Close Menu
Daily Guardian EuropeDaily Guardian Europe
  • Home
  • Europe
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Environment
  • Culture
  • Press Release
  • Trending
What's On

Anthropic’s Fable 5 worth the price? OpenAI may soon become cheaper

June 12, 2026

UK set to ban under-16s from social media, livestreaming, disappearing messages – POLITICO

June 12, 2026

Police fire water cannon at demonstrators as Belfast anti-immigration protests continue

June 12, 2026

Russian businessman sentenced in Belgium sanctions case – POLITICO

June 12, 2026

Baptism of fire: What are the five most stressful countries for beginner drivers in Europe?

June 12, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian Europe
Newsletter
  • Home
  • Europe
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Environment
  • Culture
  • Press Release
  • Trending
Daily Guardian EuropeDaily Guardian Europe
Home»Business
Business

TotalEnergies made $1bn profit from Middle East oil bet as war disrupts prices

By staffMarch 30, 20263 Mins Read
TotalEnergies made bn profit from Middle East oil bet as war disrupts prices
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Published on
30/03/2026 – 12:44 GMT+2

TotalEnergies is reported to have made more than $1bn (€868m) in profit after buying up oil cargoes across the Middle East as the Iran conflict choked shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, according to the Financial Times.

The French oil giant’s traders purchased around 70 cargoes of crude produced in the United Arab Emirates and Oman available to load in May — more than double its purchases in February — according to a person close to the company cited by the FT.

Total has so far not made any firm public statements regarding this issue and told the FT that it does not comment on its trading activities.

How the benchmark broke

The opportunity arose from a specific disruption to the way Middle Eastern oil is priced.

S&P Global Platts, which runs the Dubai crude benchmark — the main pricing reference for Middle Eastern oil exports to Asia — suspended nominations of crude grades requiring transit through the Strait of Hormuz on 2 March, effective immediately, after major shipping companies halted passage through the waterway amid heightened safety concerns.

Three of the five crude grades normally used to set the benchmark were effectively taken out of play, leaving only Abu Dhabi’s Murban, loaded from Fujairah port, and Oman available for delivery.

Platts said at the time the move cut deliverable crude in the benchmark by about 40%.

With fewer grades in play and liquidity sharply reduced, the market became far more vulnerable to a single player taking a dominant position.

TotalEnergies moved into that gap.

While trading was around 50% more active in March than the previous month, only TotalEnergies secured enough partial contracts to make a whole cargo, according to the FT.

Dubai crude climbed from around $70 a barrel just before the conflict began to an all-time high of around $170 last week. The international benchmark Brent crude peaked at around $120 a barrel in mid-March before easing back to around $113 as of late last week.

‘Dislocated’ markets

TotalEnergies chief executive Patrick Pouyanné has been candid about the scale of the disruption, if not the trading profits.

Speaking to CNBC last week, he said the world had “never experienced” refining margins at their current levels, and described the oil products market as “dislocated.”

He warned that if the conflict continues through the summer, European natural gas prices could hit $40 per million British thermal units — more than double current levels of around $18.

The company’s own disclosures paint a picture of a business simultaneously hit and buoyed by the war.

In a statement published on 13 March, TotalEnergies said production had been shut down or was in the process of shutting down in Qatar, Iraq and offshore UAE, representing around 15% of its total global output.

However, it noted that the Middle East barrels account for only around 10% of upstream cash flow due to higher taxation, and that an $8 per barrel rise in Brent crude was sufficient to offset the lost production entirely.

Asian buyers squeezed

The surge in Dubai crude prices has hit Asian refiners hard. Some have lobbied Saudi Aramco to switch its pricing benchmark from Platts Dubai to ICE Brent, according to Argus.

On 20 March, Platts took a further step to shore up the benchmark, suspending the negative quality adjustment for Murban crude in order to maximise the amount of deliverable oil in the pricing process.

The agency said it had gathered extensive feedback from market participants in support of the move.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Lagarde defends ECB interest rate hike as ‘robust across three scenarios’

ECB raises interest rates for the first time in three years as Iran war fuels inflation

Buying a home in Spain now requires over 8 years of full salary

Who works the hardest in Europe? The countries with the longest and shortest working weeks

Airbus-led group proposes fighter jet alternative after French-German project fails

German industrial output rises for the first time this year but is still ‘too little’

Le Havre: 38,000 fake trainers destroyed after 15-year court case

Robotaxis are coming to Europe — and the EU wants to speed things up

Kazakhstan targets €45bn in non-commodity exports as global export insurers turn to Central Asia

Editors Picks

UK set to ban under-16s from social media, livestreaming, disappearing messages – POLITICO

June 12, 2026

Police fire water cannon at demonstrators as Belfast anti-immigration protests continue

June 12, 2026

Russian businessman sentenced in Belgium sanctions case – POLITICO

June 12, 2026

Baptism of fire: What are the five most stressful countries for beginner drivers in Europe?

June 12, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Europe and world news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

We want bigger cuts to EU budget than planned, richer countries say – POLITICO

June 11, 2026

Video. Mexico’s President Sheinbaum joins fans as World Cup gets underway

June 11, 2026

Pope Leo slams Europe for treating migrants like ‘numbers or files’ – POLITICO

June 11, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Daily Guardian Europe. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.