pthwaite
- 20 Sep 2004 10:27
CEY is a gold mining company operating in Egypt. It was ordered by the Egyptian Government to stop drilling pending a legal dispute brought against the company by a government minister.
Since then, the whole Government cabinet was replaced a few months ago and the minister now in charge of Mining is believed to be positive on Western investment in the country. CEY are pushing for this minister to allow them to continue drilling ASAP; investers are waiting....patiently.
As soon as the company gets the go-ahead to continue drilling, the share price will move north; CEY has plenty of gold in this mine and it is (apparantly) the case of "raking" it out rather than drilling for it!
Check them out...worthy of a punt.
required field
- 27 Jan 2011 09:08
- 546 of 2354
Thanks skinny...really cheered me up...
HARRYCAT
- 27 Jan 2011 09:08
- 547 of 2354
100p looks possible.
required field
- 27 Jan 2011 09:10
- 548 of 2354
agghhhh....I hope not...
beebusy
- 27 Jan 2011 09:14
- 549 of 2354
never thought I would visit Centamin again but at this rate its looking like a possibility
required field
- 27 Jan 2011 09:20
- 550 of 2354
To me ...it's almost a screaming buy now.....
required field
- 27 Jan 2011 09:32
- 551 of 2354
Bought some for my isa at 145p....thought that was good...not looking such a great buy now....If Cynic is in this and HOIL...he will not be pleased....
hlyeo98
- 27 Jan 2011 09:35
- 552 of 2354
It is a good buy once all this politics settle... as there is nothing wrong with CEY.
hlyeo98
- 27 Jan 2011 10:01
- 553 of 2354
This has got to be a good buy at 128p now... oversold.
cynic
- 27 Jan 2011 10:18
- 554 of 2354
i think (hope!) i agree with you for a change, though i don't like that sp has fallen solidly through 140 ..... until the elections are out of the way in egypt, i don't think there's any hurry to buy ..... i suspect all the ranting and raving will be shown to be a storm in a teacup, quite possibly fomented by the fundamentalists who have many adherents there
halifax
- 27 Jan 2011 10:25
- 555 of 2354
cynic or mubarak decides to check his swiss bank account early.
cynic
- 27 Jan 2011 10:56
- 556 of 2354
other than uk i only have one in bahrain, and that's 100% legit!
skinny
- 27 Jan 2011 11:17
- 557 of 2354
I can't hear the fat lady ! -
Yemen protests: Thousands call on president to leave
Thousands of Yemenis are demonstrating in the capital Sanaa, calling on Ali Abdullah Saleh, president for more than 30 years, to step down.
This comes after mass protests in Egypt and a popular uprising in Tunisia that ousted its long-time leader.
HARRYCAT
- 27 Jan 2011 12:13
- 558 of 2354
From FT today:
"Risk premia to remain higher for some time; longer-term story still compelling.
Egypt in the headlines. Global emerging market Investors have re-focused on Egypt in recent days as the market has sharply underperformed the rest of EM. Recent market weakness has occurred following widespread protests, coming in the wake of dramatic political changes in Tunisia earlier this month.
Political uncertainty has risen. The NDP now appears likely to select a new candidate for presidential elections later this year. However in the wake of Tunisian unrest, investors are likely to demand a higher risk premium on their investments across the North Africa region
Political unrest does not necessarily equal equity rout. In four cases of severe political unrest in EM of recent years (Pakistan '99, Venezuela '02, Thailand '06 and Thailand '10), equity markets were surprisingly resilient.
Equity market not yet dramatically cheap. Despite lagging last year and early this year, Egypt does not look sufficiently cheap within CEEMEA to make for a compelling overweight case at this juncture. However given recent declines, it is probably late to sell aggressively: we would be neutral in Egypt within CEEMEA.
Longer term, Egypt continues to screen well. Longer-term, we view Egypt as an attractive market that scores well in terms of GDP growth, banking liquidity, demographics and valuations. Barring a highly disruptive political outcome, we particularly like Talaat Moustafa, Ezz Steel and the telecoms sector."
aldwickk
- 27 Jan 2011 12:30
- 559 of 2354
What about the gold mining sector . Minesite thinks the Lex column writer is a tosser as far as gold is concerned.
cynic
- 27 Jan 2011 12:50
- 560 of 2354
as i wrote a few weeks ago, i think bullion per se may well have run out of puff, and i now see that reiterated in the press .... i'm hardly prescient, for after all, gold had a phenomenal run during 2010
that said, it does not necessarily mean that ALL gold mining stocks will tumble ..... i am still of the opinion that once the nonsenses in egypt - and now of course that hotbed of fundamentalists in yemen - has died down, as assuredly it will, then a recovery here would (i hope) be very much on the cards
TANKER
- 27 Jan 2011 12:56
- 561 of 2354
I did tell you under 100p on way.
HARRYCAT
- 27 Jan 2011 12:58
- 562 of 2354
.
cynic
- 27 Jan 2011 13:32
- 563 of 2354
so Mr Tanker, did you short them?
skinny
- 27 Jan 2011 15:12
- 564 of 2354
This is about an hour old -
Egypt's stock market temporarily suspended
CAIRO, Jan. 27 (Xinhua) -- Egypt's stock market EGX 30 closes down at 10.52 percent drop, the second biggest decline in Egypt's exchange history.
Trading resumed on Egypt's stock marked after a 30 minutes suspension early Thursday, however upon resuming a sharper drop took place.
The broader EGX 70 dropped by 15.42 percent.
The Egyptian stock exchange is suffering broad declines due to fear over the ongoing demonstrations inspired by the Tunisian popular protests, asking the oust of the Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
midknight
- 27 Jan 2011 15:43
- 565 of 2354
Telegraph latest: Questor share tip: Strife presents buying opportunity at Centamin Egypt
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/markets/questor/8285951/Questor-share-tip-Strife-presents-buying-opportunity-at-Centamin-Egypt.html