Invezz

Here’s why the BP and Shell shares are falling in London this week

Here’s why the BP and Shell shares are falling in London this week
Crispus Nyaga
26 Jun 2026, 09:26 AM

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BP (BP.L)

Sell BP.L. The news is a direct demand/profit hit: oil down sharply after the US–Iran deal, with Gulf supply rising and China buying less. That combination compresses margins and makes dividend/buyback support harder versus the market’s prior “war-premium” earnings. BP’s recent strength was built on high oil prices; now the price engine is reversing.

Key Risk: Oil rebounds fast (Brent/WTI jump) because the US–Iran truce breaks or Hormuz tensions escalate.

Shell (SHEL)

Sell Shell. Same macro driver as BP: crude and natural gas are falling, and the article flags continued supply flooding through Hormuz plus weaker China demand. Shell’s buyback and dividend are attractive, but they rely on energy prices staying firm; falling prices typically force slower buybacks and weaker cash flow.

Key Risk: A renewed Middle East supply shock lifts crude prices and restores the cash-flow outlook.

  • BP stock has slumped by 22% from its highest point this year.
  • Shell has plunged by double digits, erasing billions of dollars in value.
  • The retreat is because of the falling crude oil prices.

BP and Shell share prices continued their downward trend today, reaching their lowest levels since February 27. BP dropped to 472p, down by 22% from its highest point this year, while Shell slipped to 2,900p from the year-to-date high of 3,592.

BP and Shell shares are falling as crude oil prices dive 

Energy stocks have retreated sharply after the US and Iran reached a major deal to end the war, leading to lower crude oil prices.

Data shows that the SPDR Energy Select Sector ETF (XLE) dropped to $54 from the year-to-date high of $63. Top names like ExxonMobil and Chevron have continued falling this month.

Crude oil prices have continued falling this month, with Brent and the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) falling to $73 and $70, respectively. Natural gas has continued falling this month, as supplies continue rising.

Therefore, there is a likelihood that their profitability will remain under pressure in the coming quarters as energy prices continue falling.

There is a risk that crude oil will continue falling as supplies from Gulf countries continue soaring. Tens of ships are passing through the Strait, flooding the world with oil at a time when China is no longer buying as much oil as it used to buy before the war.

The only risk facing the energy market is that the truce between the US and Iran may end in the near term. Just on Wednesday, Iran announced that it shot down a tanker that attempted to cross the Strait of Hormuz. There is also a risk that Israel will work to interfere with the deal in a bid to push the US and Iran back to war.

BP and Shell benefited from the elevated oil prices

Energy stocks jumped after the start of the Iranian war as crude oil prices jumped from $50 to $126, the highest level in years. 

This surge helped them to announce huge profits and boost their dividends and share buybacks. In a recent statement, BP said that its profit for the first quarter rose to over $3.8 billion from a loss of over $3.4 billion in the fourth quarter. Its profit was much higher than the £687 million profit it made in the first quarter of last year.

BP’s operating profit jumped to $2.86 billion from the $2.83 billion it made in the same period last year. As a result, the company sold its Gelsenkirchen refinery, reducing its costs by over $1 billion. Just recently, BP announced that it was replacing its chairman, Albert Manifold.

Shell, on the other hand, published strong financial results, which showed that its adjusted earnings rose to $6.9 billion, helping the company start a $3 billion share buyback program and increase its dividend by 5%.