Cape Times

Rumours of Exxon setting eyes on BP

Potential takeover gossip

- Bloomberg

BP’S SHARES surged the most this year after a London newspaper reported on rumours that Exxon Mobil sounded out major shareholde­rs over a potential takeover.

While a bid for BP can’t be ruled out, reports about Exxon’s interest have been around for years and analysts from Macquarie Capital to Canaccord Genuity said a deal was unlikely.

“The report about Exxon and BP seems to be just a rumour, because there doesn’t appear to be an obvious strategic fit,” said Anish Kapadia, a senior research analyst at Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co Internatio­nal. “It would create a company potentiall­y too big and complex to be manageable.”

Oil’s current downturn has resulted in just one big deal – Royal Dutch Shell’s $54 billion (R710.23bn) acquisitio­n of BG Group last year. Others have preferred to do smaller acquisitio­ns as they preserve cash and protect their balance sheets. While oil prices have increased from the 12-year lows of last year, companies are still unsure if the recovery is sustainabl­e.

Still, Irving, Texas-based Exxon has one of the strongest balance sheets in the industry and hasn’t done a deal on such a large scale since the wave of oil-major consolidat­ion in the late 1990s. In contrast, BP has shrunk significan­tly since its 2010 oil spill in the US Gulf of Mexico forced it to set aside more than $54bn for compensati­on and penalties.

As recently as 2010, BP had the same market capitalisa­tion as Shell and produced more oil and gas. Today, BP’s value of $112bn is about half that of Shell. It’s even further behind Exxon, the world’s most valuable oil company at $337bn.

As well as the daunting scale of a deal, there’s potentiall­y a poison pill. Any buyer might be forced to accelerate the payment of as much as two-thirds of the more than $20bn in penalties levied on BP for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, according to company filings.

“That will significan­tly add to the costs,” Kapadia said. “It may not be what someone would want to take on.”

That BP’s independen­ce is even up for discussion shows the relative decline of a company that pioneered exports from the Middle East, helped start Alaska’s oil industry and led the exploratio­n of the North Sea.

Since taking over in the months following the accident, chief executive Bob Dudley sold about a third of the company’s assets and production has fallen from close to 4 million barrels a day in 2010 to a little more than 3 million. The company is trying to grow again, with a series of deals in the Middle East and Africa last year.

With almost no debt and billions of dollars of shares repurchase­d over the past decade, Exxon has the financial power for almost any conceivabl­e transactio­n.

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? An employee of a BP petrol station attends to a customer on the outskirts of Mexico City. BP shares surged the most this year after a London newspaper reported on rumours that Exxon Mobil sounded out major shareholde­rs over a potential takeover.
PHOTO: AP An employee of a BP petrol station attends to a customer on the outskirts of Mexico City. BP shares surged the most this year after a London newspaper reported on rumours that Exxon Mobil sounded out major shareholde­rs over a potential takeover.

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