Word: texaco
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...same day last week that Du Pont claimed victory, all ten of the most active stocks on the American Stock Exchange were oil and gas firms. Some of the possible acquisition targets for the major energy companies: Pennzoil, Mesa Petroleum, Superior Oil, Marathon Oil, Amerada Hess and Murphy Oil. Texaco, which was an early suitor of Conoco, is reportedly considering a bid for Kerr-McGee, an Oklahoma-based oil company...
...express an opinion on a Mobil-Conoco merger. In fact, he appeared to be indicating that he might block it, when he said: "If they think we're generally soft on mergers, they're going to be in for a big surprise." If Mobil, Texaco or another member of Big Oil goes after one of the smaller energy firms, Baxter may be forced to produce his big surprise. -ByAlexanderL Taylor...
Bank America Corp. and other bank holding corporations began to create small business investment companies to fund new ventures. Lured by the potential profits, large corporations, including Exxon, General Electric and Texaco, also started setting up venture capital subsidiaries. In addition, pension funds, insurance companies and universities with large endowment funds began looking for new companies as a way of earning a higher return on their pools of cash. Big banks, corporations and other institutions now provide 83% of all the grub stakes for new firms. The venture capital firms owned by families still seek out the riskier startups, while...
...many Washington antitrust experts, including some within the Justice Department, predict that the Government will ultimately approve a merger between Conoco and one of its suitors-even Mobil or Texaco. They point out that contrary to conventional wisdom, the oil industry is highly competitive. Under present antitrust guidelines, the Government considers an industry to be exceedingly concentrated if four or fewer firms control 75% of the market. In the oil business, the top four companies account for less than 20% of sales. By contrast, four auto firms control 70% of the market, while four steel companies have 44% of that...
...acquisition of Conoco by even one of the biggest oil companies would not drastically alter the industry's balance of power. In the case of retail gasoline sales, for example, neither a Texaco-Conoco nor a Mobil-Conoco combine would hold more than 7.4% of the market. Observes one Administration antitrust lawyer: "It wouldn't be like Ford and General Motors merging...