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TULLOW OIL--stands for too low!! (TLW)     

moneyplus - 14 Sep 2005 13:17

The CEO states Tullow sp is much too low and I bought in on the comments---todays results are excellent and I feel this one is being overlooked on here. check it out bargain hunters-I'd welcome some expert feedback!

HARRYCAT - 25 Apr 2016 09:14 - 761 of 906

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=TLW&SiRBC Capital Markets today reaffirms its outperform investment rating on Tullow Oil PLC (LON:TLW) and raised its price target to 290p (from 260p).

cynic - 28 Apr 2016 14:27 - 762 of 906

wake up you guys
despite a pretty cautious trading statement, sp is +11% today and with 15m traded - far heavier than usual

jimmy b - 28 Apr 2016 16:58 - 763 of 906

I'm well awake ,but just watched them go up over the last few weeks .

cynic - 28 Apr 2016 17:19 - 764 of 906

keep gazing in admiration then :-)

just sorry i sold the ones in my sipp a few weeks back

HARRYCAT - 03 May 2016 10:19 - 765 of 906

Goldman Sachs today downgrades its investment rating on Tullow Oil PLC (LON:TLW) to neutral (from buy) and cut its price target to 274.30p (from 305p).

mentor - 04 May 2016 22:37 - 766 of 906

Chart analysis: Oil and Tullow
By Alistair Strang | Wed, 4th May 2016 - 10:24
Tullow Oil

We last talked about Tullow (TLW) in public in March last year when we'd speculated about weakness to 268p, with secondary 79p if the share managed below such a level. Visually, it appears 115p was as close as the price intended to our 79p and, hopefully, this indicates some strength. Better still, the share has recently managed to better the blue line on the chart, which, from our perspective, totally trashes our argument for a ridiculous 79p bottom.

Don't get us wrong, we're not oozing confidence about price recovery, but the share has moved from "going down" to "not going down" territory. Additionally, gymnastics against Brent's price, which we cover below, are liable to wreak havoc against oil sector shares.

For now, we shall pretend confidence against Tullow unless it manages to close a session below 230p. This would be a bad thing, taking the share price below the blue line and into a position where negative market sentiment can produce enhanced weakness.

graph 1

But from a chart perspective alone, closure now above 280p is going to be a pretty strong signal from upward oomph toward an initial 398p. Then things get a little awkward, as there's no doubt the market shared a fascination with this price level through 2014 and 2015.

It would be daft not to again anticipate some stutters if the price is fortunate enough to experience some proper growth. As we're taking an optimistic viewpoint, we can admit our secondary above 398p is a pretty useful 590p.

Now for the caveat. If Tullow's price performs the same shenanigans as Brent Crude, it is in grave danger of breaking below "blue" again and experiencing reversal - again - to the 200s. As a result, it's probably worth keeping an eye on the price of crude in conjunction with our report.

Brent crude revisited

When we viewed Brent on 29 April, we'd added our last paragraph simply due to the risks when a big trend is broken. We're quite serious when we warn things generally need a couple of days to define what's coming and Brent, perhaps unfortunately, has shown the benefit of experience. The product, indeed, was forced below the trend, quite accurately, rather spoiling our hopes for $49 initially with secondary $55.

Of course, our second problem is that we now need to wait a day or two to again try and figure out what the market intends. We received a semi-funny email, questioning if:

"Some bloke in London got back from the holiday weekend, saw what had happened to Brent crude and said 'nope'. Then he gapped the price back below the trend."

It would certainly explain a few things if this level of paranoia were true, but, realistically, all that happened is the price was slowed down. If any reversal actually has strength, near-term below $44.6 is supposed to find an initial $42.85 with secondary, if broken, at $41.1.

If triggered, the price must exceed $47.15 to scupper the drop potentials, so there's the stop-loss point. The bigger story comes if the drop targets are broken because, once again, Brent is in dangerous territory and $37.3 looks viable, as does the secondary at a longer term $29.4.

graph 2

hlyeo98 - 09 May 2016 15:47 - 767 of 906

I feel TLW is too expensive at 230p now

HARRYCAT - 09 May 2016 18:33 - 768 of 906

Barclays Capital today reaffirms its overweight investment rating on Tullow Oil PLC (LON:TLW) and raised its price target to 300p (from 280p).

HARRYCAT - 31 May 2016 10:11 - 769 of 906

Deutsche Bank today reaffirms its hold investment rating on Tullow Oil PLC (LON:TLW) and raised its price target to 270p (from 230p).

HARRYCAT - 10 Jun 2016 10:02 - 770 of 906

Morgan Stanley today initiates coverage of Tullow Oil PLC (LON:TLW) with a equal weight investment rating and price target of 322p.

HARRYCAT - 30 Jun 2016 08:40 - 771 of 906

StockMarketWire.com
Tullow Oil (TLW) said 2016 capital expenditure guidance remains at $1 billion with further savings being offset by additional capex associated with the Jubilee turret issue, ahead of potential insurance payments and the start of a new drilling campaign in Kenya.

PRODUCTION UPDATE
In the first half of 2016, Tullow's West Africa working interest oil production averaged 51,900 bopd.

This is below previous guidance due to lower production from the Jubilee field in Ghana, following issues with the FPSO turret identified in February.

This resulted in an extended shut down period in April while new offtake procedures were implemented to enable the Jubilee field to restart in early May.

Production has gradually been ramped up since then, with gross production in June averaging around 90,000 bopd.

The Group expects to continue producing from Jubilee at similar levels through the remainder of 2016 with the exception of short periods of reduced production to commence work on the long-term turret solution.

As a result, Jubilee gross average production in the second half of 2016 is expected to be around 85,000 bopd (net: 30,200 bopd).

Tullow therefore expects average gross production for the Jubilee field in 2016 to be around 74,000 bopd (net: 26,300 bopd).

As a consequence, Tullow's West Africa oil production guidance range is revised to 62-68,000 bopd net.

Tullow however has a comprehensive package of insurances in place which includes Business Interruption insurance which covers consequent loss of production and revenue from Jubilee.

In Europe, working interest gas production for the first half of 2016 was above expectations averaging 6,800 boepd. Full year guidance has been revised to 6-7,000 boepd.

HARRYCAT - 06 Jul 2016 12:19 - 772 of 906

Investors don't seem too impressed with this.....down 15%.
"StockMarketWire.com
Tullow Oil confirms the launch of an offering of $300m of Convertible Bonds due 2021.

The proposed Convertible Bond Offering will further diversify Tullow Oil's sources of funding and the proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes and to fund capital investment in the Group's assets in West and East Africa.

CFO Ian Springett commented:
"The proposed Convertible Bond issue will further diversify Tullow Oil's sources of funding and give the company access to a new investor base.

"As per our most recent trading statement, our focus will continue to be on strengthening the balance sheet and deleveraging the business."

HARRYCAT - 07 Jul 2016 13:13 - 773 of 906

StockMarketWire.com
Tullow Oil says Tullow Oil Norge AS has completed drilling of the exploration well 16/5-6 on the Rome prospect in production licence PL776 in the Central North Sea. The well did not encounter any hydrocarbons and will now be plugged and abandoned.

The well was drilled to a total vertical depth of 2,319 metres below sea level by the semi-submersible Borgland Dolphin rig in a water depth of 98 metres.

Tullow Oil Norge AS has a 40% operated interest in licence PL776 with Concedo, Wintershall and Petoro each holding 20%.

HARRYCAT - 08 Jul 2016 08:02 - 774 of 906

Goldman Sachs today upgrades its investment rating on Tullow Oil PLC (LON:TLW) to buy (from neutral) and set its price target at 270.90p.

HARRYCAT - 11 Jul 2016 11:04 - 775 of 906

Morgan Stanley today reaffirms its equal weight investment rating on Tullow Oil PLC (LON:TLW) and cut its price target to 312p (from 322p).

mentor - 11 Jul 2016 23:13 - 776 of 906

Why I expect Tullow Oil (LSE:TLW) to keep collapsing! - By Motley Fool | Mon, 11th July 2016 - 07:20

Shares in Tullow Oil (LSE:TLW) have fallen 19% during the past week, and I believe fresh weakness could be just around the corner. As if Brent's slide from the $50-per-barrel marker wasn't bad enough, a disappointing set of releases during the past week has tested investor patience still further.

Tullow started the ball rolling by advising that production problems in Africa will drive regional full-year output to 62,000-68,000 barrels per day for 2016. This is a significant markdown from the previous 73,000-80,000 barrels estimate.

And it worried the market this week after launching a $300m convertible bond auction to bolster its balance sheet. This is the latest step Tullow Oil has taken to mitigate weak oil values -- the company's debt ballooned to $4.5bn as of April, up from $4bn at the start of the year.

Even though Tullow's TEN project is expected to produce maiden oil any time now, the probability of sustained crude weakness is likely to keep the company under severe pressure, in my opinion.

And a huge forward P/E rating of 78.7 times leaves plenty of scope for further share price weakness, in my opinion.

HARRYCAT - 28 Jul 2016 08:35 - 777 of 906

Jefferies International today reaffirms its underperform investment rating on Tullow Oil PLC (LON:TLW) and raised its price target to 175p (from 166p).

Deutsche Bank today reaffirms its hold investment rating on Tullow Oil PLC (LON:TLW) and cut its price target to 240p (from 250p).

mentor - 09 Aug 2016 08:30 - 778 of 906

There is plenty of support for the stock this morning with a rise of over 6% and volume despite the oil price being lower.

Has been left behind after recent bad news

Chart.aspx?Provider=Intra&Code=TLW&Size=

hlyeo98 - 09 Aug 2016 08:39 - 779 of 906

Oil is due to begin flowing from the Tweneboa-Enyenra-Ntomme deepwater project in August and the first customer will be Royal Dutch Shell, which is due to ship 650,000 barrels from the field at the end of August.

The start of operations in the Ten field, 45km off the coast of Ghana, will mark a turning point for the UK-based Tullow, which has pressed ahead with the $4bn project in the teeth of falling oil prices and rising debts. The company launched a $300m convertible bond offering this month to increase financial headroom.

Net production from Ten is expected to be 80,000 barrels per day once it reaches full capacity around the end of this year, representing a 60 per cent increase in Tullow’s output.

The project was conceived during the boom era of $100-a-barrel oil and Mr Heavey admitted it would have been much harder to get off the ground today, with prices at around $45 a barrel. But with most of the capital expenditure out of the way, he said, Tullow would now reap the benefits of a large and productive field with expected operating costs of $8-9 a barrel — about half the level of mature UK fields.

“We’ve now got a business fit for the new oil price environment,” Mr Heavey added.

Shares in Tullow have fallen by 86 per cent since 2012 but they spiked by almost 6 per cent on Wednesday to 210.5p as the positive progress report on the Ten field was accompanied by stronger interim results than expected.

The Africa-focused company reported a net profit of $30m in the six months to June 30, compared with a $68m loss in the same period last year, and much better than analysts’ consensus forecast for a $196m loss. The positive results were aided by aggressive cost-cuts and came in spite of a shutdown at Tullow’s Jubilee oilfield in Ghana in April.

Al Stanton, analyst at RBC Capital, said: “Tullow is turning a corner, albeit with a few bumps on the way, but the share price drop below 200p has provided investors with an opportunity to buy stock in a portfolio that includes sizeable stakes in world-class projects.”

cynic - 09 Aug 2016 08:50 - 780 of 906

i followed this one faithfully for many years and got my fingers burned ultimately
however, i have always kept it on my watchlist and it's certainly time it came right once more, though it may be some time yet
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