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Guten Tag
Jetzt gibt es also auch ein Board für kanadische Aktien. Bin gespannt, was sich hier so alles ansammelt.
Auf die Watchlist gehört NORDIC DIAM LTD. Infos setzt ich später rein, wollte der erste hier sein
Good luck
sowhat
Jetzt gibt es also auch ein Board für kanadische Aktien. Bin gespannt, was sich hier so alles ansammelt.
Auf die Watchlist gehört NORDIC DIAM LTD. Infos setzt ich später rein, wollte der erste hier sein
Good luck
sowhat
Meine Empfehlung ist die Aktie von Syzygy 510480.
Gründe: am 13.04.2004 20% Dividenausschüttung
das Unternehmen ist profitabel.
heutige Empfehlung EURO AM SONNTAG
30.03.2004 Zahlen für das abgelaufene
Geschäftsjahr (werden sehr positiv gesehen)
mind. 50 % Chance bis zur Ausschüttung siehe am
Bsp. Atoss
Gründe: am 13.04.2004 20% Dividenausschüttung
das Unternehmen ist profitabel.
heutige Empfehlung EURO AM SONNTAG
30.03.2004 Zahlen für das abgelaufene
Geschäftsjahr (werden sehr positiv gesehen)
mind. 50 % Chance bis zur Ausschüttung siehe am
Bsp. Atoss
Hallo Sowhat,
zumindestens kann man Dir nicht den Vorwurf machen, daß Du diese Aktie schon vorgekauft hast, der Umsatz ist nämlich gleich Null!. Wenn man schon nicht reinkommt, wie soll man dann wiederauskommen aus solch einem Exoten-Titel?
Fragen über Fragen--Gruß Looe
zumindestens kann man Dir nicht den Vorwurf machen, daß Du diese Aktie schon vorgekauft hast, der Umsatz ist nämlich gleich Null!. Wenn man schon nicht reinkommt, wie soll man dann wiederauskommen aus solch einem Exoten-Titel?
Fragen über Fragen--Gruß Looe
Guten Morgen
@Looe
Es ist keineswegs so ein Exotentitel wie Du meinst. Anbei die Erklärung dazu. Gestern wurden 113k gehandelt
Nordic Diamonds Ltd NDL
Shares issued 15,417,868 Jan 13 close $0.72
Wed 14 Jan 2004
Street Wire
by Will Purcell
Walter Melnyk`s Nordic Diamonds has picked up some additional diamond help
with the addition of a new director, and the company has added four more
gem hunters to its technical advisory board, in a move that suggests Nordic
is about to step up its promotional pace. Some of the new arrivals have
experience with the company`s main play, the Kuopio-Kaavi diamond project
in Finland, but there is also a strong link with Winspear Diamonds and its
Snap Lake project, where Mr. Melnyk got his start with diamond exploration
in the 1990s. The new group has had some success with their earlier gem
hunts, which proved to be quite promotable, and that could help Mr. Melnyk
tout Nordic`s Scandinavian project, but it could also signal a new crack at
a Canadian project.
Nordic appointed geologist Bruce Counts to its board late last year,
replacing the Coquitlam-based Nadir Walji, who had been the only director
of Earth Star Diamonds on the board of Nordic, which merged with Poplar
Resources last fall. Mr. Walji was a businessman, but diamonds had become
the prime pursuit for Mr. Counts a dozen years ago, when he went to work
with BHP Billiton on the Lac de Gras project, where he was involved with
the discovery and development of the main Ekati deposits.
Mr. Counts struck out on his own in 1997, setting up shop as a consultant.
One of his key customers was BHP`s Ekati partner, Dia Met Minerals, which
had also been working on its own in Finland. Ashton Mining had also been
working in Finland, and the Australian diamond miner had come up with a
series of kimberlite finds in the Kuopio-Kaavi region, when the company
formed a joint venture with Dia Met. Mr. Counts was a senior consultant for
Dia Met on the project until BHP bought out the company a few years ago.
Interest in the Finland project waned after that, and much of the
Kuopio-Kaavi play was subsequently abandoned by the partners, but Poplar
hurried in to scoop up the available ground, which appears quite promotable
for a junior explorer, and the arrival of Mr. Counts would seem to support
that notion.
Mr. Counts has popped up on a number of old diamond projects in his role as
a consultant, with varying degrees of success. He has worked on the
Victoria Island project that has proven to be very promotable for Diamonds
North Resources over the past year or two, but his involvement with the old
Afridi Lake diamond play has not managed to muster much interest for Shear
Minerals, which hired him as a consultant on that project in 2001.
As well, Mr. Counts and Afridi Lake have yet to trigger much interest in
Dev Investments. The struggling company has been cease traded since last
spring, but Dev still hopes to acquire a majority stake in the Afridi
property and it has nominated the Vernon-based consultant to its board as a
result. Even if the company manages to complete its reorganization and
acquire a stake in the Afridi play, it will take some promotable news from
the old project to attract much interest.
Unlike Afridi Lake, Nordic`s Kuopio-Kaavi project comes with some existing
promotability to stir up a bit of attention for Mr. Melnyk and Mr. Counts.
Ashton found more than two dozen kimberlites, and more than three-quarters
of the finds were diamondiferous. Ashton seemed to be on to something
promising when a 23-tonne sample from kimberlite No. 7 delivered a grade of
just over 0.30 carat per tonne, and that prompted a much larger test.
Ashton processed about 1,000 tonnes of No. 7 kimberlite, but the sample
produced a bit less than 60 carats, yielding a disappointing 0.06 carat per
tonne result.
Nordic did not acquire No. 7, but it has at least a few of Ashton`s old
finds that could still hold promise. Ashton processed about 17 tonnes of
kimberlite from No. 21, recovering 4.4 carats, which indicated a grade of
0.27 carat per tonne, not far off the initial promise indicated by the
first test of No. 7. Ashton also recorded a grade of 0.17 carat per tonne
at No. 12, based on about 9.4 tonnes of sample, and kimberlite No. 13
produced a diamond content of 0.14 carat per tonne, from just three tonnes
of material.
There were signs that the diamond grades varied across those bodies, which
might offer encouragement that richer zones and possibly richer bodies
remain to be discovered in the region. A 2.3-tonne batch of kimberlite from
No. 21 yielded 1.5 carats, for a grade of nearly two-thirds of a carat per
tonne. As well, the No. 21 test produced at least one larger diamond, which
could be a sign of a favourable size distribution curve.
Despite the promotional mileage offered by the Ashton results, Mr. Melnyk,
Mr. Counts and Nordic will quickly have to come up with some good news of
their own to sustain any real interest in the Kuopio-Kaavi play. The
company has come up with a considerable amount of cash through its recent
amalgamation and reorganization, and much of the money will be directed at
the Finland play, although a much smaller private placement has added about
$400,000 in cash that will be spent on diamond projects in Canada`s North.
Meanwhile, Nordic has added to its list of advisers and consultants, and
all of the new arrivals are familiar to Mr. Melnyk from his days with
Winspear, when the Snap Lake project was a favourite with investors, and
the new group may help the company with its Canadian projects as a result.
One of Nordic`s new advisers is John McDonald, who was the vice-president
of exploration and a director of Randy Turner`s Winspear since the early
1990s. Mr. McDonald had been a professor in Australia and at the University
of Saskatchewan for 13 years, and he worked with Mr. Turner with Esso
Minerals Canada, serving as exploration manager for a decade prior to
joining Mr. Turner with Winspear`s new diamond projects.
Mr. Melnyk joined Mr. McDonald at Winspear, and he served as project
manager of Snap Lake, which boosted Winspear from a penny stock in 1998, to
a $5 takeover target of De Beers by the summer of 2000. Mr. Melnyk moved on
after De Beers acquired Snap Lake, but Mr. McDonald continues to serve as a
director of Winspear`s sister company, Diamondex Resources, which has
several toutable diamond projects scattered across the Northwest
Territories and Nunavut.
As well, Mr. McDonald has been serving as a special consultant to
International Samuel Exploration since last summer. The company is earning
an interest in a large property just west of the main Churchill property of
Shear Minerals and Stornoway Diamonds, which produced more than a dozen
kimberlite finds on what had been a grassroots play until the string of
finds began last spring.
Two additional kimberlites were subsequently found on the Churchill West
property, and the story carried International Samuel`s shares to a 45 cent
peak around the time of Mr. McDonald`s appointment. The initial Churchill
kimberlites produced just modest quantities of diamonds, and much of the
initial interest drifted away, but the Churchill and Churchill West
properties are expected to be a hot area again this year, with
multimillion-dollar exploration programs.
Diamondex has been concentrating its efforts across much of the Slave
craton in the Northwest Territories, and with International Samuel`s play
on the Churchill craton, much of Mr. McDonald`s time should continue to be
occupied with the Canadian hunts. As a result, his addition would suggest
that Nordic will continue to have an interest in the region.
That could also be the case with another Nordic advisor with a Snap Lake
past, although Nik Pokhilenko has some familiarity with the Kuopio-Kaavi
play as well. Dr. Pokhilenko has long been hunting gems in Russia, and
since 1994, he has been spending his summer holidays stomping around the
Canadian arctic for Mr. Turner.
His surface sampling and geochemical work was an important factor in all of
Winspear`s kimberlite finds, including Snap Lake, and he continues to play
a key role with Diamondex`s new projects, including its promising Lena West
play. Nevertheless, Dr. Pokhilenko has also been finding the time to help
out Mr. Melnyk, his former Winspear partner, with Nordic`s Finland
property.
The Novosibirsk, Siberia-based geologist has spent well over 30 years
looking for diamonds, and he is credited with the discovery of three
diamondiferous kimberlite clusters in Yakutia, as well as some finds in the
Archangelsk region of Russia, just across the border with Finland. The
chief research geologist for Alrosa, Russia`s diamond company, grew up
under the Soviet regime, and that may account for his lack of interest in
the promotional end of things. Dr. Pokhilenko has recently become enough of
a capitalist to successfully market himself as a consultant, but so far he
seems to have generally limited his available spare time to his former
Winspear friends.
Mr. Melnyk added a third Winspear consultant to Nordic`s advisory board,
and Malcolm McCallum has been popping up with several diamond promotions
that are off the beaten track. Like Mr. McDonald, Dr. McCallum also has an
academic past, and he also has had success as a diamond explorer. A former
professor at Colorado State University, Dr. McCallum did not have to stray
far from home to find diamonds, as he is credited with the discovery of
kimberlite in the State Line district near the Wyoming border.
Dr. McCallum has since been involved with at least one subsequent attempt
to promote a play in that region. In 2001, Consolidated Pacific Bay
Minerals landed Dr. McCallum`s assistance in the evaluation of the George
Creek deposit, one of the State Line kimberlites that had enough diamonds
to support promotions since the early 1990s. As things turned out,
Consolidated Pacific Bay never got far beyond the promotional stage, and
the company`s stock, which briefly crested above the 50-cent mark in early
2001, quickly dipped back below a dime.
Dr. McCallum`s work has also provided some promotional grist for a number
of other diamond hunters, including Winspear. The company`s stock was
sagging early in 1999, as speculators were becoming increasingly concerned
that the results Snap Lake dike might have been badly skewed by the
presence of three large diamonds, leaving the bulk of the big dike
marginally economic at best. The company called upon Dr. McCallum to
conduct a detailed study of the microdiamond and macrodiamond results from
its earlier programs, and his report seemed to satisfy the worried market.
Dr. McCallum has also been involved with the Wawa diamond hunt. In the
summer of 2002, Oasis Diamond Exploration and Arctic Star Diamond hired him
to help out with their Enigma project, which was close to two properties
that had produced modest diamond grades and some healthy promotions. Dr.
McCallum continues to work on the project, but a toutable quantity of
diamonds still eludes the Enigma partners.
The fourth Nordic adviser is Stan Deakin, who worked on the rich Argyle
mine for 17 years as the head of geological services. Mr. Deakin came up
with a technique to estimate the recovered macrodiamond grade from the
recovery of microdiamonds, and he was subsequently called upon by Mr.
Turner and Winspear to use his approach at Snap Lake, where the nature of
the shallow dike ruled out drilling as an efficient means to collect a
mini-bulk sample.
The results of Mr. Deakin`s work are believed to have played a helping hand
in the summer of 2000, when Mr. Turner and Mr. McDonald managed to wring an
additional 75 cents per share out of De Beers for Winspear`s shareholders,
through what the company called its value recognition program.
Meanwhile, Nordic`s shareholders can only hope that their company`s renewed
effort at Kuopio-Kaavi and will bring an increase in value. The merged
company began trading as Nordic in early December at 95 cents, but the
stock dipped to just 62 cents near Christmas.
Things have been a bit better to start the new year however, and Nordic was
unchanged on Tuesday, closing at 72 cents.
(c) Copyright 2004 Canjex Publishing Ltd.
Good luck
sowhat
@Looe
Es ist keineswegs so ein Exotentitel wie Du meinst. Anbei die Erklärung dazu. Gestern wurden 113k gehandelt
Nordic Diamonds Ltd NDL
Shares issued 15,417,868 Jan 13 close $0.72
Wed 14 Jan 2004
Street Wire
by Will Purcell
Walter Melnyk`s Nordic Diamonds has picked up some additional diamond help
with the addition of a new director, and the company has added four more
gem hunters to its technical advisory board, in a move that suggests Nordic
is about to step up its promotional pace. Some of the new arrivals have
experience with the company`s main play, the Kuopio-Kaavi diamond project
in Finland, but there is also a strong link with Winspear Diamonds and its
Snap Lake project, where Mr. Melnyk got his start with diamond exploration
in the 1990s. The new group has had some success with their earlier gem
hunts, which proved to be quite promotable, and that could help Mr. Melnyk
tout Nordic`s Scandinavian project, but it could also signal a new crack at
a Canadian project.
Nordic appointed geologist Bruce Counts to its board late last year,
replacing the Coquitlam-based Nadir Walji, who had been the only director
of Earth Star Diamonds on the board of Nordic, which merged with Poplar
Resources last fall. Mr. Walji was a businessman, but diamonds had become
the prime pursuit for Mr. Counts a dozen years ago, when he went to work
with BHP Billiton on the Lac de Gras project, where he was involved with
the discovery and development of the main Ekati deposits.
Mr. Counts struck out on his own in 1997, setting up shop as a consultant.
One of his key customers was BHP`s Ekati partner, Dia Met Minerals, which
had also been working on its own in Finland. Ashton Mining had also been
working in Finland, and the Australian diamond miner had come up with a
series of kimberlite finds in the Kuopio-Kaavi region, when the company
formed a joint venture with Dia Met. Mr. Counts was a senior consultant for
Dia Met on the project until BHP bought out the company a few years ago.
Interest in the Finland project waned after that, and much of the
Kuopio-Kaavi play was subsequently abandoned by the partners, but Poplar
hurried in to scoop up the available ground, which appears quite promotable
for a junior explorer, and the arrival of Mr. Counts would seem to support
that notion.
Mr. Counts has popped up on a number of old diamond projects in his role as
a consultant, with varying degrees of success. He has worked on the
Victoria Island project that has proven to be very promotable for Diamonds
North Resources over the past year or two, but his involvement with the old
Afridi Lake diamond play has not managed to muster much interest for Shear
Minerals, which hired him as a consultant on that project in 2001.
As well, Mr. Counts and Afridi Lake have yet to trigger much interest in
Dev Investments. The struggling company has been cease traded since last
spring, but Dev still hopes to acquire a majority stake in the Afridi
property and it has nominated the Vernon-based consultant to its board as a
result. Even if the company manages to complete its reorganization and
acquire a stake in the Afridi play, it will take some promotable news from
the old project to attract much interest.
Unlike Afridi Lake, Nordic`s Kuopio-Kaavi project comes with some existing
promotability to stir up a bit of attention for Mr. Melnyk and Mr. Counts.
Ashton found more than two dozen kimberlites, and more than three-quarters
of the finds were diamondiferous. Ashton seemed to be on to something
promising when a 23-tonne sample from kimberlite No. 7 delivered a grade of
just over 0.30 carat per tonne, and that prompted a much larger test.
Ashton processed about 1,000 tonnes of No. 7 kimberlite, but the sample
produced a bit less than 60 carats, yielding a disappointing 0.06 carat per
tonne result.
Nordic did not acquire No. 7, but it has at least a few of Ashton`s old
finds that could still hold promise. Ashton processed about 17 tonnes of
kimberlite from No. 21, recovering 4.4 carats, which indicated a grade of
0.27 carat per tonne, not far off the initial promise indicated by the
first test of No. 7. Ashton also recorded a grade of 0.17 carat per tonne
at No. 12, based on about 9.4 tonnes of sample, and kimberlite No. 13
produced a diamond content of 0.14 carat per tonne, from just three tonnes
of material.
There were signs that the diamond grades varied across those bodies, which
might offer encouragement that richer zones and possibly richer bodies
remain to be discovered in the region. A 2.3-tonne batch of kimberlite from
No. 21 yielded 1.5 carats, for a grade of nearly two-thirds of a carat per
tonne. As well, the No. 21 test produced at least one larger diamond, which
could be a sign of a favourable size distribution curve.
Despite the promotional mileage offered by the Ashton results, Mr. Melnyk,
Mr. Counts and Nordic will quickly have to come up with some good news of
their own to sustain any real interest in the Kuopio-Kaavi play. The
company has come up with a considerable amount of cash through its recent
amalgamation and reorganization, and much of the money will be directed at
the Finland play, although a much smaller private placement has added about
$400,000 in cash that will be spent on diamond projects in Canada`s North.
Meanwhile, Nordic has added to its list of advisers and consultants, and
all of the new arrivals are familiar to Mr. Melnyk from his days with
Winspear, when the Snap Lake project was a favourite with investors, and
the new group may help the company with its Canadian projects as a result.
One of Nordic`s new advisers is John McDonald, who was the vice-president
of exploration and a director of Randy Turner`s Winspear since the early
1990s. Mr. McDonald had been a professor in Australia and at the University
of Saskatchewan for 13 years, and he worked with Mr. Turner with Esso
Minerals Canada, serving as exploration manager for a decade prior to
joining Mr. Turner with Winspear`s new diamond projects.
Mr. Melnyk joined Mr. McDonald at Winspear, and he served as project
manager of Snap Lake, which boosted Winspear from a penny stock in 1998, to
a $5 takeover target of De Beers by the summer of 2000. Mr. Melnyk moved on
after De Beers acquired Snap Lake, but Mr. McDonald continues to serve as a
director of Winspear`s sister company, Diamondex Resources, which has
several toutable diamond projects scattered across the Northwest
Territories and Nunavut.
As well, Mr. McDonald has been serving as a special consultant to
International Samuel Exploration since last summer. The company is earning
an interest in a large property just west of the main Churchill property of
Shear Minerals and Stornoway Diamonds, which produced more than a dozen
kimberlite finds on what had been a grassroots play until the string of
finds began last spring.
Two additional kimberlites were subsequently found on the Churchill West
property, and the story carried International Samuel`s shares to a 45 cent
peak around the time of Mr. McDonald`s appointment. The initial Churchill
kimberlites produced just modest quantities of diamonds, and much of the
initial interest drifted away, but the Churchill and Churchill West
properties are expected to be a hot area again this year, with
multimillion-dollar exploration programs.
Diamondex has been concentrating its efforts across much of the Slave
craton in the Northwest Territories, and with International Samuel`s play
on the Churchill craton, much of Mr. McDonald`s time should continue to be
occupied with the Canadian hunts. As a result, his addition would suggest
that Nordic will continue to have an interest in the region.
That could also be the case with another Nordic advisor with a Snap Lake
past, although Nik Pokhilenko has some familiarity with the Kuopio-Kaavi
play as well. Dr. Pokhilenko has long been hunting gems in Russia, and
since 1994, he has been spending his summer holidays stomping around the
Canadian arctic for Mr. Turner.
His surface sampling and geochemical work was an important factor in all of
Winspear`s kimberlite finds, including Snap Lake, and he continues to play
a key role with Diamondex`s new projects, including its promising Lena West
play. Nevertheless, Dr. Pokhilenko has also been finding the time to help
out Mr. Melnyk, his former Winspear partner, with Nordic`s Finland
property.
The Novosibirsk, Siberia-based geologist has spent well over 30 years
looking for diamonds, and he is credited with the discovery of three
diamondiferous kimberlite clusters in Yakutia, as well as some finds in the
Archangelsk region of Russia, just across the border with Finland. The
chief research geologist for Alrosa, Russia`s diamond company, grew up
under the Soviet regime, and that may account for his lack of interest in
the promotional end of things. Dr. Pokhilenko has recently become enough of
a capitalist to successfully market himself as a consultant, but so far he
seems to have generally limited his available spare time to his former
Winspear friends.
Mr. Melnyk added a third Winspear consultant to Nordic`s advisory board,
and Malcolm McCallum has been popping up with several diamond promotions
that are off the beaten track. Like Mr. McDonald, Dr. McCallum also has an
academic past, and he also has had success as a diamond explorer. A former
professor at Colorado State University, Dr. McCallum did not have to stray
far from home to find diamonds, as he is credited with the discovery of
kimberlite in the State Line district near the Wyoming border.
Dr. McCallum has since been involved with at least one subsequent attempt
to promote a play in that region. In 2001, Consolidated Pacific Bay
Minerals landed Dr. McCallum`s assistance in the evaluation of the George
Creek deposit, one of the State Line kimberlites that had enough diamonds
to support promotions since the early 1990s. As things turned out,
Consolidated Pacific Bay never got far beyond the promotional stage, and
the company`s stock, which briefly crested above the 50-cent mark in early
2001, quickly dipped back below a dime.
Dr. McCallum`s work has also provided some promotional grist for a number
of other diamond hunters, including Winspear. The company`s stock was
sagging early in 1999, as speculators were becoming increasingly concerned
that the results Snap Lake dike might have been badly skewed by the
presence of three large diamonds, leaving the bulk of the big dike
marginally economic at best. The company called upon Dr. McCallum to
conduct a detailed study of the microdiamond and macrodiamond results from
its earlier programs, and his report seemed to satisfy the worried market.
Dr. McCallum has also been involved with the Wawa diamond hunt. In the
summer of 2002, Oasis Diamond Exploration and Arctic Star Diamond hired him
to help out with their Enigma project, which was close to two properties
that had produced modest diamond grades and some healthy promotions. Dr.
McCallum continues to work on the project, but a toutable quantity of
diamonds still eludes the Enigma partners.
The fourth Nordic adviser is Stan Deakin, who worked on the rich Argyle
mine for 17 years as the head of geological services. Mr. Deakin came up
with a technique to estimate the recovered macrodiamond grade from the
recovery of microdiamonds, and he was subsequently called upon by Mr.
Turner and Winspear to use his approach at Snap Lake, where the nature of
the shallow dike ruled out drilling as an efficient means to collect a
mini-bulk sample.
The results of Mr. Deakin`s work are believed to have played a helping hand
in the summer of 2000, when Mr. Turner and Mr. McDonald managed to wring an
additional 75 cents per share out of De Beers for Winspear`s shareholders,
through what the company called its value recognition program.
Meanwhile, Nordic`s shareholders can only hope that their company`s renewed
effort at Kuopio-Kaavi and will bring an increase in value. The merged
company began trading as Nordic in early December at 95 cents, but the
stock dipped to just 62 cents near Christmas.
Things have been a bit better to start the new year however, and Nordic was
unchanged on Tuesday, closing at 72 cents.
(c) Copyright 2004 Canjex Publishing Ltd.
Good luck
sowhat
@ SoWhat
Danke für die Info. sehe trotzdem nur fallende Kurse und in Deutschland O-Umsätze.
Nix für mich, da bin ich lieber bei Sally Malay dabei.
Gruß Looe
Danke für die Info. sehe trotzdem nur fallende Kurse und in Deutschland O-Umsätze.
Nix für mich, da bin ich lieber bei Sally Malay dabei.
Gruß Looe
Kanadische Aktien?
Ja dann sag ich mal: Silverado Golmines
WKN: 867737
Thread: Silverado Gold Mines. Jetzt geht`s los!
Ja dann sag ich mal: Silverado Golmines
WKN: 867737
Thread: Silverado Gold Mines. Jetzt geht`s los!
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