The latest Investing Matters Podcast with Jean Roche, Co-Manager of Schroder UK Mid Cap Investment Trust has just been released. Listen here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksBP Share News (BP.)

Share Price Information for BP (BP.)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 483.00
Bid: 481.65
Ask: 481.80
Change: 0.45 (0.09%)
Spread: 0.15 (0.031%)
Open: 479.30
High: 483.25
Low: 477.30
Prev. Close: 482.55
BP. Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Friday newspaper round-up: BAE, BoE, BP

Fri, 12th Oct 2012 06:13

BAE Systems is examining a series of potential acquisitions to bolster its position in the United States in the wake of its failed merger with EADS. While British investors are demanding to see BAE's top brass on strategy, following the aborted 28bn pound merger, The Times has been told the defence group is considering "doubling down" on its American growth strategy. According to BAE advisers, it will look at buying suppliers in the electronic warfare, services and cyber security sectors to increase its exposure to the growing areas of US defence. Speculation that BAE will become a target for one of the big American defence contractors is doubted by industry experts in Washington because the US Defence Department has an informal ban on consolidation between its prime contractors or main suppliers.Britain's £375bn money printing programme has run out of steam and new ways must be found to stimulate the economy, according to Lord Turner, one of the leading candidates for the Bank of England governorship. In comments that will be seen as a strong criticism of the Bank of England's quantitative easing policy by one of the leading candidates to replace Sir Mervyn King, Lord Turner said printing more money would have a "declining marginal impact" and threatened the stability of the economy. Lord Turner warned that quantitative easing had left Britain facing a "liquidity trap in which replacing private sector holdings of bonds with private sector holdings of money has little impact on behaviour and thus on demand," The Telegraph reports.Like a jilted lover, BAE Systems now has to look ahead to life on its own. Among those most keenly affected by the repercussions of the failure of the EADS deal are BAE's 35,000 UK employees - many of whom face an uncertain future. The main reason for this is the planned rundown in big UK defence programmes, together with a more difficult environment for export orders as military spending worldwide comes under pressure. Many of those in the UK who backed a BAE-EADS marriage did so because they believed an expanded business - with a stronger position in civil aerospace - would have put the British company in a better position to maintain its home workforce at something approaching the current level, The Financial Times explains.BP faces a major new threat after the president of Azerbaijan accused it of making "false promises" about production volumes and warned it to expect "serious measures". The oil major made "grave mistakes" that had resulted in an $8.1bn (£5bn) shortfall in the government's revenues, President Ilham Aliyev said in a dramatic televised attack. The embattled company was accused of failing to meet its output targets at a giant field in the country, which accounts for 4% of its global oil production. The threat to BP's future in Azerbaijan comes as the company is still struggling to recover from the Gulf of Mexico disaster in the US and facing major uncertainty over the future of its Russian business. Azerbaijan is of key strategic importance to the British company, which is also part of the giant Shah Deniz gas project in the country. The criticism in Azerbaijan relates to the massive Azeri-Chirag-Gunashli (ACG) fields, which BP operates, The Telegraph writes.International lenders will this weekend discuss an emergency lifeboat worth up to €15bn, aimed at preventing the Greek crisis from pushing vulnerable European countries to the east into deeper recession, The Times has learnt. Heads of institutions including the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and the European Investment Bank are due to meet on Sunday in Tokyo amid fears about the impact of the euro crisis on countries such as Romania, Albania, Slovenia, Serbia and Macedonia. Erik Berglof, chief economist of the EBRD, told The Times: "The south east Europe recovery plan will be a major co-ordinated effort to help the countries that are most acutely exposed to the spillovers from Greece and the eurozone. Many are in dire straits."Greece's biggest publicly listed company dealt the country's already battered economy a fresh blow yesterday after announcing plans to move its main listing from Athens to London. Coca-Cola Hellenic, the world's second biggest bottler of Coca-Cola Company beverages, cited the sharp fall in liquidity on the Athens Exchange since 2007 and rising borrowing costs, after the recent downgrading of its bonds by the credit ratings agencies as factors in its decision. Dimitris Lois, the chief executive, said that the move was also recognition that only 6% of the company's volumes are from Greece ? Russia provides the biggest at 16% ? while 95% of its shares are held by international investors, The Times reports.Some of the world's biggest oil companies and traders are poised to export substantial amounts of crude from the US for the first time in decades, as booming output there promises to reshape global energy markets. Royal Dutch Shell, BP and Vitol, the world's largest independent oil trading house, are among the six companies known to have applied to the US government for export licences, the Financial Times has learnt. A surge of exports from the US would affect oil trading patterns between Europe, west Africa and North America. Greater supplies in the Atlantic basin are likely to put pressure on physical prices of other crudes in the region, particularly Brent, the North Sea benchmark.Norway is to double carbon tax on its North Sea oil industry and set up a £1bn fund to help combat the damaging impacts of climate change in the developing world. In one of the most radical climate programmes yet by an oil-producing nation, the Norwegian government has proposed increasing its carbon tax on offshore oil companies by £21 to £45 (Nkr410) per tonne of CO2 and a £5.50 (Nkr50) per tonne CO2 tax on its fishing industry. Norway will also plough an extra £1bn (Nkr10bn) into its funds for climate change mitigation, renewable energy, food security in developing countries and conversion to low-carbon energy sources, Environmental Finance reported, according to The Guardian.British Gas is set to increase its gas and electricity tariffs to record levels, adding up to £100 a year to household bills. The country's biggest power supplier is preparing to reveal as early as today that it is putting up its energy prices in "high single digits" - close to the nine per cent increase from its rival, Scottish & Southern Energy, that comes into force on Monday. The average British Gas dual fuel bill for gas and electricity now stands at £1,260. A five per cent rise would add £63, while an eight per cent increase would be £100. The new higher prices are expected to kick in next month, The Independent says.AB
More News
9 May 2024 10:26

Balfour Beatty says trades in line amid "progress" on pacts

(Alliance News) - Balfour Beatty PLC on Thursday said it has traded in line with expectations so far in 2024, as it makes progress on major deals.

Read more
9 May 2024 09:53

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: NatWest target raised, other lenders backed

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Thursday morning and Wednesday:

Read more
8 May 2024 13:19

Middle East Crude-Benchmarks fall, snapping two-day streak

SINGAPORE, May 8 (Reuters) - Middle East crude benchmarks Dubai, Oman and Murban fell on Wednesday after rising for consecutive days after Saudi Aramco and ADNOC raised official selling prices (OSPs) for term supplies in June.

8 May 2024 13:06

BP softens tone on 2030 oil output cut to reassure investors

LONDON, May 8 (Reuters) - BP softened the language on its pledge to cut its 2030 oil and gas output in an effort to reassure investors over its energy transition strategy and narrow a gaping value gap with rivals.

Read more
7 May 2024 17:30

UK's FTSE 100 notches record closing high in broad rally

FTSE 100 up 1.2%, FTSE 250 adds 1.2%

*

Read more
7 May 2024 16:32

London close: Stocks jump on return from long weekend

(Sharecast News) - London markets closed on a high note on Tuesday, as the top-flight index surged to record highs, buoyed by positive momentum from the US and European markets.

Read more
7 May 2024 16:08

BP profit slides by 40% as refinery outage offsets higher output

First-quarter underlying profit $2.7 bln vs forecast $2.87 bln

*

Read more
7 May 2024 12:00

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Stocks buoyed by local data, strong US equities

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were up at midday on Tuesday, boosted by positive local economic data and tracking European equities that were buoyed by strong US stocks performance on Monday.

Read more
7 May 2024 09:09

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks track global equities rise while BP falls

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened up on Tuesday, tracking European markets in reaction to New York stocks extending their rally on weaker US jobs data, while markets reopened in London after a bank holiday on Monday.

Read more
7 May 2024 08:51

TOP NEWS: BP keeps up pace of share buybacks despite profit decline

(Alliance News) - BP PLC on Tuesday launched a fresh share buyback, despite a drop in first-quarter profit due to lower oil and gas prices and weaker fuels margins.

Read more
7 May 2024 07:02

BP in $1.75bn buyback as Q1 profits fall on weaker prices, margins

(Sharecast News) - BP reported a worse-than-expected fall in first-quarter profit on the back of lower oil and gas prices, an outage at a US refinery and "significantly weaker" fuels margins as it also started a $1.75bn share buyback.

Read more
6 May 2024 15:01

Shell to exit South Africa's downstream businesses

CAPE TOWN, May 6 (Reuters) - Oil major Shell will divest its majority shareholding from a local South African downstream unit after a comprehensive review of its businesses across all regions, it said on Monday.

Read more
3 May 2024 13:47

British regulator awards more North Sea oil and gas licences

NSTA awards 31 new licences aimed at boosting output

*

Read more
2 May 2024 12:02

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: FTSE 100 shines but "mixed feelings" after Fed

(Alliance News) - London's FTSE 100 was solidly higher on Thursday, outperforming European peers, as earnings from the likes of Shell and Standard Chartered impressed.

Read more
1 May 2024 18:30

Sector movers: Oil, Autos drag on FTSE 350

(Sharecast News) - Weakness in the oil patch and among select cyclicals dragged on the FTSE 350 in the middle of the week.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account