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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 - 25 Mar 2011 08:23 - 4561 of 6294

Good post from marlon on iii

1) sealion main fan top sand, 30m pay, OWC
2) sealion main fan lower sand, Water leg
3) sealion northern lobe thin sand, Water leg
4) sealion lowest sand thin sand, 3m pay

107m gross reservoir, 75% net to gross.

So we had 80m net pay total, 33m oil and 47m water.

We know that sand 3 was thin so let's say 5m of our "water pay" was here.

At 14/10-2 sand 1 was about 2x the size of sand 2 so assuming a similar ratio, sand 1 at 14/10-4 was 30m oil and 20m water, and sand 2 was 25m water.

So our OWC was at 2505m at 14/10-4 and 45m out of a potential 75m net pay fell below it in the main fan.

At 14/10-2 we had 34m of net pay in the main fan, had we not seen OWC at 14/10-4 this would have more than doubled!

So taking an average (32.5m down dip) we would potentially 55m of pay all above OWC!!

THE RELATIONSHIPS ARE NOT LINEAR...but it's a good start.

So what has 14/10-4 told us about P90 and P50 in the southern lobe.

1) the oil down to of 2505m absolute depth rules in the valley floor and western slope. This would increase P90 to over 100mmbs, my estimate 130mmbs
2) the oil net pay will be thinner across the valley floor than the required 35m average required for P50
3) the oil will be thicker than the required 35m in the areas between the 14/10-2 and 14/10-4 contours.
4) it is likely that net pay will be thinner than 35m up dip from 14/10-2
5) Therefore P50 is likely to be slightly lower than the 215mmbs shown in the CPR

BUT

Looking to the South
1) the MAJORITY of the additional 43km area in the new 3D is potentially up dip from 14/10-4 with a very large area in the "prime contour" region between 14/10-2 and 14/10-4.

2) there are at least three additional pay zones (Chatham, Sealion Lower and F3) which have shown oil net pay

3) it is more likely than not that these additional pay zones are either continued or replicated under the new 3D area.

There is so much high likelihood POTENTIAL. AND WHAT WE HAVE AT P90 IS COMMERCIAL.

It is looking very good from here!!!!

gibby - 25 Mar 2011 12:34 - 4562 of 6294

hmm - tempoary glitch perhaps?



Rockhopper Exploration ("Rockhopper") (AIM: RKH) is an AIM listed oil and gas exploration company based in the United Kingdom.

Rockhopper has licences to explore for oil and gas in the North Falkland Basin, a basin with two proven petroleum systems and a proven high quality oil source rock.

The company was admitted to AIM in 2005 and has since completed an extensive work programme in the area, including two 2D seismic surveys, a 3D seismic survey, four CSEM lines, site surveys and benthic sampling.

In February 2010, the Ocean Guardian drilling rig arrived in Falklands waters to carry out a multi-well drilling campaign. Rockhopper drilled an exploration well on its Sea Lion prospect during April and May 2010, the result of which is the first oil discovery and Contingent Oil Resource in the North Falkland Basin

gibby - 25 Mar 2011 12:37 - 4563 of 6294

when i say sell look for a quick profit buying back that is all
big risk you all know this

gibby - 25 Mar 2011 12:39 - 4564 of 6294

no big deal

Recent Regulatory News Date/Time Headline Source
Wed 07:00 Rockhopper Exp plc - Issue of Equity RNS
RNS Number : 4406D
Rockhopper Exploration plc
23 March 2011



23 March 2011



ROCKHOPPER EXPLORATION PLC (The 'Company')





Issue of Equity





The Company announces that, following the exercise of options issued as payment for services related to the Company's placing in October, 2009, it has issued 100,000 new ordinary shares of 1p each in the Company ("Ordinary Shares") at an exercise price of 54p per share. Following this option exercise, all options issued as payment in connection with the Company's placing in October, 2009, have now been exercised.



Application has been made for the admission of 100,000 new Ordinary Shares to be admitted to trading on AIM. The Ordinary Shares rank pari passu in all respects with the Company's existing issued ordinary shares, and it is expected that admission will become effective and that dealings will commence on 28 March 2011. On admission, the Company will have 258,139,606 Ordinary Shares in issue.





Rockhopper Exploration plc

Sam Moody - Chief Executive Officer

Tel. +44 (0)20 7920 2340 (via M: Communications)



M: Communications

Patrick d'Ancona or Ben Simons

Tel. +44 (0)20 7920 2340



Canaccord Genuity Limited
Charles Berkeley / Henry Fitzgerald-O'Connor

Tel. +44 (0) 20 7050 6500


gibby - 25 Mar 2011 12:41 - 4565 of 6294

did i hear an embargo?

gibby - 25 Mar 2011 12:45 - 4566 of 6294

http://www.smallcapnews.co.uk/article/Oil_Gas_RoundUp_25_March/8747.aspx

markymar - 25 Mar 2011 16:08 - 4567 of 6294

Its then little voices again gibby talking in your head,if your trying to deramp the stock you are looking very foolish indeed on this thread.

greekman - 25 Mar 2011 16:25 - 4568 of 6294

People still replying to gibby, so i can't see any point staying tuned to this thread. Shame as it used to have better meaningful content than iii.
When will people learn that if you reply to these adolescent muppets they have won.
Just squelch them and leave them ranting to themselves.

gibby - 25 Mar 2011 21:46 - 4569 of 6294

marky low cost i will share the voices
see who makes the most

greek no comment

markymar - 26 Mar 2011 12:39 - 4570 of 6294

http://contrarianinvestoruk.squarespace.com/

Portfolio review of the week March 25th 2011

SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 2011 AT 8:19AM

The FTSE 100 finished the week at 5,901 up 20 points on the day and up 183 points (3.2%) on the week.

The Dow Jones Industrials finished up 50 points at 12,221, up 3.1% on the week.

Markets have regained their poise as fears of a nuclear catastrophe at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan have faded and worries about Portugese debt, the fighting in Libya, unrest in Syria and Bahrain are forgotten for now.

A raft of posiive earnings from U.S. semiconductor and technology companies such as Oracle and Micron as well as news that U.S. gross domestic product increased at a 3.1% annualized rate in the fourth quarter, revised up from the 2.8% also helped lift sentiment.

Oil finished at $105.6 (WTI) little changed on the week.

For the Contrarian Investor UK portfolio it was a very good week with some excellent profits banked in Rockhopper, Chariot Oil and Gas and Xcite Energy.

The turn around in sentiment in the last 2 weeks has been extraordinary and when the mood turns this positive this quickly I like to take some profit off the table.

The market felt like it was on the verge of a collapse post the Japanese Tsunami, not investors seem to be piling back in so as to not feel left out by the return of positive momentum. When fear is rife, this is the time to buy.

Rockhopper (RKH) - At last some good news for the Falkland Islands oil sector with a very positive appraisal well result announced on Monday

.The price spiked above 300p on Monday on the news that 14/10-4 was a major oil find with a significant reservoir package and hydrocarbon column encountered (33m, 108 ft).

Oil Water Contact was at 2503m measured depth in the main fan indicating that the southern main sea lion fan is full to spill.

After moving up 300p in early trade on the 14/10-4 news, its been downhill on the way, with the price finishing at 262p, only 40p or so above the level it was before the well update.

After taking profits on Monday I have been building a substantial position all week since at 262p and with 14/10-2 and 14/10-4 proving a large oil asset in the North Falklands basin the share price makes no sense. Rockhopper has 180 millon or so in cash to complete 3 further wells in 2011 as well as detailed 3D seismic data of its acreage.

Short term traders have moved on to Desire Petroleum since the Ocean Guardian rig is due to start drilling the Ninky Well this week, in an area to the south of Rockhopper's acreage.

This in itself makes no sense as Desire have had a series of failures and no proven oil to date compared with Rockhoppers P90 of at least 100-130 million barrels (proven reserves).

Rockhopper also has the potential for huge upsides to the current P90 reserves notably in its southern acreage.

3D seismic data of this area of this area will be available in July.

Then there is the area around the 14/10-3 well which had live oil but not commercial on a stand alone basis and the S2 fan which is on the Northern lobe of Sea Lion.

Following the 14/10-4 news Rockhopper's acreage is undeniably commercial, with oil found to date valued at $10-15 billion.

Even with development and extraction costs of $3-4 billion, there is $7 billion of value, it makes the current market cap of 676 million look paltry!

The figures speak for themselves and sense will return to the share price soon I am sure.

http://contrarianinvestoruk.squarespace.com/
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

markymar - 26 Mar 2011 12:45 - 4571 of 6294

Thoughts on Rockhopper:

Negatives: The recent 14/10-3 result and the current share price.

These two are, quite rightly IMO, directly linked. Since the original 14/10-2 discovery well, Rockhopper, as a company, has been valued on the Sea Lion CPR P90 figure (58 million bbls), plus potential for the rest of the field (669 million bbls, Volumetric Report, high estimate), plus sentiment.

The 14/10-3 exploration well, at a stroke, slashed the potential part of the equation, and gave the sentiment a hammering too.

After Desires infamous oil to water shenanigans, the last thing that Rockhopper needed was an RNS suggesting that Sea Lion was full of water. The totally unnecessary use of the word un-commercial in that RNS certainly didnt help either. Sentiment, understandably, has fallen since then.

Desire will now have the rig for the next month, before Rockhopper will be able to continue with their appraisal programme. This lack of action has, understandably, seen the exit of many short term traders, as well as the usual gang of rainbow chasers, as they move onto the next big thing. Weakness in the share price, at this stage, was almost guaranteed.

Positives: Misunderstanding and over-reaction to the 14/10-3 RNS, excellent 14/10-4 result, southern acreage & 3D seismic, unrealised potential elsewhere on Sea Lion.

Since the 14/10-4 RNS was published, it looks as though there has been a shift in the way that the market values Rockhopper. This first appraisal well in the Sea Lion discovery area has more than doubled the P90, from 58 million bbls, up to approximately 130 million bbls. Current market cap values this oil at around $8 per barrel, with absolutely no value added to the company for cash, potential or sentiment.

Since 14/10-4, we have moved on from having to use words like could, may, and probable, when describing the contents of the Sea Lion reservoir. We can now use words like does, is, and proven, but only at the P90 level.

IMO, adding value to the company from here, will require adding barrels of oil to the P90 figure.

So whats not priced in, then?

> 7 metres of net pay, in the northern lobe of Sea Lion, found in 14/10-3.

> The potential for oil trapped within the hammerhead of the northern lobe, up dip of the 14/10-3 location.

> The potential for oil trapped against the eastern margin of the northern lobe, up dip of the 14/10-3 location.

> The entire S2 fan! We know that oil has migrated, northwards, through the northern lobe of Sea Lion, and we know that the down dip location, drilled at the southern extremity of S2, had oil shows. Whats up dip in S2?

> The potential for thicker net pay, up dip of the OWC, in the Sea Lion southern lobe. 14/10-4 found 30m of oil-bearing net pay in the Sea Lion main fan and a further 48m below the OWC. The contours of the reservoir to the west, south and east of the 14/10-4 location all rise, bringing more of the sand package above the OWC. Thicker sand above the OWC = more oil in place.

> The (huge) potential of the southern acreage. In one fell swoop, the 3D seismic of this area (which, as we know, is currently being fast-tracked by Rockhopper) could not only re-coup the potential that was lost by drilling 14/10-3, but could significantly increase it. Does anyone seriously believe that Sea Lion just stops at the southern boundary of the currently held 3D seismic?

> Sea Lion Lower. This fan was not penetrated by 14/10-4, is not in communication with the main fan, and therefore will have its own, deeper, OWC. The un-appraised P90 figure for this fan is currently only 8 million barrels. Appraisal of this reservoir could prove up as much as a further 148 million barrels (44 million best estimate), depending on reservoir thickness and OWC.

> Prospectivity for deeper fans. 14/10-2 found 2m of deeper net pay. 14/10-4 found 3m of deeper, oil-bearing, net pay, below the water leg of the upper sands. What is this sand? Where does it go? What does it become? Does it suggest that Sea Lion Lower could have a deeper OWC than expected?

> 200 million in cash. This alone, is worth 77p on the share price.

> The entire CPR portfolio! Theres a lot more to the North Falkland Basin than Sea Lion alone and Rockhopper currently have the cash to go and explore it.

So, IMO, from here on in, there should be little downside for Rockhopper, as the company is underpinned with a commercially viable asset.

There is, however, a large potential upside.

Make no mistake, 14/10-4 has turned the North Falkland Basin into a new oil producing province.

Current P90, 130 million barrels of recoverable oil = a $15 billion asset. Deduct $1.5 billion capital expenditure, and $1.5 billion of operational expenditure for the life of the field (RPSs figures, not mine), and youre left with $12 billion worth of oil (at current spot price) that can be brought to market.

Theyre not going to leave that in the ground.

The following is the last line from the 14/10-4 RNS:

Following this well, Rockhopper will commence work on development planning for the Sea Lion discovery.

Once more, for effect:

Following this well, Rockhopper will commence work on development planning for the Sea Lion discovery.

So, what are our Rockhopper shares worth?

Theyre worth what someone is prepared to pay for them. And currently, thats somewhere around 2.60.

Is it a fair price? Probably.

Is it a sensible price? No.

Am I bovvered? Nah! At this price, Im buying.

The future's bright. ;-)

ef.

gibby - 26 Mar 2011 14:08 - 4572 of 6294

not bad just a hmmmm
gla
Chances of finding Falklands oil are slim and the risks are highRobin Pagnamenta, Energy Editor It is the oil well that has sparked a diplomatic incident, but whether or not the Ocean Guardian the rig that began drilling into the seabed 60 miles north of the Falkland Islands on Monday will find anything more than mud and sand is doubtful. Desire Petroleum, the company behind the operation, says that the drilling campaign at its Liz prospect will take 30 days to reach a target depth of 3,500 metres (11,500ft).

There can be no doubt that the new drilling campaign is high risk, says Ross McCracken, of Platts, the oil and gas information service, who stressed that relatively little was known about the geology of the South Atlantic.

The drill-bit of the 14,400 tonne platform will descend through layers of sandstone and Lower Cretaceous rock beneath the seabed at an average of 116m (380ft) a day. Geologically, the area is not dissimilar to the North Sea, and the company claims that if a discovery is made, the field could contain nearly 400 million barrels of oil. But independent analysis of the rock structures claim that the operation has only a slim chance of success about 17 per cent, to be precise.

A commercial find is likely to send the share prices soaring, but the probability of such a find is fairly low. These are, after all, wildcat wells on almost virgin territory, Mr McCracken said.

gibby - 26 Mar 2011 14:14 - 4573 of 6294

same just a hummmm...
i am to buy back not yet though
but who am i????????????? lol

British drilling for Falklands oil threatens Argentine relationsHannah Strange, Frank Pope, Ocean Correspondent, and Deborah Haynes, Defence Editor Britains relations with Argentina fell last night to their lowest point since the Falklands conflict in a row over an oil platform that is due to arrive north of Port Stanley next week.

The Ocean Guardian is expected to complete its journey to the disputed waters 100 miles off the Falklands coast from the Scottish Highlands as part of a campaign that Britain hopes will bring a black-gold rush to the windswept, sparsely populated islands.

But, almost three decades after Britain and Argentina fought a bloody 72-day conflict over the islands, its impending arrival has stoked fury in a country that is still intent on claiming the territory as its own.

Amid an intensifying war of words, Foreign Minister Jorge Taiana warned on Thursday night that his Government would take all measures necessary to preserve our rights.

Related Links
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He reiterated that Argentina had a permanent claim on the islands, saying Buenos Aires would complain to the UN over the oil project and might take the case to the International Court of Justice in The Hague.

Unconfirmed reports by the waiting crew claimed the platform had been shadowed by Argentine aircraft as it made its journey. The Ministry of Defence and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office said they were unable to confirm the reports. Desire Petroleum, the company heading the operations, and AGR Petroleum Services, which willl operate the platform, said they were not aware of any fly-over.

As Buenos Aires said it would take all necessary steps to prevent the illegal operations in Las Malvinas, as they are known in Argentina, the Falklands government warned against such sabre-rattling, pointing out the high level of military protection the islands enjoyed. Britain has more than 1,000 military personnel on land and more than 300 at sea in the region, as well as four Typhoon aircraft, one destroyer and one patrol boat.

Were very well defended, said Phyllis Rendall, director of the islands Department of Mineral Resources. Weve got four of those Eurofighters. We certainly didnt have that kind of protection in 1982. Back then we had only 50 Marines.

The British Foreign Office denied that the oil operations were illegal. We are absolutely clear this is legitimate business in Falkland Islands waters and we will continue to reiterate our position that we have no doubt about our sovereignty over the Falkland Islands and the surrounding maritime areas, a spokesman said.

Analysts say that as many as 60 billion barrels of high-grade oil could be found in a 200 sq mile zone surrounding the islands, which is to be developed by Desire, AGR and Diamond Offshore Drilling. That could make the Falklands one of the worlds largest oil reserves, comparable with the North Sea, which so far has produced about 40 billion barrels.

The Falklands government noted that in 2007 Argentina tore up an agreement between Britain and Argentina to co-operate over hydrocarbon discoveries. I dont think theyre really willing to share at all, Ms Rendall said. Theyre all about land-grabbing. Its a matter of national pride.

While the Falklands dispute is long settled in the British consciousness, in Argentina where school textbooks show Las Malvinas as part of the national territory it remains a thorny subject. The Argentine leader, Cristina Ferndez de Kirchner, has made the countrys claim a key theme of her presidency, rousing nationalist sensibilities around a cause which has become even more significant with the approach of presidential elections next year.

On the last anniversary of the war, Mrs Kirchner insisted that the claim would never be surrendered and demanded Britain adhere to UN resolutions requiring dialogue.

In January Britain rejected Argentinas latest claim to the territory occupied by the British in 1833, and wants to extend its rights to waters surrounding the islands and lock in a vast tract of seabed off the coast of Antarctica.

gibby - 26 Mar 2011 14:16 - 4574 of 6294

they are an month or 2 old but still relevant

gibby - 26 Mar 2011 14:20 - 4575 of 6294

only 4 typoons in the maldives...
gulp!
Amid an intensifying war of words, Foreign Minister Jorge Taiana warned on Thursday night that his Government would take all measures necessary to preserve our rights.

chav - 28 Mar 2011 11:22 - 4576 of 6294

Falklands weather is much better than the Maldives...no Typhoons!

Balerboy - 28 Mar 2011 13:31 - 4577 of 6294

seems to me I read this one correct....250 coming up.,.

halifax - 28 Mar 2011 13:35 - 4578 of 6294

bb is that your floor price?...... might drift lower in the absence of tangible news.

Balerboy - 28 Mar 2011 13:38 - 4579 of 6294

I agree hali, possible to go back to 230ish. just didn't want to be out for too long incase news came. happy with my buy's at mo, won't jump in on 250 yet.,.

avsec - 28 Mar 2011 17:40 - 4580 of 6294

A stop in for 245

Starting to think that maybe I should add on Friday anyway just in case it goes ballistic over the weekend - out of the action for three days at the start of next week.
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