight than a brief rise in oil prices.
Ongoing bookings continue to underpin the longer-term outlook. In June, contract awards increased firm backlog by $185 million.
Equinor ASA NYSE:EQNR has entered into a conditional deal valued at over $1 billion spanning seven rig-years. The majority of activity is scheduled to start in 2027 or 2028. Cash conversion is not expected soon.
Oil continues to be the principal driver of short-term gains. The market surged on Friday after renewed U.S.-Iran strikes and increased risks to important shipping lanes.
“If additional tankers are attacked and suffer damage, oil prices will keep rising,” Andrew Lipow of Lipow Oil Associates said. Reuters
From July 20 to July 24, Gulf shipping and the deal spread are the live inputs. Transocean’s upcoming report is set for August 5, after the NYSE session ends. Its conference call is slated for August 6.
Risks are still significant. A truce may erase oil’s premium. Downtime for rigs or postponed launches might impact cash flow. Remedies for the merger, or a possible rejection or delay, could increase the spread.
Currently, the 2.3% spread is the clearest indicator. A broader gap would suggest greater execution risk, while a narrower gap would point to increased confidence in the deal.