Most firms hate global oil shocks.
Saudi Aramco isn't most firms. Q1 profit jumped 26% as the Strait of Hormuz block choked global oil supply.
That turned Aramco's backup pipe into the world's most key oil line.
The Beat And The Pipeline
Aramco posted Q1 profit of $33.6 billion. That's up from $26.6 billion a year ago, and 34% above Q4 2025.
Wall Street had set $31.2 billion. So Aramco beat by $2.4 billion.
The East-West Pipeline ran at full speed of 7 million barrels per day. CEO Amin Nasser called it a "critical supply artery."
In plain English: when the strait is shut, this pipe is one of the few ways oil gets out of the region.
Iran's block of the strait has pulled almost a billion barrels off the market. The pinch grows worse the longer the strait stays shut.
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What Oil Is Doing
Brent crude closed Friday at $101.29 per barrel, up about 1%. WTI settled just higher at $95.42.
Brent is up 67% year-to-date. It rose 95% in the first quarter alone.
Friday's bump came after Iran fired more missiles at the UAE. The U.S. also struck two Iran tankers trying to dodge the U.S. naval block.
In the past two weeks, oil and gas CEOs told Wall Street that the world's energy setup will look very new on the other side of this war.
SLB CEO Olivier Le Peuch said the chaos shows how weak the global energy system really is.
The Cash Flow Story
Aramco approved a base dividend of $21.9 billion for the quarter. That's up 3.5% from a year ago.
The firm's gearing ratio - debt level versus equity - sat at 4.8% at the end of Q1. That means Aramco has plenty of room to keep paying owners, even if things get rough.
The dividend hike comes despite the global oil chaos. Aramco's pipe edge means cash keeps flowing while rivals scramble.
Brent at $101 also helps. Aramco has some of the lowest costs in the world. So higher prices flow through to profit fast.
The pipeline reroute means Aramco can sell at full speed even with the strait shut.
A year ago, Q1 profit was $26.6 billion. Now it's $33.6 billion. The $7 billion gap is mostly the oil price.
Aramco is also majority owned by the Saudi state. Most of the cash flows back to the Saudi budget through dividends and taxes.
That makes the firm's cash flow a big input to the Saudi state budget too. So a strong Q1 from Aramco is a strong Q1 for Riyadh as well. The kingdom uses oil cash to fund big plans like NEOM and the broader push to diversify its base.
What To Watch
Aramco's pipeline is already maxed out. Whether the strait reopens or stays shut will set where the stock goes next.
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