Word: exxon
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...were useful indicators. Microsoft's emergence bespoke information technology as the driving force in our economy, supplanting consumer goods, aerospace and financial services as the sectors that investors most expected to outperform the rest of the market. The same point could have been made in 1993, when GE surpassed Exxon (consumer goods trumped oil), or a hundred years ago, when John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil was a monopolistic market bully and trust-busting wasn't even a slogan for Teddy Roosevelt...
...with a soft spot for polysyllabic corporate monikers can rejoice - the BP Amoco-Arco deal is on again. When first announced late last year, the $30 billion merger raised eyebrows among federal regulators, who moved to block the deal in court. The big problem wasn't size - after all, Exxon and Mobil last year combined in an $80 billion deal. Rather, according to the Federal Trade Commission, it was the fact that the combined entity would own 70 percent of Alaska's oil fields, giving it a monopolistic hold on West Coast gasoline prices...
...asbestos calamity in 1991, when it reported a loss of $980 million. The jarring news accompanied a cash call to unlucky Names who had backed the affected syndicates. Lloyd's reported loss climbed to $3.85 billion in 1992, in part as a result of disasters ranging from the Exxon Valdez oil spill to the San Francisco earthquake of 1989. The 1993 loss was even more dismal: $4.4 billion...
...approved by President Clinton, involves offering a "swap" of crude oil from the 580 million-bbl. SPR to private oil companies. They would bid to take the oil now, then make repayment in kind, plus a premium, in 12 months or less. In other words, for every barrel an Exxon-Mobil took out, it would return that barrel and a little more--the more to be negotiated...
...irony is that BP Amoco-Arco would be less than half the size of Exxon Mobil. But the FTC voiced concerns that the move would stifle competition on the U.S.'s West Coast, with BP Amoco-Arco controlling 45 percent of the oil refined in California, Oregon and Washington. This won't be the last you hear about this - the heads of British-based BP Amoco and L.A.-based Arco have long said that they would fight regulators to the bitter...