mitzy
- 25 May 2010 08:48
The oil rig disaster in the Gulf of Mexico has damaged BP's reputation will they manage to avoid a share collapse to 350p.?
472p to buy this morning.
required field
- 01 Jun 2010 08:51
- 21 of 1170
Parker...please bring the rolls......yes millady..euhh with or without butter ?...
required field
- 01 Jun 2010 09:04
- 22 of 1170
The cost to BP will be staggering....the poor wildlife, birds fish, .....a real mess.....and even though it was americans that were running the rig out there : the world will blame BP and the UK....
halifax
- 01 Jun 2010 09:15
- 23 of 1170
rf don't be ridiculous you can't blame another country (UK) for the actions of a company which is licensed by the US and is largely owned by american shareholders.
cynic
- 01 Jun 2010 09:32
- 24 of 1170
it's the bane of modern society - not my fault guv; let's blame someone else.
mitzy
- 01 Jun 2010 11:57
- 25 of 1170
I knew it was a short when Tony Craze on wake up to money Radio 5 said he was buying at 530p last week and anything under 500p was a bargain..
How right he was ..418p to buy now.
He said the same about Marconi saying buy at 120p before they went bust.
This could do the same.
Clubman3509
- 01 Jun 2010 12:05
- 26 of 1170
BP will not go bust. Granted big problems, as soon as the well is capped 100% watch the big fund managers pile in and the stock rise.
mitzy
- 01 Jun 2010 12:17
- 27 of 1170
I'm thinking a sp of around 100p Clubman.
Clubman3509
- 01 Jun 2010 12:30
- 28 of 1170
If it got to this price I would sell the houses, cars, wife & kids and buy
cynic
- 01 Jun 2010 12:32
- 29 of 1170
can you get money for your wife? ..... she must be young and lovely then! ..... i just got offered 3 goats for mine - and my children were deemed too old to be of interest to the local pederast society
Clubman3509
- 01 Jun 2010 12:38
- 30 of 1170
She is, but don't know if you can sell wife's on Ebay
cynic
- 01 Jun 2010 13:15
- 31 of 1170
a personal in Khaleej or Gulf Times might work
Clubman3509
- 01 Jun 2010 13:19
- 32 of 1170
The ragheads would not want her too skinny at 38 kilo
cynic
- 01 Jun 2010 13:26
- 33 of 1170
she's like a little thrush then!
Balerboy
- 01 Jun 2010 17:32
- 34 of 1170
spotty & itchy??
cynic
- 01 Jun 2010 17:54
- 35 of 1170
the old ones are the best ones!
cynic
- 01 Jun 2010 22:10
- 36 of 1170
looks as though 400 will be broken tomorrow, and perhaps quite substantially
hlyeo98
- 01 Jun 2010 23:03
- 37 of 1170
I think tomorrow BP will dive to 350p...and to 100p by August. Sell at all costs.
BPs future as a global concern was at stake tonight after the US Attorney General, announced that he was launching a criminal and a civil investigation into the Louisiana oil spill.
As Eric Holder made his announcement, the British companys chief executive fought to halt a headlong slide in its stock price.
After losing a third of its value in just six weeks, BP is expected to promise shareholders their full annual dividend in a last-ditch bid to retain their loyalty. More than 12 billion was wiped off the companys value today alone, as Mr Obama dispatched his top prosecutor to Louisiana and vowed to bring to justice those responsible for what he called the greatest environmental disaster of its kind in our history.
Shares in what used to be Britains biggest company endured their worst days trading in more than two decades, dragging down the FTSE 100 index and with it the value of dozens of leading pension funds.
In Washington, Mr Obama stepped up his efforts to assert control over the disaster response with his second televised address in less than a week. If our laws have been broken leading to this death and destruction, my solemn pledge is that we will bring those responsible to justice on behalf of the victims of the catastrophe and the people of the Gulf region, he said.
Mr Holder announced that he was launching a criminal and a civil investigation into the oil spill. Earlier, he met Louisiana law enforcement officials in New Orleans after ordering BP to preserve records that could shed light on what led to the disaster. He has also instructed US Department of Justice staff to look for evidence of malfeasance in the days and hours before the Deepwater Horizon rig blew up.
The first government attack on BP in US courts may come from Louisianas Attorney General, James Caldwell, who has received $5 million from the state government and demanded $22 million more to sue the company and its subcontractors on behalf of the disasters victims.
State and federal investigations are likely to focus on BPs relationship with the Minerals Management Service, a government agency condemned in official reports for a culture of corruption. In an unusual departure from normal procedures, the MMS granted BP three changes to its drilling permit for the Deepwater Horizon rig in a single day a week before the rig sank, a Wall Street Journal investigation revealed yesterday.
Separate congressional investigations have focused on two critical decisions, both blamed on BP by its main subcontractors, to replace heavy mud with water in the riser pipe leading from the well head to the surface; and to use a high-tech but relatively untested type of concrete in the well casing.
BP said today that its latest effort to cap the well a hood placed over the failed blowout preventer at the bottom of the riser could be in place as soon as today. But the failure of every tactic tried so far combined today with an increasingly hostile US Administration to produce fears for the future of the company.
This situation has now gone far beyond concerns of BPs chief executive Tony Hayward being fired or shareholder dividend payouts being cut, said Dougie Youngson at stockbroker Arbuthnot.
Its got the real smell of death. This could break BP. Given the collapse in the share price and the potential for it to fall further, we expect that it could become a takeover target, particularly if its operating position in the US becomes untenable.
BP is the most important company on the UK stock market by a considerable margin. Roughly 1 in every 6 received in dividends by UK pension funds comes from BP, so a cut would severely impact almost every saver in the land. Such is the companys size, the fall in its share price was yesterday sufficient to knock 57.5 points from the value of the FTSE-100, although the index actually finished 25.13 points lower due to rises among other blue-chip stocks.
Any cut in BPs dividend would be a traumatic event for the company. It last cut its payout to shareholders in August 1992 after reporting its first-ever quarterly loss.
With much of todays share price fall being attributed to fears that the company may have to cut its dividend, BPs chief executive, Tony Hayward, is expected later this week to assure investors that the payout will be maintained.
The companys share price fell to as low as 412.25p at one stage today before a partial rally. That followed an admission from BP that the cost of its repeated failed bids to stem the flow from the blow out, the clean-up operation, and early payments of claims by affected American and by states around the Gulf has already topped $1 billion. BP is privately putting the total cost of the disaster at $4 billion by the end of the year.
cynic
- 02 Jun 2010 06:55
- 38 of 1170
would increase my short position, but suspect now a bit late, but never mind .... certainly 350 looks on the cards ..... not sure what happens below that from a charting viewpoint
greekman
- 02 Jun 2010 07:46
- 39 of 1170
Off subject.
Can anyone tell me the epic re BP.
I have several sites saying the epic is BP, but when I put that into MoneyAm company zone, I get the message Not Found.
Greek.
skinny
- 02 Jun 2010 07:47
- 40 of 1170
BP.