cynic
- 31 Jul 2006 16:46
On 3rd July PFC announced that it was trading well ahead of expectations. Not surprisingly, sp jumped but has now fallen back pretty much to the same level as before the announcement.
While perhaps not as exciting as finding the next Cairn, remember that in the goldrush days, it was rarely the prospectors who made the money, but rather the suppliers of the spades and tents and stuff - e.g. Levis if memory serves me aright.
cynic
- 09 Feb 2017 11:20
- 694 of 839
it's one of the best in its sector
only question is whether or not it is a good sector to be in ...... probably is my view
Stan
- 09 Feb 2017 12:03
- 695 of 839
PFC Certainly worth staying clear after March over the last 5 yrs according to their chart.
cynic
- 09 Feb 2017 13:43
- 696 of 839
need to check, but i'ld guess that is immediately following their figures, regardless of how good they look
HARRYCAT
- 09 Feb 2017 14:17
- 697 of 839

Do you guys not think that there is a little more downside to come? I suppose it's pretty much impossible to buy at the absolute bottom, but would be tempted to wait a little longer to see if the 200 DMA is broken, which historically does happen on a regular basis.
cynic
- 09 Feb 2017 14:36
- 698 of 839
it's not in buying "wallet" at the moment, so had not really thought about it
to some extent, i guess sp moves parallel to crude (brent in saudi), so a view in that respect needs to be considered
Stan
- 20 Feb 2017 14:12
- 699 of 839
Anyone want to buy my shares before their results this week? -)0
cynic
- 20 Feb 2017 14:29
- 700 of 839
it's nearly always cheaper to buy these just after the results .... bit like DOM
Stan
- 20 Feb 2017 14:48
- 701 of 839
Never like holding on results day now with any company, Oh well.
Stan
- 22 Feb 2017 08:40
- 702 of 839
Up over 3% so happy with that I'm out.
Stan
- 23 Mar 2017 09:06
- 703 of 839
Stan
- 24 Mar 2017 16:29
- 704 of 839
Deutscher Bank go below notable interest.
mentor
- 28 Mar 2017 11:58
- 705 of 839
Petrofac Handed USD1.30 Billion Project From Kuwait Oil Company
LONDON (Alliance News) - Oil services provider Petrofac Ltd on Tuesday said it has been handed a contract to conduct a lump-sum engineering, procurement and construction project valued at USD1.30 billion for Kuwait Oil Co's gathering centre project in the Burgan oilfield.
Petrofac shares were up 1.9% at 916.25 pence per share on Tuesday.
Petrofac said the gathering centre project, named GC 32, is in the south-east of Kuwait.
"The lump-sum engineering, procurement and construction project, valued at approximately USD1.30 billion, is the first sour gathering centre to be developed in the field and will process crude oil and associated gas recovered from the Arifjan, Marat, Minagish Oolite and Burgan Wara high hydrogen sulphide fields," said the company.
Work will begin shortly and is scheduled to be completed in mid 2020. The scope of work for GC 32 includes greenfield activities with tie-in works to existing brownfield infrastructure, and will have the capacity to produce around 120,000 barrels of oil per day together with associated water, gas and condensate.
"Kuwait is one of our core markets in the Middle East and we have been executing projects in the country since the early 1980's. We are proud to continue our association with KOC and look forward to working closely with them to deliver the project," said Chief Operating Officer Marwan Chedid.
cynic
- 28 Mar 2017 13:02
- 706 of 839
thanks for the reminder ....need to start following this one again with rather more attention
chart looks encouraging
Stan
- 03 May 2017 11:33
- 707 of 839
hlyeo98
- 12 May 2017 15:05
- 708 of 839
Petrofac has confirmed that the Serious Fraud Office has commenced an investigation into the Company and its subsidiaries.
The Company believes that this is in connection with the investigation into Unaoil.
It added:
"As previously disclosed, Petrofac engaged Unaoil, a Monaco based company, for the provision of local consultancy services primarily in Kazakhstan between 2002 and 2009. The Company is cooperating with the authorities. Ayman Asfari, Chief Executive Officer, and Marwan Chedid, Chief Operating Officer, have been questioned under caution by the SFO."
Stan
- 12 May 2017 16:08
- 709 of 839
Wow down nearly 15%!
Stan
- 12 May 2017 17:17
- 710 of 839
Deutscher Bank go below 5%.
cynic
- 12 May 2017 17:21
- 711 of 839
that must have given DB a nasty loss over just 10 days
Stan
- 15 May 2017 09:37
- 712 of 839
DB go above 5%... this is getting monotonous );-
HARRYCAT
- 15 May 2017 12:16
- 713 of 839
UBS comment today:
"On Friday, UK's Serious Fraud Office (SFO) announced it launched an investigation into Petrofac for bribery, corruption and money laundering related to the SFO's investigation of Unaoil. Unaoil is a Monaco-based firm - in spring 2016, there were media reports alleging numerous multinational companies had used Unaoil to make illegal payments to secure work. In August 2016, Petrofac announced that its own independent investigation found no evidence confirming the payment of bribes. It also confirmed that no evidence was found that any Director was aware of the alleged misconduct. Petrofac shared its findings of the investigation with the SFO and other relevant authorities. At the time, Petrofac confirmed that it engaged Unaoil for the provision of local consultancy services primarily in Kazakhstan between 2002 and 2009. The findings of the investigation were also published in its 2016 annual report. Petrofac said it is cooperating with authorities.
Although Petrofac's previous involvement with Unaoil was already in the public domain prior to the SFO's announcement, nonetheless the announcement triggered risk aversion and Petrofac shares traded down sharply, wiping out ~£400m ($500m) of market cap. To put this into context - we estimate that the single largest contract in Kazakhstan for Petrofac was for the provision of process facilities for the Kashagan project, awarded back in August 2004. Although not disclosed, we estimated at the time the contract value was in the range of $400-500m. Subsequently, there were numerous contracts in Kazakhstan for front end engineering and design and project management work. In 2008 and 2009, Petrofac disclosed revenues in Kazakhstan were $200m and $184m, respectively, accounting for ~5% of group revenue (revenues less than 2007 were included in the CIS region). From 2010 onwards, the revenues in Kazakstan were not sufficiently material for separate disclosure.
Our experience tells us that these legal matters take a long time to resolve and the potential financial impact is almost impossible to estimate from the outside as all parties are reluctant to discuss details. There could be a rebound in the shares as investors shift their focus more to improving order intake, cashflow generation and reducing capital intensity."