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+ - The End of Big Oil?

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Hugh Pickens writes
Hugh Pickens writes writes "Cyrus Sanati writes in Fortune Magazine that up until now, it has been widely accepted that being bigger was better for oil companies, but the announcement that ConocoPhillips plans to break up into two separately traded companies, separating its exploration and production unit from its refining and marketing units, took Wall Street by surprise, raising uncomfortable questions about the future of Big Oil. "That's because the exploration side and the refining side of the oil business have little to do with one another," writes Sanati. "Contrary to popular belief, Big Oil has almost no control over the price of oil these days. That power squarely rests with oil-rich nations that hold most of the world's oil reserves and the Wall Street banks and hedge funds that speculate and make markets in the oil trading game. So even though ExxonMobil pumps oil, it can't guarantee that its refining unit will be able to profitably process a barrel into gasoline or heating oil." Investors who want exposure to the oil and gas sector have noticed this disconnect and if ConocoPhillips were to ultimately gain 30% in its split, it would add a whopping $33 billion in value, bringing pressure on companies like ExxonMobil, Total, Chevron, Shell and BP to unlock shareholder value and follow suit. "If the ConocoPhillips story is a success for shareholders, there will be calls to break up Big Oil just in time for the annual meetings in the spring. So by this time next year, it is possible that Big Oil will go the way of Rockefeller's once gargantuan Standard Oil — with the markets, not the government, forcing a break up this time.""
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The End of Big Oil?

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I'm still waiting for the advent of the computer science groupie.

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