On the headquarters of Elliott Administration in New York, the hedge fund’s vitality workforce now has T-shirts with “Gulf of America” printed on them, together with one with an image of Donald Trump as a pirate, in honour of the US president’s most well-liked identify for the Gulf of Mexico.
It’s a far cry from the temper even final 12 months. Then, the activist investor questioned whether or not calling for an oil main to reduce its inexperienced spending would threat a backlash from environmentalists and even the media, in line with individuals who spoke with the hedge fund on the time.
Occasions have modified. As shares in UK oil group BP sank to a two-year low final November the activist investor was already busy constructing what has grown into a near £3.8bn stake within the troubled firm.
The transfer has began to repay. Shares in BP have risen greater than 26 per cent from that low, with Trump’s rallying cry of “drill child, drill” lifting the temper round oil and gasoline firms and placing higher give attention to their core enterprise of promoting fossil fuels.
However sentiment round BP had additionally soured by the point the hedge fund made its transfer, stated one individual conversant in Elliott’s pondering. The activist had concluded that buyers and analysts had been now of the view that BP was destroying worth. “The extent of consensus is stunning,” the individual stated.
The oil firm’s share worth spent most of final 12 months in free fall because it persistently fell wanting the market’s expectations, each financially and operationally, and made almost $7bn of writedowns throughout its enterprise, notably in refining.
Regardless of its troubles, BP pissed off buyers by insisting that it will stick with a method — set out by former chief govt Bernard Looney in 2020 — that known as for the corporate to “reinvent” itself by spending a number of billion {dollars} a 12 months on inexperienced vitality and chopping oil and gasoline manufacturing.
The goal to chop oil manufacturing by 40 per cent by 2030 was scaled again to 25 per cent in February 2023 by Looney, who was then abruptly sacked for a scandal over previous relationships with colleagues. However BP stays the one oil main with a pledge to really reduce its output. In the meantime, its “transition development engines” contributed simply $1.2bn out of its $38bn of adjusted earnings earlier than curiosity, tax, depreciation and amortisation final 12 months.
Murray Auchincloss, who grew to become chief govt simply over a 12 months in the past, has already put BP’s onshore US wind enterprise up on the market and spun off its offshore wind tasks right into a three way partnership. The corporate is searching for the same construction for its Lightsource photo voltaic enterprise. He instructed analysts in October that whereas BP needs to have “a continued dedication to transition”, it will search for a “capital-light” mannequin when attainable.

Nonetheless, BP’s troubles have attracted consideration — and never simply from Elliott. A number of different activists instructed the Monetary Occasions they’d additionally taken a take a look at the oil group, regardless of the daunting scale of constructing a reputable place in a £75bn firm. “It’s a treasure trove of property caught in a administration swamp,” stated one US activist. One other warned that there was “no straightforward repair” to the challenges dealing with the corporate.
Whereas information of Elliott’s position broke last week, the hedge fund has been finding out BP for greater than a 12 months and began constructing its close to 5 per cent stake “effectively earlier than” Trump’s election victory in November, in line with one other individual conversant in the matter.
The Elliott marketing campaign is being run by New York-based John Pike — who has led a sequence of previous campaigns in opposition to vitality firms Hess, Marathon, Suncor and Phillips 66 — and by Gaurav Toshniwal, a portfolio supervisor in London. This week the hedge fund additionally stepped up its marketing campaign at Phillips 66, revealing it had a $2.5bn stake and calling for the refiner to dump pipeline and chemical substances property.
The play at BP could also be comparable. Elliott’s view is that BP should make important divestments together with in its inexperienced vitality companies, in line with the individual conversant in the hedge fund’s pondering. A break-up or a sale weren’t at present on the activist’s agenda, they stated, including that Elliott can be prepared to carry the place in BP for a number of years if required.
Evaluating BP to Anglo American, the UK-listed mining firm the place Elliott additionally has a stake, the individual stated that what was wanted was “an aggressive chair main an engaged board, with a chief govt that purchased into the technique”.
The components for BP, the individual added, was simple: “It’s sturdy capital allocation, proper sizing their prices, a divestiture plan and resetting the technique. It’s ensuring that shareholders who’ve caught with the corporate are rewarded. It’s a basic pivot.”
The activist’s arrival units up an important take a look at for Auchincloss at BP’s capital markets day on February 26. Amid frustration on the group’s lack of course, Auchincloss has promised to “basically reset” his predecessor’s technique.
Rebuilding BP would take time, warned analysts, bankers and buyers. One senior vitality funding banker stated the closely indebted firm was working out of “levers to drag”.

The corporate has upstream tasks underneath improvement, together with some promising fields within the Gulf of Mexico, and has stated it should return to Iraq’s huge Kirkuk area. However Kaskida within the Gulf of Mexico is just not as a result of come on-line till 2029 and it’ll take two to 3 years to extend manufacturing at Kirkuk. Analysts anticipate all of BP’s new tasks merely to offset declines elsewhere, with Biraj Borkhataria at RBC Capital Markets pencilling in 2.3mn to 2.4mn barrels a day of manufacturing in 2030, the identical degree that it has been since 2020.
Buyers are also wary after a 12 months of disappointing monetary outcomes.
“The shares are low cost however not that low cost. The underperformance in its share worth displays its precise underperformance,” famous Stuart Joyner, an analyst at Redburn Atlantic. Because of its excessive debt ranges, BP was notably uncovered amongst its friends if oil costs begin falling, he stated. “In the event that they drop to $60 or $55 a barrel, BP will wrestle.”
Most of the firm’s critics have hit out at Auchincloss, however others argue that BP’s woes stem from a comparatively inexperienced board and its chair, Helge Lund, who splits his time between the oil main and the identical place at Novo Nordisk.
One former senior BP govt described the chair as a “catastrophe”, including: “He had two jobs, handle the chief govt transition — an utter failure — and handle the vitality transition, one other failure.” Amanda Blanc, BP’s senior impartial director, is seen as one potential successor to Lund by headhunters and business executives. Nevertheless, she is taken into account unlikely to go away her day job as Aviva’s chief govt within the close to time period following the insurance coverage group’s acquisition of Direct Line.
Regardless of the rising strain, Auchincloss stated this week that he felt “well-supported” internally and by the board. “It’s at all times a troublesome time when there’s uncertainty,” he instructed the Monetary Occasions. “I’m certain that as strategic readability is supplied that can make individuals extra comfy and we’ll transfer ahead.”
Further reporting by Jamie Smyth and Sujeet Indap in New York and Ivan Levingston and Arash Massoudi in London