The clearest driver was stronger pricing. Business Standard, citing Aramco’s stock-exchange filing, reported that the company benefited from higher prices for crude oil, refined fuels and chemical products during the quarter . Khaleej Times also reported that the year-over-year profit rise was driven by greater crude oil sales and higher prices
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That mix matters. The beat was not only about crude oil. Refining and chemical-product pricing also helped, giving Aramco support across multiple parts of its hydrocarbon value chain . Revenue rose 8.8%, while operating income rose 16.3% to SAR 222.54 billion, meaning operating profit grew faster than sales in the quarter
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The profit beat did not translate into stronger free cash flow. Aramco reported cash flow from operating activities of $30.7 billion, down from $31.7 billion a year earlier, and free cash flow of $18.6 billion, down from $19.2 billion . The company said free cash flow was affected by a $15.8 billion working-capital build
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That distinction is important for investors. Q1 showed strong earnings sensitivity to commodity prices, but cash generation lagged the profit improvement. Aramco also reported $12.1 billion of capital expenditures in the quarter and declared a $21.9 billion base dividend to be paid in the second quarter .
They can continue if the commodity backdrop stays supportive, but the outlook is not one-way. The same factors that lifted Q1 — crude, refined-product and chemical-product prices — are cyclical and can reverse .
Oil-price forecasts are notably split. A Business Standard oil-market outlook citing Mirae Asset Sharekhan forecast Brent at $90 in Q4 2026 if prolonged disruption around Iran and the Strait of Hormuz keeps supply tight, with upside risk under a larger supply shock . J.P. Morgan Global Research, by contrast, expects Brent crude to average around $60 per barrel in 2026, citing soft supply-demand fundamentals and arguing that prolonged supply disruptions are unlikely
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Demand signals are also mixed. OPEC lowered its Q2 2026 global oil-demand forecast to about 105.07 million barrels per day, down from 105.57 million barrels per day, citing the effect of the ongoing Middle East war on consumption; it maintained its 2026 demand-growth forecast at about 1.4 million barrels per day .
Saudi Aramco’s Q1 2026 profit beat was real, but it was not a clean signal that every future quarter will look the same. Higher prices for crude oil, refined fuels and chemical products lifted earnings above expectations . But free cash flow declined year over year, and credible oil-price outlooks for 2026 range from a $90 Brent disruption case to a roughly $60 average Brent forecast
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The practical read: Aramco can keep delivering strong profits if oil and downstream markets stay firm, but repeating the scale of Q1’s surprise will depend on prices, margins and working capital moving in the company’s favor at the same time.
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