BP Finally Moves to Make Itself Investable Again

For too long, British oil company BP Plc denied, obfuscated and played down its troubles. The market and the media, rather than the company, was the issue. On Tuesday, the oil major took the first step toward redemption: “BP can and will do better for investors,” it said. Amen.

Incoming Chairman Albert Manifold and Chief Executive Murray Auchincloss will conduct a wide-ranging review of the company’s entire portfolio of businesses — all of them. That should mean there will be no more sacred green cows. The aim is “maximizing shareholder value moving forward – allocating capital effectively.” Or, in plain English, sell, restructure or shutdown whatever doesn’t make enough money – and sadly, there’s plenty. BP also announced a “further cost review,” corporate jargon for cost cutting and firing employees.

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Regular readers know I’ve been a critic of BP for the last five years or so. To me, the company has squandered shareholders’ money trying to shift from its tried-and-tested business of pumping, refining and selling oil and gas. Forced by poor returns in its green projects, inflated costs and the arrival of an activist investor , it finally “reset” its strategy in February. But it seemed a half-hearted change; more a 90-degree move than the 180-degree U-turn needed. Since then, BP executives have continued to blame the market, rather than themselves, for their travails.

Enter Manifold, the former CEO of New York-listed cement company CRH Plc. His appointment as BP chairman last month didn’t get investors excited, to put it mildly. “Albert who?” was a typical comment. But months before he formally starts in October, he’s signaling he gets both the task ahead and its urgency. In many ways, he’s replicating what he did in his previous job. And what a success that was.