A huge company that carries out business in a number of different countries is known as a transnational corporation or TNC. Examples of Transnational companies include BP-Amoco, Unilever and Cadbury-Schweppes.
% P = P/BP *100 % - percentage P - profit P/BP - fraction BP - buying price * 100 - times one houndred (you have to be given the buying price and the selling price to work out the percentage profit) REMEMBER TO CANCEL DOWN THE FRACTION!!!
I can't tell you. I can explain why this information is not available. The British Petroleum company pays dividends to people who own their stock. Computer systems keep track of who the owners are and their addresses on a particular date, as specified by the company. The computer system does not report the citizenship of their investors. I will explain why BP is owned by many people in many countries, not just Britain: The people who own the stock generally buy their shares from another person who wants to sell their stock. The buying and selling is done by a stock broker. The BP company is listed in New York and London. This makes it very easy for a brokerage company to buy and sell shares of BP stock. With the Internet, people from everywhere in the world can buy BP stock. Some people own it and will receive dividends, and they don't even know they have the stock. This is because they buy a mutual fund which contains many stocks, one of them could be BP. Each owner of a mutual fund will own a very small part of a large group of stocks and frequently they don't know all the stocks in the group. This makes it easy for investors in the US and other countries to own stocks in foreign countries.
I'll have to make a few assumptions here: A. BP is British Petroleum; B. BP drills for oil in Country ABC; and C. BP sells oil to Country XYZ. In this scenario the oil BP sells in ABC is listed as an export product. If specific to oil and not oil products or gas, then it's Oil under exports.
BP made 50 million dollars in profits every week.
on April 6, 1999, BP Amoco bought Solarex, making BP Amoco the world's largest solar power company.
AMOCO became part of BP (formerly known as British Petroleum) when they merged in 1998. Its ticker symbol was AN prior to the merger. BP continues to market products under the AMOCO brand. The ticker symbol of BP is BP.
Amoco
Amoco
According to the official BP website, the company BP merged with the company Amoco on 1998. According to the New York Times, the BP bought the site for 48.2 billion dollars.
BP Amoco Arco Aral Castrol am/pm
BP's stock price as traded on the US exchanges is $29.85 as of July 2, 2010.
0.6617 Share
Amoco is a brand owned by BP. BP bought Amoco Corporation in 1998. The merged company was known as "BP Amoco" until 2001, then changed its name to BP p.l.c. The letters BP do not stand for British Petroleum any more. The company is a global supermajor, headquartered in London, traded in New York and London, with operations on all continents. Most of its U.S. workforce are former employees or Amoco and Arco (Atlantic Richfield). Under CEO Sir John Browne, BP used the slogan 'Beyond Petroleum', implying an effort to become an "energy company" rather than strictly an oil and gas company. Other brands owned by BP include Castrol (engine oils), Aral (German network of gas stations), ARCO.
Amoco was a real company that started as Standard Oil, then became the American Oil Company, then Amoco. It merged with BP in 1998.
arco and amoco
In August 1998 British Petroleum purchased Amoco for $57 billion, and British Petroleum renamed itself BP Amoco. On December 31, 1998, Browne's title became group CEO.