Scottish Daily Mail

Boost for City as BP vows to keep its London listing

...but profits at oil giant tumble 45pc to £2.2bn

- By Jessica Clark

BP’S boss insisted the oil giant has no plans to leave the London stock market as first quarter profits tumbled.

Chief executive Murray Auchinclos­s yesterday said leaving the City is not on the agenda.

It comes as Auchinclos­s faces pressure to close the valuation gap with competitor shell and Us rivals such as Exxon Mobil and Chevron.

Shell has said it would consider switching its listing to New York over concerns the company is undervalue­d.

Footsie firms across other industries have already departed the struggling exchange, with gambling giant Flutter the latest major player to announce a move to Wall street.

London’s stock market is also in the grip of a ‘takeover frenzy’ as buyers circle undervalue­d firms for cheap deals.

Recently announced bids include Australian miner BHP’s £31bn offer for rival Anglo American, which was dismissed.

Czech billionair­e Daniel Kretinsky is considerin­g another bid for Royal Mail owner Internatio­nal Distributi­ons services after the board rejected his £3.2bn offer as ‘opportunis­tic’. Challenger bank Virgin Money and packaging firm Ds smith have both agreed to sell up this year.

Analysts have suggested BP could be a takeover target, with shell named as a potential bidder. Auchinclos­s, who took over after Bernard Looney quit as boss in disgrace last year, dismissed concerns that the oil giant could leave the City.

‘It’s not on our agenda,’ he said when asked about moving BP’s listing. ‘We’re just focused on quarterly deliveries.’

BP reported a 45pc fall in profits to £2.2bn in the first quarter as oil and gas prices fell from last year’s highs. An outage at an American oil refinery also hit profits in the first quarter.

The energy giant announced a further £1.4bn of share buybacks as part of its plan to return £2.8bn in the first half of the year. Auchinclos­s said BP is committed to returning at least £11bn to shareholde­rs by the end of 2025 – provided oil and gas prices remain stable. BP held its dividend at 5.8p per share and promised to cut costs by £1.6bn by the end of 2026. Russ Mould, investment director at broker AJ Bell, said: ‘Auchinclos­s is eyeing a big valuation disparity between BP and rivals across the Atlantic and will clearly feel a big part of his remit is closing that gap.

‘To that end, the company is targeting efficienci­es and savings through initiative­s like the use of technology and improvemen­ts to its supply chain. Maintainin­g the pace on share buybacks demonstrat­es a commitment to returning cash to shareholde­rs.’ stuart Lamont, investment manager at RBC Brewin Dolphin, added: ‘BP has missed profit expectatio­ns on the back of lower gas prices, weaker margins, and operationa­l outages.’

But he said the dividend and extension to the share buyback programme will ‘provide shareholde­rs with some solace’.

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