SUJEEVANN
- 03 Nov 2003 23:02
This is an another money maker -trading in high volumes -not yet started the race -But once moving ahead there is no chance of picking up this tiddler.Join together to enjoy the instant wealth
highinterest
- 30 Apr 2004 11:26
- 119 of 196
what the hell? maybe they've got wind of the cao deal falling through. i hate it when there are leaks but i'm beggared it i'll be panicked into selling. in fact my inclination is to top up but they raise and lower the price so quickly with fto that it changes before i can push the buy button.
chartist2004
- 30 Apr 2004 11:26
- 120 of 196
SUJEEVANN ~ how wrong 'one' can be! ref your pose of 03/11.03 !!!!!
bosley
- 30 Apr 2004 11:27
- 121 of 196
this aviation deal.
Fortune Oil shareholders to get unexpected gain from planned aviation ops sale
AFX
LONDON (AFX) - Fortune Oil PLC's shareholders will get an unexpected windfall if the company's planned sale of Fortune Aviation Holding Ltd to China Aviation Oil (Singapore) Corp Ltd goes ahead.
Fortune said on Feb 5 that it will hold an extraordinary general meeting to approve the deal on April 19.
Since that date the value of the cash and shares deal has increased as the value of CAO's shares have jumped 67 pct.
The share portion of the purchase price has consequently risen from about 17.6 mln stg to about 29.5 mln stg and the overall value of the deal has increased from about 31.8 mln stg to about 49.8 mln stg.
bosley
- 30 Apr 2004 11:29
- 122 of 196
but its still awaiting clearance from the government. from results yesterday
In early 2004 we accepted an offer to sell our 24.5% stake in Bluesky to China
Aviation Oil (Singapore) Corporation Limited ('CAO'). We took the view that the
offered consideration, including shares and options in CAO, represented an
attractive value for our shareholders and the disposal was approved by
shareholders. However, we have subsequently been informed that CAO are still
waiting for final approval by the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration
Commission of China for issue of CAO shares to Fortune Oil. As a result
completion has not yet taken place, but we have been working closely with CAO on
this and we will inform shareholders as soon as we have more information.
mcmahons
- 30 Apr 2004 11:37
- 123 of 196
This beggers belief good results excellent medium to long term outlook expansion into Gas and a terminal working at full capacity taking over 10% of China's oil imports. Who's at play me asks! Time to buy me thinks!
jammyjimmy
- 30 Apr 2004 12:09
- 124 of 196
Could it have something to do with the Chinese government's statement abour slowing down future growth?
game_boy
- 30 Apr 2004 12:23
- 125 of 196
The China 'problem' is way overstated IMO.....Chinese officials are starting to say so too...especially for infrastructure projects such as FTO are involved in...
China acts to calm investor fears
By James Kynge in Beijing and Richard McGregor in Shanghai
Published: April 29 2004 20:31 | Last Updated: April 29 2004 20:31
Stock and commodity prices tumbled on Thursday as investors worried over confused reports that China was slamming the credit brakes on its economic boom. But after Asian markets closed, Beijing explained it had much milder intentions.
The China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC), the banking regulator, announced it had requested only that commercial banks should not rush to approve loans before the May holiday if those loans had been scheduled for next month. China holds a week-long holiday from Saturday.
Such rushing of loan approvals was undesirable because it could skew monthly loan growth figures at a time when policymakers are trying to ascertain how effective recent steps to tighten monetary policy have been.
The regulator also urged banks to favour lending for public infrastructure such as coal, power, oil, transport and water supply projects, to ease some of the bottlenecks restraining the Chinese economy and adding upward pressure to prices.
Lastly, the CBRC stressed that banks should be careful to provision for bad loans properly and improve performance standards at branches. But if loans were granted this week, banks should honour the commitments, it said.
The explanation from the regulator struck a milder tone than media reports that Beijing had issued a moratorium on new lending until May 1. Those reports were also inconsistent with the testimony of several banks, which said lending was continuing as normal or had only been partly curbed.
An executive at the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the country's largest state bank, said the bank's credit activities were the same as ever. China Merchant Bank, a commercial bank, had curbed loans to enterprises but not to individuals, an executive said.
An Agricultural Bank executive said checks on mortgage borrowers had become more stringent but otherwise there was no effect. But in the Shanghai branch of the Bank of Communications, all lending had stopped until May 1.
The mixed picture was consistent with Beijing's policy of resisting the use of blunt instruments to curb over-investment in some parts of the Chinese economy.
Wen Jiabao, prime minister, has often stressed that China will not use "one knife cuts all" measures to engineer a slowdown.
However, investors in the stock, commodity and currency markets were unsettled by rumours that China was killing off credit expansion as a precursor to raising interest rates for the first time since 1995.
The Hang Seng Index fell 1.31 per cent, or 159.73 points, to 12,005.58 points, its lowest close since November 25 last year. The China Enterprise Index, which groups Chinese firms, fell 4.54 per cent to 4,069.79 points.
The Australian dollar touched a five-month low as commodities and commodity-based currencies were sold off on fears of an abrupt Chinese slowdown.
Some senior Chinese officials have started to mention the possibility of raising interest rates, but most commentators say this is unlikely until the People's Bank of China (PBoC), the central bank, has had a chance to observe how its latest measures to rein in credit growth have worked.
This month the PBoC raised the ratio of deposits that commercial banks must keep on deposit with the central bank, draining liquidity out of the market.
Wang Mengkui, director of the development research centre of the State Council - the Chinese cabinet - told the Financial Times last week that China's economy would slow this year to 8.5 per cent, following a 9.1 per cent official growth rate last year.
daviesnc
- 30 Apr 2004 12:24
- 126 of 196
I work in the Aviation business, and we have extensive dealing with China (inc china Airlines), I know that they can really play cat and mouse...to the point of insanity, if the stakes are high enough . also the Chinese Govt. departments can best be described as 'opaque' in their dealings with outsiders. I am not surprised at last-minute volte-face's and delays - Keep your powoder dry......
game_boy
- 30 Apr 2004 12:29
- 127 of 196
This FT article is what spooked investors in FTO today.....looks like many panicked and sold.....buyers coming back in now at bargain price !!
Fortune Oil's Chinese asset sale delayed
By Friederike Tiesenhausen Cave
Published: April 29 2004 16:40 | Last Updated: April 29 2004 16:40
Fortune Oil, the energy group focused on China, has suffered a setback with the planned sale of its largest asset because of delays in receiving approval from the Chinese regulator.
John Pexton, who became deputy chief executive in February, said: "We obviously hope [the transaction] will happen in the near future. Though the problem with any state bureaucracy is that you just don't know."
Fortune agreed in February to sell its 24.5 per cent stake in Bluesky, a jet fuel company, to China Aviation Oil (CAO) for a mix of cash and shares. But completion of the deal has been hampered by China's state-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, which has so far not cleared the issue of CAO shares to Fortune.
Due to a strong rise in CAO's share price, the Bluesky deal would now be worth about 43.5m compared with 31.8m in February. completing the disposal will be critical for the company's 2004 profits, as the value of deal currently stands at about a third of Fortune's market capitalisation.
Fortune, which is staking its future on China's surging demand for energy, yesterday said it wanted to invest further in downstream natural gas projects. In November, it took an 80 per cent stake in a joint venture with a subsidiary of China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), the state holding company that controls most of the domestic natural gas supplies.
China last year overtook Japan as the world's second largest importer and consumer of crude oil after the USA. To reduce pollution from coal and other fuels, the country's government aims to increase the share of natural gas in primary energy consumption from the current three to six to eight per cent by 2010.
Thursday's news came as Fortune reported full-year results, which were delayed by a day because of the uncertainty involving Bluesky. The company said full-year profits for 2003 were 1.3m compared with 1.1m in 2002, leading to earnings per share of 0.09p (0.08p). Turnover increased by 22 per cent to 99m (80.9m). No dividend was proposed. Fortune shares closed up 1/8 p at 7p.
FT Comment:
As one of the few foreign companies that have direct exposure to China's insatiable energy appetite, Fortune could live up to its name if it manages to carve out a slice of the growing natural gas market.
But Thursday's news served as a timely reminder nothing goes without co-operation of the state authorities. Even though the Bluesky deal has become a lot more attractive due to the rise in CAO's share price recently, investors new to Fortune might want to stay put until the regulator has approved it.
highinterest
- 30 Apr 2004 12:39
- 128 of 196
i couldn't resist - another 50000 at 6.35. whatever happens to the sale, at this price it will seem like a bargain in six months.
goss
- 30 Apr 2004 12:58
- 129 of 196
highinterest
I followed you. Could not help myself but buy more even more @ 6.25. Its a worth while for the future. This is a nice stock.
Goodluck all.
highinterest
- 30 Apr 2004 13:18
- 130 of 196
good luck goss - that's 120k for me at av 6.6
hlyeo98
- 30 Apr 2004 13:20
- 131 of 196
i followed you guys. Bought in 70000 at 6.5p
blanny19
- 01 May 2004 19:53
- 132 of 196
what about Share's opinion that these shares are expensive now, since they have trebled over last couple of months ?
Any target prices on this one?
ckmtang
- 03 May 2004 10:13
- 133 of 196
i htink stil cheap
hlyeo98
- 03 May 2004 14:24
- 134 of 196
Yes I agree in view of its exposure in China and it has improved its profit and EPS.
hlyeo98
- 03 May 2004 14:24
- 135 of 196
blanchard1
- 03 May 2004 17:59
- 137 of 196
Are we hopeful that the Chinese authorities are going to allow the sale? IMO it's always expected that things never run smoothly, but you get there in the end c.f. buying a new house - when all looks to be collapsing, the deal goes through.
If the Chinese do block the sale, what is the worst that can happen?