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BP Sovereign Wealth Investment Scenario, part II

bp 228x300 BP Sovereign Wealth Investment Scenario, part IIAs the story unfolds it was reported that BP Plc CEO Tony Hayward made a trip to Abu Dhabi.  BP declined to comment on any activity.  During an interview with Bloomberg, they reported, ” ‘I’m just visiting,’  Hayward said in an interview in Abu Dhabi today. ‘I’m here for a couple of days.’

BP is an international oil company plagued with the Gulf disaster, but many SWFs are looking at a possible investment.  The Kuwait Investment Office, GIC have stakes already in the company. 
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Mideast buyers reported to be eyeing BP investment

bp 228x300 Mideast buyers reported to be eyeing BP investment

BP is not a new investment for SWFs, especially Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds.  Already the Kuwait Investment Authority is a large holder of the security, including many others.  In the past, numerous SWFs have taken small equity positions in BP.  Now with the possibility of a takeover from oil rivals and the need to increase their capital base, SWFs may come to the rescue at the right price and structure.  BP also has the option of selling assets in its oil producing portfolio as well.

According to the AP, “BP may be looking to sovereign wealth funds in the oil-rich Middle East to fend off takeover bids amid mounting costs from the Gulf of Mexico oil leak disaster, according to reports published Sunday.

The National, an Emirati newspaper, cited unnamed “informed sources” in the region saying that Mideast financial institutions have submitted proposals to BP advisers and are waiting for a response. Among the options being considered are the acquisition of key assets or a direct cash injection to help strengthen the oil giant’s balance sheet, according to the English-language paper.

The paper quoted a person it called an informed source as saying that “BP knows there is potential support from the Middle East.”

The National is owned by the government of Abu Dhabi, one of seven emirates that make up the United Arab Emirates federation. The sheikdom hosts the country’s capital and controls nearly all the OPEC member state’s oil reserves.

BP spokeswoman Sheila Williams in London declined to say whether the company had been approached by investors from the region.

“We don’t comment on financial issues,” she said.”

Source: AP

Gulf sovereign wealth funds fret over US Treasuries

The Financial Times reports that, “Sovereign wealth funds in the Middle East are growing increasingly concerned about the health of the US Treasury market, raising questions about whether they will remain such active buyers of US government debt. Middle Eastern buyers are the fifth-largest investors in Treasuries after China, Japan, the UK and Caribbean banking centres, and their appetite could prove critical to US government plans to issue mountains of debt to fund stimulus efforts. So far there is little sign of a flight from the dollar or from Treasuries, but senior executives at several sovereign funds in the region say the US Treasury has been conducting a dialogue to reassure Middle Eastern investors that US government debt still offers value.”

read more: Financial Times