PANCONTINENTAL OIL - Projekte in Australien, Kenya, Malta, Marocco und Namibia (Seite 320)
eröffnet am 23.01.10 01:07:33 von
neuester Beitrag 14.05.24 23:11:46 von
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ID: 1.155.508
ID: 1.155.508
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Gesamt: 421.305
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ISIN: AU000000PCL4 · WKN: A0CAFF
0,0150
EUR
+3,45 %
+0,0005 EUR
Letzter Kurs 14.05.24 Lang & Schwarz
Werte aus der Branche Öl/Gas
Wertpapier | Kurs | Perf. % |
---|---|---|
4,8050 | +39,52 | |
15,000 | +15,38 | |
2,4500 | +11,87 | |
2,7600 | +11,29 | |
8,0000 | +10,34 |
Wertpapier | Kurs | Perf. % |
---|---|---|
300,01 | -7,69 | |
1,2050 | -10,74 | |
1,0000 | -13,04 | |
0,8150 | -14,84 | |
5,9460 | -75,48 |
Beitrag zu dieser Diskussion schreiben
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.688.411 von otimm99 am 23.06.11 12:15:48Selbst wenn es PCL nicht sein sollte, ist es nicht schlimm.
PCL kann selbstbewußt auftreten und hat zumindest in East Africa, Westaustralia und Namibia - wie ich meine - hervorragende Aussichten.
Die Spannung, die hier mit einem kleineren Explorer teuer aufgebaut wird, erinnert mich an Mongolei Öl. Und mit Saudi Aramco ist nicht zu spaßen, wenn man Partner sein wollte.
PCL kann selbstbewußt auftreten und hat zumindest in East Africa, Westaustralia und Namibia - wie ich meine - hervorragende Aussichten.
Die Spannung, die hier mit einem kleineren Explorer teuer aufgebaut wird, erinnert mich an Mongolei Öl. Und mit Saudi Aramco ist nicht zu spaßen, wenn man Partner sein wollte.
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.688.411 von otimm99 am 23.06.11 12:15:48Schönes Stück Detektivarbeit, bin mal gespannt was rauskommt und ob du schneller bist als bis der Kurs noch bei 1.80 steht^^
Jetzt hat der hier schon angesprochene Chris deHaemer in der neusten Ausgabe seines Newsletters die Katze (fast) aus dem Sack gelassen. Leider promoted er nicht die kleine PCL sondern eine andere Firma. Hier ein Auszug aus dem kostenlosen Newsletter http://www.angelnexus.com/o/web/27393:
quote
Now, here's the part that's most important for you...
Sometime in early January of this year, another real estate deal went down that I didn't mention in my bullet points earlier.
It was for a 7,300-square-mile chunk of property located in north central Kenya.
The acquisition was the last in a series of purchases that secured a grand total of 32,000 square miles of Kenyan territory...
All of it dead center in the heart of this vast, untapped oil-rich region...
... All of it now held by this young upstart energy company.
By the estimates quoted in the company's own website, their overall land holdings in Kenya alone add up to a chunk of land about the size of South Carolina.
With an additional 101,000 square miles — equivalent to the state of Nevada — held in surrounding countries, the total resource wealth possessed by this company is enormous.
But land is land and oil is oil...
So how much of the stuff is in the ground — and within reach?
Well, with inferred reserves already totaling over 2 billion barrels, the total value of what's already been measured is in the hundreds of billions of dollars.
However, taking into account the massive size of this company's East African holdings, the actual wealth buried in this land is far, far greater.
One way geologists use to estimate the mineral wealth of a certain region is to compare that region to known mineral concentrations in geologically similar areas.
Remember how I said this East African system of oil formations has direct geological connections with the fabled Middle Eastern oil deposits?
This geological formation is called the Late Jurassic-Cretaceous rift system...
It extends from East Africa all the way across Central Africa into the Congo, Angola, and up into Nigeria.
Well, with these two regions sharing that characteristic, we can then build a direct comparison with the owner of the best-known, and perhaps most closely studied reserve on the planet...
Saudi Arabia's Ghawar.
With total land holdings of more than 1.5 million square miles and annual revenues exceeding $230 billion...
Saudi Aramco is the world's biggest petroleum company.
Now, with only 133,000 square miles, the company I've been telling you about owns approximately 11% of the Saudis' total real estate...
But because the land it holds will very closely mimic the mineral concentrations of the varied Middle Eastern properties of Saudi Aramco, we can ballpark the size of the resource they own.
Saudi Aramco's 1.5 million square miles of property contain reserves estimated to be around 264 billion barrels.
Accepting the land Saudi Arabia mines — and the land this company has been acquiring contains similar mineral concentrations....
We can conservatively estimate a total reserve of 29.04 billion barrels getting ready to be tapped, for the very first time.
A nice chunk of the 71.7 billion barrels the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) estimates lies in the region... So the company I've been talking about must be an intermediate to large-sized oil producer, right?
You couldn't be more wrong.
In fact, the company which owns all this land, in a region that is a virtual geological photocopy of the same land which made the built the biggest oil dynasty...
Today trades for only $1.80.
And has a market cap of just $320 million...
Even when viewed most conservatively — and assuming these properties are less than one-fifth as fertile as the properties of Saudi Aramco...
A $1.80 stock price is, technically, a 99.4% discount!
And that's assuming the very worst for the pockets of land which have yet to be thoroughly analyzed.
But I know that you might not be interested in these theoretical 'projections', no matter how good the science behind them may be.
I'm the same way.
If you want completely eliminate all optimism and just get the bare facts as they're known today, let's go back to the 'inferred reserves' figure which this company's geologists have already determined.
As I mentioned earlier, an inferred reserve value doesn't merely use surrounding land to ballpark mineral concentrations.
Instead, geologists evaluate the property by cutting core samples directly from the target land itself.
For this figure, thousands of core samples — some drilled to a depth of almost 2 miles — were analyzed, the geological equivalent of using a dipstick to find out what's going on under a vast stretch of terrain.
And it's just as reliable.
Today, this company's latest inferred reserves analysis state a total resource of 2.24 billion barrels.
At today's oil prices, this oil reserve would be valued at $222 billion — more than 740 times what the company trades for today!
unquote
Gesucht wird also eine Firma deren Shares derzeit mit ca $1.80 gehandelt werden und die eine Marktkap. von etwa $320 Millionen hat.
Diese Info läßt sich Chris allerdings -wie ich finde- sehr teuer bezahlen. $995 pro Jahr für seinen Newsletter sind mir zuviel.
Ich habe allerdings schon eine Vermutung um welche Firma es sich handeln könnte, muß das aber jetzt übers Wochenende noch genauer verifizieren.
quote
Now, here's the part that's most important for you...
Sometime in early January of this year, another real estate deal went down that I didn't mention in my bullet points earlier.
It was for a 7,300-square-mile chunk of property located in north central Kenya.
The acquisition was the last in a series of purchases that secured a grand total of 32,000 square miles of Kenyan territory...
All of it dead center in the heart of this vast, untapped oil-rich region...
... All of it now held by this young upstart energy company.
By the estimates quoted in the company's own website, their overall land holdings in Kenya alone add up to a chunk of land about the size of South Carolina.
With an additional 101,000 square miles — equivalent to the state of Nevada — held in surrounding countries, the total resource wealth possessed by this company is enormous.
But land is land and oil is oil...
So how much of the stuff is in the ground — and within reach?
Well, with inferred reserves already totaling over 2 billion barrels, the total value of what's already been measured is in the hundreds of billions of dollars.
However, taking into account the massive size of this company's East African holdings, the actual wealth buried in this land is far, far greater.
One way geologists use to estimate the mineral wealth of a certain region is to compare that region to known mineral concentrations in geologically similar areas.
Remember how I said this East African system of oil formations has direct geological connections with the fabled Middle Eastern oil deposits?
This geological formation is called the Late Jurassic-Cretaceous rift system...
It extends from East Africa all the way across Central Africa into the Congo, Angola, and up into Nigeria.
Well, with these two regions sharing that characteristic, we can then build a direct comparison with the owner of the best-known, and perhaps most closely studied reserve on the planet...
Saudi Arabia's Ghawar.
With total land holdings of more than 1.5 million square miles and annual revenues exceeding $230 billion...
Saudi Aramco is the world's biggest petroleum company.
Now, with only 133,000 square miles, the company I've been telling you about owns approximately 11% of the Saudis' total real estate...
But because the land it holds will very closely mimic the mineral concentrations of the varied Middle Eastern properties of Saudi Aramco, we can ballpark the size of the resource they own.
Saudi Aramco's 1.5 million square miles of property contain reserves estimated to be around 264 billion barrels.
Accepting the land Saudi Arabia mines — and the land this company has been acquiring contains similar mineral concentrations....
We can conservatively estimate a total reserve of 29.04 billion barrels getting ready to be tapped, for the very first time.
A nice chunk of the 71.7 billion barrels the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) estimates lies in the region... So the company I've been talking about must be an intermediate to large-sized oil producer, right?
You couldn't be more wrong.
In fact, the company which owns all this land, in a region that is a virtual geological photocopy of the same land which made the built the biggest oil dynasty...
Today trades for only $1.80.
And has a market cap of just $320 million...
Even when viewed most conservatively — and assuming these properties are less than one-fifth as fertile as the properties of Saudi Aramco...
A $1.80 stock price is, technically, a 99.4% discount!
And that's assuming the very worst for the pockets of land which have yet to be thoroughly analyzed.
But I know that you might not be interested in these theoretical 'projections', no matter how good the science behind them may be.
I'm the same way.
If you want completely eliminate all optimism and just get the bare facts as they're known today, let's go back to the 'inferred reserves' figure which this company's geologists have already determined.
As I mentioned earlier, an inferred reserve value doesn't merely use surrounding land to ballpark mineral concentrations.
Instead, geologists evaluate the property by cutting core samples directly from the target land itself.
For this figure, thousands of core samples — some drilled to a depth of almost 2 miles — were analyzed, the geological equivalent of using a dipstick to find out what's going on under a vast stretch of terrain.
And it's just as reliable.
Today, this company's latest inferred reserves analysis state a total resource of 2.24 billion barrels.
At today's oil prices, this oil reserve would be valued at $222 billion — more than 740 times what the company trades for today!
unquote
Gesucht wird also eine Firma deren Shares derzeit mit ca $1.80 gehandelt werden und die eine Marktkap. von etwa $320 Millionen hat.
Diese Info läßt sich Chris allerdings -wie ich finde- sehr teuer bezahlen. $995 pro Jahr für seinen Newsletter sind mir zuviel.
Ich habe allerdings schon eine Vermutung um welche Firma es sich handeln könnte, muß das aber jetzt übers Wochenende noch genauer verifizieren.
Schöne Umsätze heute in Australien:
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.681.083 von links-zwo-drei-vier am 22.06.11 07:43:53na vielleicht kann ich mir die Karten dann vom Panconti-Gewinn kaufen.?
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.669.087 von links-zwo-drei-vier am 20.06.11 07:50:55Australien: http://www.asx.com.au/asx/research/companyInfo.do?by=asxCode…
Und nicht vergessen Jungs:
Am Freitag beginnt der Vorverkauf für die RAMMSTEIN-TOUR:
"Made In Germany 1995-2011"
See you!
L234
Und nicht vergessen Jungs:
Am Freitag beginnt der Vorverkauf für die RAMMSTEIN-TOUR:
"Made In Germany 1995-2011"
See you!
L234
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.668.626 von otimm99 am 19.06.11 21:58:01Ich glaube nicht, dass sich die TOPs mit kleinen Gewinnen begnügen. Dafür ist für sie das bisherige Risiko auch hoch - wie bei uns. Und ein Verkauf müßte sich auf jeden Fall lohnen.
Vermutlich käme dann auch Konkurrenz durch die etablierten Producer und Partner, die sich ihre Anteile und Rechte nicht abnehmen lassen wollen. Und wenn doch, dann zu hohen Preisen.
Vermutlich käme dann auch Konkurrenz durch die etablierten Producer und Partner, die sich ihre Anteile und Rechte nicht abnehmen lassen wollen. Und wenn doch, dann zu hohen Preisen.
Guten Morgen im Thread!
Moin Männers,
ich weis nicht ob hier Interesse besteht, aber Caspian Oil and Gas ist gerade am bohren. NEW auf ASX zu lesen
Gruß
Fliege
ich weis nicht ob hier Interesse besteht, aber Caspian Oil and Gas ist gerade am bohren. NEW auf ASX zu lesen
Gruß
Fliege
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 41.668.558 von gimo211 am 19.06.11 21:21:18Lt.der letzten Presentation halten die Top 20 Shareholder zusammen ca 51% der Shares.
Ich hoffe das die sich einig sind und PCL nicht für z.B. 0,20 AUD 'verramschen'.
We will see.....
Ich hoffe das die sich einig sind und PCL nicht für z.B. 0,20 AUD 'verramschen'.
We will see.....