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Black Rock Oil purchase (BLR)     

Rutherford - 30 Mar 2004 20:18

www.blackrockoilandgasplc.co.uk
www.vsaresources.com
www.oilbarrel.com
Presentation from Thursday 6th July 06 can be seen on oilbarrel !


Monterey appraisal well suspended pending Wintershall evaluation. 1/12/06
BLR and Kappa in dispute.
BLR to meet with Kappa within next two weeks 1/12/06

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

georgetrio - 25 Sep 2006 11:45 - 710 of 1049

What can happen if it gets right in the north sea? Oh yes can be very interesting. i will behave like a hunting cat. focus on the target, admire it, calm every cell in my system, keep the spot on, wait, wait, wait, till in one single leap catch my target. Not easy though. the joy of a hunting cat. patience can pay big. best luck.

rpaco - 25 Sep 2006 14:25 - 711 of 1049

Well after buys of almost 3M since 08:11 this morning the price has shot up from 1.14 to err, umm 1.4!!! with only 8 sell transactions the price is obviously being held down artificially.

skyhigh - 25 Sep 2006 15:38 - 712 of 1049

Yes, grim isn't it !....

Can't help thinking that it's a good time to top up but...I've done that on 4 ocassions and every time it's fallen further! so I'm not going to buy any more and just hope the sp rises over the next couple of months!

rpaco - 26 Sep 2006 15:48 - 713 of 1049

You must be one of my ilk then, whose minor purchase seems to affect markets dramatically. Here's a deal, you buy some, then after its dropped like a stone I'll but some and it will shoot back up. Mean while you can short it! knowing that my buy wil push it throughthe floor :-)

soul traders - 26 Sep 2006 16:45 - 714 of 1049

Okay, then please stay away from FEP tomorrow. :o)

smiler o - 26 Sep 2006 17:22 - 715 of 1049

SOUL T

had a look at FEP good show !! : )

rpaco - 04 Oct 2006 10:16 - 716 of 1049

Trouble is that as far as I can see from Ivan's statement, Gemini is merely acting as a bank and I simply dont believe it. Unless Gemini have a further stake in BLR proceeds from Monterey 49/8c-4 or some other part of BLR revenue, why would they put up U$4.274M? Unless maybe the rate of interest is criminally high. Perhaps this is why there are still no full details of the deal.
Come on Ivan if you read this please tell us the truth, we wont tell anyone!

soul traders - 04 Oct 2006 11:43 - 717 of 1049

Perhaps Gemini and BLR really believe they are going to produce commerical hydrocarbons.

Rutherford - 04 Oct 2006 15:53 - 718 of 1049

rpaco: Gemini fund other exploration wells for oil and gas explorers on the AIM and with similar agreements. I doubt you would have preferred another share issue so I think it was a good piece of business by Ivan. As soul trader said they must be pretty confident of finding gas!

smiler o - 04 Oct 2006 16:11 - 719 of 1049

may be of interest.

North Sea producers forced to give gas away

04 October 2006
Britain's big energy suppliers came under renewed pressure to cut bills yesterday after wholesale gas prices fell below zero, forcing North Sea producers to pay customers to take supplies off their hands.

In a highly unusual development, spot prices fell to minus 5p a therm due to a combination of weak demand and excess supply in the system, catching out a number of big producers, including BG and Shell.

This is the first time in nine years that wholesale prices have fallen below zero. But domestic gas users failed to benefit because all the free gas was snapped up by power stations and large industrial consumers. This caused prices to rebound later in the day.

The plunge in UK gas prices was caused partly by the Norwegians pumping huge amounts of gas into the UK to test the newly-opened Langeled pipeline from the Orman Lange field in the North Sea. This coincided with unusually low demand because of the warm weather.

When gas producers are pumping more gas into the system than there is demand for, they can either pay a charge to National Grid, which is responsible for balancing the system, or pay traders to take the gas off their hands. Most producers with "long positions" are thought to have done the latter because it was cheaper than paying the balancing charge.

A Centrica spokesman said that household gas consumers were unable to benefit from the price collapse because virtually all supplies for the domestic market had been bought months in advance at much higher prices. The price of wholesale gas for delivery in January was still being quoted at 74 pence a therm yesterday. However, Centrica, and a number of other operators of gas-fired power stations, did take advantage of the price fall to buy on the spot market. Large industrial customers on flexible contracts will also have benefited.

John Hemming, the Liberal Democrat MP for Birmingham Yardley who has fought a long campaign over alleged manipulation of the gas market, said: "Consumers should get a cut in their gas bills from the temporary negative prices as the shippers use their higher prices to justify putting prices up. I am not holding my breath on this though."

Wholesale gas prices have fallen by about a quarter since June because of expectations that supply will be plentiful this winter thanks to delivery projects, such as the Langeled pipe-line, and adequate stocks.

Britain's big energy suppliers came under renewed pressure to cut bills yesterday after wholesale gas prices fell below zero, forcing North Sea producers to pay customers to take supplies off their hands.

In a highly unusual development, spot prices fell to minus 5p a therm due to a combination of weak demand and excess supply in the system, catching out a number of big producers, including BG and Shell.

This is the first time in nine years that wholesale prices have fallen below zero. But domestic gas users failed to benefit because all the free gas was snapped up by power stations and large industrial consumers. This caused prices to rebound later in the day.

The plunge in UK gas prices was caused partly by the Norwegians pumping huge amounts of gas into the UK to test the newly-opened Langeled pipeline from the Orman Lange field in the North Sea. This coincided with unusually low demand because of the warm weather.

When gas producers are pumping more gas into the system than there is demand for, they can either pay a charge to National Grid, which is responsible for balancing the system, or pay traders to take the gas off their hands. Most producers with "long positions" are thought to have done the latter because it was cheaper than paying the balancing charge.
A Centrica spokesman said that household gas consumers were unable to benefit from the price collapse because virtually all supplies for the domestic market had been bought months in advance at much higher prices. The price of wholesale gas for delivery in January was still being quoted at 74 pence a therm yesterday. However, Centrica, and a number of other operators of gas-fired power stations, did take advantage of the price fall to buy on the spot market. Large industrial customers on flexible contracts will also have benefited.

John Hemming, the Liberal Democrat MP for Birmingham Yardley who has fought a long campaign over alleged manipulation of the gas market, said: "Consumers should get a cut in their gas bills from the temporary negative prices as the shippers use their higher prices to justify putting prices up. I am not holding my breath on this though."

Wholesale gas prices have fallen by about a quarter since June because of expectations that supply will be plentiful this winter thanks to delivery projects, such as the Langeled pipe-line, and adequate stocks.

georgetrio - 04 Oct 2006 16:49 - 720 of 1049

smiler
thanks for the post. no bad, at least if it comes to the point where our gas bills are seriously reduced, we can recoup some of our investments losses. on the other hand we may find some undervalued gas businesses to buy waiting for the gas price to recover again. Mad world of ups and downs. best luck

smiler o - 04 Oct 2006 16:51 - 721 of 1049

And to you georg, are you still holding FAO ??

georgetrio - 04 Oct 2006 17:00 - 722 of 1049

smiler
yes, and i will not sell any of them. after the fund, there will be consolidation in my view, oil price is falling now, so this is the best time to do all the house cleaning before next summer. I believe things will happen very fast here, i keep my eyes wide opened.

smiler o - 04 Oct 2006 17:03 - 723 of 1049

Thanks for your thoughts :)

robertalexander - 09 Oct 2006 15:34 - 724 of 1049

any news on the acre 5 appraisal?

soul traders - 09 Oct 2006 16:30 - 725 of 1049

No RNS's. Can't be bothered to check the company website as it's too soon into October for me to start panicking, and given that oilers' drilling schedules always, always, always slip, I'd rather just wake up one morning and be surprised.

smiler o - 16 Oct 2006 10:49 - 726 of 1049

steaming to start soon ?? can not be far off !!

explosive - 19 Oct 2006 19:00 - 727 of 1049

28% spread even with 1.6m buys today..... Mmmmm why the large spread, have been expecting this to firm up. Looks like the market doesn't share our BB confidence....

soul traders - 19 Oct 2006 21:35 - 728 of 1049

I agree that it sucks - but hey, on the bright side, that's 1.6m buys despite the big spread. However, it's still only about 20k-worth of stock . . . .

This will get better.

Rutherford - 19 Oct 2006 23:44 - 729 of 1049

3 weeks till we hear about Monterey and within that time scale we should have heard about steaming equipment at Arce being up and running.
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