goldfinger
- 27 May 2004 10:47
Yes an engineer but lets call it a TECH Engineer. Compressed air technology is its main business, develops industrial air compressors and Gas seals and whats more it provides them for the OIL and GAS industry.
Very close to commercialisation now with its compressors and seals and todays deal ( see below ) should bring that very close.
Charges upfront payments, continuing royalties and development contracts so revenues are not lumpy.
It as a market cap circa off the top of my head 20 million(hope my calculator is now working) and as circa of 5 million cash on the books, very nice.
Some very big names as customers.
Heres todays announcement...........
Corac Group Plc
26 May 2004
For Immediate Release 26 May 2004
Corac Group plc ('Corac')
Joint Industry Programme for Downhole Gas Compression
Corac, the intellectual property and licensing company specialising in
compressor technology, is pleased to announce the signature today of a Joint
Industry Programme ('JIP') for the development of its unique, patented downhole
gas compression technology.
Following the recent successful completion of a Shell funded feasibility study
which evaluated both the technical and economic viability of the technology,
considerable industry interest has been generated, culminating in the addition
of a further four major international oil and gas operators to the project.
The participants of the JIP comprise ConocoPhillips, ENI, Husky Energy,
Repsol-YPF as well as Shell, all of whom have gas assets worldwide which they
believe could benefit from this game changing technology. As well as covering
the development costs for the next phase, the participants will also make
substantial resource available to ensure the final product specification meets
the requirements of the industry.
Corac's downhole gas compression concept involves the coupling together of a
number of axial compressor modules in a single compression train for
installation in the well bore in close proximity to a gas reservoir. In this
location, a modest uplift in pressure results in a very significant increase in
gas production compared with conventional methods using surface compression,
thereby accelerating gas production and cash flow from a producing asset.
Potential production rate enhancement of up to 40% has been demonstrated through
the application of downhole gas compression during a number of gas field case
studies carried out over recent months.
Placing the compressor downhole could also have the effect of being able to
lower the reservoir abandonment pressure which in turn would materially increase
the ultimate recovery from a gas field, thereby further enhancing the economic
benefit from the installation of this novel application of existing technology.
Phase 1 of the JIP is scheduled for completion by the end of 2004, with further
engineering and development work leading to the manufacture and testing of a
prototype downhole in a producing gas well within the following two years.
Commenting on the JIP, Professor Gerry Musgrave, Chairman, said:
'The support from such eminent oil and gas companies vindicates Corac's
development to date of the downhole gas compression project and gives the Group
another product line to bring to the market using its core technologies. It is
the start of a major business development opportunity which is expected to have
significant international ramifications throughout the upstream natural gas
industry.'ENDS.
Although loss making at the moment it shouldnt be very long before this one turns the corner.
Outlook
The Company has a loyal, talented workforce dedicated to the innovation and
exploitation of the technology. Successful trials have demonstrated the
commercial performance in Corac's industrial air compressor and its seals. The
Board is striving to deliver the right manufacturing and sales licences which
will yield the best returns in the long term.
We are confident that a number of deals, which have been subject to recent
intensive negotiation, will be successfully concluded in the near term.
Short to medium term investment, and anyone interested should DYOR and please remember you are responsible for the timing of your buying and selling actions.
cheers GF.
notlob
- 04 Feb 2008 13:10
- 299 of 743
yes, harry cat
CRA is a long term investment for me.
IPL i viewed as a quick punt, it never was an 'investment' for me, just a spread-bet to pass the time!
All my CRA shares are fully paid for!
2517GEORGE
- 04 Feb 2008 13:30
- 300 of 743
That was a b----y struggle getting back to unchanged.
2517
cynic
- 13 Feb 2008 16:17
- 301 of 743
back in again at 63 ..... had hoped for 62, but no real complaints ..... trading these has worked well enough for me, having bought back cheaper than the price at which i sold, and also making profitable use of that money while it was "spare" ..... isn't that the point of investing in shares?
2517GEORGE
- 13 Feb 2008 16:22
- 302 of 743
Absolutely, I've done the same with CRA,ROK,PDG and to a lesser degree BRR, long may the market continue to be volatile.
2517
2517GEORGE
- 13 Feb 2008 16:23
- 303 of 743
Although I'm not back in CRA or ROK yet.
2517
cynic
- 13 Feb 2008 16:24
- 304 of 743
if you want to scare yourself, and also have the time and patience and concentration to watch the markets, there is a lot of money to be made on the indices when they are this volatile
2517GEORGE
- 14 Feb 2008 10:21
- 305 of 743
Back in CRA @ 66.5p.
2517
BigTed
- 14 Feb 2008 11:06
- 306 of 743
Think this is now the run up to results, the surge couple weeks ago was probably on share tips, 60p held as i thought, fingers crossed for sensible figures and a very bullish outlook...
cynic
- 14 Feb 2008 11:27
- 307 of 743
the tiresome thing about CRA is the illiquidity and consequent frequent wide spread, typically 4/5p
BigTed
- 14 Feb 2008 11:35
- 308 of 743
I'm presuming also, that your not trading these by CFD, i agree, however this is my only long term hold and as such the spread doesn't affect me:) likewise in the event of further progress (or success) with dgc trials the illiquidity could work in my favour.
cynic
- 14 Feb 2008 11:40
- 309 of 743
of course i am, but that makes little or no difference, and of course the spread affects you as it still means sp has to move (a further) x% before you are in the money
BigTed
- 14 Feb 2008 12:06
- 310 of 743
Strange, tried to find CRA on CFD the other day and couldn't, presumed it was too small market cap, my holdings paid for in Nominee, and can usually deal well within indicated spread...
cynic
- 14 Feb 2008 12:39
- 311 of 743
IG has it .... may be that you need to ask your broker for cap is 55m which should be plenty big enough
BigTed
- 14 Feb 2008 12:53
- 312 of 743
Sorry yeh,. i meant i had found it now...
cynic
- 14 Feb 2008 13:23
- 313 of 743
by the way, CRA is an MM stock, so the spread is as indicated though one can always leave an order in with a set price
BigTed
- 18 Feb 2008 12:21
- 314 of 743
*damn*, i sold a small amount from my nominee an hour ago, when the spread was small and re-purchased into cfd (there is no way to transfer them) and it would appear i seem to have sparked off some selling... oooops!
notlob
- 18 Feb 2008 14:21
- 316 of 743
lovely chart
think they will break north of 1 in the within the next few months.
2517GEORGE
- 19 Feb 2008 09:36
- 317 of 743
Slightly bigger loss than last year, revenue down a fraction, were the results as expected or was something better envisaged?
2517
notlob
- 19 Feb 2008 09:44
- 318 of 743
at this stage, revenue and losses are really imaterial, within reason.
It is all about progress of the DGC project (and, to a lesser extent, the Industrial Air side)
The report indicates progress on DGC is excellent, everything more than on track and I fully expect the sp to resume its upward path, as a technology that can have such a profound effect on the gas extraction industry must be worth a lot more than 50m or so.