J
JosephKK
Guest
On Sat, 19 Jun 2010 15:41:14 -0500, "amdx" <amdx@knology.net> wrote:
the company. BP cash and assets and debits are largely the same as
before the spill. The stock price drop is mostly the disappearance of
imaginary money. Now that $20 billion escrow fund may weaken them a
little, but not much or they would never have agreed to it. They know
more and are covering themselves if the problem escalates past $100
billion.
Yo Mike. The fall in stock prices is damages to the stockholders, not"MooseFET" <kensmith@rahul.net> wrote in message
news:3dc8cf08-35f0-4778-a677-570da7141661@t26g2000prt.googlegroups.com....
On Jun 19, 10:36 pm, "Michael A. Terrell" <mike.terr...@earthlink.net
wrote:
Grumps wrote:
"George Jefferson" <phreon...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:hvg8j6$4ie$1@news.eternal-september.org...
snippy snip snip
If there is a conspiracy then it's not necessarily obvious why BP
would go
along with such a thing until you think about the whole picture. Cap
n
trade, a foreign company
Foreign company? Was the DWH not operated by BP America, a US
registered
company?
And fully owned by British petroleum. That's why their spokesweasel
is returning to England.
Multinational corporations are not really part of any nation. BP is
largely but
not completely owned by the British.
The US registered part could be used as a way to duck out from the
responsibility after things cool off. The main part of BP can pump
the
money out of the US part while making the US part responsible for the
damages. At some point the US part goes bankrupt leaving the US
stuck with the remaining costs.
The 20 Billion set aside doesn't even begin to cover the likely long
term costs.
Ya, the government should have let BP keep their $20 billion.
We all need to keep the company financially strong, if they can continue
making $15 billion in profits the next 10 or 20 years they can pay the
losses caused by the oil leak.
But taking $20B form a company that has already lost over $70B in assets
is just weakening them and pushing them toward bankruptcy Bp only had $7B
in cash when the shakedown occurred. Now they need to find a way to get
$13B plus a little more for operating capital.
Mike
the company. BP cash and assets and debits are largely the same as
before the spill. The stock price drop is mostly the disappearance of
imaginary money. Now that $20 billion escrow fund may weaken them a
little, but not much or they would never have agreed to it. They know
more and are covering themselves if the problem escalates past $100
billion.