Showing posts with label drill-baby-drill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drill-baby-drill. Show all posts

6.09.2010

25% of BP's market cap disappears in 4 days of trading

On June 4th, when we broke the story of the incredible rate at which BP's liability is increasing, the market valued BP at $122.6 billion USD.  Today, less than a week later on June 9th, their market cap has plummeted about 25% to $93.68 billion USD.  Today's announcement from U.S. DOI Secretary Ken Salazar that the government is about to revisit its estimates of the BP's gusher's flow rate, appears to have triggered today's one-day market decline of 15%.

The rest is probably due to a combination of factors including their promising but less than perfect attempts to cut and cap the well in addition to reports over the past few days that BP may need to begin pursuing a strategy of sequestering its massive Deepwater Horizon liabilities and shopping itself around for acquisition.

In general, you don't want a graph of your stock price over a week to look like this:


Perhaps that's why we're starting to see articles from the wags on Wall Street with titles like "BP May Not Make It" and "BP is Toast!"

6.08.2010

BP's potential insolvency getting picked up by mainstream media

This morning the New York Times picked up on a story we broke in our original reporting last week, namely that BP is at risk of becoming insolvent due to their ever increasing liability as a result of the Deepwater Horizon oil disaster.

Though it doesn't go into the level of detail we did, the article is worth a read, as it takes a more acquisition oriented perspective as well as talks about the precedent of the once seemingly invincible Texaco filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 1987 as a result of a billion dollar jury verdict.  As we reported last week, BP's Clean Water Act liability is going up at a rate of at least 1% of their current market cap every 2 weeks.

Keith Olbermann also broached the topic last night. Clip after the jump.


6.01.2010

The CEO of BP "would like [his] life back."

The CEO of BP would like his life back.  Poor chap!  I bet the tens of thousands of workers and families whose livelihoods the BP oil disaster claimed would like theirs back too!  Maybe they can work something out ...



Update: He apologized.

5.30.2010

"Top Kill" operation fails to stop BP oil leak

BP COO Doug Suttles: "After three full days of attempting top-kill, we have been unable to overcome the flow from the well," he said. "So we now believe it is time to move on to the next of our options, which is the LMRP, lower marine riser package cap."

More coverage to come.

5.17.2010

Independent analysts discover that the BP oil disaster is 10 times worse than BP says

NPR reported Friday that independent analysis has shown the BP "eventual worst-case" estimates to not even cover the current rate of flow from the oil leak they caused in the Gulf of Mexico, which has now been discovered to be about 70,000 barrels per day.  BP's current estimate of the leak is an order of magnitude off and they are in fact causing the equivalent of the Exxon-Valdez Oil Spill every four days. According to the New York Times, oil plumes "as large as 10 miles long, 3 miles wide and 300 feet thick" have begun to form in the Gulf of Mexico.

Below the fold you can see aerial video of this terrible spill with poignant commentary.

5.05.2010

Has BP created an extinction level event?

I hate being alarmist, I really do.  In the case of the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Disaster, however, I think a bit of potential alarmism may be appropriate.  Indeed, the worst case scenario is that this disaster turns out to be the first extinction level event caused by mankind.  And perhaps Though probably not the last.

How to reduce our dependence on foreign oil

There are memes out there that even hardened cynics like myself can end up internalizing and taking as truth. One of these is the idea of "reducing our dependence on foreign oil" by drilling domestically. As Chris Hayes breaks down in the following segment (starting at 5:40), there is no set aside for oil extracted domestically; it all ends up in the same commodity market, so the idea of reducing our dependence on foreign oil by drilling domestically is mostly self-serving, brilliant PR proffered by oil companies designed to leverage nationalism and national security interests to curry favor for increasing their drilling footprint.