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Rockhopper Exploration (RKH)     

markymar - 15 Aug 2005 15:14

Web Page Traffic Counter

http://www.falklands-oil.com/

http://www.rockhopperexploration.co.uk

http://www.argosresources.com/




Rockhopper was established in 2004 with a strategy to invest in and undertake an offshore oil exploration programme in the North Falkland Basin. It was floated on AIM in August 2005. Rockhopper was the first company to make a commercial oil discovery in the Falklands. Today Rockhopper is the largest acreage holder in the North Falkland Basin, with interests in the Greater Mediterranean region.




free counters

markymar - 31 Jul 2009 11:30 - 361 of 6294



CANACCORD ADAMS STARTS ROCKHOPPER EXPLORATION WITH SPECULATIVE BUY
rating, target price of 67P

cynic - 31 Jul 2009 12:00 - 362 of 6294

though that is a nice accolade - perhaps too strong a word - i would still have thought that either DES (i know you like those) or FOGL would be better, if one feels compelled to invest in falklands E&P oilies

HARRYCAT - 11 Sep 2009 08:31 - 363 of 6294

Business Financial Newswire
"Rockhopper Exploration has agreed farm-in terms with a third-party energy company for one of its licences in the Falklands.

A further announcement including proposed terms will be made once approvals are in place.

Rockhopper has also welcomed yesterday's announcement by Desire Petroleum of its intention to hire a rig for a North Falkland Basin drilling campaign.

The company says it hopes to drill a minimum of two wells on its operated acreage. "

markymar - 11 Sep 2009 08:37 - 364 of 6294


i guess you got in wrong again cynic,why dont you do one of your graphs to compare the prices.........now was it 12p i bought in at.

greekman - 11 Sep 2009 08:49 - 365 of 6294

Yet more movement from one of the Falkland Oil Crew Companies..... Rockhopper Exploration.

Now I wonder if this will end up like the bus stop syndrome. You seem to wait for ages for one to come along, then what happens, three or more come at once.

marni - 11 Sep 2009 10:45 - 366 of 6294

thats only 700% increase markymar........for this year only! cynic looks for 0.2% increase for a 1 hour holding......maybe 1 minute holding (thats 60secs and not a tiny one, lol)

cynic - 11 Sep 2009 11:03 - 367 of 6294

take the piss and be as arrogant as you like.
for myself, i have no need to try the macho bit and buy squitty blue sky shares and then crow when they happen to come good - isn't hindsight great

you all seem to go very quiet about your stinkers though, but that is no surprise

at the moment, picking winners is definitely shooting rats in barrels ..... and profits of course, are only that when banked .... you probably haven't done that either

marni - 11 Sep 2009 11:26 - 368 of 6294

this is at almost all time high! so its hardly a stinker! wake up and smell the coffee

cynic - 11 Sep 2009 11:28 - 369 of 6294

very selective reading
so you don't have any losers in your portfolio????????
and i take it you have not and will not be taking any profits here either

greekman - 12 Sep 2009 10:25 - 370 of 6294

As reiterated in todays press, the oil majors such as Shell, BP, Exxon and the like are still desperate to boost their inventories, mainly due to the fact of low oil reserves on their books, but also due to intentionally over estimating for the last fews years in order to enhance their share prices.
As the Falkland field possiblefinds are being talked about in the same volume category as the BP and Chevron recent finds in Mexico how long will it be before the minnows such as Des/Fogl/Rock and the like are taken over.
IMHO the question won't be so much if as when. Will they wait till oil is pumping in sufficient quantities and risk loosing out to a competitor that jumps first or chance getting in on the ground, IE now.
Both strategy are a risk but which once will they take.

required field - 12 Sep 2009 12:42 - 371 of 6294

A rig being available is good news for the falkland stocks but like everything else it is only when they drill and test that we will be sure of anything, look at Gulfstone : they have discovered loads of oil and there are still doubters !....all in all good progress for the falklander oilies....I'm looking to invest at some stage but there are bound to be delays with drilling and such, so testing results next summer ? July....somewhere around there perhaps a bit before....the sp's are too high for me now..will have to wait for a retracement before taking any position....and then a long wait...the problem is that at the moment there are loads of successful small oil companies out there GPX, GKP, for instance plus all the main market mid caps...all doing well so I just can't cover them all. Anyway the South Atlantic will be a hot zone from 2010 onwards for small and big investors alike !.

greekman - 13 Sep 2009 16:29 - 372 of 6294

Required field,

Agree with your comments.

Obviously there is a risk of waiting to jump in, but like you I feel there is bound to be a retracement of the sp, so imho I feel you are right to wait. The only reason I am not selling and buying back in (the only Falkland connected company I'm in is FKL) at a lower sp is due the the spread probably taking away any profit. But as you appear to be 'not yet in', obviously the spread is not yet for you a consideration. Best of luck on your timing.

Greek.

markymar - 16 Sep 2009 08:25 - 373 of 6294

http://www.oilbarrel.com/nc/news/display_news/article/north-falkland-basin-exploration-campaign-gathers-momentum-as-rockhopper-exploration-bags-a-farm-in/771.html

September 15, 2009

North Falkland Basin Exploration Campaign Gathers Momentum As Rockhopper Exploration Bags A Farm-In Partner And Desire Petroleum Secures That All-Important Rig





More than ten years after the first, and last, wells were drilled in the North Falkland Basin and the campaign to return to the islands is, at last, gaining traction. Shares in Rockhopper Exploration hit a new 52-week high last week as the company announced it had agreed farm-out terms with an unnamed energy company, a deal that should give the AIM firm the financial clout to drill at least two wells on its acreage next year.
And fellow AIM explorer Desire Petroleum also released welcome news to the market last week as it confirmed it has signed a letter of intent to hire the Ocean Guardian rig for a minimum four-well programme starting in February 2010. As long time Falklands followers will know, the chartering of a suitable rig on reasonable terms has been one of the biggest stumbling blocks to getting these remote waters drilled up, with rig mobilisation fees alone running into the many millions of dollars (earlier this year some operators in the Falklands were talking about eye-watering mobilisation fees of between US$10 million and US$50 million).


Now Desire has succeeded in signing a letter of intent with Diamond Offshore Drilling for a minimum four well programme in the North Falkland Basin. The rig, a third generation semi-submersible capable of drilling in waters 1,500 feet deep, is currently in the North Sea and will mobilise for Falkland waters in November, to reach the islands in early February 2010. Desire has options to drill a further four wells, either on its own account or for partners.

This means there are up to eight well slots for the taking in 2010. Given it has taken over ten years to get a rig back in the area, the operators in the North Falkland Basin should take full advantage of this opportunity in order to drill up this high prospective but little drilled area. Desire is already investigating fundraising options to help it make the most of the rig. We intend to explore as many play types as possible, thus maximising our chances of success, said Desires chairman Stephen Phipps, a comment that not only refers to one of the shortcomings of the 1998 drilling campaign, which tested only one play type, but also highlights the diversity of his companys prospect inventory.

Rockhopper certainly hopes to be one of the operators to take advantage of the Ocean Guardians arrival and last weeks farm-out news should ensure it has the financial clout to take up at least one well slot. Investors will now be keen to learn the identity of the anonymous energy company and to find out more about the terms of the deal: all that is known at present is that the farm-in partner has agreed to contribute, at a promote, to the costs of drilling one well on the licence and to certain back costs. Investors will want to know just what kind of investment the incoming partner will make in return for how much equity in the acreage in order to put a value on the deal. These details will also help investors crunch through the numbers to work out what kind of funding gap the AIM firm faces to drill up its acreage: Rockhopper has said it hopes to drill at least two wells using the Ocean Guardian.

Like Desire, the company has a wide range of prospects to choose from, including the Johnson structure, which is the only classified contingent resource in the Falklands. Johnson was drilled by Shell in 1998, finding 165 metres of net gas pay. When Rockhopper took over the acreage it undertook 3D seismic and extensive re-interpretation and cross-analysis with Shells findings to come up with a data set that according to a Competent Persons Report (CPR) from RPS Energy that shows recoverable contingent gas resources in the Johnson structure of 1.6 trillion cubic feet of gas, with a high estimate stretching up to 7.9 tcf. In addition to Johnson, Rockhopper also has over 20 structural oil prospects on its acreage, eight of which have been independently verified. Of these, the Sea Lion and Ernest oil prospects remain the leading candidates for drilling with prospective reserves of 170 million barrels and 156 million barrels of recoverable oil on a P50 basis, respectively.

markymar - 22 Sep 2009 12:31 - 374 of 6294

http://www.falklands.gov.fk/assembly/documents/201-09.pdf

Review of Environmental Impact Statements produced by Rockhopper Exploration PLC for offshore drilling

Another positive step in the right direction

markymar - 22 Sep 2009 12:32 - 375 of 6294

http://www.smallcapnews.co.uk/article/Rockhopper_Exploration_eyes_participation_in_2010_drilling_campaign/7675.aspx

Rockhopper Exploration eyes participation in 2010 drilling campaign


22 September 2009

Rockhopper Exploration, the oil and gas explorer working in the North Falkland Basin, today said that it had a very real prospect of taking part in a multi-well drilling campaign in 2010.

The comments by Rockhoppers chairman, Dr Pierre Jungels, came following news this months that the companys partner in the Falkland Islands, Desire Petroleum, had signed a letter of intent with a drilling contractor that should see a rig arrive by early next year.

In addition, Rockhopper recently signed its own letter of intent with a third party energy company to farm out one of its licences.

During the last year the company declared a gas discover over its acreage and said its Johnson prospect contained an estimated contingent gas resource of up to 7.9 Tcf recoverable. The two best oil prospects have been given a 23% chance of success in the companys Competent Persons Report.

markymar - 28 Sep 2009 16:38 - 376 of 6294

http://proactiveinvestors.co.uk/companies/news/8568/aim-oil-gas-explorers-mixed-frontera-resources-europa-oil-gas-and-aurelian-lead-risers-8568.html

AIM Oil & Gas Explorers Mixed, Frontera Resources, Europa Oil & Gas and Aurelian Lead Risers

markymar - 08 Oct 2009 08:05 - 377 of 6294

Falklands oil rumours swirl
By Neil Hume and Bryce Elder

Published: October 8 2009 03:00 | Last updated: October 8 2009 03:00

Desire Petroleum , up 0.2 per cent to 99p, and Rockhopper Exploration , down 4.5 per cent at 85p, were in focus yesterday amid talk that the exploration companies were attempting to raise about 100m to help finance their drilling programmes in the Falkland Islands.

Traders said Desire was looking to raise 50m via an issue of new shares at 75p a share and Rockhopper up to 50m at a price yet to be determined.

Desire recently struck a deal to take a drilling rig to the Falklands for the first time since 1998.

It is planning to drill a minimum of four wells, but has the option to drill a further four for itself or its partners, which include Rockhopper.




HARRYCAT - 08 Oct 2009 08:47 - 378 of 6294

A chance for you long term holders to take a little profit & buy some more at a lower price?

I thought DES was in bed with BLT, so a bit surprised they need more cash. Or have I got that wrong?

halifax - 08 Oct 2009 09:47 - 379 of 6294

FOGL in bed with BLT

markymar - 15 Oct 2009 13:39 - 380 of 6294

Brokers report released today by Killik & Co

Although the share prices of both Desire Petroleum and Rockhopper Exploration are back to around the highs they made in early 2008, this time around the appreciation we have seen is based upon a degree of tangible activity, given the announcement of the procurement of a rig for use in the North Falkland Basin, and not just down to an influx of speculative money as we saw last year. This now gives short term scope for potentially company-defining news-flow, given drilling is anticipated in February 2010.

Both Desire and Rockhopper have indicated their intention to raise monies to fund the drilling programme in the south Atlantic: I have always been of the view that these prospects potentially represent Mrs Thatchers final economic legacy to the nation. Given below is oil and gas consultancy Senergys best estimate of the probability of success. You may well find those odds unappealing. It should be recalled that, whilst Tullow Oil has had unprecedented success this year, with 11 out of 12 wells hitting oil, the average hit rate for prospective wells in the broader E&P industry ranges from between 3 and 10 to 1.

However, the key point to make is that I believe our clients should have the scope to benefit from the much touted better to travel than arrive adage. In the meantime Killik is likely to have the scope to buy into these stories at a material discount to the prevailing price.

On balance we are inclined to favour the outlook for Rockhopper over Desire given that:
Rockhopper has in Sea Lion and Ernest two of the three lowest risk prospects in the entire North Falkand Basin, recognised in the CPRs and detailed in the table below.
Rockhopper also has the only block with proven live moveable oil; this was originally found by Shell and is near the proposed Sea Lion drilling area that has yet to be drilled but most of the prospect has been covered by 3D seismic.
Rockhopper also has a gas discovery to exploit: this is Johnson, a discovery made in 1998, again in the former Shell license area. The exploration update of the 22nd May 2009 revealed that RPS Energy had classified the Johnson structure as a Contingent Gas Resource with a best estimate of 1.6 Trillion Cubic Feet (Tcf). These were actually the first Contingent Resources declared in the Falkland Islands area.
Rockhopper also appears to have a share in Desires initially targeted, and therefore presumably most attractive, blocks (Liz, Ann and Ninky) whilst the converse is not true, given Sea Lion and Ernest are 100% owned by Rockhopper.
At the end of the day, who knows which company has the better acreage when they are drilling in the same basin. But if they both had a 150m barrel discovery it would be worth markedly more to Rockhopper, if only because their market cap is 68m or almost exactly one-third of Desires market cap of 212m


Background
The background to oil exploration in the Falkland Islands dates back to 1998, when Shell, Lasmo, Amerada and Lundin drilled to various depths in the North Falkland Basin (home to Desire and Rockhopper, with shallower water and in a different petroleum system to that of Borders & Southern and FOGL to the south of the island). Then, six wells were drilled and of these five had oil shows, with one well (Shell) flowing oil to the surface (27 API, a full spectrum crude) and another (also Shell) showing gas. Wells were discovered which had all of the elements in place to confirm an active petroleum system; good source rocks with traps, reservoirs and seals. The oil found here however was not classed as a discovery as no test wells were drilled; the oil price at the time (a multi-year low of just $10/barrel) made exploration of this kind uneconomic. Clearly, now at $70/barrel the proposition is completely different and highly attractive. It should also be noted that at the time Shell drilled to relatively shallow depths (as 3D seismic was not available), hence drilling was even more of an art than a science back then than it is today.

From a geological point of view, the petroleum system in the north Falkland Islands is similar to the Albertine Graben Basin in Uganda (where Tullow Oil has had unprecedented success) both in terms of size and source rock. The Ugandan basin has been heavily explored to date, and in excess of 600m barrels of contingent resources have been discovered there since 2005. The Falklands however have not been explored since 1998 and remains a frontier region for oil exploration.

The first major challenge faced by any relatively small company undertaking offshore drilling in a remote location is the cost of securing a rig, and mobilising it to the location. The added difficulty faced by companies prospecting in the Falkland Islands in this regard is political, coming from Argentina, who are putting pressure on other South American countries and therefore international players drilling in the locale (e.g. the Santos basin off the coast of Brazil) to be uncooperative. We expect vocal opposition rather than military intervention will be the extent of Argentinian opposition this time. However, this has meant that Desire have had to secure a rig from a great distance (with associated mob/demob costs for that journey). Interestingly, Rockhopper management have also mentioned this as an issue in relation to their previous attempts to secure a farm-out partner, although we believe they continue to talk with an interested party; Desire signed a farm-out agreement with Arcadia in August 2008.

The offshore rig market has been exceptionally tight of late, forcing daily rig rates outside the financial capacity for many small exploration companies part of the reason why Desire and Rockhopper were always likely to share the costs of the rig. However, with regards to the rig, recent news flow, has been positive, with the announcement in early September 2009 that Desire Petroleum had exchanged a letter of intent with an established rigger, Diamond Offshore Drilling, to secure the use of the Ocean Guardian rig, a third generation semi-submersible to undertake a four well minimum drilling campaign in the North Falklands; it is capable of operating in water depth up to 1500 ft (and a maximum drilling depth of 25,000 ft.) which is more than adequate to meet all the potential needs of operating in the North Falkland Basin, albeit inadequate for operators like Borders & Southern in the south. This rig is set to mobilise at the end of November to arrive in the south Atlantic and commence a five month drilling programme in early February 2010.

Under the terms of the rig contract with Diamond Offshore Drilling Desire, which has cash of c. $40m already, would like to raise monies to commit to drill two or three additional wells (to make four or five in total- likely to be Ann, Alpha, Liz and Dawn/Jacinta) whilst Rockhopper (which also has a 7.5% equity interest in two of Desires likely early well drills, Liz and Ann as well as a further 7.5% in a likely later drill, Ninky) would like to drill two of its own 100% ownded prospects: Sea Lion and Ernest; the costs per well are likely to be in the order of $25m.

If both companies can successfully raise money, the exploration wells can be drilled; there are many more potential wells to be drilled although if all of the wells in this five month drilling programme prove to be dry then we suspect that both businesses would struggle to secure additional equity funding to keep drilling.

If oil is found however, both the Desire and Rockhopper share prices will see significant appreciation, although to calculate the precise value of oil held in the acreage, further test wells will have to be drilled (at further cost). At this point it seems likely that both businesses would farm out parts of their shares in the assets (to fund further development of the assets), whilst reducing their equity stakes in the oil, or they will be takeover targets from medium/large E&P players. The upside potential is very considerable. A Competent Persons Report released by Desire, and conducted by industry experts Senergy, highlighted that the mean, gross, un-risked prospective recoverable resources across ten of its main prospects is over 3.0 bn barrels. Depending on the oil price assumptions and the ultimate amount of oil discovered (after being discounted back by 10%), Senergy, the CPR estimates that the NPV for acreage held by Desire ranges from $296m (at 50MMbo assuming $75 oil) to $6.2bn (assuming 400MMbo, again assuming $75 oil).

The upside potential at Rockhopper is similarly large. According to the Competent Persons Report (which assumed $80 oil), and on a P50 basis, the five wells earmarked for drilling at Rockhopper have been calculated as having an NPV of some $5.05bn, again discounted at 10% on an estimated 370 MMbo. As an aside, the directors have estimated upside on RKH acreage to be 4.3bn barrels recoverable on a P50 basis.
Prospect Desire Interest (%) Rockhopper Interest (%) P50 (MMbo) Chance of Success
Ann 57.5 7.5 89 18%
34 11%
Alpha 100 0 331 6%
Liz 100 7.5 260 17%
Dawn 100 0 97 8%
Jacinta 100 0 437 6%
Helen 100 0 57 9%
258 11%
Rachel 100 0 230 15%
Beth 100 0 166 9%
Ninky 100 7.5 29 27%
29 27%
28 27%
28 27%
Pam 100 0 73 11%
88 11%
Sea Lion 0 100 170 23%
Ernest 0 100 156 23%

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