Exclusive: BP seeks
buyers for its half of China petchem venture
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[August 09, 2016]
By Arno Schuetze and Denny Thomas
FRANKFURT/HONG KONG (Reuters) - British
oil major BP is seeking buyers for its 50 percent stake in Chinese
petrochemicals joint venture SECCO, its largest investment in China,
in a deal sources said could fetch $2-$3 billion.
State-owned China Petroleum & Chemical Corp (Sinopec), which owns
the other half of the venture and has a right of first refusal, said
it was discussing the conditions put forward by BP, but has made no
decision.
BP is working with Morgan Stanley to sell its shareholding in the
SECCO venture as part of a drive to cash out of businesses where it
lacks control, three sources familiar with the matter said. A
successful deal would mark BP's first significant exit from a
business in China.
Situated in Caojing near Shanghai, SECCO is China's largest
petrochemicals refinery and was built at a cost of $2.7 billion,
according to BP's website.
BP shares were up 1.1 percent in morning trade, outpacing a 0.3
percent rise in the FTSE index, as investors digested news that
would bolster its cash position and underpin dividends. Sinopec's
Shanghai-listed shares were up 1 percent, slightly outperforming the
broader China market.
A London-based BP spokesman declined to comment. Morgan Stanley was
not available for immediate comment.
SECCO, a venture formed in 2001, produces ethylene and propylene,
which are used to make resins, plastics and synthetic rubbers.
Bankers said Chinese state enterprises were unlikely to step in to
buy the stake as executives at many of them are distracted by
anti-corruption probes.
BP's stake has been marketed to existing refinery operators in
China, including companies from Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and
Europe, the sources added.
Bankers said the stake would also attract interest from Chinese
private firms stepping up their presence in petrochemicals.
"Even in this low oil price environment, this is one auction that
will attract a lot of demand. With most SOEs going slow on M&A,
Chinese private enterprises will be active," one Asia-based oil and
gas banker said.
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A BP logo is seen at a petrol station in London, Britain January 15,
2015. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor/File Photo
The refining and chemicals businesses have been a bright spot for M&A in the oil
sector since the sharp drop in oil prices more than two years ago. Lower oil
prices have boosted refining profits and demand for oil products around the
world.
BP, like other global oil and gas companies, has been sharpening its focus on
costs and core businesses as it reels from lower oil prices. U.S. rival Chevron
and Britain's BG Group have also recently sold stakes in Asian ventures as they
return their focus to their core home markets.
BP has sold more than $50 billion of assets since the deadly 2010 Gulf of Mexico
oil spill in order to pay for clean-up costs and legal bills. This year, it
plans to offload between $3 billion and $5 billion worth of assets, of which
$1.9 billion has been agreed, it said when releasing second-quarter earnings
last month.
(Reporting by Arno Schuetze in FRANKFURT and Denny Thomas in HONG KONG;
Additional reporting by Ron Bousso in LONDON and Tris Pan in HONG KONG; Editing
by Will Waterman)
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