Petroleum
News: Investors sue Shell over stock losses:
"The new suit, filed in Newark, N.J., names the
company as well as past and current executives
including current Chairman Jeroen van der Veer.
: Week of Jan 15, 2006 A group
of major shareholders is suing Royal Dutch Shell
PLC for several hundred million dollars in
damages after the company’s 2004 oil reserves
accounting scandal, their lawyers said Jan. 9.
The group of 26 institutional investors
represents up to 5 percent of Shell’s stock, and
is led by Dutch pension fund ABP — the world’s
second-largest pension fund by assets. The
investors say they should be compensated for
losses suffered when Shell’s stock fell after
the company admitted overstating the size of its
estimated oil and gas reserves by up to 33
percent.
According to the filing, Shell made
“materially false and misleading statements”
that caused the investors “to sustain
substantial losses.”
A Shell spokeswoman said the company
“contests these claims and will vigorously
defend itself against the action.”
The reserves scandal cost Shell almost
$150 million in fines imposed by U.S. and
British regulators and led to the dismissal of
three senior executives.
Shell has already paid $90 million to
settle one U.S. shareholder lawsuit related to
the writedown of its reserves.
Spokeswoman Bernadette Cunnane said the
company couldn’t comment further on the pending
case or speculate on whether it will eventually
be settled.
The new suit, filed in Newark, N.J., names
the company as well as past and current
executives including current Chairman Jeroen van
der Veer.
Shell shares were up 0.8 percent at $32.71
in afternoon trading in Amsterdam.
—The Associated Press |