Shell has struggled to rebuild confidence after the reserves crisis
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Oil giant Shell could be bracing itself for a takeover attempt, possibly from French rival Total, a report claims.
Bosses at the Anglo-Dutch group are said to have admitted that the company
is vulnerable to a predator, according to the Observer newspaper.
Total would be an obvious contender because it is believed to be the only firm capable of getting any merger proposal past the regulators.
Shell has been vulnerable since it downgraded its reserves estimates.
Reserves crisis
The company shocked the market in January by announcing that its oil and gas stocks
were 20% lower than previously thought.
But that was not the end of the matter - it subsequently downgraded its reserves
another three times.
The crisis forced the resignations of three top executives, including chairman Sir Philip Watts and the head of exploration and production Walter van de
Vijver.
The company agreed to pay more than £80m in penalties to settle inquiries by US and UK regulators into the firm's restatement of reserves.
Meanwhile, a spokeswoman for Shell said the company would not comment on the latest takeover
speculation.