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Showing posts with label BP oil spill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BP oil spill. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Stock Analysts on BP

Is BP Stock a Buy?

No, I'm not going to add my outrage to the flood of commentary already about the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico (a sickening human, environmental, and economic tragedy, on multiple levels).

Instead, given my interest in the stock market (after real estate, of course!), I thought I'd summarize what various stock commentators and analysts covering BP have had to say (I'm paraphrasing, but the gist is accurate):

April 20 -- Date of spill (BP stock price = $60): "Buy! The damage from the spill is likely to be contained, and it's far from clear that BP -- rather than Halliburton or TransOcean -- is liable."

April 30 -- Estimate of spilled oil quadrupled (BP stock price = $50): "Buy! The damage and legal liability are likely to be far greater than originally estimated -- but that's more than reflected in the now-lower stock price."

May 15 -- Various efforts to cap the spill have all failed; oil continues to spew into the Gulf (BP stock price = $42): "Buy! The market has already priced in billions of legal liability -- liability that's likely to be far in the future."

June 1 -- U.S. Justice Department announces criminal probe into BP (BP stock price drops to $36). "Sell! The oil spill and its after-effects threaten to bring down the company."

Hmm, I wonder who's been doing all the selling between April 20 and June 1???

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Capping a Polluting Gusher

Looking for a "Containment Dome" . . . . for Wall Street

See if this sounds familiar:

First came the explosion and melt-down.

Next came the after-effects: millions of innocent victims, sickened and poisoned by the fast-spreading pollution.

Finally, tardy and tepid, came the containment and clean-up efforts -- entrusted, incredibly, to the same despoilers whose negligence and greed caused the spill.

BP's oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico?

Try, Wall Street's 2008 Melt-Down and after-effects, still causing shock waves in financial markets and the global economy two years later.

The only real difference I see is that, at the moment, the authorities are making a serious effort to staunch the pollution . . . in the Gulf.