
Borr Drilling navigates Q1 revenue dip, betting big on aggressive fleet expansion
Borr Drilling (NYSE:BORR) announced its unaudited financial and operational results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2026, revealing a slight sequential softening in current financial performance offset by a substantial structural expansion of its offshore drilling fleet.
The Hamilton, Bermuda-based shallow-water specialist generated total operating revenues of $247 million for the three-month period.
This marks a 5% decrease compared to the fourth quarter of 2025, though it represents a 14% increase when measured against the first quarter of the prior year.
The sequential drop contributed to a first-quarter net loss of $29 million, widening from a minor net loss of $1 million in the final quarter of 2025.
Diluted earnings per share settled at a loss of $0.09.
First-quarter adjusted EBITDA arrived at $88.5 million, tracking 16% lower quarter-on-quarter.
Management attributed the margin compression to temporary friction points, primarily the delayed contract start-up of its Odin jack-up rig, which required unexpected preparation work during its mobilization from Mexico to the U.S. Gulf of Mexico.
EBITDA figures were further weighed down by an $8.4 million provision for non-cash credit losses recorded during the quarter.
Operationally, the legacy fleet sustained high levels of reliability, booking a technical utilization rate of 99.4% alongside an economic utilization rate of 97.0%.
The financial noise arrived amid a massive asset consolidation strategy.
Borr completed the $360 million acquisition of five premium jack-up rigs from Noble Corporation, funded through a mix of cash on hand and $150 million in seller notes.
The units—subsequently renamed Sif, Freyja, Forseti, Bestla, and Joro—expanded Borr's wholly owned fleet to 29 active rigs.
Building on this momentum, the company executed agreements to secure five additional premium rigs for $287 million through a newly formed 50/50 joint venture structure targeting localized infrastructure projects.
To optimize its capital structure following the acquisitions, Borr finalized a private placement of $300 million in senior unsecured convertible notes maturing in 2033.
The capital influx was primarily deployed to aggressively repurchase its shorter-dated 2028 convertible bonds, smoothing out its mid-term debt maturity profile.