SHEL Stock Research, Signals & Filings

Drillr aggregates AI research, SEC filings, earnings signals, alt-data and financial tables for SHEL. 14 published articles.

Latest Research

  1. SHEL: Hormuz Blockade Tightens LNG Supply for Majors

    The Hormuz blockade creates a bifurcated outcome: LNG producers with Middle East assets (Shell, ExxonMobil, TotalEnergies) face 2-3 quarter supply disruptions and margin compression, while refining-heavy majors and integrated producers with refining exposure benefit from crude-product spread widening. Consensus has treated all majors symmetrically on Brent upside, missing the structural divergence. LNG-heavy names should underperform the refining basket by 5-10% over the next 2-3 quarters.

    XOMCVXBP
  2. SHEL: Brent Holds as Trump Rejects Iran Peace Overture

    Trump's rejection of Iran's truce proposal extends the diplomatic impasse supporting oil's $75-$85 range, removing near-term risk of a breakthrough that would flood markets with Iranian barrels. Shell and BP have captured this tailwind, but the trade now hinges on whether sustained tension can push oil above $90 — driving margin expansion — or whether the base-case range holds and sets up valuation compression.

    BPUSO
  3. XOM and CVX Up 26-28% YTD — Why the UK Refusing Hormuz Blockade Could Widen Their Lead

    The UK's April 12, 2026, refusal to join Trump's Hormuz blockade plan exposes oil majors to extended disruptions in the 20% global oil chokepoint, but XOM and CVX's robust finances and production ramps set up margin gains. YTD stock surges of 26-28% reflect market bets on higher crack spreads, with Middle East assets (20% of output) offset by US shale strength. Bullish stance: Buy supermajors for FCF upside amid geopolitical limbo.

    XOMCVXBP
  4. Strait of Hormuz Crisis Sparks China Cancellations — XOM and CVX Margins Set to Surge

    April 11, 2026, reports detail Hormuz crisis damaging Middle East oil/gas supplies and sparking Chinese order cancellations, tightening global markets. ExxonMobil and Chevron—fortified by $40B+ FCF, low debt, and downstream leverage—stand to gain most from elevated cracks and prices. Bullish: Buy dips for 20-30% FCF upside.

    XOMCVXBP
  5. Saudi Infrastructure Attacks Squeeze SHEL Margins — LMT Up 30% YTD as Defense Benefits

    Attacks on Saudi infrastructure on April 9, 2026, held oil prices higher, pressuring Shell's margins amid Middle East risks while boosting Lockheed Martin's defense prospects. SHEL trades at attractive 6.1x EV/EBITDA with strong FCF, but volatility looms; LMT's 30% YTD gains signal backlog tailwinds. Bullish LMT, hold SHEL.

    LMT
  6. Strait of Hormuz Blocked: XOM Cuts Q1 Output 6% as Oil Majors Drop 3–5%

    Shipping halted in the Strait of Hormuz on April 9, 2026, as Iran imposes terms, with the US prioritizing free passage. Exxon reports 6% Q1 production cuts from related Middle East disruptions; majors' stocks fell 3-5% but YTD gains exceed 20%, backed by $50B+ FCF and low leverage. Bullish setup if oil prices surge on sustained risks.

    XOMCVXBP
  7. Hormuz Blockade Risks 20% Oil Supply Squeeze — XOM, CVX, SHEL Surge

    Strait of Hormuz blockade has halted Iraqi oil exports at Basra hub, risking 20% global supply squeeze and $100 oil. XOM, CVX, and SHEL's low-debt profiles and strong FCF position them for explosive margins. Stocks surging 7-16% monthly signal investor bets on profit windfalls.

    XOMCVX
  8. Iran War Drives Record Capital Flight: EEM Down 12% While SPY Gains Safe-Haven Flows

    Record bullish positions in EU natural gas futures are spiking volatility amid supply shocks, per Bloomberg, boosting SHEL and BP's LNG trading margins. Both delivered robust FY2025 FCF and returns, with guidance for sustained growth. Bullish on their leverage to Europe's crunch.

    BP
  9. Qatar Tanker Strike Confirmed: XLE, EURN, SHEL Poised to Surge as Gulf Oil Routes Reroute

    UKMTO-confirmed tanker strike off Qatar—one projectile unexploded—heightens Gulf of Oman risks, potentially spiking tanker rates and benefiting XLE, EURN, and SHEL. Shell's robust $21.8B FCF and 26% 3-month gains position it strongly, while disruptions could reroute 20% of global oil flows.

    XLEEURN
  10. SHEL and BP Up 14–16% After Ust-Luga Strike — EU Supply Crunch Has Further to Run

    Ukraine's April 7 strike on Russia's Ust-Luga oil port threatens EU supply, potentially boosting crude prices and refining margins for Shell and BP. Both majors showed FY2025 resilience with strong FCF and low leverage, shares up 14-16% in the past month. Bullish stance: Expect margin expansion if disruptions persist.

    BP
  11. SHEL and BP Up 10-16% Despite Gas Futures Plunge — Why LNG Is Their Shield

    European gas futures tumbled on April 8, 2026, post-US-Iran ceasefire, easing supply fears—but SHEL and BP stocks rose 10-16% in the prior month, buoyed by LNG resilience and strong 2025 financials ($21B+ FCF each). Integrated portfolios and low leverage position them for continued outperformance. Bullish: Buy the reversal with 15% upside potential.

    BP
  12. LNG & SHEL vs. XOM: Who Wins as Iran Ceasefire Crashes Asian Energy Prices

    The US-Iran ceasefire on April 8, 2026, is crashing Asian LNG and crude prices, pressuring global suppliers while easing Vietnam's energy security woes. Cheniere and Shell stand out as resilient winners due to contracts and growth, while Exxon faces bigger oil headwinds. Ranked picks favor low-cost, contract-heavy LNG plays.

    LNGXOMKMI
  13. Gulf Conflict Escalation: Mapping the Energy Winners from Middle East Supply Disruption

    Gulf conflict escalation threatens Middle East oil supply through the Strait of Hormuz and Red Sea, creating a risk premium that benefits non-Gulf energy producers and LNG exporters. Cheniere Energy and Shell are the top picks for structural LNG upside, while ConocoPhillips, Canadian Natural Resources, and Dorian LPG offer upstream, heavy-oil substitution, and shipping-rate leverage respectively.

    LNGCOPCNQ
  14. At what oil price level does Gulf conflict risk trigger demand destruction in EM economies?

    Gulf conflict escalation creates a geopolitical risk premium benefiting oil producers in the $80–100 Brent range, but sustained prices above $100–110 risk triggering demand destruction in import-dependent emerging markets. EOG Resources and Shell offer the best risk-adjusted positioning, while BP carries the highest combined balance sheet and operational risk.

    COPEOGCVX

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