hard to say since the last chamber is destroyed and the aperture not quite visible, but we can say it looks like Fohsella (globorotalia) peripheroronda in its global shape.
this is the description of it copied from mikrotax
Morphology:
Test very low trochospiral, equatorial periphery slightly lobulate , axial periphery rounded with a tendency to become subangular, umbilical side more convex than the spiral; chambers ovate, five to six in the final whorl, increasing slowly in size as added; sutures on spiral and umbilical side strongly curved, slightly depressed; surface smooth with evenly scattered pores: umbilicus narrow; aperture interiomarginal, extraumbilical-umbilical, low arch bordered by a distinct lip.
For any fossil to be assessed, it would be useful to know the location and the lithostratigraphic unit (formation) from which it is derived. For trochospiral taxa, please also add a spiral view. My first impression is that it could also be a benthic species. What is its overall microfossil context? Abundant planktics or are these rather rare?