After 4Q Struggles, Transocean’s Upcycle Prediction Looks to Pay Off

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Despite suffering an adjusted net loss of $74 million during fourth-quarter 2023, offshore drilling company Transocean is in the midst of an upcycle, which CEO Jeremy Thigpen presciently predicted in the company’s third-quarter 2023 earnings call.

Now it just needs to pay off.

After a tough fourth quarter, Transocean expects to see a meaningful increase in demand for “longer-duration contracts and expects significant opportunities over the next 18 months,” according to a Feb. 21 report by Evercore ISI. Transocean expects seven incremental rig lines to be awarded in Brazil, increasing the rig count in the region to 36 rigs by the end of 2025; steady demand in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico (GoM); and 13 programs to commence in the next 18 months, Evercore said.

“While deleveraging continues to be a concern, we believe Transocean’s ability to generate significant operating leverage, economies of scale and free cash flow should enable the company to accelerate organic deleveraging, which could potentially allow the company to begin returning cash to shareholders in the form of dividends and share repurchases,” Evercore analysts wrote.

During Transocean’s Feb. 20 earnings call, Thigpen said that 2023 “was a very productive year for the company.”

Future opportunities beckon

In regards to the future, the rig market is booming with opportunity.

“Over the past nine quarters, the number of tendered rig years has increased by 90% to 91 rig years,” said Keelan Adamson, Transocean president and COO. “Our customers’ programs have increased and continue to increase in duration.”

In Brazil, Petrobras alone was awarded seven rig lines, with five more expected to be awarded by second quarter 2024.

The U.S. GoM has several tenders and negotiations ongoing, but since the Atlas, Titan and Stena Evolution already have contracts in the area, Adamson expects most demand requirements over the next 18 months to be met by rigs already in the region.

“We continue to be encouraged by demand in West Africa and currently expect that up to 13 programs will commence in the next 18 months. Notably, half of these programs are at least 2 years in duration,” Adamson said.

Demand in West Africa is steadily growing as well. In Namibia, TotalEnergies, Shell and Galp Energia have recently made significant discoveries, leading Adamson to surmise that most of the four rigs currently in the area will have their contracts extended. In Nigeria, Shell has issued its multiyear tender, and Chevron and Exxon are expected to follow suit in the first half of this year. Angola also has seven rigs under contract with operators such as TotalEnergies, Exxon Mobil and Azule Energy.