Tuesday, June 8, 2010 - 12:10 AM

As we all know, Einstein went to his grave refusing to accept quantum mechanics until it was linked with a unified theory of physics. In that vein, it's not surprising to see the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, too, setting the minds of restless geniuses to work. In one of the latest examples, Federal Judge Richard A. Posner, the indefatigable Chicago writer and thinker, outdoes himself with a unified theory of catastrophes. The gulf spill, Posner argues in The Washington Post, is of a piece with the global financial crisis, the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004, and Hurricane Katrina the following year, not to mention flu epidemics, the extinction of species, nuclear accidents, global warming, and the collision of an asteroid with Earth. Why does no one take action to prevent or avoid injury in such catastrophes? ponders Posner. Because there's no date certain of their occurrence.
That's all very interesting. As for me, I'd like to get past the waiting and simply learn at last whether or not BP CEO Tony Hayward and the company itself are toast. For help to this end, I called and emailed around to people in and out of the oil industry. Among the first was Ken Robertson of Paddy Power, a Dublin-based online betting site. Sometimes when people are putting down their own money, they find judgment inaccessible to the rest of us.
Robertson said that while Paddy Power isn't accepting bets on whether BP survives, bettors -- Robertson called them "punters" -- are increasingly unsure of Hayward's longevity. As of last Friday, he told me, the chances of Hayward lasting beyond the end of the year had shrunk from 8 in 11 to 8 in 13, with about a hundred people getting in on the action in just over a week of betting. "Betting has really escalated over the past 48 hours," Robertson emailed.
To be fair, Hayward has been in the job just three years, following a long leadership stint by John Browne. Browne built BP into the globally competitive giant that it became in the 1990s, but in 2007 left the company accused also of cutting corners when it came to safety. Regardless, to the degree that a dismissal of Hayward can preclude a breakup of the company, BP's board of directors will sacrifice its CEO.
The higher-stakes gamblers on Wall Street have weighed in, too, knocking BP's share price down by 38 percent since the April 20th accident. Both Moody's and Fitch have downgraded their rating of BP's bonds -- such ratings are a sign of market confidence, with lower ratings forcing BP to pay a higher rate of interest in order to attract investors to buy the bonds that it sells to finance projects.
This isn't science, of course. Investors are engaged in a guessing game on the survival of Hayward (in this Wall Street Journal story by my former colleagues Guy Chazan and Benoit Faucon) and BP (in this strong piece co-written by the Financial Times' Lina Saigol, Miles Johnson and Ed Crooks). At the FT, Joseph Cotterill writes that "the market is abuzz" with discussion of BP as takeover target. The accident has also cast a cloud over BP's partners in the Macondo Prospect, the oil and gas play where the rig disaster took place: Anadarko Petroleum's share price is down 40 percent, and has also suffered a Moody's downgrade; Japanese trading firm Mitsui's shares are down 30 percent.
Part of this is due to the uncertainty about what the cleanup, the fines, and the lawsuits ultimately will cost. BP says it's already spent $1.2 billion on the spill. Add to that the $4,300 per barrel that, in line with the Clean Water Act, the federal government can penalize BP and its partners, and you've got almost $6 billion in just one category of fine.
But more important is the damage to the corporate image. (What's the first thing that pops into your head when you hear the word "Exxon"?) A spill of this type affects BP's ability to buy the rights to new fields around the world, and to attract the best talent to work at the company, says Edward Chow, a former senior executive for Chevron and now a fellow at the Center for Security and International Studies. "It's potentially a company killer," Chow told me.
A sign that BP and the rest of Big Oil have explaining to do around the world comes from Russia's powerful behind-the-scenes oil czar, Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin, who says the country will tighten up offshore drilling rules in light of the gulf spill. Look for such signals elsewhere as well.
Chow thinks that already the other oil majors are looking hungrily at BP: "What if BP becomes available? Which pieces do I want?" he said. "If they aren't doing this, they should be fired."
Since he has experience of a personal nature, I called John Imle, the former president of Unocal. As you recall, it was the 1969 Unocal oil spill offshore from Santa Barbara that gave full voice to the vigorous global environmental movement. Regarding the fate of BP and Hayward, Imle was blunt. "It could be company threatening, and job threatening," he said. Hayward "worked mightily to change the (BP) culture, but one assumes he didn't quite get there."
re: corporate image, something I read recently (which I apparently can't recall in specifics) suggested that, given that there is a certain amount of social capital applied to any business, any brand, BP has likely spent or lost all or most of its social capital given the far-reaching consequences of the oil spill. Recovery of perception of the organization will perhaps be a larger battle than the loss of monetary capital in fines and clean-up and shareholder losses.
That's precisely right. Last night I had a talk with a former BP executive who thinks the company's image may be irreparably tarnished, and that the company's most valuable assets may simply be sold off to rivals like Shell.
It certainly doesn't help that their share price has fallen so rapidly in the last week! From the guardian this morning:
The oil giant's shares dived 11% to 345.15p in early London trading, their lowest level since April 1997, as analysts predicted that it will be forced to cut its dividend payout.
They then clawed back some of these losses as stockbrokers speculated that BP could fall to a takeover bid from Chinese firm PetroChina, and were down 5.5% at 370p shortly before midday.
At today's low BP had lost 47% of its value since the Gulf of Mexico disaster struck, wiping around £58bn off the market capitalisation of one of Britain's biggest companies.
Ouch. That seems to be some evidence pointing to the loss of both fiscal and social capital, right there.
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Who has found the deepest depths of the Abyss?
By Dwight Baker
June 9, 2010
Dbaker007@stx.rr.com
Corporate Culture is driven down from the top by the big shots at the peak of the heap. Some know whom they are and some do not. BP is never going to go away they own the oil in our Gulf from the cradle to the tank. No long hauls across the oceans, no middlemen taking a piece of the action, simply pump out --- send to Houston refine then out to fill our tanks, the largest gasoline market in the world. So go ----away NO WAY. Dr. Hayward sold 30% of his stock just days before the blow out. Now he is setting well like the big shots at the peak to pickup others baling out for pennies on a dollar. Now will that kind of corporate culture cease to exist in our lifetime? Ask Krugman.
Out in America today many good sane solid to the rock core citizens want to aid in the BP Blow Out best as they can. But the biggest problem is finding the deepest depths of all the spun up and shouted out media hype type Abyss.
The Abyss is coming from across the pond, from upstairs and downstairs and dimly lit corners. Some comes disguised as scientific, prophetic, monolithic, and even some of the deeper depths of the Abyss is found on Fox news. Yet that is just a glance of some of the sources.
Others round and about are shouting out “I have the plan!” but when getting through their self imposed dismal Abyss --- one finds out they too did not have a clue. WHY? The truth is not a company policy held in high esteem by those working for the New Green BP.
While searching for the truth hidden behind all the lies, some times a junction in the road jumps up. And we want to say OH NO more digging to do. But that my friend is where the road will finally end ---- for us finding the deepest depths of the Abyss.
Karaka: I have a feeling that BP is a speculator's playground right now, meaning one shouldn't look at the numbers one-dimensionally. Many fortunes will be earned in the rise and fall of BP stock, and we won't get to a stable share price for awhile. I also think that it's not clear whether or not the divident will be paid. It very well might be.
Dwight: thanks as usual for your thoughts.
Thanks for the comments.
Letter of Welcome to the USA and Introduction to the Tame Nature overshot Plan.
Mr. Carl-Henric Svanberg, BP’s chairman
Chairman Svanberg,
A Pre-Welcome as you make plans to visit us in the USA. With your added understanding and ability to cope with these problems facing us in oil and gas will make things get much better. As you join us addressing all the issues as an engineer to bring this on going disaster to an end. That is a fact not fiction, much of the free press in the USA has been drenched in miss understanding and that has led to breeding hate anger and hostility toward many in oil and gas here and abroad. The seemed endless media hype chatter has brought about a forlorn look in peoples eyes for they have no clue what to do or what has been going on for one reason or another. And without good will going in and coming out all deals will soon fall apart.
And that has been my prime moving force to tell the facts as they are then give a solution built on good sound oil and gas engineering schools of thoughts and my plus twenty five years of field experience. For what else can be done other than that, for the many folks that have no hope of this blow out matter coming to a quick and easy solution will understand base common sense and logic.
Thus I propose a few good ideas to help BP get beyond these problems and give immediate more hope from the 70% of people in the USA that have serious and dubious doubts of anything good to come from BP.
1. The USA has a huge workforce of indigenous folks in oil and gas, many of them are spread around the globe and many are working in the Gulf of Mexico and they need re-assurance their jobs will not be lost. BP must push for, good will, and can no longer seek for bad press aimed at our Administration. Kind smiles and genuine caring must be the focus while you are here in control. I kindly submit it is time to hand off the ball of fixing the problem. I will work the work of getting the Tame Nature overshot plan to become a reality for all in the loop to see and work toward implementing the sooner the better. I will not become a public figure at all. I will only work behind the scenes if not then I will not work at all. Too many of that unknowing crowd in the USA now and I will not be associated with them. The other thing I would suggest be done is pass along the well kill effort to a crew of Wild Well fighters in the USA your choice. Doing that would again bring a sigh of relief to many on the Gulf Coast where some of the worst hate anger and hostility has been broadcast on TV and put in print.
2. Admission of faults and guilt is your prerogative; those issues are yours and the board to decide. But one thing for sure BP has a bird’s nest on the ground in the Gulf of Mexico and the huge gasoline market in the USA, so with that in mind “What is the cost to fight a losing battle”?
3. Please delegate someone people savvy the role of floorwalker in the control center. That is not a job becoming you. Your time must be spent first and foremost bringing a halt to the oil and gas gushing out ---then on the other hand you must engineer a delicate touch to be put on all the environmental groups that have proven real time facts ----but some in BP have shunned those causing a rift in any type of good will. Again “What is the cost to fight a battle already lost” in the Free Press based on scientific evidence?
I stand to aid you in your work and BP all I can in the near term goals of stopping the oil and gas.
Following is a letter recently sent to President Obama and at the end his reply.
Cheers have a nice flight call anytime.
Dwight Baker
Thanks for the link.
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