l2e
- 30 Apr 2003 07:12
BP dissapointed private investors as the share price slid even though a
Massive 136 percent jump in profits were recorded for the last quarter.
This was already expected and comments from Lord Browne saying falls in oil expected have brought also helped the stock down.
He says can stand oil price even below $16 pb
The hostage situation in Nigeria getting bad maybe BP putting on some weight today?
Locals want enviroment cleaned up and profits shared.
Any chance?
nordcaperen
- 10 May 2010 09:26
- 9 of 688
When them Yanks start 'claiming' for losses incurred dont be surprised to see this little baby go bankrupt - Target price - nil !
skinny
- 10 May 2010 09:57
- 10 of 688
HARRYCAT
- 10 May 2010 10:27
- 11 of 688
BP go bankrupt!!! In your dreams.
When this is all over I assume they will claim from the manufacturer of the blow out preventer, the sub-contracted drilling rig & the various insurers involved? Their next set of accounts will therefore show a one-off impairment charge, but much of that should be recovered way off in the future, imo.
Tricky to pick a good entry point atm, but certainly on my watch list as a decent investment medium term, imo, with a low sp.
skinny
- 10 May 2010 10:33
- 12 of 688
Harry - I didn't think that post needed a reply :-) Have gone long @547.
jimmy b
- 10 May 2010 10:48
- 13 of 688
Bust ,that would be interesting ,i'll put a bid in for a tenner anyone want to go half each ?
Clubman3509
- 10 May 2010 11:02
- 14 of 688
Go bankrupt my ass, If he thinks this he should get all his cash together and short it.
then he will be rich.
hangon
- 11 May 2010 14:51
- 15 of 688
?...Bankrupt...?
Very, very, unlikely IMHO, but the fall in sp is certainly a worry. All the gains I've made are struck out. Certainly there is a worry that BP has been a tad negligent in the past, due to penny-pinching Browne (some say), yet (here) this Co. is attempting to produce oil in extremely difficult locations.
If the US Authorities punish, for what is really a "natual" catastrophe - and deep-water Oilco's will have to develop additional "safety" measures - - - - because a leak is dispersed before it reaches the surface....so any clean-up extent becomes a factor of wind and tide.
Yet, in practice it only matters what Institutions do - will they sell on the basis they might buy-back more cheaply...? Certainly, the "volumes" look large (bearing in mind the [BP.] price).
...Anyone got a crystal ball...?
Clubman3509
- 11 May 2010 15:30
- 16 of 688
As soon as it is capped watch the SP fly
skinny
- 11 May 2010 15:37
- 17 of 688
skinny
- 11 May 2010 15:43
- 18 of 688
Sen. Bingaman To Cite Human, Regulatory Failures in Gulf Spill
By Siobhan Hughes
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)
Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Chairman Jeff Bingaman (D, N.M.) said technological, human and regulatory failures contributed to an oil-rig accident in the Gulf of Mexico that's spewing thousands of barrels of oil a day into the sea.
"At the heart of this disaster are three interrelated systems: a technological system of materials and equipment, a human system of persons who operated the technological system, and a regulatory system," Bingaman will say, according to a copy of his statement. "These interrelated systems failed in a way that many have said was virtually impossible. We need to examine closely the extent to which each of these systems failed to do what it was supposed to do."
The comments reflect an interest in continuing offshore drilling in the deep waters off the coast of the U.S. Some environmentalists have called on the Obama administration to ban offshore drilling following the April 20 explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig.
Bingaman said he will work to develop legislation as lawmakers develop an understanding of what went wrong. "I don't believe it is enough to label this catastrophic failure as an unpredictable and unforeseeable occurrence," he said.
skinny
- 11 May 2010 15:47
- 19 of 688
UPDATE: Interior Dept Plans To Split Minerals Management Service
(Updates to add details, more background)
By Siobhan Hughes
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)
The Interior Department plans to split the Minerals Management Service into two divisions, one focusing on gathering royalties from oil and gas companies and another focused on safety inspections, the department intends to announce Tuesday.
An Interior Department official confirmed the plan.
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar is to make an announcement at 1 p.m., EDT Tuesday.
The reorganization comes amid a vast Gulf Coast oil spill that has called into question the efficacy of the government's regulation.
The tiny agency currently plays dual roles, focusing on collecting money as well as on ensuring the safety of oil drilling in federal waters and land. Some former employees have said that amounts to a conflict-of-interest, as employees must focus on keeping oil revenue flowing while also focusing on safety.
Also, former regulators and oil executives say the MMS has shifted most of the job of crafting safety regulations to the oil industry over the last decade, setting broad performance goals instead. The agency has also been rocked by scandal: in 2008, an Interior Department investigation said some employees of the MMS' Denver bureau engaged in drug consumption and inappropriately close relations with sources in the oil industry.
The current spill is the result of the April explosion and sinking of the Transocean Ltd. (RIG) Deepwater Horizon rig, which was finishing a deepwater well for oil giant BP PLC (BP).
skinny
- 11 May 2010 17:29
- 20 of 688
BP Executive: Transocean Was Responsible For Safety
By Siobhan Hughes
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)
BP Plc (BP, BP.LN) on Tuesday stepped up its criticism of the company from which it leased an oil rig that exploded, saying Transocean Ltd. (RIG) was responsible for safety.
Lamar McKay, the head of BP's U.S. unit, said Transocean "had the responsibility for the safety." He also said there were "anomalous pressure readings" before the April 20 explosion.
He said the company was still investigating what went wrong and that it was too early to draw conclusions. Based on official estimates, the underwater well site is leaking 5,000 barrels of oil a day.
skinny
- 12 May 2010 07:23
- 21 of 688
Ye but no but -
4th UPDATE: Companies, Lawmakers Level Blame At Oil Hearing
Irregular pressure readings, limitations in some testing and deference on decision-making preceded last month's deadly oil-rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico, according to new details emerging from testimony by oil company executives before the U.S. Senate.
The testimony added to the picture of the accident on the Transocean Ltd. (RIG) rig, which BP Plc (BP) was leasing in order to drill an exploratory well with the help of Halliburton Co. (HAL) employees. But a big question about whether procedures took place in the correct sequence remained unanswered, as officials said that none of them was familiar with the federally approved plans for drilling an exploratory well that was located one mile below the ocean's surface.
mnamreh
- 12 May 2010 07:39
- 22 of 688
.
nordcaperen
- 12 May 2010 10:55
- 23 of 688
When the photo's of all the beaches ruined, thousands of dead birds and sea mammals start to make their grizzly way to a T.V screen near you which will be very soon, the share price will plummet again - The yanks wont let this be another Exxon Valdiz without someone paying the price - and BP will be paying that price - Still looks like a bankruptcy in my eyes!
skinny
- 13 May 2010 07:10
- 24 of 688
UPDATE ON GULF OF MEXICO OIL SPILL RESPONSE
BP today provided an update on developments in the response to the MC252 oil well incident in the Gulf of Mexico.
Subsea Source Control and Containment
Subsea efforts continue to focus on, firstly, progressing options to stop the flow of oil from the well through interventions via the blow out preventer (BOP) and, secondly, attempts to contain the flow of oil at source to reduce the amount spreading on the surface. These efforts are being carried out in conjunction with governmental authorities and other industry experts.
skinny
- 13 May 2010 15:01
- 25 of 688
Transocean To Petition To Limit Liability In US Gulf Rig Blast, Sinking
Transocean Ltd. (RIG), the owner and operator of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig that burned and sank last month, unleashing a massive oil leak into the Gulf of Mexico, will Thursday file in federal court a petition to limit its liability to just under $27 million, according to a person familiar with the company's plans and a copy of the filing seen by Dow Jones Newswires.
The world's biggest offshore driller is filing the request in the U.S. District Court in Houston under a century-and-a-half-old law originally aimed at helping U.S. ship owners compete with foreign-flagged vessels. While the company may not succeed in limiting its financial liability, the filing could give Transocean an edge in what could be a lengthy, multipronged legal battle against claims for damages from the accident that killed 11 workers.
skinny
- 13 May 2010 16:08
- 26 of 688
White House Wants $10 Million To Fight Litigation Related To Oil Spill
The White House is asking Congress to set-aside $10 million so the government can fight any claims related to the Gulf oil disaster that is spewing thousands of gallons of crude off the coast of Louisiana.
The set-aside is the first indication that the government might be on the hook to pay for some costs related to the spill despite the Obama administration's near-daily proclamations that BP Plc (BP, BP.LN) will bear the full costs.
The $10 million is part of a legislative package President Barack Obama sent to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi late Wednesday to help respond to the Gulf oil disaster and future spills. The proposed legislation asks Congress for $10 million "for litigation expenses related to affirmative and defensive litigation associated with the Deepwater Horizon oil spill that may not qualify as recoverable from the Responsible Parties or the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund," according to a copy of the proposal. Deepwater Horizon is the name of the rig that exploded in the Gulf.
skinny
- 14 May 2010 07:29
- 27 of 688
Oil Spill Not Imminent Threat To Shorelines - Coast Guard
Oil leaking from a deepwater well in the Gulf of Mexico is not yet an imminent threat to the coastline in Alabama, Mississippi and Florida, the U.S. Coast Guard said Thursday.
Coast Guard officials said oil sheen has appeared in Louisiana at Chandeleur Island and South Pass. Also, "tar balls" have washed up on beaches in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama this week.
But favorable weather patterns and offshore containment efforts through controlled burns, skimming and the use of dispersement chemicals continue to keep the oil away from coastlines in the northern Gulf, said Capt. Steven Poulin, Coast Guard incident commander in Mobile, during a press briefing Thursday.
UPDATE: Republicans Block Bid To Raise Oil-Spill-Damages Limit
Republicans blocked an attempt by a handful of Senate Democrats to raise the cap on damage claims that BP Plc (BP) must pay for a Gulf of Mexico oil spill, saying that the plan wouldn't work.
Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R, Alaska) led the charge against the measure, aimed at raising to $10 billion the limit on damage claims. The current limit is $75 million. Republicans objected to a request to proceed with a vote, saying independent offshore oil developers would not be able to stay in business because small companies wouldn't be able to self-insure against claims.
skinny
- 17 May 2010 07:42
- 28 of 688
UPDATE ON GULF OF MEXICO OIL SPILL RESPONSE
Subsea Source Control and Containment
Subsea efforts continue to focus on progressing options to stop the flow of oil from the well through interventions via the blow out preventer (BOP), and to collect the flow of oil from the leak points. These efforts are being carried out in conjunction with governmental authorities and other industry experts.
The riser insertion tube tool (RITT) containment system was put into place in the end of the leaking riser on May 16. Operations began during the day to allow oil and gas to flow through the tool up to the drillship Discoverer Enterprise on the surface 5,000 feet above. Produced oil is being stored on the drillship while produced gas is being flared. It is expected that it will take some time to increase the flow through the system and maximise the proportion of oil and gas flowing through the broken riser that will be captured and transported to the drillship.