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.
Master RSI
- 06 Jul 2010 08:38
- 621 of 1170
Has open well up at 338p and now stand at 348p +14.70p
Master RSI
- 06 Jul 2010 10:41
- 622 of 1170
BP Piles Up Cash in Show of Strength -- By James Herron
BPs embattled Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg and Chief Executive Tony Hayward
The oil leak into the Gulf of Mexico is as bad as ever and may continue for another month, but BP is piling up cash as fast as possible and looks increasingly like it can meet whatever financial demands the cleanup places on it.
Fears last month over whether the spill could push BP into bankruptcy look like little more than irrational panic now.
Back in the first half of June the picture looked very different. BPs shares were in free-falldropping 16% one afternoon in New Yorkthe cost of insuring its debt was ballooning and there were genuine fears that demands for upfront compensation from Congress and the White House could push the company into insolvency.
BPs June 16 deal with the White House to set up an independently-administered $20 billion fund to cover oil spill liabilities extinguished that particular fire and the company has been working hard since then to calm its shaken investors.
Shortly after the deal with the White House was announced, BPs Chief Financial Officer Byron Grote said:
Were taking a very prudent financial position during this period because of the uncertainties. While there is uncertainy out there, the company believes its prudent to continue to bolster its balance sheet to be able to address any uncertainties that might exist in the future.
BP has gone a long way towards that goal.
The company had a prior $5.25 billion credit line available with a number of banks and, in a show of support since the oil spill, eight or nine banks have offered additional standby credit lines totaling $9 billion. Add that to the $5 billion in cash BP already had on its balance sheet in early June, the $2.6 billion BP saved by canceling its first quarter dividend and another $2 billion loan secured against its stake in Russian oil giant Rosneft and BP already has war chest exceeding the size of the compensation fund.
BPs plan to sell $10 billion of assets to boost its balance sheet could pay off quickly if reports are correct that China National Offshore Oil Company could buy BPs stake in Pan American Energy for around $9 billion within weeks.
There may be further sources of cash, should BP need it. The companys gearing is at the bottom of its 20% to 30% target range, although borrowing would probably be an expensive last resort following recent downgrades to its credit rating from Fitch and Moodys.
There are also reports that a number of sovereign wealth funds from the Middle East are ready to pump billions in fresh equity into BP, although its hard to see such a dilution going down well with existing BP investors.
And despite BPs severe problems in the U.S., the vast bulk of its global operations continue as normal, generating around $30 billion a year in free cash flow.
The Head of Libyas National Oil Company, Shokri Ghanem, certainly gave a vote of confidence in BPs ability to survive the current crisis. I still have trust in BPIts a good opportunity for bargain hunters, he said, adding that he will recommend buying a stake in BP to the Libyan sovereign wealth fund.
So BP will live to fight another day, but its bosses may not. The need to restore the companys image and rebuild relations with the authorities in the U.S. make it increasingly likely that one or both of BPs public faces during the crisisChief Executive Tony Hayward and Chairman Carl-Henric Svanbergwill have to take one for the team.
Master RSI
- 06 Jul 2010 10:44
- 623 of 1170
Sources said that BP is considering selling some of its non-core assets in Colombia, Venezuela and Vietnam. This could be in addition to the possible sale of its $9bn stake in PanAmerica, for which the China National Oil Corporation may bid.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/energy/oilandgas/7873702/Libya-eyes-stake-in-bargain-BP.html
Master RSI
- 06 Jul 2010 10:53
- 624 of 1170
AFTER TODAY'S RISE comments of RBS upgrading to BUY with valuation of 455p.........
Shares in embattled oil major BP BP.L rise 3.2 percent to be among the top FTSE 100 .FTSE risers, after RBS upgrades its recommendation to "buy" from "hold" citing valuation grounds.
Traders also cite comments made on Monday by Shokri Ghanem, chairman of Libya's National Oil Corporation, who said in a telephone interview: "I think that BP shares are good value for bargain hunters."
The comments followed weekend newspaper reports that BP would seek a strategic investor to ward off takeover bids while the company's massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico spread.
RBS says BP shares have fallen 100 pence per share more than its base case scenario -- which implies direct costs connected with the incident, including negligent and non-negligent, of $67 billion or 235 pence per share.
BP's value has almost halved since oil began pouring into the Gulf of Mexico in late April, with its shares trading at around 340 pence.
RBS resets its target price to 455 pence from 595 pence given the share price fall, saying "catalysts for share performance are particularly evident in this case," adding it expects the first relief well to intersect the Macondo bore by mid-July, and "we believe this will be a turning point for BP's share."
Master RSI
- 06 Jul 2010 12:32
- 625 of 1170
BP asks oil spill partners to pay $400m
Demands sent to Deepwater Horizon partners Anadarko and Japan's Mitsui Oil Exploration as total bill passes $3bn
BP has sent a $400m bill to its partners for the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Photograph: KPA/Zuma/Rex Features
The oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has so far cost BP $3.12bn (2bn), the company said this morning as it emerged that the oil giant is demanding that its partners in the well pick up at least part of the bill.
Last month, BP sent out demands for almost $400m to Anadarko and Japan's Mitsui Oil Exploration Company, both of whom are minority shareholders in the well. That is equivalent to 40% of the $1bn BP said it spent in May. Anadarko owns 25% of the well and Mitsui has 10%.
Details of the demands were contained in documents released by a Senate subcommittee last week. BP is demanding payment within 30 days, meaning that the two companies have roughly until the weekend to pay up.
Anadarko, however, has refused to accept any blame for the disaster. Last month its chairman and chief executive, Jim Hackett, said BP's actions probably amounted to "gross negligence or wilful misconduct". If proved in court, that could allow Anadarko to escape its responsibilities under its joint operating agreement. Mitsui, meanwhile, has said it is too early to conclude what happened on the Deepwater Horizon.
News that BP is trying to recoup some of its losses comes as the company updated investors on Monday morning about the scale of the salvage and clean-up exercise. Since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded on 20 April, the cost of the response to date amounts to approximately $3.12bn, including the cost of the spill response, containment, relief well drilling, grants to the Gulf states, claims paid, and federal costs. The news follows BP's agreement on 16 June to put $20bn into a special clean-up fund for the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster after company executives met Barack Obama.
Approximately 44,500 personnel, more than 6,563 vessels and some 113 aircraft are now engaged in the response effort. BP said on Monday that almost 95,000 claims for compensation have been submitted and more than 47,000 payments have been made, totalling almost $147m.
BP said two containment systems continue to collect oil and gas flowing from the Deepwater Horizon's failed blow-out preventer (BOP) and transport them to vessels on the surface. The first cap, installed on 3 June, takes oil and gas to the Discoverer Enterprise where oil is collected and gas flared. The second system, which began operations on 16 June, takes oil and gas to the Q4000 vessel on the surface where both oil and gas are flared.
As of 3 July, a total of approximately 25,198 barrels of oil were collected or flared by the two systems and 57.0m cubic feet of gas were flared. To date, the total volume of oil collected or flared by the containment systems is approximately 585,400 barrels.
Hurricane season
Preparations continue for the next step in containment operations, BP added, but work on a first floating riser containment system designed to allow more rapid disconnection and reconnection of the system thereby reducing the time that collection is halted by inclement weather has been delayed by heightened sea states caused by Hurricane Alex as it passed through the Gulf of Mexico.
It is currently anticipated that the first floating riser system will be available to begin operations towards the end of the week, BP said. Plans also are being developed for additional containment capacity and flexibility. These are currently anticipated to begin operations around mid-to-late July.
Work on the first relief well, which started 2 May, continues. The well reached a depth of 17,725 feet on 4 July. The second relief well, which started 16 May, has now reached 13,871 feet. Both wells are still estimated to take approximately three months to complete from the start of drilling.
Operations to skim oil from the surface of the water were suspended for approximately three days because of Hurricane Alex. To date, these operations have recovered, in total, approximately 673,497 barrels of oily liquid. In addition, a total of 275 controlled burns have been carried out to date, removing an estimated 238,000 barrels of oil from the sea's surface.
The total length of containment boom deployed as part of efforts to prevent oil from reaching the coast is now almost 2.9m feet.
tabasco
- 06 Jul 2010 12:55
- 626 of 1170
From what I can make out the fractured pipe is beneath around 5,000 feet of waterand then around 13,000 feet under the seabednow so far BP have tried to activate the well's blowout preventerwhich failedattempted to place a dome over the fracture that got clogged up almost immediately and failedthen there was the top kill maneuver that lasted a couple of days and failedBP then tries another capping strategy but has difficulty cutting off a leaking riser pipewhich failedthen there was this supertanker converted into a super skimmer? That seems to go quite the minute the wind blowsbut the saviour is going to be a relief wellstill weeks from completionthis is going to travel down and along 18,000 feet and hit a target the size of a footballnow using the other attempts as a form lineanyone want to price up the chance of success?they do seem confident though?I believe they are trying to rustle together as much support prior to another failuresuccess would see the SP = 5 failure SP = 2.I cant price up the odds for successbut I dont believe it is an odds on shot!
hlyeo98
- 06 Jul 2010 13:02
- 627 of 1170
Just shorted it at 341p... weakness will prevail.
Gausie
- 06 Jul 2010 13:04
- 628 of 1170
Am also watching for evidence of a DCB. I think you you might be a little early though hlyeo. This could easily go to 370 or 380 before turning back down.
hlyeo98
- 06 Jul 2010 13:25
- 629 of 1170
It has retreated from this morning's high... hopefully you're wrong... wish me luck.
Clubman3509
- 06 Jul 2010 13:28
- 630 of 1170
Yes it has but IMHO I think the USA will fly up today +290 my prediction and it should take BP up with it.
Gausie
- 06 Jul 2010 14:31
- 631 of 1170
hlyeo - good luck. Where's your stop? And what's your target?
cynic
- 06 Jul 2010 14:31
- 632 of 1170
welcome back to the human race clubby!
i think +290 is pretty wishful stuff, but closing anything ahead of the opening will do nicely
Clubman3509
- 06 Jul 2010 14:43
- 633 of 1170
Thank's Cynic Dow 90 up allready my boy
cynic
- 06 Jul 2010 16:32
- 634 of 1170
ADRs = $31.48
cynic
- 06 Jul 2010 21:56
- 636 of 1170
ADRs closed at $31.91 which can't be bad news for tomorrow
Master RSI
- 06 Jul 2010 21:57
- 637 of 1170
ADRs = $31.91 +2.56 or 8.7%
Moving well ahead as it was closing, good start tomorrow
Master RSI
- 06 Jul 2010 22:11
- 638 of 1170
SHORTS?
Master RSI
- 06 Jul 2010 22:41
- 639 of 1170
From the TELEGRAPH ( tomorrow edition )
BP's Tony Hayward tours the Middle East as investors weigh up prospects
Tony Hayward, BP's chief executive, was last night touring the Middle East to reassure the oil giant's partners, as sources said the company is still trying to drum up interest in its shares among Gulf investors.
BP confirmed that Abu Dhabi, rumoured to be interested in taking a stake, was "on Mr Hayward's itinerary" following a stop at the company's operations in Azerbaijan. A spokesman insisted that Mr Haywood was there to offer assurances about the company's stability but would talk about investments "should there be any interest".
BP has ruled out any new shares - either as a placing or a rights issues - but could encourage a new white knight investor to provide a backstop on the declining share price.
The tour comes as BP's management remains under intense pressure to deal with its financial situation in the aftermath of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. BP's market value has dropped by 50pc since the accident on April 20 killed 11 men and triggered the catastrophic leak.
It is understood that Sir Bill Castell, BP's senior independent director, has been leading a round of talks with shareholders. Sources suggest that BP's leadership team will stand down as soon as the leaking well is plugged. As the senior non-executive director, Sir Bill's role is to liaise between shareholders and management - and smooth over any change over at the top.
The Daily Telegraph has also learned that BP bosses are seeking to calm the concerns of top institutional investors by claiming they are ready to roll out a "robust defence" as soon as the oil leak is capped.
Investors have been told about a "Plan B" which is being secretly worked on by teams of lawyers in answer to criticism that they are failing to defend the company from public attacks. One top ten shareholder said: "We've only heard one side of the story so far. BP has to get the problem solved first but after that we expect the company to come out fighting."
The investors have also voiced their concerns about suggestions that BP could issue shares to bolster its finances. One investor said: "There will be a stink about issuing shares, the company doesn't need either the capital or a row over pre-emption rights. We've made it clear that any new investor must buy shares in the market and support the price."
Instead the company could do a multi-billion pound bond issue for more support which would also underline confidence in its financial position. Experts said the market would support an issue of as much as 10bn.
The developments came as:
BP's oil slick spread deeper into Louisiana's delicate inland wetland areas and tar balls from the spill were confirmed on beaches in Texas.
High waves delayed BP's efforts to catch more oil from the leaking well. It is currently picking up 25,000 barrels per day and hoped to increase this by 10,000 barrels yesterday.
BP's share price rose 3.7pc in London to 345p as drilling for its relief well advanced ahead of schedule.
Gausie
- 07 Jul 2010 09:04
- 640 of 1170
I guess hlyeo got burned.