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Biofuels Corporation. (BFC)     

wilbs - 07 Jul 2004 19:47

The main activity of Biofuels is the large scale production and exploitation of biodiesel and glycerine following the construction and commissioning of the initial plant.

Biodiesel is produced from vegetable oils and, as an environmentally friendly product, can make a significant contribution towards reducing green house gases and meeting Kyoto targets.

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=BFC&Si

RNS's from BFC can be viewed at:

http://www.uk-wire.com/cgi-bin/index?search_type=3&words=bfc&go.x=17&go.y=8

http://www.biofuelscorp.com/

Stan - 21 Apr 2005 11:51 - 218 of 1184

Just a general question everyone, whats the normal spread on this one please?

I see It's just over 3% at the mo.

wilbs - 21 Apr 2005 13:44 - 219 of 1184


Biofuels Corporation PLC
21 April 2005

SCHEDULE 10

NOTIFICATION OF MAJOR INTERESTS IN SHARES


1. Name of company

Biofuels Corporation plc

2. Name of shareholder having a major interest

Morgan Stanley Securities Limited

3. Please state whether notification indicates that it is in respect of holding of the shareholder named in 2
above or in respect of a non-beneficial interest or in the case of an individual holder if it is a holding of
that person's spouse or children under the age of 18.

As in 2 above

4. Name of the registered holder(s) and, if more than one holder, the number of shares held by each of them

Not stated

5. Number of shares/amount of stock acquired

Not disclosed

6. Percentage of issued class

Not disclosed

7. Number of shares/amount of stock disposed

Not disclosed

8. Percentage of issued class

Not disclosed

9. Class of security

Ordinary Shares

10. Date of transaction

19 April 2005

11. Date company informed

21 April 2005

12. Total holding following this notification

2,340,264

13. Total percentage holding of issued class following this notification

5.12%

14. Any additional information



15. Name of contact and telephone number for queries

Martin Purvis 01642 345695

16. Name and signature of authorised company official responsible for making this notification.

Martin Purvis, Company Secretary

Date of notification: 21 April 2005


Biofuels Corporation PLC
15 April 2005

SCHEDULE 10

NOTIFICATION OF MAJOR INTERESTS IN SHARES


1. Name of company
Biofuels Corporation plc

2. Name of shareholder having a major interest
Toscafield Limited

3. Please state whether notification indicates that it is in respect of
holding of the shareholder named in 2 above or in respect of a
non-beneficial interest or in the case of an individual holder if it
is a holding of that person's spouse or children under the age of 18.
As in 2 above

4. Name of the registered holder(s) and, if more than one holder, the
number of shares held by each of them
Morstan Nominees Limited a/c SEG

5. Number of shares/amount of stock acquired
Not disclosed

6. Percentage of issued class
Not disclosed

7. Number of shares/amount of stock disposed
Not disclosed

8. Percentage of issued class
Not disclosed

9. Class of security
Ordinary Shares

10. Date of transaction
Not disclosed

11. Date company informed
15 April 2005

12. Total holding following this notification
6,669,090

13. Total percentage holding of issued class following this notification
14.8%

14. Any additional information
The holding has changed following the conclusion of the recent
Placing & Open Offer

15. Name of contact and telephone number for queries

Martin Purvis 01642 345695

16. Name and signature of authorised company official responsible for
making this notification.
Martin Purvis, Company Secretary

Date of notification: 15 April 2005



wilbs


Madison - 22 Apr 2005 09:23 - 220 of 1184

Anyone seen the FT article this morning?

Cheers, Madison

tallsiii - 22 Apr 2005 09:25 - 221 of 1184

Interest in biodiesel innovation is beginning to spread
By Chris Tighe
Published: April 22 2005 03:00 | Last updated: April 22 2005 03:00

D1 Oils and Biofuels Corporation, the biodiesel companies, are following different business models but both have seen a huge rise in their share price since flotation, even before hard evidence emerges of their production capability.


ADVERTISEMENT





The market capitalisation of each of these new Aim-listed companies is now about 100m, testament to investors' interest in companies that will contribute to the global drive to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Biofuels floated in June 2004 at 75p a share and D1 Oils in October at 160p. Their share prices yesterday closed at 229p and 420p.

Biodiesel is made from energy crops that produce vegetable oil, tallow or cooking oils. It can be blended with diesel, made from mineral crude oil, to benefit the environment by reducing harmful carbon emissions and airborne particulates. The production process, transesterification, results in biodiesel and glycerine.

To create its "green" fuel, Biofuels plans to use as its feedstock rapeseed, soya and palm oil; D1 Oils favours jatropha and has mounted a global campaign in tropical areas to increase planting of this fast-growing tree.

At present, the UK lags behind some other European Union countries, notably Germany and France, on biodiesel take-up. While the EU target is that biofuels should account for 2 per cent of all transport fuel sold in 2005 and 5.75 per cent by 2010 - an estimated demand of 10.5bn litres per annum - the UK expects to achieve just 0.3 per cent this year.

Biodiesel enthusiasts believe the fuel could

comprise 20 per cent or more of a blend but carmakers focused on warranty obligations are more cautious, opting for 5 per cent biodiesel.

However, even this small percentage gives big possibilities. Sean Sutcliffe, Biofuels' chief executive, says: "I would prefer to sell 5 per cent to all diesel users in the UK rather than try to grow a whole new market sector."

Biofuels, with headquarters in Teesside, is building Europe's biggest biodiesel production plant, able to produce 250,000 tonnes a year, at Seal Sands, near the mouth of the Tees. First production is due this July, with full production by September. A second plant, at Seal Sands or in continental northern Europe, is planned.

Although the 28m Seal Sands plant is based on proven technology, licensed from Energea of Austria, the project has sustained delays to its original timetable and consequent cost overruns, arising from capital and working capital cost needs and hedging arrangements.

Having raised 13m net at flotation, plus 17m debt from Barclays, Biofuels recently raised, via a placing, slightly more than 30m net, plus 5m bank debt.

Contracts have so far been agreed for the glycerine and with Petroplus for a quarter of the biodiesel. "We are talking to a range of distributors and refineries for the bulk of production," says Mr Sutcliffe. Some may be sold to Germany. Biofuels estimates its annual operating profit will be 14m (30m before the hedging impact).

The 20p discount on excise duty helps biodiesel's viability but the fiscal instrument that could stimulate demand is the proposed Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation, now under government consideration. This would operate in a similar way to the power generators' Renewable Obligation Certificates.

But D1 Oils insists the best option is a business model that needs no government subsidy. "We feel the whole biodiesel industry worldwide is obsessed with the German market because that's where the biggest subsidy is," says Karl Watkin, chairman.

D1 Oils' aim is to be vertically integrated; it is securing jatropha plantation rights in many locations in Africa and other countries, including India, Madagascar and the Philippines, by joint ventures or by supply deals with growers. It has acquired refining technology to fabricate, in Teesside, transportable refineries for installation at jatropha plantations worldwide.

The biodiesel could be sold locally or internationally. Jatropha not needed by D1 could be sold to other producers - such as Biofuels.

This month, D1 Oils carried out seven days' continuous trial production of biodiesel, using rapeseed oil, in its first modular, transportable refinery. It intends that its first in-situ refinery, in Durban, South Africa, funded via an offset financing arrangement with Rolls-Royce, should be operational by the end of 2005.

While, for European motorists, the chance to buy 5 per cent "green" diesel may seem no big deal, an agreement announced last week by D1 Oils illustrates biodiesel's potential impact on poorer economies.

D1 Mohan, a joint venture with Mohan Breweries Distilleries, has clinched an agreement with the State Bank of India to provide 1.3bn rupees (15m) to local farmers in Tamil Nadu to plant up to 40,000 hectares of jatropha. The deal, says SBI, will benefit small farmers and landless labourers.

Regardless of the business model adopted, interest in partaking in biodiesel innovation is spreading.

Madison - 22 Apr 2005 09:33 - 222 of 1184

Thanks tallsiii - impeccable service as always.

Cheers, Madison

stockdog - 22 Apr 2005 10:43 - 223 of 1184

Great Tallsiii - very nice article, because it will not send the price wild, but is low key with good references to potential market and interstesing quotes from the CEO's.

I absolutely agree with Karl Watkin about not chasing subsidies - that policy has very nearly destroyed the UK Film Industry over the last 7 years and in periods prior to that. Go for the best business model and take subsidy where it happens to be for sure.

I am interested to see the first mention in print of D1 Oils supplying surplus Jatropha oil to Biofuels - which I've mentioned more than once before as a great synergistic idea - especially as they both have a base in Teesside. That's another great deal - using all that massive skilled labour force from the otherwise redundant North East. Good social policies nearly always make good business sense in the mid to long term.

SD

wilbs - 22 Apr 2005 10:57 - 224 of 1184

Great article tallsiii.
wilbs

stockdog - 22 Apr 2005 12:15 - 225 of 1184

tallsiii - 22 Apr 2005 16:56 - 226 of 1184

Biofuels Corporation plc


Biofuels Corporation plc was informed on 21 April 2005 that Toscafield Limited is no longer a beneficial owner of any shares in Biofuels Corporation plc.



ENDS

END

stockdog - 22 Apr 2005 18:24 - 227 of 1184

So between 15th April and 22nd April Toscafield had 14.8% and then dispose of it entirely. Anyone notice this going through the market - 6,669,090 shares.

Morgan Stanley who had 5.12% on 21 April, up from 4.2% on 12 April, announce today they now have 19.9%, so I gues we know where Toscafield's holding went, presumably not via the MMs.

So I think this news is neutral (no massive sell off) to good (Morgan Stanley building a very sizeable interest) - what level triggers a full offer by the way - is it 25 or 30% can't remember?

SD

wilbs - 26 Apr 2005 07:19 - 228 of 1184

Market report: Monday close
Mickey Clark, Evening Standard
25 April 2005
HAVE we seen the top of the market in City speculators' favourite Biofuels, the company that plans to build Europe's biggest plant for making diesel from vegetable oils on Teesside?


The shares slid 4p to 227p after hedge fund Toscafield, its biggest independent shareholder, sold its entire 6.66m shares, almost 15% of the firm. Toscafield is the vehicle of Martin 'Rottweiler' Hughes, who walks away from Biofuels with a big profit.


He has watched as the shares raced up from 66p shortly after floating last summer to a peak of 302p last month. It is not known what price Hughes sold at or to whom. He topped up his holding last month with a parcel of shares at 230p each.

http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/investing-and-markets/tips-and-tactics/article.html?in_article_id=399992&in_page_id=23&ct=5

wilby

gallick - 29 Apr 2005 11:41 - 229 of 1184

Ouch 20% down - rather nasty, glad I dumped mine some time ago.

As usual, an over-reaction from the market I suspect. Buying opportunity?

Stan - 29 Apr 2005 11:47 - 230 of 1184

Buying opp.?..maybe, but let the dust settle 1st I reckon.

wilbs - 29 Apr 2005 11:53 - 231 of 1184

Next support level at 140p?? We will see if it breaks that or can stay above it. I guess it depends if buyers are convinced in the company and what news will be released next. I got out on Monday but will get back in when it settles.
wilbs

stockdog - 29 Apr 2005 12:18 - 232 of 1184

No one has mentioned this mornings RNS which accounts for a fragile market looking for victims picking on BFC. It's not really such bad news, but see waht negative news can do in a jittery market.





RNS Number:7057L
Biofuels Corporation PLC
29 April 2005



29 April 2005

Biofuels Corporate plc
Project Update

Biofuels Corporation plc ("Biofuels"), which is building one of Europe's largest
Biodiesel plants, makes the following update on the Project:

Due to slower than expected contractor performance, Biofuels believes that the
biodiesel plant will now be operational approximately four weeks later than
previously anticipated, in August 2005. Despite this, Biofuels still expects
that full biodiesel production will be achieved by the end of September 2005.

Following discussions with potential customers in Germany, the Board has
determined that the attainable sales price of Biodiesel is expected to be lower
than previously predicted. Conversely, due to underlying increases in ULSD
values, UK prices are expected to be higher. The company is therefore focussing
its short term sales efforts on the UK to match anticipated production.
Progress on sales discussions in the UK is encouraging and the company is also
pursuing other European market opportunities.


Contacts
Biofuels Corporation plc Binns & Co PR Limited
Sean Sutcliffe, Chief Executive Paul McManus
Bob Green, Finance Director

Tel: 01642 345 683 Tel: 020 7153 1485
Mob: 07980 541 893

gallick - 29 Apr 2005 16:06 - 233 of 1184

Can't work out if this will bounce on Tuesday or not. 20% seems to be a bit to steep a fall based on this news.

Oh mystical Stockdog, what are the charts telling you!?

rgrds
gk

wilbs - 29 Apr 2005 16:11 - 234 of 1184

Please do tell us mystical Stockdog. Im a novice at charts. Is the last spike called a 'Head & Shoulders'? If so, what does this tell us? (and no jokes about shampoo please!!).
wilbs

stockdog - 29 Apr 2005 22:33 - 235 of 1184

I can't tell anything much from the chart, since it is still pretty undefined - not a calssical h&s - too asymmetrical. I think largely oversold in a market looking for excuses to savage the price of small caps. Any bad news accentuated into a major crisis.

Forced to guess, I'd go for a major bounce when the market in general turns its face to the sun, but too unsure to put money on it. Since it has fallen sharply through the Aug, Nov, Jan uptrend line, there is no visible means of support above 140p.

Meanwhile, I continue to hold my free ride after profits, plus thre rights issue on my orignal holding.
5% up on cost - a far cry from theose heady days of over 100%.

Anyone got any fundamental figures on this share? Since it is imminent danger of actually trading (give or take a month!) we should start to do some proper analysis here.

SD

gallick - 03 May 2005 12:37 - 236 of 1184

I am quite glad I did not go for the bounce...... since it is down over 17% today!!

Of course the same question remains today about whether this is a buying oppo!!??

rgrds
gk

Stan - 03 May 2005 16:09 - 237 of 1184

I see you've been thinking what I've been thinking gallick...to coin a phrase.

Not touching It till It stops falling, and might not touch It even then.
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