required field
- 27 Jan 2015 15:39
- 3121 of 3666
Not good I have to say....what else.....
aldwickk
- 27 Jan 2015 15:57
- 3122 of 3666
HAb
Obama during his Saudi Arabia visit has already emphasized the requirement to develop 'stronger relations' with Saudi Government to maintain greater security in the region.
That's funny if it wasn't so tragic , America and Saudi are two of the main country's who
have helped to inflame the madness that is the Middle East
jimmy b
- 27 Jan 2015 16:05
- 3123 of 3666
Not nearly as funny as Tony Blair being Peace Envoy to the middle east ,now that really was a smack in the mouth for the region .
mitzy
- 27 Jan 2015 18:03
- 3124 of 3666
Incredible down 72% on the day.
derwent
- 28 Jan 2015 01:00
- 3125 of 3666
From Prmoldoaks on another board regards Afren
I have to admit this company and its management has been incredibly complacent, and its reporting and management is unbelievable.
I am fairly well connected generally and do have some contacts on the ground and within the industry, including some of the financial institutions.
Afren's statements recently have been poorly drafted and issued without due regard to damage limitation, some would suspect a deliberate attempt to devalue the SP.
Working with the numbers on the balance sheet, the debt and forward projections we can work our own conclusions which are simply mathematical.
My synopsis yesterday is still VERY ACCURATE and the numbers into days RNS reinforces that, including $230m in cash.
Afren is like most people, they have a certain amount of cash but getting their hands on it is sometimes difficult, and takes time to extract from various sources, its easy to write it down on the balance sheet.
Afren has a large proportion of that cash in the Afren/Oriental account for the Ebok development, you may like to call this a float, each partner pays out a share at given times but always keep a float.
It has the Cash to easily pay $50m & $12m but that takes it out of its normal operating zones, could be done, but takes time and they would not really want to leave the Ebok float low.
So alternatives are to delay payments and restructure if possible.
The cash flow required now is due to the increase in capex to bring more wells on line and that in tern will increase cashflow and ramp up production.
Afren are now cutting discretionary capex and will delay non producing asset expenditure, Barda Rash is an example of this.
(However Barder Rush have now completed the BR5 well and is testing so I believe and my contacts suggest the results here are better than thought so maybe some positive news flow from that afterall, remember Afren still has a 20% share of Hunt oils Kurdistan Asset that have recently committed to more production wells so I'm told)
I think the key here now is the restructure of debt, if this can be done, and probably through the addition of an increased loan facility or 3rd party farm in, Afren could ramp up production to pay back this facility fairly quickly given the major Tax breaks Afren currently receives.
Remember this effects Oriental Energy big time so its not just Afren piling on the pressure to bond holders, bankers etc.
The sp is ridiculous and if a refinancing deal can be struck (just the same as Enquest) things could turn very quickly.
Our saviour will be either a decent bid from Seplat or a supportive restructure short term, remember other debt is serviceable by the hedged oil.
There are some positives to hang onto, and I don't think this is a dead dog yet.
And don't count out Nigerian Bank funding coming in ;-)
The £1.20 price spouted was a generalisation amongst institutional investors what they consider to be an acceptable bid prior to the Kurdistan news.
DYOR as we always say, But Afren's Assets and production upgrades are not worth didly squat not to mention cashflow, they can get out of this with a little help from thier friends and a good CEO
deltazero
- 28 Jan 2015 07:30
- 3126 of 3666
tuppence?
http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/markets/article-2929140/Afren-heading-judgement-day-investors-weigh-200m-cash-call.html
jimmy b
- 28 Jan 2015 08:05
- 3128 of 3666
28 Jan Westhouse... 2.00 Sell
27 Jan Westhouse... 90.00 Neutral
----------------
How clever are these brokers !
HARRYCAT
- 28 Jan 2015 08:37
- 3131 of 3666
In freefall.......upwards!
HARRYCAT
- 28 Jan 2015 09:51
- 3134 of 3666
No offense intended Mitzy! Just thought I would beat you to it!
required field
- 28 Jan 2015 11:21
- 3136 of 3666
yes...but why..... am I ...choking....
cynic
- 28 Jan 2015 11:24
- 3137 of 3666
easy to know why ..... the nimble bears darting in and out
deltazero
- 28 Jan 2015 13:01
- 3138 of 3666
another disposal
http://www.investegate.co.uk/afren-plc--afr-/rns/tr-1--notification-of-major-interest-in-shares/201501281255123926D/
this morning was just to let iis out ;
jimmy b
- 28 Jan 2015 13:11
- 3139 of 3666
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/markets/article-2929140/Afren-heading-judgement-day-investors-weigh-200m-cash-call.html
deltazero
- 28 Jan 2015 13:12
- 3140 of 3666
LONDON (ShareCast) - Broker Westhouse Securities has cut Afren from 'neutral' to 'sell' and slashed its target price from 90p to just 2p, saying that the risk of owning shares in the struggling oil producer is too high.
Afren has had a tough past 12 months: it dismissed a number of top executives due to unauthorised payments and has faced operational issues, whilst contending with the recent collapse in crude prices.
Investors are also having to deal with the uncertainty surrounding a potential takeover offer from Nigerian firm Seplat, with a firm approach having not yet been made.
What's more, Afren's share price plummeted on Tuesday after the company said it needs funding in excess of its market capitalisation and wants to defer payments due on its debt to resolve liquidity problems.
Westhouse said: "We downgraded Afren to 'neutral' in September after the suspension of the chief executive, chief operating officer and two associate directors and flagged the risks of owning Afren in its current state.
"Since then, the company has continued to disappoint the market - operational delays, the downgrade of Barda Rash reserves and resources and now the inability to service its debt."
The broker said that, on its current estimates, Afren will breach its financial covenants with its banks this year if capital expenditure levels are maintained.
"It all hinges upon successful debt re-negotiation and a potential equity raise means a material dilution to current shareholders," Westhouse said.
Afren was trading 19% higher at 5.95p by 12:00 on Wednesday after a heavy drop the previous session.