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Heard the news about Berry Petroleum?
The company's moving its headquarters to Denver. Read reporter Gretchen Wenner's report. She'll be bringing us more information throughout the day. For now, what's this going to mean for the oil industry here? 12 comments from 7 users
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posted by
nooneisabovethelaw
on Mar 28, 2008 at 12:28 PM
Let's see...Denver? Bakersfield? Denver? Bakersfie... Oh, hell yes, Denver. I note only very top management will get to move. posted by
ChicoEsquela
on Mar 28, 2008 at 12:31 PM
It's called business if there is a profit bo be made it will happen (Bako production) unless of course the Dems take over Then it will all depend on Bakshish (or Barackshis) posted by
Maggiepoo
on Mar 28, 2008 at 12:41 PM
Halliburton moves out of USA, for profit Dubai 'ecstatic' about Halliburton's move 14 March 2007WASHINGTON, March 14 (HalliburtonWatch.org) -- Dubai's business community is ecstatic about Halliburton's announcement that it will move its headquarters to the city known for its lax or non-existent restrictions on corporations. "I'm sure everyone in Dubai, especially the government of Dubai, is ecstatic," Yusef Ibrahim, managing director for the Strategic Energy Investment Group (SEIG), told WBUR Radio's On Point program. SEIG's clients include some of the best-known Western corporations with business in Dubai, including Exxon Mobil, British Petroleum, Norway's Statoil, France's Totalfinaelf and JP Morgan. http://www.halliburtonwatch...
posted by
Lingtaowoo
on Mar 28, 2008 at 12:42 PM
So they are moving to Denver.....their field will still be here....I remember Berry when they worked out of two offices just past Taft.....I'm glad to see that ' local boys ' still can do good....if I was Berry, I would be 'eye-ing' the new field that may spring up in Wyoming....... posted by
ChicoEsquela
on Mar 28, 2008 at 12:46 PM
posted by
catpaw
on Mar 28, 2008 at 12:49 PM
What's the dif? I'll still be paying $4 per gallon before the year is out. posted by
Maggiepoo
on Mar 28, 2008 at 01:42 PM
Is this about tax breaks? Getting beyond the reach of congressional subpoenas? And what about all that sensitive information that Halliburton has had access to? At a minimum, reincorporating in Dubai would mean that Halliburton will be paying less taxes to the U.S. Treasury, even as it collects billions from government contracts. The last paragraph of the FT story begins to answer the questions about Halliburton's, uh, interestingly timed decision to move its corporate headquarters: Dubai has long positioned itself as a regional business hub, with a laisser faire attitude to business regulations. The government has launched several free zones allowing foreign firms to circumvent laws barring foreigners owning businesses.
posted by
Maggiepoo
on Mar 29, 2008 at 01:11 AM
UPDATE 1-Calif. Q4 gasoline demand fell 1.4 pct yr/yr-state
HOUSTON, March 28 (Reuters) - California gasoline consumption in the fourth quarter of 2007 fell 1.4 percent year-on-year, in spite of a 1.2 percent increase in December gasoline use, the California state sales tax board said on Friday. For all of 2007, drivers in California used nearly 1 percent less gasoline compared to the previous year, according to the California State Board of Equalization. On Wednesday. the Federal Highway Administration said Americans cut back on driving in 2007, the first such annual decrease in 20 years. The drop in demand was bad news to West Coast refiners, said an energy analyst. "If you're a refiner right now, you can't be all that happy," said David Hackett, president of Stillwater Associates. "Crude prices are high, gasoline demand is off, crack spreads are crummy. Yeah, interesting times." Refiners with West Coast operations like Valero Energy Corp (VLO.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Tesoro Corp (TSO.N: Quote, Profile, Research) have said they were cutting back production because of poor refining margins. http://www.reuters.com/arti... posted by
dcs217
on Mar 29, 2008 at 04:17 PM
I'm glad the report stated that it wouldn't effect local presence and production. I just hired on with a company that builds control panels for Berry. Thanks for the post. posted by
motopoet
on Mar 29, 2008 at 05:34 PM
Are you all kidding me? Does anyone remember Freymiller Trucking? Sam Tanksley? Oxy? No?..Reading the responses I thought not. Their local offices(Freymiller and Tanksley were actually HQ'd in Bako) all picked up their sticks and went to play elsewhere..Arizona, Nevada, and Texas, respectively, and these are just the ones off the top of my head. They all left for the same reason. California is simply hostile in its tax laws to large corporations. It is MUCH cheaper to staff and operate offices outside of California, even when the base of your business is here posted by
Maggiepoo
on Mar 30, 2008 at 02:48 AM
Here is a list of companies we've confirmed are "Exporting America." These are U.S. companies either sending American jobs overseas, or choosing to employ cheap overseas labor, instead of American workers. Long list !! posted by
Maggiepoo
on Mar 30, 2008 at 02:56 AM
Companies Leaving California Have Little Impact
Oct. 26 (KGO) -- There's interesting new information out about California's economy. We've heard a lot the last few years about how businesses are fleeing our state for less costly places to do business. It turns out, that may not have hurt us as much as we thought. Yes, companies have been leaving California over the decade. As many as 1,300 in a single year. It made it seem like a stampede or mass exodus. But a new study by the Public Policy Institute of California says the impact was negligible - at worst, just one-tenth of one percent of all jobs in the state. David Neumark, Ph.D., Public Policy Institute of California: "People, including the media, latch onto these stories. They use the anecdote not just to make an illustrative point, which is how anecdotes should be used, but they used the anecdote as an argument this really is the state of the world." Neumark is an economist who took a fresh look at statistics compiled by a private research firm that tracked business relocation. He says previous studies overlooked the number of companies that moved into California from other states and the number of newly created businesses. Nevada was the most aggressive suitor enticing companies to cross over with tax incentives. So, when a company didn't take the bait, it was considered a victory, such as the groundbreaking for a new Genentech facility in Vacaville.
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