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Burmah Castrol

The document discusses the sale of Burmah Castrol to BP Amoco in 2000. It provides background on Burmah Castrol, including its founding in 1886 and operations in over 55 countries. It describes transformations at Burmah Castrol in 1997 to focus on shareholders and decentralize businesses. The sale allowed BP Amoco to gain market share in Europe and reduce costs. BP's strategy was to increase its gas business by 9-11% annually and retail petroleum by 3-4% through 2003. Recommendations for BP include investing in renewable energy and ensuring safety.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
311 views13 pages

Burmah Castrol

The document discusses the sale of Burmah Castrol to BP Amoco in 2000. It provides background on Burmah Castrol, including its founding in 1886 and operations in over 55 countries. It describes transformations at Burmah Castrol in 1997 to focus on shareholders and decentralize businesses. The sale allowed BP Amoco to gain market share in Europe and reduce costs. BP's strategy was to increase its gas business by 9-11% annually and retail petroleum by 3-4% through 2003. Recommendations for BP include investing in renewable energy and ensuring safety.

Uploaded by

anfkr
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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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.

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