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STERLING ENERGY big buyers about... (SEY)     

proptrade - 14 Jun 2004 11:58

anyone got any ideas about the block trades that went through today?

website: http://www.sterlingenergyplc.com/

graph.php?movingAverageString=%2C50%2C20

weather: www.nhc.noaa.gov/refresh/graphics_at4+shtml/084938.shtml?50wind120

daves dazzlers - 22 Mar 2005 13:16 - 3621 of 7811

You know i love to leger.

mickeyskint - 22 Mar 2005 13:30 - 3622 of 7811

For those of you looking for that little gem that's going to make you rich. Well read this taken from Shares. "We worry that the winds of good fortune are blowing so strong for the oil exploration companies that even the turkeys may get off the ground. The critical, time-comsuming challenge for the investors is to differentiate between the turkeys and the exploration minnows with real assets and upside potential".
There are a few being pushed on the boards at the moment, so DYOR. Want my advice, you won't get any better than SEY.
And remember where there is oil there is gas and lots of it. The LNG industry is going to be huge. Shell are making a massive investment in a new plant in Qatar. Tankers are being ordered and built, and on shore storage sites being constructed. This will be the next oil. So look at HMY and STAR.

MS

hightech - 22 Mar 2005 15:24 - 3623 of 7811

DNX has started to fly.

stockdog - 22 Mar 2005 15:26 - 3624 of 7811

MS - also look at BG. - not only big in LNG, but a possible takeover target from one of the majors, so I read.

SD

Fundamentalist - 22 Mar 2005 15:28 - 3625 of 7811

hightech - nice breakout on DNX, i bought another lump at 510p and now way overexposed - should be a nice run up to results and hopefully a re-rate afterwards

sorry for o/t guys

hightech - 22 Mar 2005 15:42 - 3626 of 7811

stockdog,
What about ISYS. Isn't it in LNG industry?

stockdog - 22 Mar 2005 15:54 - 3627 of 7811

don't know ISYS

StarFrog - 22 Mar 2005 15:58 - 3628 of 7811

ISYS (Invensys) is an electronic equipment fabricator. Don't think that they have anything to do with LNG.

And why all the sells on SEY today. Somebody not saying something?

mickeyskint - 22 Mar 2005 16:21 - 3629 of 7811

BG's been on the radar screen of one of the major oils for a while. Would be a good move.

MS

proptrade - 22 Mar 2005 16:51 - 3630 of 7811

Sterling Energy PLC
22 March 2005


Sterling Energy plc

Re: Directorate


Sterling Energy plc announces the resignation with immediate effect of Alan
Levison as a non-executive director following his acceptance of a senior
executive position with another oil company.

mickeyskint - 22 Mar 2005 17:03 - 3631 of 7811

Is this a problem?

MS

seawallwalker - 22 Mar 2005 18:10 - 3632 of 7811

From the extraordinary general meeting of the Company to be held on
18 November 2004

Chairmans Statement

I am pleased to report significant progress during 2004 which bodes well for the future of Sterling.
The first half of the year has also been a period of significant consolidation for the Company following
the acquisitions of Fusion and the Osprey assets. I am delighted to say that the management teams
have integrated well and work on all the assets is proceeding smoothly this is no small achievement
when one considers the impressive pace of growth that has been maintained. I am also happy to
announce that Alan Levison, who has considerable high-level experience in the energy sector and in
African affairs, has agreed to join the Board as an independent non-executive director.

http://www.sterlingenergyuk.com/common/downloads/ProposedPlacingofNewOrdinarySharesandInvestmentinMauritania.pdf

He like most people has to take his chances to improve himself just like any others.

FWIW Harry Wilson was on the board of PET before becoming CEO of Sterling. He only lasted a few months there at PET, from what I recall.

http://www.sterlingenergy.co.uk/ourCompany/mgmtStructure.asp

Levison has disappeared from the management pictures already if he was ever put in the gallery on the new look site of course!

gavdfc - 22 Mar 2005 20:35 - 3633 of 7811

Evening all, nice to see some good posts here today. As to Levison leaving, I don't think its a majorly negative point. Since he wasn't even on the board that long, did he actually do anything for us? Nice post SWW and as you say, his picture is gone and I don't know if it was ever there in the first place.

From reading the RNS, there is none of the usual "the board of Sterling wish him all the best" Sounds to me like it is no great loss. Now if Harry was to leave, then that would indeed make me re-think my position.

gavdfc - 22 Mar 2005 21:23 - 3634 of 7811

More activity in the GOM, this time from Woodside:

Australian oil and gas company Woodside Petroleum Ltd. (WPL.AU) expects to start pumping gas from its 50%-owned Midway prospect in the middle of this year, marking the company's first production in the Gulf of Mexico.

Woodside and its 50% joint venture partner and project operator Pioneer Natural
Resources USA Inc. reported successful completion of testing at Midway and now expect to tieback the well to an existing nearby platform.

"Midway carries a resource number of about two billion cubic feet, which is tiny in our terms," a Woodside spokesman told Dow Jones Newswires.

"But the Gulf of Mexico has platforms everywhere so you don't have much upfront capex to produce. You just put a hole in and tie it in with (existing infrastructure). So returns are much quicker - smaller, but much easier," he said.


http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?a_id=21231


seawallwalker - 22 Mar 2005 22:06 - 3635 of 7811

Time for an aggresive takeover in the Gulf............

I will lend Sterling 50 for the fighting fund to target Woodside before BG. get them and Hardman.

(Well I can dream..............)

gavdfc - 23 Mar 2005 11:32 - 3636 of 7811

OIlbarrel article today:

23.03.2005
Sterling Energy Agrees Farm-Out Terms To Trigger Progress On The Heavy Oil Dome Flore Project
Sterling Energy hopes to unlock the previously dormant value of its 800 million barrel Dome Flore heavy oil deposit in the AGC area that straddles the offshore boundary between Senegal and Guinea Bissau in West Africa. The London-quoted company has signed a farm-out deal with private Malaysian firm Markmore Energy, which, in return for a 55 per cent stake and operatorship of the licence, will fund a feasibility study of the Dome Flore project, examine the prospectivity of the rest of the licence and possibly fund an exploration well next year, the success of which would trigger an exploration bonus for the British oil company.

Sterling will retain a 30 per cent stake in the licence with state-owned LEntreprise AGC holding the final 15 per cent.

Without incurring any costs, we benefit from a residual 30 per cent interest in the significant potential of this permit, said Sterlings chief executive Harry Wilson. With current oil prices and recent advances in technology, heavy oil deposits such as Dome Flore start to look very interesting commercially.

The licence has had a patchy exploration history. There has been 3D seismic work over Dome Flore and Dome Gea as well as the drilling of 13 holes. Most of these were shallow tests, drilled between 1967 and 1971, which found heavy oil. There have been only two wells drilled in the last 30 years.

Sterling acquired the project through its 40 million takeover of Fusion Oil & Gas but has done little with it until now. The project has been given legs by the high oil price environment: when crude tops US$50 per barrel even expensive and difficult-to-produce heavy oil projects carry an attractive margin for investors. The Markmore-funded study will employ Canadian engineering firms to assess the potential development economics and options, including the use of steam assisted gravity drainage technology which has achieved recovery rates in excess of 40 per cent in Canadas oil sands projects.

But the licence isnt a one-trick pony. In addition to the Dome Flore heavy oil, there are a number of smaller deposits of light crude oil in around 50 metres of water some 70 km offshore.

Sterling can afford to risk a little on its exploration campaign because it is backed by steady production flows from the US, where it holds a range of interests in shallow water fields and associated infrastructure in the coastal waters of Texas and Louisiana. Given the boom in US commodity prices, this is a profitable business and it funds the companys higher risk exploration in Africa. And come this time next year, the US production flows will be boosted by additional barrels from the Chinguetti oilfield offshore Mauritania, which is due onstream at a rate of 75,000 bpd in the first quarter of 2006. Sterling has stakes ranging from 3 to 6 per cent in these prolific licences in Mauritanian waters, which have yielded a string of interesting discoveries that should assure further developments down the road.

Elsewhere in Africa, Sterling holds the Ntem licence in Cameroon plus acreage offshore Guinea Bissau and Gabon. It is also active on the east coast of the continent, having signed up to explore two large exploration licences offshore northwest Madagascar. The Ambilobe and Ampasindava blocks cover 34,000 sq km of undrilled acreage that has been home to hydrocarbon shows while heavy oil deposits have been recorded onshore.

gavdfc - 24 Mar 2005 10:06 - 3637 of 7811

Anyone wanting the last Evo's note on SEY then email me.

gavdfc - 24 Mar 2005 10:31 - 3638 of 7811

Provost, got your message but you will need to send me your email address to reply to you.

Fundamentalist - 24 Mar 2005 10:42 - 3639 of 7811

Gav

thanks for the evo note

gavdfc - 24 Mar 2005 11:02 - 3640 of 7811

You're welcome Fundy.

Found this earlier and thought it worthy of posting:

"CSFB said its now assuming oil will be above 40 usd in its
models as it believes the energy commodity cycle will stay strong to the end of
the decade.
It lifted its targets across the board including on BP. The Swiss broker
upped its target on the UK major to 600 pence from 570 pence, but repeated its
'neutral' stance."

So is this the first broker to assume $40 oil over the longer term.
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