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TotalEnergies (TTE) Stock Soars 35% YTD Following Massive $1 Billion Middle East Crude Trading Windfall
Key Highlights
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Key Highlights
Execution of the Strategic Position
Wall Street Perspective on TTE Stock
The French energy giant secured profits exceeding $1 billion through purchases of approximately 70 crude oil shipments from UAE and Oman during March
Conflict-related blockages at the Strait of Hormuz reduced benchmark-eligible crude supply by roughly 40%
Dubai benchmark crude skyrocketed from approximately $70 to peak near $170 per barrel throughout the crisis period
TotalEnergies shares have climbed more than 10% over the last 30 days and exceeded 35% gains year to date
Wall Street analysts maintain a Moderate Buy rating on TTE with a consensus price target of $84.31
Shares of TTE are currently changing hands around the $89 level, reflecting year-to-date appreciation exceeding 35%.
TotalEnergies SE, TTE
The French oil major TotalEnergies (TTE) capitalized on extraordinary market conditions during March, generating profits surpassing $1 billion by aggressively accumulating Middle Eastern crude while regional warfare disrupted critical shipping lanes through the Strait of Hormuz, causing dramatic price escalations.
Reporting from the Financial Times indicates that the company’s trading desk acquired approximately 70 crude oil cargoes originating from United Arab Emirates and Oman facilities — representing more than twice its February acquisition volume — scheduled for May delivery windows. Oxford energy academic Adi Imsirovic characterized the position as among the most significant wagers witnessed in petroleum market history.
Company representatives declined to provide commentary regarding specific trading strategies.
The profit opportunity emerged from a fundamental disruption in Middle Eastern oil pricing mechanisms. S&P Global Platts, administrator of the Dubai crude benchmark that serves as the primary pricing reference for Asian oil imports, suspended acceptance of crude grades requiring Strait of Hormuz transit on March 2nd, following major shipping firms halting passage due to security concerns.
Three among five crude categories utilized for benchmark calculation were eliminated from market availability. This action reduced deliverable supply volumes by approximately 40%, restricting eligibility exclusively to Abu Dhabi’s Murban grade and Oman crude.
With market liquidity dramatically constrained, the trading environment became exceptionally susceptible to concentrated positioning. TotalEnergies capitalized decisively.
Execution of the Strategic Position
Dubai benchmark crude advanced from approximately $70 per barrel immediately preceding the conflict outbreak to an unprecedented peak around $170 last week. Brent crude reached approximately $120 per barrel during mid-March before moderating to roughly $113.
Despite trading activity within the benchmark window increasing approximately 50% compared to the previous month, TotalEnergies remained the sole market participant accumulating sufficient partial contracts to assemble complete cargo positions, according to FT reporting.
The energy company additionally deployed futures contracts and options instruments to manage risk exposure and establish positions ahead of the price surge, per Imsirovic’s assessment.
TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanné remarked to CNBC last week that global markets had “never experienced” refining margins at present levels, characterizing the oil products market as “dislocated.” He cautioned that prolonged conflict extending through summer months could propel European natural gas prices toward $40 per million British thermal units — exceeding double the current $18 levels.
Regarding production operations, TotalEnergies announced on March 13th that output had been suspended or was being reduced across Qatar, Iraq and offshore United Arab Emirates facilities — representing approximately 15% of total global production. Nevertheless, the company noted those Middle East volumes constitute only about 10% of upstream cash flow generation due to elevated taxation structures, and that an $8 per barrel Brent increase was sufficient to completely offset lost production volumes.
Wall Street Perspective on TTE Stock
Platts implemented an additional measure on March 20th to reinforce the Dubai benchmark, suspending the negative quality adjustment applicable to Murban crude to maximize deliverable supply. The agency indicated broad market participant support for the modification.
Last week, Jefferies analyst Mark Wilson reaffirmed a Buy rating on TTE, emphasizing the Rio Grande LNG project as a long-duration asset featuring attractive cost positioning. Wilson calculated that LNG supply disruptions across Qatar and UAE operations would impact 2026 cash flow by approximately $200 million — a manageable figure, according to his analysis.
TTE presently carries a Moderate Buy consensus rating on TipRanks, supported by 10 Buy ratings, 8 Hold ratings and 1 Sell rating issued over the past three months. The consensus price target registers at $84.31 — approximately 6% beneath current trading levels.
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