
Golar LNG enters this review with the stock trading at $52.36 and very strong multi year share price gains, including 38.0% year to date and 42.1% over the past year. The share price has pulled back recently, down 8.2% over the past week, while the value score of 4 suggests the market may already be pricing in some of the recent progress.
For investors watching NasdaqGS:GLNG, the combination of a formal options review and plans for a fourth FLNG unit signals a possible shift in how the business is structured and grows. Depending on the outcome, the process could reshape the company’s asset base, capital allocation priorities, or partnerships, all of which are key factors to monitor over the coming quarters.
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3 things going right for Golar LNG that this headline doesn't cover.
The formal review with Goldman Sachs International comes on top of a very strong operational quarter for Golar LNG. Q1 2026 revenue was US$137.55 million compared with US$62.5 million a year earlier, and net income was US$83.58 million compared with US$8.2 million. That kind of step up in earnings, supported by record FLNG production and overproduction at Gimi, gives the board more flexibility to consider options such as a sale, merger, asset spin outs, or changing how FLNG assets are held. At the same time, Golar has confirmed plans to order a fourth FLNG vessel within 2026 and is progressing the Mark II project. This points to a capital intensive growth path that may require careful funding choices, especially with analysts highlighting debt coverage and Altman Z-Score concerns. The confirmed US$0.25 per share dividend, repeated across several announcements, shows management still returning cash while it evaluates these options. For you as an investor, the key question is whether any future transaction or structure can balance large contracted FLNG cash flows with the financing needs of another vessel and ongoing Argentina related expansion.
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From here, keep an eye on three things. First, whether the review leads to concrete proposals such as asset spin outs, a sale, or a different ownership structure for the FLNG units, and how any outcome treats existing shareholders. Second, how Golar times and finances the planned fourth FLNG vessel alongside the Mark II project, because capital needs could be large relative to current cash and debt metrics. Third, watch contract developments and counterparties, especially for Argentina and other key projects, as these will influence how resilient cash flows are compared with peers like Cheniere Energy, Flex LNG, or New Fortress Energy. Any change in dividend policy or guidance around leverage would also be important context for judging the balance between risk and reward.
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