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BP Selling $7 Billion In Assets To Help Pay Oil Spill Costs

CHRIS KAHN   07/20/10 08:44 PM ET   AP

Bp Asset Sale

NEW YORK — BP PLC said Tuesday it will sell assets in the U.S., Canada and Egypt to Apache Corp. for $7 billion to help pay the costs from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

At least part of the proceeds will go toward a $20 billion fund that BP agreed to last month under pressure from the Obama administration. The fund will help pay cleanup costs and damages from the spill.

As the spill escalated in the weeks after the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig, BP realized it would need to boost its cash reserves to pay costs that analysts have said could rise to $100 billion. The company suspended dividend payments of about $10.6 billion for this year, and sped up plans to sell $10 billion in assets.

Apache eventually emerged as a potential buyer.

"If it hadn't been for the Gulf incident, I'm sure we wouldn't be sitting here tonight," Apache Chief Executive G. Steven Farris told investors after announcing the deal.

BP has spent about $4 billion so far on containing and cleaning up the oil, as well as on damage claims from Gulf businesses. But that's just the beginning. The Gulf spill could be one of the worst environmental disasters in U.S. history and the rig explosion killed 11 workers. Analysts expect BP to be paying fines, damages, legal costs and other expenses for years.

BP has asked its partners in the blown-out well – Anadarko Petroleum Corp. and MOEX 2007 LLC – to contribute their share of the cleanup costs, but both companies so far have refused.

As part of its agreement with the Obama administration, BP will contribute $5 billion to the oil spill fund this year. The deal with Apache, which includes a $5 billion deposit due July 30, will help cover that contribution.

Earlier Tuesday, BP announced plans to sell its oil and gas fields in Vietnam and Pakistan that analysts value at between $2 billion and $4 billion.

"BP's board believes that there are opportunities to divest assets which are strategically more valuable to other parties than they are to BP," BP Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg said in a statement.

The asset sales to Apache include:

_Oil fields and gas processing plants in Texas and southeast New Mexico worth $3.1 billion;

_BP's upstream Western Canadian gas business for $3.25 billion;

_Oil exploration and production assets in Egypt worth about $650 million.

BP earned $166 million last year from those properties. They're considered to be past their peak, but that spells opportunity for Apache, which has a reputation for buying mature fields and boosting their production, said Argus Research analyst Phil Weiss.

After the deal was announced, BP shares rose almost 3 percent in after-hours trading while Apache shares dropped about 3 percent. Apache announced separately that earnings nearly doubled in the second quarter to $860.2 million, or $2.53 a share and that it plans to sell 21 million common shares and $1.1 billion of preferred shares to the public.

Weiss said Apache makes sense as a buyer. The Houston company owns oil and gas assets near each of the properties BP is selling, so it has the staff and facilities in place to take them over.

Farris and Apache made what now seems an ill-timed advance into deepwater drilling just days before the rig explosion. It agreed to buy Mariner Energy Inc. and Devon Energy's offshore assets for a combined $3.75 billion. That made Apache a major player in the Gulf of Mexico just weeks before the U.S. banned deep-sea exploration in federal waters.

Apache shares have dropped 16 percent since the April 20 rig explosion. BP's shares have dropped 41 percent in that time.

Apache is one of the biggest of the "independent" petroleum producers, companies that hunt for oil but do not refine it into gasoline and other products.

The sale doesn't include BP's stake in Prudhoe Bay, countering published reports that said a deal with Apache for the Alaska field was in the works.

The companies must wait for government and regulatory approvals to complete the sales. BP said it expects the deals to be completed during the third quarter.

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NEW YORK — BP PLC said Tuesday it will sell assets in the U.S., Canada and Egypt to Apache Corp. for $7 billion to help pay the costs from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. At least part of the pro...
NEW YORK — BP PLC said Tuesday it will sell assets in the U.S., Canada and Egypt to Apache Corp. for $7 billion to help pay the costs from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. At least part of the pro...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrJJ
10:03 PM on 07/22/2010
Interactive: BP's great asset sale

Gulf of Mexico oil spill: BP's great asset saleBP has reached a deal to sell $7bn (£4.58bn) in assets to contribute towards a $20bn fund to compensate those affected by the Gulf of Mexico oil spill

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/interactive/2010/jul/21/bp-deepwater-asset-sale-compensation?intcmp=239
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrJJ
10:00 PM on 07/22/2010
BP chief Tony Hayward to outline strategy that restores firm's fortunes• Second quarter figures likely to show surge in profits to $5bn
• BP's Gulf oil spill liabilities expected to top $20bn
BP boss Tony Hayward will next week launch a fight back against the wave of criticism that has engulfed him and BP following the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. Hayward is set to outline a new corporate growth strategy in a bid to reassure shareholders and, at the same time, cement his position as chief executive.

His move comes as pension funds in New York and Ohio unveiled plans to sue BP for "securities fraud" as a result of the oil company's allegedly misleading comments on its ability to handle safety issues and deal with a major clean-up.

The strategy briefing in London on Tuesday will come alongside the release of second quarter profit figures which will show a strong year-on-year increase to about $5bn (£3.2bn). The result, however, will be dwarfed by an expected $20bn-plus estimate of liabilities emanating from the Deepwater Horizon disaster.

more: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/jul/21/bp-oil-spill-tony-hayward?intcmp=239
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01:53 PM on 07/22/2010
Sell, Baby Sell!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
M Miles
10:46 AM on 07/22/2010
Now BP is selling some of their assets. . .

The following new when to sell their assets also . . .

Goldman Sachs sold $250 million dollars of BP stock in the quarter before the Deep Horizon blew. Odd the quick sale seems to have cost Goldman Sachs $16 million dollars in losses; the stock was valued at $266 million dollars, according to article . . .

http://thcforum.ning.com/forum/topics/goldman-sachs-sold-250-million

Obama via Vanguard sold his BP stocks too prior to blowout, what are the odds? See article . . .

http://www.twawki.com/?p=6768

Tony Hayward sold his BP stocks just prior to Deep Horizon blowout also? Odds even get greater that ___________. See article . . .

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/energy/oilandgas/7804922/BP-chief-Tony-Hayward-sold-shares-weeks-before-oil-spill.html

Odds even grow greater that something is taking place when these people buy!
Haliburton buys Boots & Coots just prior to Deep Horizon blowout. Boots & Coots are famous for the quick fix on oil wells that have blown up.
Wow now the odds are, take it to a statics prof. and see what they are.
see article . . .

http://www.dailyfinance.com/story/investing/halliburton-snaps-up-boots-and-coots/
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
M Miles
10:55 AM on 07/22/2010
Martha Stewart owned shares of a company Called Imclone. In 2001 ImClone received
notification that a new prescription drug, in which the company poured extensive money into
research and development, would not receive approval by the Food and Drug Administration
(Carroll & Buchholtz, 2006, p. 653). The CEO of ImClone, Sam Waskal, in an effort to avoid
financial losses to his shares of ImClone, made a call to his stock broker to dump his shares of
the company stock. The broker, who also served as a broker for Martha Stewart,
The above article from . . .

http://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1002&context=busi_fac_pubs

Didn't Martha Stewart go to jail?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
M Miles
02:26 PM on 07/22/2010
More odds just in. Congressmen state today, July 22, 2010, prior to the Deepwater Horizon blowout; fifty thousand wells have been drilled and never before has there been a blow out disaster of the magnitude of the Deepwater Horizon!

That makes the odds 1 in 50,000. Now add the odds of those that have sold their BP stocks prior to the well blow out to the 1 in 50,000 odds and the odds are now extremely high against a random event.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tribilin219
AND NO ONE IN JAIL YET, Why?
05:35 PM on 07/21/2010
It's not for the clean up, it's for the lawyer's so they don't have to pay for the clean up!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ron Adam
Retired home builder
10:47 PM on 07/21/2010
It sound to me like their getting rid of all US holding for they can tell us to screw there not going to pay anymore, and go home to England .
01:36 PM on 07/21/2010
FOR SALE: Photoshop software, only used once. Unlicensed Chinese bootleg copy in original cheesy packaging, reclosed with Scotch tape. Authenticity certified by our friends at Minerals Management Service. $400 OBO.

Surplus Halliburton casing cement, 4,450 gallons, premixed, contains some rubber chunks but guaranteed not to cure for at least 10 more months. $600 plus shipping (hazmat charges apply).

2 Gulf walrus tusks, matched set, only known example. Would look great mounted over the mahogany forecastle of any large yacht. $1,000 firm, contact Sally in our Props & Special Effects Department (formerly Spill Response & Recovery).

1 slightly used drilling platform. Price negotiable, buyer must pick up from gates of He//.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
studmoose
This Micro-Bio Intentionally Left Blank
09:08 AM on 07/21/2010
That's so un-American. BP should not have to pay, the US taxpayers should.

Sorry...

for a moment there I think I was channeling Sarah Palin.
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TheRevV
My micro-bio is microbial.
09:19 AM on 07/21/2010
And Rand Paul.
07:10 AM on 07/21/2010
What BP has done in his entire life is no less than criminal activity, and I'm sorry for free market but corporations should not only be forced to pay (which is quite easy for a company that has always made money over environmental disasters), but also be subjected to corporate death penalty, while its board members need to be prosecuted and jailed, if necessary. That is a just application of criminal law, isn't it?
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
07:59 AM on 07/21/2010
I have been posting about this since the explosion and resultant deaths and injuries. Had this been described as an act of geo-terrorism (which it clearly should be given the pattern of illegality and wanton disregard for human life shown, over years by BP, Anadarko, Mitsui, Halliburton and Transocean in many different sites in the U.S. and abroad) perpetrated by Hugo Chavez-controlled Citgo, or Vladimir Putin-controlled Gazprom or Lukoil, we would be screaming for war.

At the very least, this cabal should be charged under RICO statutes by Holder's Justice Department. However, I believe that Obama's extraction of the $20 billion from BP for restoration and restitution, is basically a "get out of jail card" for Hayward, Suttles, Newman and the "rest of the boys."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ron Adam
Retired home builder
10:50 PM on 07/21/2010
He hasn't gotten the money yet and it sounds like the prime minster of England was telling him they may not pay anymore.
07:06 AM on 07/22/2010
I got it, but the point is, while compensation is strictly a civil law principle (you indemnify for the damage you have caused), in this disaster you can easily acknowledge the possibility of prosecuting BP and its board members for multiple CRIMINAL charges, thus providing for imprisonment. I'm not expert of american criminal law system, but I know enough of it to say you have more chances than we would have here in Italy for a similar issue, because of one simple thing: our Criminal Codification (you know we have Codes for everything) doesn't provide for Environmental Crimes!
08:42 AM on 07/21/2010
so your the judge jury and executioner eh?
10:00 AM on 07/21/2010
What are you, the sleazy defense attorney?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JavaJuice
07:06 AM on 07/21/2010
BP is trying to plant a narrative that they are going broke to get out of not paying for the clean up.

This company is worth trillions.
08:43 AM on 07/21/2010
you are ignorant
09:59 AM on 07/21/2010
I can't imagine that just that scenario didn't cross the minds of many readers. It's not like it hasn't happened before, so why would we all be shocked if BP took the money and ran? That isn't ignorance, that is realism born of experience.
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steve11407
pending approval and won't be displayed until ...
09:44 AM on 07/21/2010
Trillions???
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06:35 AM on 07/21/2010
What good is the clean-up when the oil soaked sand and rags are just getting tossed into a plastic bag and taken to a dump? How long before it escapes from those locations?
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
07:51 AM on 07/21/2010
Excellent question. I believe it deserves an answer, but don't expect any illumination from BP or their allies in the Interior Department or US Coast Guard.
08:43 AM on 07/21/2010
so we should just leave it where it's at?
09:57 AM on 07/21/2010
It's a valid question.
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
06:27 AM on 07/21/2010
After they sell off their corporate assets, Hayward, Suttles, and the BP Board of Directors can move on to selling their mothers, grandmothers and children to the highest bidders.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OBroadhurst
My politics do not meet guidelines.
03:06 AM on 07/21/2010
Seize ALL of its assets. Nationalize it now!
08:44 AM on 07/21/2010
ok hugo chavez the marxist solution it is, idiot
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OBroadhurst
My politics do not meet guidelines.
09:41 AM on 07/21/2010
Sounds good to me.

So sorry to hear that you love BP so much, though.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ron Adam
Retired home builder
10:53 PM on 07/21/2010
Can't its and English company and there starting to sound like they are done paying
02:50 AM on 07/21/2010
Who owns Apache? Is it publicly traded?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrcontinental
03:02 AM on 07/21/2010
Probably the russian mob.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vegasyankee
Making Energy for a Strong America!
04:22 AM on 07/21/2010
Apache is publicly traded and a U.S. company that had only a handful of platforms just 15 years ago. There are now the single largest lease holder in The Gulf. 100% U.S. owned company based in Houston, NEVER had anything even close to a large spill, doesn't donate a single penny of earnings to D.C. or local politicians, invests millions in clean energy every year and has a branch that does nothing but conservation work. IMO - A shining example of a U.S. oil & gas producer and employer that does things by the book.
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TheRevV
My micro-bio is microbial.
09:22 AM on 07/21/2010
Do they pay their fair share in taxes, unlike Exxon & BP? That would be worthy of applause.
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01:41 AM on 07/21/2010
Meanwhile the people of Ecuador are still fighting Chevron over it's dumping of oil byroducts and millions of barrels of oil into their fragile ecosystems. This fight has been going on for over ten years.
12:28 AM on 07/21/2010
This is the first thing bp has done that I approve of. Exxon didn't do that in the Alaska spill.
02:53 AM on 07/21/2010
The US government could have seized BP's assets to pay off debt. Now that BP has sold many of its US assets to Apache, the US government cannot seize those same assets to pay off BP's debt. BP may have simply converted its assets to dollars which can be placed beyond reach of the US government. I think BP is always three steps ahead of the Navy and U.S. government, not to mention the readers of Huff Post.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OBroadhurst
My politics do not meet guidelines.
03:07 AM on 07/21/2010
I concur. We should have seized BP's assets long ago.
08:47 AM on 07/21/2010
despite obamas efforts this is still america and the government cannot seize a corporation , we have courts to settle all this and thats where it will be handled if you want to be a commie move in with hugo