NYSE:SDRL Seadrill Q1 2026 Earnings Report $51.06 +0.08 (+0.15%) Closing price 05/22/2026 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$50.44 -0.62 (-1.21%) As of 05/22/2026 07:31 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Seadrill EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.11Consensus EPS -$0.10Beat/MissMissed by -$0.01One Year Ago EPSN/ASeadrill Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$358.00 millionExpected Revenue$326.75 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$31.25 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/ASeadrill Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/11/2026TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateMonday, May 11, 2026Conference Call Time9:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsSeadrill's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Wednesday, August 5, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled at 4:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (6-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Seadrill Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 11, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Seadrill added about $860 million of backlog this quarter, including follow‑on contracts for the West Neptune and West Vela in the U.S. Gulf, a 7‑well option in Angola and a 3‑year extension for the West Polaris in Brazil, reducing 2026 white space and improving near‑term revenue visibility. Positive Sentiment: Management raised full‑year guidance after a stronger Q1, with EBITDA of $97 million in the quarter and updated 2026 revenue and EBITDA ranges of $1.43–1.48 billion and $370–420 million, respectively. Positive Sentiment: Seadrill expects a free‑cash‑flow inflection point in mid‑2026 driven by early contract starts, higher market day rates on re‑contracted rigs, and approximately $70 million of lump‑sum mobilization receipts due from Petrobras related to reacceptance projects. Neutral Sentiment: The balance sheet shows $329 million cash, $625 million gross principal debt and ~$482 million total liquidity, with capex guidance of $200–240 million; management prioritizes FCF generation and says capital returns or M&A will be considered once cash is generated. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallSeadrill Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Seadrill First Quarter 2026 Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. Today, we ask that you limit to one question and one follow-up. If you would like to ask a question, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, press star one again. Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Kevin Smith. Please proceed. Kevin SmithVP of Corporate Finance and Investor Relations at Seadrill00:00:38Hello, and welcome to Seadrill's first quarter 2026 earnings call. I'm Kevin Smith, Vice President of Corporate Finance and Investor Relations, and I'm joined today by Samir Ali, President and Chief Executive Officer, Grant Creed, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, and Jacob Taylor, Vice President, Commercial. Our call will include forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainty. Actual results may differ materially. No one should assume these forward-looking statements remain valid later in the quarter or year, and we assume no obligation to update them except as required by securities laws. Our filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission provide a more detailed discussion of our forward-looking statements and the risk factors affecting our business. During the call, we will also reference non-GAAP measures. Our earnings release, furnished to the SEC and available on our website, includes reconciliations with the nearest corresponding GAAP measures. Kevin SmithVP of Corporate Finance and Investor Relations at Seadrill00:01:40Our use of the term EBITDA on today's call corresponds with the term adjusted EBITDA as defined in our earnings release. I'll now turn the call over to Samir. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:01:51Thanks, Kevin. Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I'll begin with Seadrill's key priorities, followed by first quarter highlights, including recent contract awards and a brief market update. Grant will review our financial results and speak to our improved full-year 2026 guidance before I close with final remarks. Seadrill's priorities continue to be driven by our motto of focus on the drill bit. It reflects the fundamentals of our business and the standards we hold ourselves to every day. First and foremost, operational discipline underpins everything we do. Our goal is to deliver safe, efficient, and reliable operations across our fleet with a focus on zero incidents while maximizing uptime. This is supported by an adherence to our procedures, disciplined risk management, and systematically learning from our experiences. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:02:47By identifying issues early, closing gaps quickly, and applying lessons learned across our fleet, we seek to strengthen Seadrill's performance quarter over quarter. We're sharpening our focus on free cash flow. This means winning the right contracts and then effectively converting that backlog into cash. It also means delivering projects on time and on budget while continuing to simplify our onshore organization so every dollar spent supports value creation. We're committed to capturing the upside ahead of us. Three legacy day rate contracts roll off in 2026, we have already recontracted two of the associated rigs, an important milestone that strengthens our earnings and cash flow profiles this year. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:03:34As we look ahead, we believe the opportunity to reprice the West Carina at current market rates, combined with our contracting leverage in an improving market, positions us for meaningful earnings and free cash flow growth in 2027. Executing these priorities is reflected in our first quarter performance. Both the West Tellus reacceptance and the West Capella reactivation projects were completed ahead of schedule and on budget, enabling early startup and revenue generation. We delivered a solid quarter, both financially and operationally, with EBITDA of $97 million and strong economic utilization. As a result of this performance, we are raising full-year revenue and EBITDA guidance, which Grant will cover in more detail. Importantly, we remain on track for meaningful free cash flow generation starting in the second half of 2026. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:04:27I want to extend a special thank you to our offshore crews for the tremendous work delivered this quarter. Our performance is driven by your collaboration and operational discipline, and your continued efforts strengthen Seadrill's position as a leader in deepwater drilling. Turning to our contract awards, since our last call, we have added approximately $860 million to our backlog. In the U.S. Gulf, industry-leading performance continues to translate into follow-on work. In April, the West Neptune and West Vela each secured new contracts with LLOG, adding approximately $260 million to our backlog. We are pleased to expand our relationship with LLOG, now a subsidiary of Harbour Energy, and look forward to supporting their ambitions to establish a leading position in the U.S. Gulf with a second drillship now unlocking valuable resources. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:05:20Last quarter, we noted that seven drillships were expected to roll off contract in the U.S. Gulf before year-end. Removing white space for both of our drillships in the region significantly improves revenue visibility and reduces idle time in 2026 for Seadrill. Both rigs are now positioned to capitalize on improving supply-demand fundamentals in 2027 as other assets find work or leave the region. Ultimately, we believe improving market utilization will drive the potential upward day rate momentum. In Angola, the Sonangol Quenguela had a seven-well priced option exercised, committing the rig into mid-2028. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:05:59Lastly, in Brazil, the West Polaris was awarded a three-year extension with Petrobras in direct continuation of the current program, extending a sixth-generation drillship into the next decade. Consistent with our focus on free cash flow, this extension has no additional CapEx requirements and does not require lengthy acceptance testing normally found in Petrobras contracts. In addition, we now anticipate the West Carina will remain on contract until mid-June. We continue to see a strong demand pipeline driven by growing deepwater exploration as operators intensify efforts to secure future growth. There's a clear shift amongst majors and large independents towards allocating incremental capital to deepwater, addressing the exploration underinvestment of the past decade and offsetting production declines. At an industry conference in March, the largest operators in the world highlighted the reality of production declines and the maturation of onshore plays. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:06:59Chevron's CEO noted that the natural decline of existing fields as a growing supply challenge. He described the loss as the equivalent of five Saudi Arabias over the next decade. Similarly, ConocoPhillips CEO noted that the peak in shale output has helped shape their strategy of targeting major new conventional discoveries. This decline, coupled with recent exploration successes from Eni in Indonesia, Egypt and Libya, Petrobras in Brazil and Colombia, and Oxy in the U.S. Gulf, to name just a few, further strengthens our thesis that a new exploration cycle is emerging. At the start of the year, geopolitical tensions pushed import-dependent economies to prioritize energy security, with examples such as India's initiative to drill approximately 150 wells over seven years amid sanctions on Russian crude. The Iran conflict has further intensified this focus, reinforcing the need for domestically anchored supply, where deepwater will be the beneficiary. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:08:03With production shortfalls already in the hundreds of millions of barrels and pressure to rebuild strategic reserves, deepwater resources are becoming increasingly attractive and even better positioned for development. Energy security is back in vogue. In summary, sentiment has improved since our last call. Demand in Brazil has crystallized, with several multi-year extensions recently awarded. Despite a softer 2026 in the U.S. Gulf, we've contracted both of our drillships in a highly competitive environment. Going forward, we expect available capacity to be redeployed across the Atlantic Basin towards the Eastern Hemisphere, where demand continues to strengthen. Taken together, rising demand from deepwater exploration and a renewed focus on energy security increases our confidence in an improving 2027, and a firmer commodity backdrop provides an additional tailwind for offshore project economics. With that, I'll hand the call over to Grant. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:09:02Thanks, Samir. I'll now walk through our first quarter 2026 financial results before providing an update on our outlook for the balance of the year. First quarter results surpassed expectations due to early contract commencements, solid economic utilization, and the timing of operating expenditures. During the quarter, the West Jupiter underwent reacceptance testing and began its new contract with Petrobras in late March. The West Capella was successfully reactivated and commenced operations late in the quarter, and the West Tellus entered reacceptance testing following the completion of its contract in mid-March. Contract drilling revenues were $277 million, up $4 million quarter-on-quarter. The key drivers were more operating days and higher day rates for the West Vela and higher economic utilization across the fleet, with increased uptime driven by strong operational execution. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:09:54This offset the impact of fewer operating days for the West Jupiter and fewer operating days for the Sevan Louisiana, which had a short gap between programs. Reimbursable revenues decreased, offset by a corresponding movement in reimbursable expenses. Management contract revenues decreased by $2 million to $63 million due to the timing of add-on services, which can fluctuate quarter on quarter. Leasing revenues were consistent with the prior quarter at $8 million. Now moving to operating expenses, which were $334 million in the first quarter, down $10 million from the prior quarter. The movement was attributable to a reduction in vessel and rig operating expenses relating to the capitalization of mobilization costs for the West Jupiter, with the cost to be amortized over the three-year contract term. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:10:44That was partially offset by higher costs related to the preparation and commencement of the West Capella contract. Resulting EBITDA was $97 million, a sequential increase of $9 million compared to the prior quarter. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow statements, we ended the quarter with total cash of $329 million. The $35 million use of cash in the first quarter included $13 million of capital expenditures captured in investing activities and $38 million of long-term maintenance recorded in operating activities. As anticipated, our cash position was largely impacted by the reactivation and contract preparations for West Capella, the reacceptance testing for West Jupiter, as well as timing of working capital. We are increasingly confident in a return to strong cash flow generation in the middle of 2026. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:11:37We expect cash receipts totaling approximately $70 million over the next two quarters relating to lump sum mobilization revenues from Petrobras as reimbursement for reacceptance projects for both the West Jupiter and West Tellus. These receipts, as well as benefiting from incremental day rate revenues from the West Jupiter, West Capella, and West Tellus contracts, will mark the inflection point in our cash profile this year. Overall, our capital structure remains robust. Gross principal debt was $625 million at quarter end, with maturities extending through 2030. We have access to $482 million of total liquidity when including available borrowing capacity on our revolving credit facility. Now turning to our outlook for the remainder of the year. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:12:27First quarter EBITDA was stronger than anticipated, with a portion of the outperformance attributable to the timing of repair and maintenance expenses that are expected to occur later in the year. We are updating our revenue and EBITDA guidance ranges to reflect project execution, as demonstrated by the early commencement of the West Jupiter and West Capella contracts in the first quarter and additional operating days for the West Carina, which is now expected to work through mid-June. For the full year 2026, we are updating our guidance for operating revenues to $1.43 billion-$1.48 billion, and that excludes $50 million of reimbursable revenues. Our EBITDA range to $370 million-$420 million. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:13:11That EBITDA guidance includes a non-cash net expense of $26 million related to the amortization of mobilization costs and revenues, of which $7 million has been recognized at the end of the first quarter. Full year capital expenditure guidance range is maintained at $200 million-$240 million. I'll now hand the call back to Samir for his closing remarks. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:13:36Thanks, Grant. In closing, I'd like to reiterate our priorities: safe, reliable operations, free cash flow generation, and capturing the upside. We are proud of our performance to start 2026, executing key projects ahead of schedule, adding meaningful backlog, delivering first quarter EBITDA that exceeds expectations, and raising our full year revenue and EBITDA guidance. Collectively, these achievements enhance our line of sight to higher earnings and free cash flow in the second half of 2026 and in 2027. With that, I will now hand the call over for questions. Operator00:14:29At this time I would like to remind everyone in order to ask question press star then the number one on your telephone keypad. And your first question comes from the line of Fredrik Stene with Clarksons Securities. Please go ahead. Fredrik SteneAnalyst at Clarksons Securities00:14:37Thanks, Samir and team. Hope you are well and congratulations on a very solid first quarter performance. I wanted to kick it off here with maybe a high level question. You, you paint a relatively, I think, supportive demand story, which I definitely agree with myself. Start of 2026 has been quite, you know, eventful from a geopolitical perspective. My, my take on this is that, you know, the pivot towards more exploration, more conventional oil and gas activity rather than just M&A to replace reserves is something that was on the way of happening anyway. I guess my question is, would you agree with that and any kind of additional commentary you might have around it? Fredrik SteneAnalyst at Clarksons Securities00:15:33Also with the war in the Middle East now adding some aspects around energy security, et cetera, on top of that, how has that changed, if anything? Are we starting to see any impacts of that war into tenders, et cetera, at the moment, or is that too early? Thanks. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:15:55Yeah, absolutely. Afternoon, Fredrik. You know, I'd say we saw it coming before, if you kind of roll the clock back in like January 1st, just to pick a date. When we look and did our forecast and looked out and demand in the world, we saw clients already starting to, you know, talk about investing in new regions and going back and finding hydrocarbons through the drill bit. To your point, you know, historically, they've bought a lot of their hydrocarbons via M&A, I think there was that pivot that came of, look, we have to go invest in, you know, places like Namibia or Angola or even Mozambique, just to pick a few places. We saw that coming early this year. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:16:31On top of that, you've now had the, you know, what's going on in Iran. Which has helped commodity prices, obviously, which has, you know, added some cash to their balance sheets and allowed them to spend. On top of all of that is you have energy security. Long way of saying, yes, we saw that, you know, demand coming already, and then what you've seen with what happened in Iran has just added fuel to that fire of, you know, energy security and a higher commodity price for them to go explore even more. Fredrik SteneAnalyst at Clarksons Securities00:17:01All right. Thank you. As a follow-up to that, if, and I am sure there are some stats on this, but if you think about both the share of exploration drilling versus development drilling over the last, let's say, five years, given this new exploration cycle, if you will, are you able to in some way quantify how much additional demand that can come from your exploration versus what you have seen historically again over the maybe the last, five years? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:17:40You know, it's hard to quantify right now, but you know, historically if you look at it, exploration by definition is a little less efficient than development because, you know, you're not doing exploration wells, with an eyesight of each other. With a development program you kind of rinse and repeat on the same field. Exploration, you know, you have one well here, one well there. By definition that will take a bit more time and add more incremental demand for, you know, our assets and our peers' assets. You know, hard to quantify exactly how much more demand comes from the exploration, but we definitely see more exploration coming and that will drive more demand going forward. Fredrik SteneAnalyst at Clarksons Securities00:18:18All right. I appreciate all the comments, and I'll leave it at that for now. Thank you very much. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:18:24Thanks, Fredrik. Operator00:18:26Your next question comes from the line of Eddie Kim with Barclays. Please go ahead. Eddie KimAnalyst at Barclays00:18:33Hi, good morning. Obviously the world has changed since your last earnings call three months ago. Just wanted to ask if you could remind us on how you see the trajectory or the progression of leading-edge pricing, which I assume is probably improved since three months ago. We're kind of still in the low 400s today for leading-edge drillships. Do you suspect we'll see contract announcements maybe by the end of this year in the mid 400s or even the high 400s? Just any thoughts there based on the customer conversations you're having today would be great. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:19:13Sure. I'll start on and I'll hand it over to Jacob to provide some more color. You know, when we look at day rates, right, Eddie, for us it's about free cash flow generation, right? You know, when we look at, you know, internally on bidding stuff, obviously day rate matters, but it's how much free cash flow can you generate off that contract? I would just frame it that way of how we think about day rates, at least at Seadrill. You know, as we look forward, demand continues to improve, and utilization is kind of picking up across the world, so that should lead to day rate progression as we move into 2026 and into 2027. I'll let Jacob speak a little more on that. Jacob TaylorVP of Commercial at Seadrill00:19:52Hi, Eddie. I think if we look back over the last, you know, three to four months, we've had the strongest backlog cycle we've had since 2012. I think we've had over 71 years of contracted term being awarded throughout the industry, that was predicated on a market that, you know, was materializing before the war broke out. I think that this is just going to bring momentum, you know, and a windfall of cash to some of our customers who are gonna continue to invest going forward. What we have going forward is we have opportunities within Indonesia, Namibia, Nigeria, Suriname, U.S. Gulf with long-term contracts anywhere from two to three years that we expect to be awarded here before the end of 2026. Jacob TaylorVP of Commercial at Seadrill00:20:44I think that that definitely, you know, creates an opportunity for rates to be pushed up further than they are today. Eddie KimAnalyst at Barclays00:20:54Great. Thanks for that. My follow-up is just on potential M&A and perhaps increasing the size of your fleet. It would seem that having more rigs and rig availability in this rising pricing environment would be a good thing. Are there sort of obvious acquisitions of one-off drillships out there or even larger corporate M&A? Just curious on your willingness to increase the size of your fleet or if you're comfortable with the size of your fleet at this stage. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:21:26Okay. Yeah, I'd say we're at minimum efficient scale. Our focus is on, you know, if we're gonna do M&A, making sure it's an accretive deal. For us, we're not, you know, jonesing to do a deal just because we, you know, just for the sake of it. If it makes financial sense, absolutely, we'd look at it, and we'd look at it on the other side as well, right? We are a public company. Our job is to make sure we maximize shareholder return, and that is gonna be the focus. Eddie KimAnalyst at Barclays00:21:49Understood. Right. Thanks for the color. I'll turn it back. Operator00:21:55Your next question comes from the line of Keith Beckmann with Pickering Energy Partners. Please go ahead. Keith BeckmannAnalyst at Pickering Energy Partners00:22:02Eddie, thanks for taking my question. congrats on the quarter, guys. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:22:07Thanks, Keith. Keith BeckmannAnalyst at Pickering Energy Partners00:22:09I just wanted to hit a little bit more on free cash flow, around, you know, I think that you guys, thinking about working capital, you know, you kinda talked about the $70 million that you guys expect to be paid back through the rest of the year, and then 2027 should also, we're thinking should be a really strong free cash flow year for you. Can you maybe talk about how you're thinking about free cash flow conversion through the balance of that? And then maybe also hit on whenever you get all this free cash flow, how do you plan to deploy it? Is that the buyback or kinda like or potentially M&A similar to what Eddie was just talking about? Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:22:43Yeah. Thanks, Keith. You're dead right. We've been looking to this inflection point for some time and looking to it with great enthusiasm, and it's now upon us. You know, of course, cash flow wasn't the strongest Q1, and that was entirely as anticipated, given the fact that we were going through reactivation of Capella and the reacceptance of Jupiter. Of course, Q2, we had the reacceptance of Tellus as well as a headwind. On the tail side, we have lump sum mobilizations, which I mentioned in my prepared remarks, of $70 million due to us from Petrobras in respect of Jupiter and Tellus. Importantly, the Jupiter and Tellus move off of legacy contracts and legacy day rates. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:23:34There were lower rates onto market rates in Brazil. That's gonna be really instrumental to that free cash flow generation starting in the middle of the year. Moving forward, your question around what we do with that cash. Look, as a management team, to be honest, we're focused on generating the cash. That's our number one priority. How we distribute that, we'll take a decision at that point in time. That's, yeah. I don't wanna get ahead of ourselves there. You know, we've demonstrated in the past that returning capital to shareholders is extremely important to us and so, you know, that's a data point to look at. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:24:21Yeah. Don't wanna get ahead of it on how and what we do. We just wanna focus on generating it for now. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:24:27Keith, just to put a pin on that, our job as a management team is to maximize free cash flow generation. That's what this team is gonna be focused on. Keith BeckmannAnalyst at Pickering Energy Partners00:24:39Perfect. That's awesome. My second question, just wanted to check in and see, potentially what the outlook. You know, you guys have done a really good job, contracting, several, like the two Gulf rigs, in particular, but just thinking about the West Carina, maybe what's the outlook on it, after the extension received in June, with Petrobras? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:25:02you know, for the West Carina, you know, we are finishing up the well currently with Petrobras. You know, we've said that it's probably mid-June. After that, you know, we are chasing opportunities both inside of Brazil, in South America and other markets. These are mobile rigs, and we will chase opportunities around the world for that asset. Nothing to announce at this point, but we've got till mid-June, and we are pursuing opportunities actively. Jacob TaylorVP of Commercial at Seadrill00:25:28I think one thing I would add to that is, you know, we have been successful in recently contracting some of our seventh-generation rigs and covering that white space in 2026 and in 2027, and we like the idea of, you know, having the Carina available to us for playing the upside going into 2027, which we feel is gonna be a strong year. Keith BeckmannAnalyst at Pickering Energy Partners00:25:51I see. I really appreciate it. I'll turn it back. Operator00:25:56Your next question comes of Greg Lewis with BTIG. Please go ahead. Greg LewisAnalyst at BTIG00:26:02Hey, thank you, good morning, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. You know, Samir, I'd like to talk a little bit about, excuse me for my soft voice today. The outlook in Brazil and kind of some of the things that we're starting to hear was, you know, if you go back in time, Petrobras has clearly been very opportunistic in how it's contracted rigs and the sticks at the bottom more recently. You know, the outlook for It, it sounds like when we listen to these calls, you included, the outlook for the industry, the floater industry as a whole is pretty positive. Really my question is, you know, you have the rig rolling off in Brazil. You mentioned the Carina. Greg LewisAnalyst at BTIG00:26:51You mentioned there's potential opportunities, whether that's with You didn't specifically say it's with IOC or maybe Petrobras. Really what I'm wondering is, you know, as we look at the outlook for Brazil rigs, I guess there's two questions. One is, what is the opportunity for IOCs? It seems to be that there's this growing consensus that, or at least there was a growing consensus that Petrobras was gonna shed two to three rigs. Could we be in an environment in 2027 maybe where Petrobras isn't as negative from where they are today? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:27:32Look, I think it's possible, Petrobras, you know, they are incredible acquirers of rig, just given their size in the market. You know, we still believe that they're probably net down three to four rigs, kind of if you roll the clock forward a year from now. Could some of those get picked up by IOCs? Absolutely, right? The IOCs are starting to ramp up. You know, I wouldn't say that it's likely. Greg LewisAnalyst at BTIG00:27:56Right Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:27:57It's definitely possible that you could see that situation. I think overall what we are seeing in the market is that demand is continuing to increase, right? I think Petrobras probably is back in the market later this year or next year. I think there will be other demand pools from West Africa and from Southeast Asia. As we look forward, as Jacob mentioned, we're quite happy that we've got the West Carina to redeploy into a higher day rate. Greg LewisAnalyst at BTIG00:28:21Okay. Super helpful. Thanks. Operator00:28:25Your next question comes from the line of Hamed Khorsand with BWS Financial. Please go ahead. Hamed KhorsandAnalyst at BWS Financial00:28:32Hey, good morning. Was there any update on the Gemini? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:28:39Nothing specific that we mentioned, but, you know, you know, the rig continues to perform quite well for in Angola. We think that there's more room in that JV and kind of more demand as we look into 2027 in Angola and across West Africa. We remain cautiously optimistic about the ability to continue finding work for the Gemini. Hamed KhorsandAnalyst at BWS Financial00:28:59Is it too early to talk about, you know, bringing, stacked ships back online? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:29:08You know, look, as we look at our stacked fleet, we've got two harsh environment semis that are probably the most likely candidates to reactivate. We would look to reactivate them for the right contract. You know, there is a cost of capital arb between what, you know, our cost of capital and our client's cost of capital is. You know, if they're willing to fund a large portion of that reactivation, would we look at it? Absolutely. As we look back, we think the, you know, the harsher environment market continues to tighten just like the rest of the floater market, and there's probably gonna be a need for those assets. In the near term, I think it's a bit challenged. Longer term, we could absolutely look at reactivating them. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:29:43I think the key there is, given the focus on free cash flow, we are not going to fund that on our balance sheet. That, you know, a client will have to fund that reactivation. Hamed KhorsandAnalyst at BWS Financial00:29:53Okay. Thank you. Operator00:29:57Again, if you would like to ask a question, press star then the number one on your telephone keypad. Your next question comes from the line of Noel Parks with Tuohy Brothers. Please go ahead. Noel ParksAnalyst at Tuohy Brothers00:30:11Hello. You know, one thing I was thinking about is if we sort of look at the current really encouraging environment fundamentally now for offshore. Sort of contrast it with the last big rally in the sector sort of 2023 into 2024. I just wonder, is it possible to sort of contrast maybe the relative capabilities of the global fleet, just in terms of efficiency, technical upgrades, and so forth that could sort of help make an argument for not just sort of re-achieving the levels we had before, but, you know, even more robust cycle of kind of maybe even above and beyond what we're seeing with the exploratory boost? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:31:05Look, if I look at our fleet work, you know, we've continued to invest in making sure that they're at the leading edge, of, you know, technological, you know, upgrades and competitive. Do I think there's more efficiency to be had? Potentially, but I don't think there's a step change in efficiency that's coming with the current technology we have, right? For, for us, you know, there's probably a bit more to do, but I wouldn't say that, you know, you're gonna get, you know, a 40% or 50% increase in efficiency from here. Noel ParksAnalyst at Tuohy Brothers00:31:34Gotcha. I wonder if you just had any further thoughts. You had mentioned, of course, the general trend of equipment moving out of the Atlantic basin and moving east. I just wonder on the customer side, as they look to again, what costs might look like in the cycle heading up from here, the ones that are multi-basin in their drilling, is there any degree of sort of regional arbitrage they're looking at? Noel ParksAnalyst at Tuohy Brothers00:32:14Sort of like, you know, a project maybe a little bit less upside, keeping a rig in region or being able to hang on to a rig in anticipation of something, maybe a larger program that they're looking to for next year, versus just, you know, just going totally on near-term economics as far as, you know, making the regional choices. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:32:37Yeah, look, I think when you speak to our clients, they view their portfolio the same way, you know, you would rationally, they're gonna allocate capital where it makes the most sense for them. You know, we have talked to certain clients that have said, "Look, we're pulling capital away from a particular market and investing in the Gulf," for example, the U.S. Gulf. We've talked to certain clients that are, you know, ramping up their investments in Southeast Asia. I think it really is client-specific and where their acreage sits and how ready to develop those programs are. You know, when we do speak to the kind of the bigger international oil companies, a lot of them do seem to be shifting capital to, you know, Southeast Asia and West Africa. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:33:13It really does feel like there's a demand pull there, but by no means does that mean that, you know, that's the only place we're seeing demand improve. Noel ParksAnalyst at Tuohy Brothers00:33:22Great. Thanks a lot. Operator00:33:26There are no further questions at this time. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesGrant CreedEVP and CFOJacob TaylorVP of CommercialKevin SmithVP of Corporate Finance and Investor RelationsSamir AliPresident and CEOAnalystsEddie KimAnalyst at BarclaysFredrik SteneAnalyst at Clarksons SecuritiesGreg LewisAnalyst at BTIGHamed KhorsandAnalyst at BWS FinancialKeith BeckmannAnalyst at Pickering Energy PartnersNoel ParksAnalyst at Tuohy BrothersPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(6-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Seadrill Earnings HeadlinesSeadrill Limited 2026 Q1 - Results - Earnings Call PresentationMay 15, 2026 | seekingalpha.comAnalysts Offer Insights on Energy Companies: Sunoco (SUN) and Seadrill Limited (SDRL)May 15, 2026 | theglobeandmail.comYour $29.97 book is free todayWhy Some Traders Skip Stocks Entirely You don't need a big account to trade options. In fact, options can give you up to 12 times the leverage of stocks — with a fraction of the capital tied up. This free guide lays it all out in plain English — from A to Z, with step-by-step examples you can follow in your own account. | Profits Run (Ad)Seadrill: Bright Outlook, But Beware Of The RisksMay 15, 2026 | seekingalpha.comIs It Too Late To Consider Seadrill (SDRL) After A 99% One Year Surge?May 14, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comInvestment Manager Doubles Down on Energy Stock, According to Recent SEC FilingMay 14, 2026 | fool.comSee More Seadrill Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Seadrill? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Seadrill and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About SeadrillSeadrill (NYSE:SDRL), trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol SDRL, is a leading provider of offshore drilling services to the global oil and gas industry. The company specializes in the design, construction, deployment and operation of mobile offshore drilling units, serving major exploration and production companies with turnkey drilling solutions. Seadrill’s fleet comprises ultra-deepwater drillships, semi-submersible rigs and high-specification jack-up units capable of operating in some of the world’s most challenging offshore environments. In addition to drilling operations, the company offers project management, engineering support and asset integrity services to optimize well delivery and enhance operational efficiency. Established in 2005 by Shirish Patel and shipping magnate John Fredriksen, Seadrill is headquartered in Hamilton, Bermuda. The company underwent a comprehensive financial restructuring in 2017–2018 to strengthen its capital structure and emerge with a streamlined balance sheet. Today, Seadrill continues to invest in fleet modernization and technological innovation to meet evolving industry demands. Seadrill operates across key offshore basins, including the Gulf of Mexico, the North Sea, West Africa, Brazil, the Middle East and Asia Pacific. The business is overseen by a board chaired by John Fredriksen and managed by an experienced executive team with deep expertise in offshore drilling, safety and project execution. View Seadrill ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Was Decker’s Double Beat a Bullish Signal—Or Mere HOKA’s-Pocus?Workday Validates AI Flywheel: Stock Price Recovery BeginsOverextended, e.l.f. Beauty Is Primed to Rebound in Back HalfDeere Beats Q2 Estimates, But Ag Weakness Weighs on OutlookNVIDIA Price Pullback? 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Seadrill First Quarter 2026 Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. Today, we ask that you limit to one question and one follow-up. If you would like to ask a question, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, press star one again. Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Kevin Smith. Please proceed. Kevin SmithVP of Corporate Finance and Investor Relations at Seadrill00:00:38Hello, and welcome to Seadrill's first quarter 2026 earnings call. I'm Kevin Smith, Vice President of Corporate Finance and Investor Relations, and I'm joined today by Samir Ali, President and Chief Executive Officer, Grant Creed, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, and Jacob Taylor, Vice President, Commercial. Our call will include forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainty. Actual results may differ materially. No one should assume these forward-looking statements remain valid later in the quarter or year, and we assume no obligation to update them except as required by securities laws. Our filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission provide a more detailed discussion of our forward-looking statements and the risk factors affecting our business. During the call, we will also reference non-GAAP measures. Our earnings release, furnished to the SEC and available on our website, includes reconciliations with the nearest corresponding GAAP measures. Kevin SmithVP of Corporate Finance and Investor Relations at Seadrill00:01:40Our use of the term EBITDA on today's call corresponds with the term adjusted EBITDA as defined in our earnings release. I'll now turn the call over to Samir. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:01:51Thanks, Kevin. Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I'll begin with Seadrill's key priorities, followed by first quarter highlights, including recent contract awards and a brief market update. Grant will review our financial results and speak to our improved full-year 2026 guidance before I close with final remarks. Seadrill's priorities continue to be driven by our motto of focus on the drill bit. It reflects the fundamentals of our business and the standards we hold ourselves to every day. First and foremost, operational discipline underpins everything we do. Our goal is to deliver safe, efficient, and reliable operations across our fleet with a focus on zero incidents while maximizing uptime. This is supported by an adherence to our procedures, disciplined risk management, and systematically learning from our experiences. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:02:47By identifying issues early, closing gaps quickly, and applying lessons learned across our fleet, we seek to strengthen Seadrill's performance quarter over quarter. We're sharpening our focus on free cash flow. This means winning the right contracts and then effectively converting that backlog into cash. It also means delivering projects on time and on budget while continuing to simplify our onshore organization so every dollar spent supports value creation. We're committed to capturing the upside ahead of us. Three legacy day rate contracts roll off in 2026, we have already recontracted two of the associated rigs, an important milestone that strengthens our earnings and cash flow profiles this year. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:03:34As we look ahead, we believe the opportunity to reprice the West Carina at current market rates, combined with our contracting leverage in an improving market, positions us for meaningful earnings and free cash flow growth in 2027. Executing these priorities is reflected in our first quarter performance. Both the West Tellus reacceptance and the West Capella reactivation projects were completed ahead of schedule and on budget, enabling early startup and revenue generation. We delivered a solid quarter, both financially and operationally, with EBITDA of $97 million and strong economic utilization. As a result of this performance, we are raising full-year revenue and EBITDA guidance, which Grant will cover in more detail. Importantly, we remain on track for meaningful free cash flow generation starting in the second half of 2026. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:04:27I want to extend a special thank you to our offshore crews for the tremendous work delivered this quarter. Our performance is driven by your collaboration and operational discipline, and your continued efforts strengthen Seadrill's position as a leader in deepwater drilling. Turning to our contract awards, since our last call, we have added approximately $860 million to our backlog. In the U.S. Gulf, industry-leading performance continues to translate into follow-on work. In April, the West Neptune and West Vela each secured new contracts with LLOG, adding approximately $260 million to our backlog. We are pleased to expand our relationship with LLOG, now a subsidiary of Harbour Energy, and look forward to supporting their ambitions to establish a leading position in the U.S. Gulf with a second drillship now unlocking valuable resources. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:05:20Last quarter, we noted that seven drillships were expected to roll off contract in the U.S. Gulf before year-end. Removing white space for both of our drillships in the region significantly improves revenue visibility and reduces idle time in 2026 for Seadrill. Both rigs are now positioned to capitalize on improving supply-demand fundamentals in 2027 as other assets find work or leave the region. Ultimately, we believe improving market utilization will drive the potential upward day rate momentum. In Angola, the Sonangol Quenguela had a seven-well priced option exercised, committing the rig into mid-2028. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:05:59Lastly, in Brazil, the West Polaris was awarded a three-year extension with Petrobras in direct continuation of the current program, extending a sixth-generation drillship into the next decade. Consistent with our focus on free cash flow, this extension has no additional CapEx requirements and does not require lengthy acceptance testing normally found in Petrobras contracts. In addition, we now anticipate the West Carina will remain on contract until mid-June. We continue to see a strong demand pipeline driven by growing deepwater exploration as operators intensify efforts to secure future growth. There's a clear shift amongst majors and large independents towards allocating incremental capital to deepwater, addressing the exploration underinvestment of the past decade and offsetting production declines. At an industry conference in March, the largest operators in the world highlighted the reality of production declines and the maturation of onshore plays. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:06:59Chevron's CEO noted that the natural decline of existing fields as a growing supply challenge. He described the loss as the equivalent of five Saudi Arabias over the next decade. Similarly, ConocoPhillips CEO noted that the peak in shale output has helped shape their strategy of targeting major new conventional discoveries. This decline, coupled with recent exploration successes from Eni in Indonesia, Egypt and Libya, Petrobras in Brazil and Colombia, and Oxy in the U.S. Gulf, to name just a few, further strengthens our thesis that a new exploration cycle is emerging. At the start of the year, geopolitical tensions pushed import-dependent economies to prioritize energy security, with examples such as India's initiative to drill approximately 150 wells over seven years amid sanctions on Russian crude. The Iran conflict has further intensified this focus, reinforcing the need for domestically anchored supply, where deepwater will be the beneficiary. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:08:03With production shortfalls already in the hundreds of millions of barrels and pressure to rebuild strategic reserves, deepwater resources are becoming increasingly attractive and even better positioned for development. Energy security is back in vogue. In summary, sentiment has improved since our last call. Demand in Brazil has crystallized, with several multi-year extensions recently awarded. Despite a softer 2026 in the U.S. Gulf, we've contracted both of our drillships in a highly competitive environment. Going forward, we expect available capacity to be redeployed across the Atlantic Basin towards the Eastern Hemisphere, where demand continues to strengthen. Taken together, rising demand from deepwater exploration and a renewed focus on energy security increases our confidence in an improving 2027, and a firmer commodity backdrop provides an additional tailwind for offshore project economics. With that, I'll hand the call over to Grant. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:09:02Thanks, Samir. I'll now walk through our first quarter 2026 financial results before providing an update on our outlook for the balance of the year. First quarter results surpassed expectations due to early contract commencements, solid economic utilization, and the timing of operating expenditures. During the quarter, the West Jupiter underwent reacceptance testing and began its new contract with Petrobras in late March. The West Capella was successfully reactivated and commenced operations late in the quarter, and the West Tellus entered reacceptance testing following the completion of its contract in mid-March. Contract drilling revenues were $277 million, up $4 million quarter-on-quarter. The key drivers were more operating days and higher day rates for the West Vela and higher economic utilization across the fleet, with increased uptime driven by strong operational execution. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:09:54This offset the impact of fewer operating days for the West Jupiter and fewer operating days for the Sevan Louisiana, which had a short gap between programs. Reimbursable revenues decreased, offset by a corresponding movement in reimbursable expenses. Management contract revenues decreased by $2 million to $63 million due to the timing of add-on services, which can fluctuate quarter on quarter. Leasing revenues were consistent with the prior quarter at $8 million. Now moving to operating expenses, which were $334 million in the first quarter, down $10 million from the prior quarter. The movement was attributable to a reduction in vessel and rig operating expenses relating to the capitalization of mobilization costs for the West Jupiter, with the cost to be amortized over the three-year contract term. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:10:44That was partially offset by higher costs related to the preparation and commencement of the West Capella contract. Resulting EBITDA was $97 million, a sequential increase of $9 million compared to the prior quarter. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow statements, we ended the quarter with total cash of $329 million. The $35 million use of cash in the first quarter included $13 million of capital expenditures captured in investing activities and $38 million of long-term maintenance recorded in operating activities. As anticipated, our cash position was largely impacted by the reactivation and contract preparations for West Capella, the reacceptance testing for West Jupiter, as well as timing of working capital. We are increasingly confident in a return to strong cash flow generation in the middle of 2026. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:11:37We expect cash receipts totaling approximately $70 million over the next two quarters relating to lump sum mobilization revenues from Petrobras as reimbursement for reacceptance projects for both the West Jupiter and West Tellus. These receipts, as well as benefiting from incremental day rate revenues from the West Jupiter, West Capella, and West Tellus contracts, will mark the inflection point in our cash profile this year. Overall, our capital structure remains robust. Gross principal debt was $625 million at quarter end, with maturities extending through 2030. We have access to $482 million of total liquidity when including available borrowing capacity on our revolving credit facility. Now turning to our outlook for the remainder of the year. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:12:27First quarter EBITDA was stronger than anticipated, with a portion of the outperformance attributable to the timing of repair and maintenance expenses that are expected to occur later in the year. We are updating our revenue and EBITDA guidance ranges to reflect project execution, as demonstrated by the early commencement of the West Jupiter and West Capella contracts in the first quarter and additional operating days for the West Carina, which is now expected to work through mid-June. For the full year 2026, we are updating our guidance for operating revenues to $1.43 billion-$1.48 billion, and that excludes $50 million of reimbursable revenues. Our EBITDA range to $370 million-$420 million. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:13:11That EBITDA guidance includes a non-cash net expense of $26 million related to the amortization of mobilization costs and revenues, of which $7 million has been recognized at the end of the first quarter. Full year capital expenditure guidance range is maintained at $200 million-$240 million. I'll now hand the call back to Samir for his closing remarks. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:13:36Thanks, Grant. In closing, I'd like to reiterate our priorities: safe, reliable operations, free cash flow generation, and capturing the upside. We are proud of our performance to start 2026, executing key projects ahead of schedule, adding meaningful backlog, delivering first quarter EBITDA that exceeds expectations, and raising our full year revenue and EBITDA guidance. Collectively, these achievements enhance our line of sight to higher earnings and free cash flow in the second half of 2026 and in 2027. With that, I will now hand the call over for questions. Operator00:14:29At this time I would like to remind everyone in order to ask question press star then the number one on your telephone keypad. And your first question comes from the line of Fredrik Stene with Clarksons Securities. Please go ahead. Fredrik SteneAnalyst at Clarksons Securities00:14:37Thanks, Samir and team. Hope you are well and congratulations on a very solid first quarter performance. I wanted to kick it off here with maybe a high level question. You, you paint a relatively, I think, supportive demand story, which I definitely agree with myself. Start of 2026 has been quite, you know, eventful from a geopolitical perspective. My, my take on this is that, you know, the pivot towards more exploration, more conventional oil and gas activity rather than just M&A to replace reserves is something that was on the way of happening anyway. I guess my question is, would you agree with that and any kind of additional commentary you might have around it? Fredrik SteneAnalyst at Clarksons Securities00:15:33Also with the war in the Middle East now adding some aspects around energy security, et cetera, on top of that, how has that changed, if anything? Are we starting to see any impacts of that war into tenders, et cetera, at the moment, or is that too early? Thanks. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:15:55Yeah, absolutely. Afternoon, Fredrik. You know, I'd say we saw it coming before, if you kind of roll the clock back in like January 1st, just to pick a date. When we look and did our forecast and looked out and demand in the world, we saw clients already starting to, you know, talk about investing in new regions and going back and finding hydrocarbons through the drill bit. To your point, you know, historically, they've bought a lot of their hydrocarbons via M&A, I think there was that pivot that came of, look, we have to go invest in, you know, places like Namibia or Angola or even Mozambique, just to pick a few places. We saw that coming early this year. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:16:31On top of that, you've now had the, you know, what's going on in Iran. Which has helped commodity prices, obviously, which has, you know, added some cash to their balance sheets and allowed them to spend. On top of all of that is you have energy security. Long way of saying, yes, we saw that, you know, demand coming already, and then what you've seen with what happened in Iran has just added fuel to that fire of, you know, energy security and a higher commodity price for them to go explore even more. Fredrik SteneAnalyst at Clarksons Securities00:17:01All right. Thank you. As a follow-up to that, if, and I am sure there are some stats on this, but if you think about both the share of exploration drilling versus development drilling over the last, let's say, five years, given this new exploration cycle, if you will, are you able to in some way quantify how much additional demand that can come from your exploration versus what you have seen historically again over the maybe the last, five years? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:17:40You know, it's hard to quantify right now, but you know, historically if you look at it, exploration by definition is a little less efficient than development because, you know, you're not doing exploration wells, with an eyesight of each other. With a development program you kind of rinse and repeat on the same field. Exploration, you know, you have one well here, one well there. By definition that will take a bit more time and add more incremental demand for, you know, our assets and our peers' assets. You know, hard to quantify exactly how much more demand comes from the exploration, but we definitely see more exploration coming and that will drive more demand going forward. Fredrik SteneAnalyst at Clarksons Securities00:18:18All right. I appreciate all the comments, and I'll leave it at that for now. Thank you very much. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:18:24Thanks, Fredrik. Operator00:18:26Your next question comes from the line of Eddie Kim with Barclays. Please go ahead. Eddie KimAnalyst at Barclays00:18:33Hi, good morning. Obviously the world has changed since your last earnings call three months ago. Just wanted to ask if you could remind us on how you see the trajectory or the progression of leading-edge pricing, which I assume is probably improved since three months ago. We're kind of still in the low 400s today for leading-edge drillships. Do you suspect we'll see contract announcements maybe by the end of this year in the mid 400s or even the high 400s? Just any thoughts there based on the customer conversations you're having today would be great. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:19:13Sure. I'll start on and I'll hand it over to Jacob to provide some more color. You know, when we look at day rates, right, Eddie, for us it's about free cash flow generation, right? You know, when we look at, you know, internally on bidding stuff, obviously day rate matters, but it's how much free cash flow can you generate off that contract? I would just frame it that way of how we think about day rates, at least at Seadrill. You know, as we look forward, demand continues to improve, and utilization is kind of picking up across the world, so that should lead to day rate progression as we move into 2026 and into 2027. I'll let Jacob speak a little more on that. Jacob TaylorVP of Commercial at Seadrill00:19:52Hi, Eddie. I think if we look back over the last, you know, three to four months, we've had the strongest backlog cycle we've had since 2012. I think we've had over 71 years of contracted term being awarded throughout the industry, that was predicated on a market that, you know, was materializing before the war broke out. I think that this is just going to bring momentum, you know, and a windfall of cash to some of our customers who are gonna continue to invest going forward. What we have going forward is we have opportunities within Indonesia, Namibia, Nigeria, Suriname, U.S. Gulf with long-term contracts anywhere from two to three years that we expect to be awarded here before the end of 2026. Jacob TaylorVP of Commercial at Seadrill00:20:44I think that that definitely, you know, creates an opportunity for rates to be pushed up further than they are today. Eddie KimAnalyst at Barclays00:20:54Great. Thanks for that. My follow-up is just on potential M&A and perhaps increasing the size of your fleet. It would seem that having more rigs and rig availability in this rising pricing environment would be a good thing. Are there sort of obvious acquisitions of one-off drillships out there or even larger corporate M&A? Just curious on your willingness to increase the size of your fleet or if you're comfortable with the size of your fleet at this stage. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:21:26Okay. Yeah, I'd say we're at minimum efficient scale. Our focus is on, you know, if we're gonna do M&A, making sure it's an accretive deal. For us, we're not, you know, jonesing to do a deal just because we, you know, just for the sake of it. If it makes financial sense, absolutely, we'd look at it, and we'd look at it on the other side as well, right? We are a public company. Our job is to make sure we maximize shareholder return, and that is gonna be the focus. Eddie KimAnalyst at Barclays00:21:49Understood. Right. Thanks for the color. I'll turn it back. Operator00:21:55Your next question comes from the line of Keith Beckmann with Pickering Energy Partners. Please go ahead. Keith BeckmannAnalyst at Pickering Energy Partners00:22:02Eddie, thanks for taking my question. congrats on the quarter, guys. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:22:07Thanks, Keith. Keith BeckmannAnalyst at Pickering Energy Partners00:22:09I just wanted to hit a little bit more on free cash flow, around, you know, I think that you guys, thinking about working capital, you know, you kinda talked about the $70 million that you guys expect to be paid back through the rest of the year, and then 2027 should also, we're thinking should be a really strong free cash flow year for you. Can you maybe talk about how you're thinking about free cash flow conversion through the balance of that? And then maybe also hit on whenever you get all this free cash flow, how do you plan to deploy it? Is that the buyback or kinda like or potentially M&A similar to what Eddie was just talking about? Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:22:43Yeah. Thanks, Keith. You're dead right. We've been looking to this inflection point for some time and looking to it with great enthusiasm, and it's now upon us. You know, of course, cash flow wasn't the strongest Q1, and that was entirely as anticipated, given the fact that we were going through reactivation of Capella and the reacceptance of Jupiter. Of course, Q2, we had the reacceptance of Tellus as well as a headwind. On the tail side, we have lump sum mobilizations, which I mentioned in my prepared remarks, of $70 million due to us from Petrobras in respect of Jupiter and Tellus. Importantly, the Jupiter and Tellus move off of legacy contracts and legacy day rates. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:23:34There were lower rates onto market rates in Brazil. That's gonna be really instrumental to that free cash flow generation starting in the middle of the year. Moving forward, your question around what we do with that cash. Look, as a management team, to be honest, we're focused on generating the cash. That's our number one priority. How we distribute that, we'll take a decision at that point in time. That's, yeah. I don't wanna get ahead of ourselves there. You know, we've demonstrated in the past that returning capital to shareholders is extremely important to us and so, you know, that's a data point to look at. Grant CreedEVP and CFO at Seadrill00:24:21Yeah. Don't wanna get ahead of it on how and what we do. We just wanna focus on generating it for now. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:24:27Keith, just to put a pin on that, our job as a management team is to maximize free cash flow generation. That's what this team is gonna be focused on. Keith BeckmannAnalyst at Pickering Energy Partners00:24:39Perfect. That's awesome. My second question, just wanted to check in and see, potentially what the outlook. You know, you guys have done a really good job, contracting, several, like the two Gulf rigs, in particular, but just thinking about the West Carina, maybe what's the outlook on it, after the extension received in June, with Petrobras? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:25:02you know, for the West Carina, you know, we are finishing up the well currently with Petrobras. You know, we've said that it's probably mid-June. After that, you know, we are chasing opportunities both inside of Brazil, in South America and other markets. These are mobile rigs, and we will chase opportunities around the world for that asset. Nothing to announce at this point, but we've got till mid-June, and we are pursuing opportunities actively. Jacob TaylorVP of Commercial at Seadrill00:25:28I think one thing I would add to that is, you know, we have been successful in recently contracting some of our seventh-generation rigs and covering that white space in 2026 and in 2027, and we like the idea of, you know, having the Carina available to us for playing the upside going into 2027, which we feel is gonna be a strong year. Keith BeckmannAnalyst at Pickering Energy Partners00:25:51I see. I really appreciate it. I'll turn it back. Operator00:25:56Your next question comes of Greg Lewis with BTIG. Please go ahead. Greg LewisAnalyst at BTIG00:26:02Hey, thank you, good morning, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. You know, Samir, I'd like to talk a little bit about, excuse me for my soft voice today. The outlook in Brazil and kind of some of the things that we're starting to hear was, you know, if you go back in time, Petrobras has clearly been very opportunistic in how it's contracted rigs and the sticks at the bottom more recently. You know, the outlook for It, it sounds like when we listen to these calls, you included, the outlook for the industry, the floater industry as a whole is pretty positive. Really my question is, you know, you have the rig rolling off in Brazil. You mentioned the Carina. Greg LewisAnalyst at BTIG00:26:51You mentioned there's potential opportunities, whether that's with You didn't specifically say it's with IOC or maybe Petrobras. Really what I'm wondering is, you know, as we look at the outlook for Brazil rigs, I guess there's two questions. One is, what is the opportunity for IOCs? It seems to be that there's this growing consensus that, or at least there was a growing consensus that Petrobras was gonna shed two to three rigs. Could we be in an environment in 2027 maybe where Petrobras isn't as negative from where they are today? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:27:32Look, I think it's possible, Petrobras, you know, they are incredible acquirers of rig, just given their size in the market. You know, we still believe that they're probably net down three to four rigs, kind of if you roll the clock forward a year from now. Could some of those get picked up by IOCs? Absolutely, right? The IOCs are starting to ramp up. You know, I wouldn't say that it's likely. Greg LewisAnalyst at BTIG00:27:56Right Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:27:57It's definitely possible that you could see that situation. I think overall what we are seeing in the market is that demand is continuing to increase, right? I think Petrobras probably is back in the market later this year or next year. I think there will be other demand pools from West Africa and from Southeast Asia. As we look forward, as Jacob mentioned, we're quite happy that we've got the West Carina to redeploy into a higher day rate. Greg LewisAnalyst at BTIG00:28:21Okay. Super helpful. Thanks. Operator00:28:25Your next question comes from the line of Hamed Khorsand with BWS Financial. Please go ahead. Hamed KhorsandAnalyst at BWS Financial00:28:32Hey, good morning. Was there any update on the Gemini? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:28:39Nothing specific that we mentioned, but, you know, you know, the rig continues to perform quite well for in Angola. We think that there's more room in that JV and kind of more demand as we look into 2027 in Angola and across West Africa. We remain cautiously optimistic about the ability to continue finding work for the Gemini. Hamed KhorsandAnalyst at BWS Financial00:28:59Is it too early to talk about, you know, bringing, stacked ships back online? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:29:08You know, look, as we look at our stacked fleet, we've got two harsh environment semis that are probably the most likely candidates to reactivate. We would look to reactivate them for the right contract. You know, there is a cost of capital arb between what, you know, our cost of capital and our client's cost of capital is. You know, if they're willing to fund a large portion of that reactivation, would we look at it? Absolutely. As we look back, we think the, you know, the harsher environment market continues to tighten just like the rest of the floater market, and there's probably gonna be a need for those assets. In the near term, I think it's a bit challenged. Longer term, we could absolutely look at reactivating them. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:29:43I think the key there is, given the focus on free cash flow, we are not going to fund that on our balance sheet. That, you know, a client will have to fund that reactivation. Hamed KhorsandAnalyst at BWS Financial00:29:53Okay. Thank you. Operator00:29:57Again, if you would like to ask a question, press star then the number one on your telephone keypad. Your next question comes from the line of Noel Parks with Tuohy Brothers. Please go ahead. Noel ParksAnalyst at Tuohy Brothers00:30:11Hello. You know, one thing I was thinking about is if we sort of look at the current really encouraging environment fundamentally now for offshore. Sort of contrast it with the last big rally in the sector sort of 2023 into 2024. I just wonder, is it possible to sort of contrast maybe the relative capabilities of the global fleet, just in terms of efficiency, technical upgrades, and so forth that could sort of help make an argument for not just sort of re-achieving the levels we had before, but, you know, even more robust cycle of kind of maybe even above and beyond what we're seeing with the exploratory boost? Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:31:05Look, if I look at our fleet work, you know, we've continued to invest in making sure that they're at the leading edge, of, you know, technological, you know, upgrades and competitive. Do I think there's more efficiency to be had? Potentially, but I don't think there's a step change in efficiency that's coming with the current technology we have, right? For, for us, you know, there's probably a bit more to do, but I wouldn't say that, you know, you're gonna get, you know, a 40% or 50% increase in efficiency from here. Noel ParksAnalyst at Tuohy Brothers00:31:34Gotcha. I wonder if you just had any further thoughts. You had mentioned, of course, the general trend of equipment moving out of the Atlantic basin and moving east. I just wonder on the customer side, as they look to again, what costs might look like in the cycle heading up from here, the ones that are multi-basin in their drilling, is there any degree of sort of regional arbitrage they're looking at? Noel ParksAnalyst at Tuohy Brothers00:32:14Sort of like, you know, a project maybe a little bit less upside, keeping a rig in region or being able to hang on to a rig in anticipation of something, maybe a larger program that they're looking to for next year, versus just, you know, just going totally on near-term economics as far as, you know, making the regional choices. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:32:37Yeah, look, I think when you speak to our clients, they view their portfolio the same way, you know, you would rationally, they're gonna allocate capital where it makes the most sense for them. You know, we have talked to certain clients that have said, "Look, we're pulling capital away from a particular market and investing in the Gulf," for example, the U.S. Gulf. We've talked to certain clients that are, you know, ramping up their investments in Southeast Asia. I think it really is client-specific and where their acreage sits and how ready to develop those programs are. You know, when we do speak to the kind of the bigger international oil companies, a lot of them do seem to be shifting capital to, you know, Southeast Asia and West Africa. Samir AliPresident and CEO at Seadrill00:33:13It really does feel like there's a demand pull there, but by no means does that mean that, you know, that's the only place we're seeing demand improve. Noel ParksAnalyst at Tuohy Brothers00:33:22Great. Thanks a lot. Operator00:33:26There are no further questions at this time. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesGrant CreedEVP and CFOJacob TaylorVP of CommercialKevin SmithVP of Corporate Finance and Investor RelationsSamir AliPresident and CEOAnalystsEddie KimAnalyst at BarclaysFredrik SteneAnalyst at Clarksons SecuritiesGreg LewisAnalyst at BTIGHamed KhorsandAnalyst at BWS FinancialKeith BeckmannAnalyst at Pickering Energy PartnersNoel ParksAnalyst at Tuohy BrothersPowered by