The sale of Burmah
Castrol to BP Amoco
Group 3:
Cao Thanh Lan
Nguyen Doan Ngoc Hien
Nguyen Thi Hoai Thuong
Contents
Introduction
Burmah Castrol in 1990s
Burmah Castrol timeline
Transformations in 1997
Recommendation to Tim Stevenson
Recommendation the sale of Burmah Castrol
Issue of BP since acquired of Burmah Castrol
Strategy of BP
Recommendation issue of BP
Introduction
The company was
founded in 1886
The company is the
worlds leading supplier of
automobile and
motorcycle lubricants.
It has more than 150
subsidiaries operating in
about 55 countries
Business bought included
Castrol, signal oil and gas.
BP called the Anglo -Persian Oil Company,
later became British Petroleum
In 2000, BP agreed to purchase Burmah
Castrol
Burmah Castrol in 1990s
Strengths
Weaknesses
Very successful developing world
position, particularly in Asia
Pacific.
Acquisition ability
Chemicals became higher
performer through cost cutting
Reduce in share price in Castrol
Lack of vision that affected
company internally.
Not being market responsive
Opportunities
Threats
Expansion
Implications of conglomerate
creation
Ability to improve operating
efficiency.
Over-expansion could have
impact on management
Substantial (75%) dependence of
total profits on singular tier
within the structure
Burmah Castrol timeline
Before 1997:
Expansion and focus on acquisition to engage
into chemical sector, conglomerate
After 1997:
Selling most of the companies that they bought
before recession
Breaking off into two divisions
Expanding chemical division by buying out new
companies
Transformation in 1997
Redesigned strategy
Lack of decision marking process
shareholders value as a driver force to the
company operations and profit generation
Appearance of decentralized business to focus on
local customers with increased attention.
Recommendation to Tim Stevenson
Initially approach other major player.
Fusion development
Recommendation the sale
of Burmah Castrol
They should face of value provision to shareholders,
big competitors and their ability to utilize
economies of scale.
They should improve ability to strategically ally with
major competitors.
Issue of BP since acquired
of Burmah Castrol
The acquisition, which was finalized in mid-
2000, gave BP Amoco the second largest
market share in lubricants in Europe.
It allowed the company to reduce costs by
eliminating redundant jobs
Strategy of BP
Over the first 3 years of the 21st century: To
increase its gas marketing and trading
business by 9 to 11 percent annually.
Expected its retail petroleum business to
grow by only 3 to 4 percent annually.
In 2003: BP estimated gas to account for
more than 40 percents of its daily
hydrocarbon production.
Recommendation issue of
BP
BP should invest much on renewable energy
sources.
The strategy should also establish a body of
expertise in greenhouse gases.
The CEO should ensure more investment in
the pipeline.
The company should increase expenditures
on infrastructure maintenance and
employee safety.