What’s behind BP’s exceptional Q1 forecast, and debt surge with it?

April 14, 2026

BP is heading into its first-quarter results with an unusually strong message on earnings, but also with a less comfortable one on the balance sheet.

The oil major said on Tuesday that its oil trading business is expected to deliver “exceptional” results in the first quarter.

The forecasts are helped by the violent swings that hit crude markets during the period.

It also said stronger refining margins should support earnings.

At the same time, BP forecast net debt of $25 billion to $27 billion, up from $22.2 billion at the end of 2025.

That leaves investors with a more nuanced picture than the headline suggests: the quarter looks strong, but the quality and durability of that strength are already under scrutiny.

Trading and refining turned chaos into earnings

The main reason BP is sounding so upbeat is that it was well placed for disorder in oil markets.

Brent crude briefly surged toward $120 a barrel during the quarter as conflict-related disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz rattled supply expectations.

For a company like BP, that kind of volatility can be highly profitable in trading, because sharp moves, dislocations, and shifting physical flows tend to create more opportunities.

BP said plainly that its oil trading business should post an “exceptional” quarter, making this less a story of booming production than one of a large energy trader benefiting from turbulence.

Refining added a second leg to the story.

BP said its refining margin rose to $16.9 a barrel in the first quarter, up from $15.2 a barrel in the previous quarter.

The improvement could add roughly $100 million to $200 million to refined-products earnings.

That matters because it shows the quarter was not carried by trading alone.

BP also benefited from stronger downstream economics, giving the company a broader earnings lift across the business.

The debt increase is the part investors cannot ignore

The catch is that stronger earnings have come with heavier balance-sheet demands.

BP said net debt is expected to rise to between $25 billion and $27 billion from $22.2 billion at year-end 2025.

In plain terms, more cash has been tied up in the mechanics of running the business during a volatile quarter.

The inventories can become more expensive to finance, receivables can swell, and trading operations may require more collateral and funding.

None of that automatically signals deterioration, but it does make the earnings picture less clean than the word “exceptional” might imply.

That tension is what makes the story interesting.

BP may be earning more, but it is also leaning more heavily on activities that absorb cash when markets become stressed.

Working-capital swings can reverse in later quarters, so the debt increase does not necessarily point to a structural weakening.

But investors tend to pay close attention when profit strength arrives alongside rising debt, because it raises the question of how much of the quarter’s success is truly cash-generative and repeatable.

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