Halliburton Beats Q1 2026 Earnings Estimates by 10% — Here’s What It Means for the Stock

Photo of Ian Cooper
By Ian Cooper Published
Halliburton Beats Q1 2026 Earnings Estimates by 10% — Here’s What It Means for the Stock

© Golden Dayz / Shutterstock.com

Halliburton (NYSE:HAL | HAL Price Prediction) delivered a sharper-than-expected Q1 2026 earnings beat on Tuesday morning, posting EPS of $0.55 against a consensus estimate of $0.50, a 10.55% positive surprise. Revenue came in at $5.40 billion versus the $5.30 billion estimate, a 1.80% beat. The magnitude of the EPS outperformance stands out given the volatile oil macro backdrop heading into the quarter.

At a Glance

  • EPS: $0.55 reported vs. $0.50 estimated (10.55% beat)
  • Revenue: $5.40B reported vs. $5.30B estimated (1.80% beat)
  • Net Income: $461M, up 125.98% YoY from $204M in Q1 2025, though the prior year figure was weighed down by $356M in pre-tax charges, including asset impairments and severance costs
  • Operating Income: $679M, up 57.54% YoY
  • Free Cash Flow: $123M, up 64% YoY
  • Stock (prior close): $36.68, down 5% over the prior week

The international mix tells the real story. Latin America’s 22% revenue surge, driven by broad-based activity gains across Ecuador, the Caribbean, and Brazil, offset a 13% decline in the Middle East tied to geopolitical disruptions. Management noted that Middle East conflict reduced EPS by approximately 2 to 3 cents, making the headline beat even more impressive on an adjusted basis.

Capital Allocation

  • Dividend: $0.17 per share quarterly dividend paid during Q1 2026
  • Buybacks: Approximately $100M of common stock repurchased during Q1 2026

Key Risks

  • Geopolitical conflict in the Middle East is impacting both divisions
  • OPEC+ production quota uncertainty
  • Oil and natural gas price volatility, with WTI ranging from $96.17 to $114.58 in early April 2026
  • Tariff and trade regulation changes
  • Lower activity across multiple product service lines in Saudi Arabia and Qatar

Bottom Line

Halliburton’s Q1 2026 results demonstrate that disciplined international diversification can absorb regional shocks. The 10.55% EPS beat reflects genuine operational leverage, not just a favorable comparison to a charge-laden prior year. With North America described as in the “early innings of a recovery” and international markets offsetting Middle East headwinds, the structural setup entering Q2 appears constructive. Investors should focus on earnings call guidance given WTI’s elevated but volatile positioning at $100.72 per barrel as of April 13, 2026. HAL has now beaten estimates in three of the last four quarters, with the Q4 2025 beat reaching 49.12%, reinforcing a pattern of conservative analyst estimates and consistent outperformance.

Photo of Ian Cooper
About the Author Ian Cooper →

Ian Cooper is a veteran market analyst and investment strategist with more than 20 years of experience covering stocks, commodities, and macro trends. Since 1999, he has helped investors identify market opportunities using a blend of technical analysis, fundamental research, and market sentiment.

He is the creator of the ADD News Flow Strategy, which focuses on trading market reactions to major news events and investor psychology. Cooper was also among the analysts who warned about the 2008 financial crisis and major financial institution collapses ahead of the broader market.

Before joining 247 Wall St., Cooper wrote extensively for InvestorPlace and other financial publications, covering market trends, trading strategies, and investment opportunities.

Continue Reading

Top Gaining Stocks

HPE Vol: 153,197,465
ENPH Vol: 8,360,053
GLW Vol: 18,152,646
APTV Vol: 6,761,325

Top Losing Stocks

TTD Vol: 21,905,513
INTU Vol: 7,383,018
CTRA Vol: 73,319,495
CBOE Vol: 5,000,011
HP
HPQ Vol: 29,259,826