世界石油


(彭博社)据激进投资者 Bluebell Capital Partners 称,英国石油公司 (bp Plc) 正显示出重新转向石油和天然气的迹象,这应该会提高回报,但其行动过于低调,以致于其股价受益。

英国石油公司计划摆脱石油和天然气业务已经四年了,一些股东要求其提高盈利能力并缩小与更多专注于石油的美国竞争对手的估值差距,压力越来越大。Bluebell 联合创始人朱塞佩·比沃纳 (Giuseppe Bivona) 和马可·塔里科 (Marco Taricco) 曾高调发起针对达能 (Danone) 和拜耳 (Bayer AG) 等企业巨头的运动,去年年底,他们将目光转向了这家能源公司,要求更加重视其核心业务。

Bluebell 在 10 月份的一封信中表示,英国石油公司应加强对石油和天然气的投资,削减海上风电等昂贵的可再生能源项目的支出,并向股东返还更多资金。Bivona 表示,这家总部位于伦敦的公司在 2 月 6 日的收益报告中显示出朝着这个方向发展的迹象,这是自 Murray Auchincloss 被永久任命为首席执行官以来的第一次。

“看起来英国石油公司已经准备好或正在计划做我们要求的很多事情,包括增加石油和天然气产量,”比沃纳在接受采访时表示。但如果公司没有明确表示的话,这种转变不会让投资者受益。”

在第四季度收益超出预期后,奥金克洛斯在接受分析师采访时强调,他将采取“务实”和“灵活”的能源转型方式,以满足更广泛的社会需求。他淡化了在一系列专注于低碳能源的大型交易之后进行进一步数十亿美元收购的可能性,并表示 bp 的石油产量可能会超出 2027 年 2% 至 3% 的预期目标。

但他也重申了英国石油公司对净零排放最终目标的承诺,称该公司的“目标保持不变”。

对于比沃纳来说,英国石油公司不愿大声谈论他认为的战略转变,这限制了其股价。

比沃纳表示,除非英国石油公司向市场明确说明他们的计划,否则该股不会走高。如果他们不明确说明将在哪些方面削减投资,那么他们就是在故意压低股价。”

Bluebell 仅持有 bp 的少量股份,但比沃纳表示,他已与几位前 40 名股东进行了交谈,其中大多数股东都与他一样对该公司股票表现不佳表示担忧,并支持该基金关于转向该基金的建议。战略。

比沃纳表示,在与英国石油公司董事长赫尔格·隆德会面并与该公司投资者关系部门进行互动后,与该公司接触的大门似乎已经关闭。投资者关系主管克雷格·马歇尔 (Craig Marshall) 在二月份写信给该基金,承认其最近的一封信,但表示“对于我们向您和公开发表的评论,没有什么可以补充的。”

奥金克洛斯表示,他不打算亲自与 Bluebell 交谈,并且“与我交谈过的股东非常支持我们的战略。”


原文链接/oilandgas360

World Oil


(Bloomberg) – bp Plc is showing signs of a pivot back toward oil and gas that should boost returns, but is doing it too quietly to benefit its share price, according to activist investor Bluebell Capital Partners.

Four years into its plan to shift away from oil and gas, bp is under increasing pressure from some shareholders to raise its profitability and narrow the valuation gap with more oil-focused U.S. competitors. Bluebell co-founders Giuseppe Bivona and Marco Taricco, who have led high-profile campaigns against corporate giants such as Danone and Bayer AG, turned their sights on the energy company late last year, demanding a greater emphasis on its core business.

bp should bolster investments in oil and gas, cut spending on expensive renewable energy projects such as offshore wind and return more money to shareholders, Bluebell said in an October letter. The London-based company showed signs of moving in this direction in its Feb. 6 earnings presentation, the first since Murray Auchincloss was permanently appointed to the position of chief executive officer, Bivona said.

“It looks like bp is already prepared to do, or is planning to do, a lot of the things we’re asking, including increase oil and gas production,” Bivona said in an interview. But this shift will not benefit investors “if the company does not clearly say so.”

Speaking to analysts after fourth-quarter earnings surpassed expectations, Auchincloss emphasized that he would follow a “pragmatic” and “flexible” approach to the energy transition that keeps pace with broader societal needs. He downplayed the possibility of doing further multibillion-dollar acquisitions — after a number of large deals focused on low-carbon energy — and said bp’s oil production could rise beyond the expected 2% to 3% targeted for 2027.

Yet he also reaffirmed bp’s commitment to the ultimate goal of net zero emissions, saying the company’s “destination remains unchanged.”

For Bivona, bp’s unwillingness to talk out loud about what he perceives as a shift in strategy is keeping a lid on its share price.

⁠The stock won’t move higher “unless bp say clearly to the market what their plans are,” Bivona said. If they don’t lay out where they’ll scale back investment plainly “they are deliberately depressing the share price.”

Bluebell only has a small stake in bp, but Bivona said he has spoken to several top 40 shareholders, the majority of whom share his concerns on the under-performance of the company’s shares and back the fund’s proposals for a shift in strategy.

After a meeting with bp Chairman Helge Lund and interactions with the company’s investor relations department, the door to engagement with the major seems to have closed, Bivona said. Head of Investor Relations Craig Marshall wrote to the fund in February, acknowledging its most recent letter but saying it had “nothing further to add to the comments we have made to you and in public.”

Auchincloss has said he has no plans to speak to Bluebell personally and “the shareholders I talk to are very supportive of our strategy.”