TLDR
- Transocean (RIG) rose 6.5% Thursday, trading as high as $7.02
- The company secured ~$1.0 billion in new backlog, including a 1,095-day contract for the Transocean Barents in Norway
- Multi-year extensions were signed for two Petrobras drillships in Brazil
- Transocean retired $358 million of 2028 notes, reducing debt
- Consensus analyst rating remains “Reduce” with an average price target of $6.38
Transocean jumped 6.5% Thursday after landing roughly $1.0 billion in new contract backlog. The stock hit an intraday high of $7.02 before pulling back slightly to $6.9250.
The headline contract is a 1,095-day harsh-environment deal for the Transocean Barents, operating in Norway. That’s just over three years of locked-in work in one of the more demanding drilling environments in the world.
The company also secured multi-year extensions for two Petrobras drillships operating in Brazil. These extensions add to revenue visibility and show continued demand from one of the world’s biggest deepwater operators.
$RIG +4% [Transocean wins $1B in new drilling contracts, extends Brazil/Norway rigs, and pays off debt early—boosting revenue and financial health.] https://t.co/fmefcZHxYU pic.twitter.com/XHxqFa0ebh
— NOTRELOAD AI (@notreload_ai) April 2, 2026
On top of the contract news, Transocean retired $358 million of its 2028 notes. That move cuts debt and cleans up the balance sheet — something the market clearly noticed.
The stock had previously closed at $6.50. Trading volume during mid-day came in around 6.19 million, well below the average daily volume of roughly 45.9 million — so this wasn’t a volume-driven surge.
Analyst Ratings Still Cautious
Despite the pop, Wall Street isn’t exactly rolling out the welcome mat. The consensus rating on RIG sits at “Reduce” with an average price target of $6.38 — below where the stock was trading Thursday.
The breakdown: 2 Buys, 5 Holds, 3 Sells. BTIG is the bull in the room, raising its target from $6 to $10 with a Buy rating back in February. Morgan Stanley is more measured, lifting its target from $4.50 to $5 with an Equal Weight rating.
Fearnley Fonds and Clarkson Capital both downgraded from Strong Buy to Hold earlier this year, signaling some cooling enthusiasm at the higher end.
Insider Selling Has Been a Headwind
Insiders have been selling. CEO Keelan Adamson sold 58,687 shares in late January at $5.00 per share, reducing his stake by 4.58%. EVP Roderick Mackenzie sold 78,370 shares in early March at $6.36.
In total, insiders sold around 159,903 shares worth roughly $906,000 over the last three months. Insiders now own 12.27% of the company.
Institutional ownership tells a different story. Vanguard lifted its position by 19.3% in Q3, now holding over 94.5 million shares. Barclays increased its stake by 230.6% in Q4. Institutional investors collectively own 67.73% of the stock.
The most recent earnings, reported February 20, showed EPS of $0.02 — missing the $0.09 consensus by $0.07. Revenue came in at $1.04 billion, just above the $1.03 billion estimate, up 9.6% year-over-year. Analysts expect full-year EPS of $0.14.
The stock’s 50-day moving average sits at $6.01, while the 200-day moving average is $4.63. Year-to-date, RIG is up 57.38%.







