checkAd

    Norske OLJESELSKAP - die norwegische Ölrakete (Seite 170)

    eröffnet am 15.06.05 15:53:37 von
    neuester Beitrag 04.01.24 18:17:25 von
    Beiträge: 2.147
    ID: 987.602
    Aufrufe heute: 0
    Gesamt: 175.769
    Aktive User: 0

    DNO
    ISIN: NO0003921009 · WKN: 865623
    0,9698
     
    EUR
    +0,78 %
    +0,0075 EUR
    Letzter Kurs 22:59:52 Lang & Schwarz

    Werte aus der Branche Öl/Gas

    WertpapierKursPerf. %
    1,9400+25,57
    0,6560+24,24
    12,730+19,53
    22,210+13,14
    19,360+12,23

    Beitrag zu dieser Diskussion schreiben

     Durchsuchen
    • 1
    • 170
    • 215

    Begriffe und/oder Benutzer

     

    Top-Postings

     Ja Nein
      Avatar
      schrieb am 22.01.10 20:41:55
      Beitrag Nr. 457 ()
      Det flagges storpost i DNO International. Artikkel av: Øystein Byberg (HegnarOnline - 22.1.10 08 :52)


      DNO Fond forvaltet av Oppenheimer har kjøpt 1.668.000 aksjer i DNO International. Ny beholdning er 46.212.020 aksjer, noe som tilsvarer 5 ,11 prosent av aksjekapitalen.

      In deutsch:

      Oppenheimer Fond kauft 1 668 000 DNO-Aktien !
      Avatar
      schrieb am 21.01.10 18:49:03
      Beitrag Nr. 456 ()
      Dezemberzahlen
      DNO produserte 14.744 fat olje per dag i desember, mens snittproduksjonen for fjerde kvartal var 13.581 fat olje per dag.

      DNO förderte 14744 Fässer Öl pro Tag im Dezember.

      Im 4.ten Quartal 13581 Fässer Öl pro Tag im Quartal.

      Mfg
      Kalle
      Avatar
      schrieb am 20.01.10 13:14:40
      Beitrag Nr. 455 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 38.767.651 von ingeting am 19.01.10 19:45:50Hi ingeting und DNO-ler,


      erst wenn der letzte Verzweifelte raus ist, geht der Kurs ins

      ORBIT !!!!!
      Avatar
      schrieb am 19.01.10 19:45:50
      Beitrag Nr. 454 ()
      Hallo zusammen,
      ASC hat heute wieder über 1,6 Mio.DNO-Aktien gekauft. Das
      geht nun schon einige Tage so. Wissen die noch mehr wie ich ?

      Über 200.000 Barrel/Tag in nur 24 Monaten
      Avatar
      schrieb am 19.01.10 18:53:10
      Beitrag Nr. 453 ()
      Und Financial Times:

      Kurdish minister pushes for Iraqi oil deal with DNO

      By Andrew Ward in Stockholm and William MacNamara in,London

      Published: January 19 2010 02:00 | Last updated: January 19 2010 02:00

      Shares in DNO, the Norwegian oil company, rose more than 16 per cent yesterday after authorities in Iraqi Kurdistan said they were ready to resolve a dispute with Iraq's central government over distribution of oil revenues and payment of foreign operators.

      But the statement appeared to be a political overture, not a binding plan capable of breaking the deadlock that has prevented full-scale exploitation of Iraqi Kurdistan's estimated 40bn barrels of oil.

      Ashti Hawrami, oil minister for the autonomous Kurdistan regional government (KRG) of Iraq, said in the statement that the KRG is prepared to resume international oil exports after holding a "serious dialogue" with Baghdad over how to pay operators such as DNO and Turkey's Genel Energy.

      Mr Hawrami proposed paying DNO a minimum amount that would cover DNO's cost of oil exports. The payments would come from Baghdad-controlled oil revenues. That step, he suggested, "would create a suitable and positive atmosphere" in which to restart oil exportation. Then all sides, he said, could resolve the thornier issues of operators' profits and out of which government's budget payments are paid.

      Winning access to Iraq in 2003, DNO was able to start exporting oil from its Tawke field in June 2009. Those exports were orchestrated by the Kurdish government. They were intended to mark the end of tensions with the central government, which continued to call the KRG's oil licenses illegal. But Baghdad retained all revenues from those exports and did not remit payments to the companies. The KRG did not pay operators out of its budget. In October DNO said it would halt oil exports until a payment mechanism was set up.

      DNO declined to comment on the statement, including whether or not they endorsed a break-even payment plan.

      Mr Hawrami appealed to Baghdad to consider the revenues it could gain by co-operating with a newplan. Those revenues could rise from $2.75bn in 2010 to $25.62bn in 2014. Over those four years only $6bn of the $67bn in Baghdad-controlled revenues would need to be allocated to Kurdistan-based operators as compensation, he said.

      Trond Omdal, analyst at Arctic Securities in Oslo, said the statement indicated momentum is building towards a deal. But he cautioned that much would remain uncertain until after Iraq holds parliamentary elections in March.

      Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2010. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.

      http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/4dd2cc76-0499-11df-8603-00144feabd…

      Trading Spotlight

      Anzeige
      Nurexone Biologic
      0,4740EUR -5,20 %
      NurExone Biologic mit dem BioNTech-Touch?! mehr zur Aktie »
      Avatar
      schrieb am 19.01.10 18:52:14
      Beitrag Nr. 452 ()
      Zwei interessante Artikel:

      Bloomberg
      Kurds’ Boom in North Iraq Imperiled by Oil Dispute With Baghdad
      January 14, 2010, 05:21 AM EST

      By Ben Holland

      Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Outside a newly built go-kart racetrack in Erbil, the capital of Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq, a poster urges would-be drivers to “feed the need for speed.”

      Kurds are taking that advice to heart, racing ahead of the rest of the country in luring oil investment and rebuilding after decades of war and sanctions. They have hit a speed bump: a four-month standoff with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki over how to share the country’s oil resources and where to draw internal boundaries.

      The dispute, which led al-Maliki to refuse payments to oil companies hired by the Kurds, may threaten the boom that has given Erbil new homes, conference centers and underground fiber- optic cables. It may also jeopardize Iraq’s stability as it approaches March 7 elections and the pullout of U.S. troops.

      The tension “could potentially escalate into live fire” if al-Maliki’s government tries to weaken Kurdish self-rule, said David L. Phillips, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, a research institute in Washington. “Sectarian violence will never break Iraq but ethnic conflict can.”

      Since the U.S. ousted dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003, the north has stayed largely free of the violence between Sunni and Shia Muslims in Arab provinces that has killed about 100,000 Iraqis, according to the Web site Iraq Body Count. That stability strengthened the hand of Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani and helped attract investors.

      Early Contracts

      The Kurdish oil ministry started awarding contracts to companies such as Calgary, Canada-based Addax Petroleum Corp., later acquired by China Petrochemical Corp., and Oslo-based DNO International ASA as early as 2002 -- the year before Hussein’s fall.

      Now, those companies aren’t getting paid because of the dispute with Baghdad.

      Al-Maliki, whose central government controls export pipelines and collects all oil revenue, has refused to turn over money pledged by the Kurds to their producers, saying the Kurdish government had no right to sign its own contracts.

      The Kurds responded by halting exports in October. DNO and the other producers are supplying the domestic market.

      Not repaying the Kurds is “unfair and unreasonable and illogical,” and hurts the whole of Iraq by cutting oil sales, said Falah Mustafa Bakir, head of the Kurdish government’s foreign affairs department.

      Oil Production

      Oil output in Kurdistan, which the local authorities say could soar to 450,000 barrels a day by the end of this year, has slumped to 20,000 barrels instead, from a peak of 100,000 last year. Nationwide, Iraq produces about 2.4 million barrels a day.

      A dispute over Kurdish borders adds to friction between Barzani and the Baghdad government. Barzani says Kirkuk, a province southeast of Erbil that produces about one-quarter of Iraq’s oil, should be part of Kurdistan because it is majority- Kurdish in population.

      A referendum on that question has been delayed for two years and, meantime, Barzani and al-Maliki have bolstered their military forces there. Kirkuk was omitted from the 15 oilfields offered by al-Maliki to investors last month.

      “If you don’t have an agreement between Erbil and Baghdad then all these oil and gas fields can’t be developed,” said Gareth Stansfield, an analyst at the Chatham House research center in London. “They’ve got each other by the throat and that’s what makes it so dangerous.”

      ‘Lots of Industry’

      Those dangers don’t overshadow the current boom for those in the Kurdish region who recall Hussein’s chemical attacks in the late 1980s and the decade of poverty and international sanctions that followed.

      “A few years ago there was no money, no electricity, no banks,” said Dara Jalil Khayat, head of the Erbil Chamber of Commerce. “Now we have lots of industry and we’re working on setting up a stock exchange.”

      In the 1990s, when most Iraqi Kurds were living on United Nations handouts in an enclave protected by U.K. and U.S. warplanes, Baz Karim turned the offices of his family marble business into distribution posts for food and fuel.

      Now Karim’s Kar Group has about $1 billion in energy and building contracts, and is mulling a stock market listing -- “maybe in two or three years, maybe in London,” Karim said at Kar’s office, a villa in Erbil’s suburbs. On his desk is a model of its successor, a 13-story skyscraper being built in Erbil.

      Kar is extracting oil from the Khurmala field west of Erbil. Last year it opened a refinery that Karim says will produce 75,000 barrels a day by year-end for Erbil’s growing fleet of private cars.

      Tomato Paste

      Investors from outside Iraq are seeking to profit in Kurdistan.

      Andrew Eberhart’s Marshall Fund, a U.S.-based private equity firm, runs a tomato-paste plant near Erbil that it took over from the UN food program. Eberhart, a former U.S. Army officer and later a banker at New York-based Citigroup Inc., got interested after a Defense Department-sponsored trip to Iraq in 2007. He’s now looking at such opportunities as fast-food franchises and the dairy industry.

      “The level of institutional interest in the U.S. and the U.K. is picking up,” Eberhart said. “There’s plenty of really good opportunities there right now.”


      --Editors: Anne Swardson, Peter Hirschberg

      To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Holland in Istanbul at +90-212-317-3902 or bholland1@bloomberg.net.

      To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Hirschberg at +972-2-640-1104 or phirschberg@bloomberg.net.

      http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-01-14/kurds-boom-in-no…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 18.01.10 21:00:44
      Beitrag Nr. 451 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 38.758.706 von ingeting am 18.01.10 17:42:16Hi ingeting, hi dno-ler,

      Statoil bekommt bei einer Auktion die Möglichkeit im Irak arbeiten
      zu dürfen für 0,68 $/ barrel nach Steuern, jetzt Shell zu ähnlich
      schlechten Bedingungen - all dies wird als siegesreicher deal
      von den big-playern gefeiert.

      DNO wird vermutlich schlechtestenfalls 10% Royalties zugesprochen,
      d.h. ca. 7-8 $, wobei die Investitionskosten in einem großzügigen
      Verfahren auch schnell erstattet werden. Erst dann fallen Steuern an, maximal 40%!!!!

      Hegnar und die norwegische short-Mafia versuchen immer noch
      ernsthaft das DNO-Papier als loser-Aktie abzustempeln.
      Kursziel heute von 8,50 NOK ausgerufen!!!!!!!

      Aus meiner Sicht kann man nur ein Vollidiot sein, jetzt zu verkaufen.

      Strong long

      brokerburt

      anvisiertes Kursziel ( kurzfristig !!!! ) ca. 20 - 30 NOK.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 18.01.10 17:42:16
      Beitrag Nr. 450 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 38.747.134 von kalleari am 15.01.10 17:38:38Hallo zusammen,
      nochmals die Tagesmeldungen:
      18/01-2010 08:49:32: (DNO) OSLO BØRS - MATCHING HALT
      A matching halt has been imposed in anticipation of
      an announcement from the company.
      *18/01-2010 10:12:00: (DNO) DNO International ASA - KRG Pressemitteilung
      DNO International ASA

      ( "NOA" oder "die Gesellschaft")
      KRG Pressemitteilung

      DNO wurde von der kurdischen Regionalregierung (KRG) darauf hingewiesen, dass eine Pressekonferenz
      Release wurden auf der KRG-Webseite veröffentlicht, www.krg.org
      . Eine englische
      Übersetzung der Pressemitteilung KRG ausgestellt wird dieses Stock befestigt
      Exchange Notice. Es sei darauf hingewiesen, dass im Rahmen dieser Pressemitteilung herausgegeben
      KRG sind die DNO PSC Verträge ebenfalls veröffentlicht.

      Zum gegenwärtigen Zeitpunkt kann DNO bietet keine weiteren Informationen oder Stellungnahmen zu diesem Thema
      über das wurde von der KRG veröffentlicht.



      DNO International ASA
      18. Januar 2010


      Diese Information ist der Offenlegung nach Thema. zu § 5-12 vphl
      (Norwegian Securities Trading Act)

      18/01-2010 10:17:16: (DNO) OSLO BØRS - MATCHING HALT ENDS
      See announcement issued by DNO. Matching halt to end.
      There will be a pre-trading session (CLIN) until
      10:21.Ekstern link: http://www.newsweb.no/index.jsp?messageId=252633


      Nyheten er levert av OBI.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 18.01.10 10:13:25
      Beitrag Nr. 449 ()
      News vom KRG oil Minister

      http://www.krg.org/articles/detail.asp?lngnr=12&smap=0201010…

      Vielleicht gehen die Exporte bald wieder los:D

      und der Kurs dann...
      Avatar
      schrieb am 15.01.10 17:38:38
      Beitrag Nr. 448 ()
      Gute News

      Wie ich gerade in Hegnar gelesen habe, Irakprobleme schwinden und Jemen anscheinend Anteilskäufer Interesse an Miteinstieg.

      Mfg
      Kalle
      • 1
      • 170
      • 215
       DurchsuchenBeitrag schreiben


      Norske OLJESELSKAP - die norwegische Ölrakete