The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Fears grow that BP’s Alaska sale may prove half-baked

- Jamie Nimmo’s jamie.nimmo @mailonsund­ay.co.uk

WITH oil prices tumbling, investors will be glued to the first-quarter results due out from BP and Shell on Tuesday and Thursday respective­ly.

Shares in the two oil giants have taken a hit since the oil price slumped amid a collapse in demand and fears over the lack of storage space for excess barrels of crude being pumped out during the lockdown.

So it will be intriguing to see the toll that this is taking on Britain’s largest listed oil firms.

There is growing concern that BP might not get the £4.5billion sale of its Alaskan assets over the line in the current climate, for instance.

BP and its buyer, Hilcorp, said earlier this month that the deal was still on.

The Alaskan oilfields and pipelines are part of a total £12billion of assets that BP wants to sell by the middle of next year to pay down debt, so that target might be at risk.

It’s not all bad news though. Analysts at the Swiss bank UBS reckon Shell could cut more costs before it has to take an axe to the dividend.

And I’m told the oil trading divisions of both companies have cashed in on the oil price volatility.

ONE company that has already put its dividend on hold is Travis Perkins, the builders’ merchant.

The company was quick to cut its payout last month and it has put a split from its Wickes business on hold too.

It also said it could look to cut costs to deal with a further sales slump.

A trading update on Tuesday will shed light on how much sales have fallen during the lockdown given that many constructi­on firms have shut up shop.

Scribblers at UBS estimate that Travis Perkins might have to slash spending to £90million this year to deal with the fallout from the crisis.

That would be £53million less to spend than last year.

FORMER Tory MP Sir Tony Baldry’s aptly named security company, Westminste­r Group, is due to reveal record first-quarter results on Thursday, but the share price has still suffered in recent weeks from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

That’s because it provides security services to Freetown Internatio­nal Airport in Sierra Leone, which is shut because of the outbreak.

However, the company has seen a surge in demand for its fever screening equipment during the crisis.

I hear Westminste­r is poised to launch a marketing campaign that could help boost sales of its testing kit further and – investors will hope – boost its shares, too.

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