March 27, 2025

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BP Shares Jump After Activist Investor Elliott Builds Stake

BP Shares Jump After Activist Investor Elliott Builds Stake

(Bloomberg) — BP Plc shares surged the most since 2020 after one of the world’s most aggressive activist investors built a stake in the company, seeking to end years of under-performance by pushing for significant change.

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Elliott Investment Management, led by Paul Singer, has amassed a significant holding in the British energy giant, Bloomberg reported on Saturday. This is typically the first step in a playbook it has deployed successfully at many other big public companies. Over the years, the fund’s efforts have led to strategy shifts, CEO departures and even corporate breakups.

“We think any activist would call for a change in the chairperson at the very least,” said RBC Europe Ltd. analyst Biraj Borkhataria. BP could also be urged to sell low-carbon assets and focus on growing oil and gas production, analysts at Jefferies Ltd. said in a note.

Shares of the company rose as much as 8.2%, and were up 6.6% at 461.7 pence as of 11 a.m. in London trading.

Elliott’s intervention comes after BP stumbled through a series of missteps over the past 15 years, from the Deepwater Horizon disaster to former Chief Executive Officer Bernard Looney’s sudden dismissal for his personal conduct. Since his faulty bet in 2020 that global oil consumption had peaked and the world was accelerating toward net zero emissions, the company’s valuation has lagged other oil majors.

Several of those rivals have been running the numbers over what a takeover might look like, according to people familiar with the matter. It’s not clear whether any are seriously considering a move, but that such deliberations are happening is an indicator of how far the London-based behemoth has fallen.

Over the previous five years, BP shares had dropped almost 8%, compared with a gain of about a third for its closest rivals Shell Plc and TotalEnergies SE.

Elliott is seeking to boost shareholder value by pushing BP to consider transformative measures, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because the discussions were private. It believes the company is significantly undervalued and its performance is disappointing, they said.

Representatives for the activist investor declined to comment, and the exact size of its stake couldn’t be immediately learned. But its track record gives an indication of the kind of pressure that might be faced by BP’s current CEO, Murray Auchincloss.

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