Here's some much-needed perspective on the physical extent of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill: "the amount of oil released is 1/10,000,000,000 of the volume of the Gulf (one ten billionth)."
Meanwhile, here is a BP research report from energy investment bank Simmons & Company. They have upgraded BP shares from neutral to overweight, which is interesting since principal Matt Simmons has been pounding the table about spill severity.
The summary:
"we estimate that BP’s pre-Macondo liquidation value is in the range of $130 - $192 billion, well above our undiscounted net Macondo liability range of $18 – 91 billion, leaving a base case theoretical residual value of $38/adr if BP were to be immediately liquidated (not likely, in our view). When instead the Macondo liabilities are paid over 10+ years, the net present value of those liabilities is further reduced. Net of these discounted liabilities (10% discount rate, 10 years), BP shares are worth, by our estimates, $24-58/adr, offering an attractive risk reward balance"Of course, if the shares are worth anything, the debt should be worth par.
I think the best contrarian play is the 1.55% Guaranteed Notes due 2011 [pdf] that I mentioned on Friday, and which are currently trading to yield 6%. The notes are issued by BP Capital Markets p.l.c. but fully guaranteed by the parent company.
I suspect these will bounce back to par as soon as the spill is out of the headlines.
I do predict that the spill will become the new all-purpose excuse for companies reporting bad second quarter earnings.
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