Transocean — Financial Results
Revenue and Operating Performance Improved Meaningfully in 2025
| Metric | 2025 | 2024 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Contract drilling revenues | $3,965M | $3,524M | +13% |
| Average daily revenue | $456,700 | $430,100 | +6% |
| Rig utilization | 72.4% | 60.5% | +11.9 pts |
| Revenue efficiency | 96.5% | 94.5% | +2.0 pts |
The core drilling business genuinely improved in 2025. More rigs were working (utilization jumped from 60.5% to 72.4%), customers were paying higher dayrates (the daily fee charged per rig), and Transocean converted a greater share of contracted work into actual revenue. The newbuild drillship Deepwater Aquila contributed roughly $70 million in additional revenue as it ramped up operations.
A $3.05 Billion Asset Write-Down Dominated the Bottom Line
Despite stronger revenues, Transocean recorded a net loss of $2.915 billion in 2025, compared to a $512 million loss in 2024. The primary culprit was a $3.05 billion impairment charge — an accounting write-down taken when nine older rigs were reclassified as held for sale and deemed worth far less than their book value. These older floaters were sold for scrap, generating only $71 million in cash proceeds. This is a non-cash charge that signals Transocean is actively retiring its less competitive vessels.
Contract Backlog Is Declining and Near-Term Rig Availability Is Rising
| Period | Total Backlog | Ultra-Deepwater Uncommitted |
|---|---|---|
| February 2025 | $8,328M | — |
| October 2025 | $6,728M | — |
| February 2026 | $6,064M | 36% (2026), 52% (2027) |
Contract backlog — the pipeline of locked-in future revenue — has fallen by 27% over the past year. More concerning, over half of the ultra-deepwater fleet will be without a contracted job by 2027, rising to 82% by 2028. Harsh environment rigs are better covered near-term (only 5% uncommitted in 2026) but face a similar cliff in 2028–2029. This means Transocean needs to win significant new contracts to maintain current revenue levels.
Debt Restructuring Reduced Near-Term Maturities but Pushed Up Interest Costs
Transocean ran an active debt management program in 2025: it redeemed $903 million of notes due in early 2027, issued $500 million of new notes at 7.875% due 2032, and raised $421 million through a fresh share issuance. The net effect pushes debt maturities further out, but interest expense jumped 53% year-over-year to $555 million. The company ended 2025 with $620 million in unrestricted cash and a $510 million credit facility, giving it reasonable near-term liquidity headroom.
A Major Merger with Valaris Was Announced in February 2026
Just after the reporting period closed, Transocean agreed to acquire Valaris, one of its largest offshore drilling competitors, in an all-stock deal. Each Valaris share will be exchanged for 15.235 Transocean shares. This would create a significantly larger combined fleet, potentially improving scale and contract negotiating power — but it also means existing shareholders will be diluted. The deal's financial impact is not yet reflected in these results and remains subject to regulatory and shareholder approvals.