Regardless of an enormous plunge in spring 2025, the BP (LSE: BP) share value ended final 12 months up simply over 10% (excluding money dividends). Not a foul annual return, however nothing to write down house about. Nonetheless, because the begin of this 12 months, the shares have bounced round like loopy. What’s inflicting this elevated volatility and uncertainty for BP shareholders?
BP: beginnings in Persia
BP started life in 1909 because the Anglo-Persian Oil Firm, later changing into the Anglo-Iranian Oil Firm in 1935 after which the British Petroleum Firm in 1954. After merging with US rival Amoco in 1998, it briefly turned BP Amoco earlier than rebranding to BP in 2000.
For many years, BP was owned by the British state and its individuals. In 1977, the UK began promoting off its stake to non-public buyers, together with a disastrous sale to the general public coinciding with the Black Monday stock-market crash of 19 October 1987. Since then, BP has been a stalwart of the UK’s elite FTSE 100 index.
What’s fascinating to me is that the share value of this international vitality large has mainly gone nowhere since April 1999. On Friday (8 Could) the inventory closed at 535.6p, round 6% beneath its closing value 27 years in the past. Then once more, the shares have leapt 43.9% over the previous 12 months and 70.8% over 5 years, once more excluding dividends.
BP: bouncing value
That stated, BP shares have been far more risky than common to date this calendar 12 months. The excellent news for shareholders is that the share value has jumped 23.8% in 2026, with a lot of this bounce coming after the US attacked Iran on 28 February.
Nonetheless, the shares have jumped round from a 2026 intraday low of 413.3p to a peak of 609.4p on 31 March. That’s an unusually big selection in slightly over 4 months. What’s the trigger? Three components — the oil value, the US/Israel-Iran battle, and the pronouncements of President Donald Trump — are driving the worth up and down.
With the most recent Center East battle settling into an uneasy stalemate, the BP value has dropped 12.1% from its March excessive. In the meantime, the oil value has dipped by solely 3.4% over this timeframe. To me, this recommend that BP’s valuation could have gotten a bit forward of itself in March’s shopping for frenzy.
BP: greater value?
Talking of valuation, BP’s present market worth stands at £84.6bn, making it a FTSE 100 heavyweight. Rising quarterly dividend payouts have boosted this inventory’s dividend yield to 4.6% a 12 months. That’s effectively forward of the broader Footsie‘s yearly money yield of roughly 3%.
For my part, the shares appear like a easy binary guess on the Iran battle and the oil value. If the battle drags on, then issues within the Strait of Hormuz might crimp international oil provide and pump up oil costs. Conversely, if the battle ends swiftly or convincingly, then falling vitality costs might drag down BP’s valuation.
My household portfolio holds BP shares, having paid 484.1p a share for our stake in August 2023. Given the wholesome earnings they pay, plus their use as a hedge towards rising vitality payments, I’ll maintain on tightly to this shareholding for now. Likewise, worth buyers might take into account shopping for BP inventory for its wholesome dividends and publicity to grease and fuel costs.
