BP shares rise amid reports Shell considering takeover offer


BP shares jumped on Tuesday following reports that its rival, Shell, is exploring a possible acquisition of the oil and gas giant.

Shares rose as much as 2.5% in early trading after it was reported that Shell has been weighing the merits of a takeover with advisers in recent weeks.

BPโ€™s stock has slumped following a period of massive investment in renewable energy which failed to deliver enough profits to please investors.

In February, it revealed a new growth strategy focused on extracting more oil and gas after pressure from some investors to boost profits at the firm.

At the time, bosses said the business went โ€œtoo far, too fastโ€ on green energy and confirmed plans to heavily reduce spending on renewables.

It is also facing pressure from influential US hedge fund Elliott Management, which took a nearly ยฃ4 billion stake in the company โ€“ just under 5% of its shares โ€“ earlier this year.

The move is understood to have been aimed at pushing BP back towards fossil fuels to boost profit.

In April, chief executive Murray Auchincloss said the company has been making progress with the strategy despite wider economic uncertainty.

But it has done little to arrest the slide in BPโ€™s share price, which is down about one-third compared with the same point last year.

BPโ€™s market capitalisation is about ยฃ56.5 billion based on its current shares, compared with Shellโ€™s ยฃ146.7 billion.

Bloomberg reported last week that Shell has been weighing a bid based on whether BP shares continue to slide.

A merger would be among the largest in the oil industryโ€™s history, and would end decades of speculation over a possible deal between two of the UKโ€™s biggest companies.

A Shell spokesman said: โ€œAs we have said many times before, we are sharply focused on capturing the value in Shell through continuing to focus on performance, discipline and simplification.โ€

Shell shares were down 1.35% on Tuesday morning.

BP has been approached for comment.

Leave comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *.