markymar
- 15 Aug 2005 15:14
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.
required field
- 10 Jan 2012 09:15
- 5681 of 6294
I think that as BOR drilling gets closer and closer, that sp should rise....
Balerboy
- 10 Jan 2012 09:26
- 5683 of 6294
glad I'm out this is going back to 260p.,.
cynic
- 10 Jan 2012 09:27
- 5684 of 6294
so my (un)educated guess of "chances are usually something like 5:1, but in unknown territory, more realistic to say 8 or 10 or even 12:1" wasn't far off the mark then
markymar
- 10 Jan 2012 15:52
- 5685 of 6294
gibby
- 12 Jan 2012 08:29
- 5686 of 6294
baler i think you did the sensible thing at this moment in time - rkh will continue to slide imo for the time being - obvious thing is so simple - sell now and buy back later when sp is likely to be sub 250 imo
and beware the squid wars the argentines have started with the falklands - that is a crafty argy step against the falklands and getting news in SA - other factors other than oil here and lets hope there is no more turning oil into water in this region!! gla
Balerboy
- 12 Jan 2012 08:43
- 5687 of 6294
Thanks gib, think it was the right thing too, I've also sold the last two batches I bought for a profit in gkp as I think this will drift a little again into the 250's later today.
gibby
- 12 Jan 2012 09:07
- 5688 of 6294
good stuff baler & agreed - if not today quite soon
greekman
- 13 Jan 2012 15:49
- 5690 of 6294
Markymar,
Excellent listen.
Proselenes
- 15 Jan 2012 10:55
- 5691 of 6294
Cairn interest in RKH according to Danny (the man hated by many DES holders) at the Sunday Times.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-01-15/cairn-starts-talks-with-rockhopper-on-falkland-oil-times-says.html
Looks like trying to drum up sum industry interest ahead of the data room opening.
.
dreamcatcher
- 15 Jan 2012 11:11
- 5692 of 6294
What is the point of posting the same posts on two Rockhopper sites. I cannot see the point.
aldwickk
- 15 Jan 2012 18:45
- 5693 of 6294
Twiter
steve_hawkes steve hawkes
Sunday Times talks about Cairn's interest in Falklands explorer Rockhopper.. I hear Amerada Hess and BP have also logged interest
about 3 hours ago
gibby
- 15 Jan 2012 21:53
- 5694 of 6294
hmmmmm
avsec
- 16 Jan 2012 09:52
- 5695 of 6294
Cairns / BP interested - but Pro is NOT!
Today could be a very interesting day! Already through 300
avsec
- 16 Jan 2012 11:36
- 5697 of 6294
A bit quiet on the Baler and Gibby front today - but hey - who knows - it could plummet! LOL
HARRYCAT
- 16 Jan 2012 12:13
- 5698 of 6294
From today's FT:
"Rockhopper Exploration, the oil and gas company focused on the Falkland Islands, has started work on plans to find a partner to develop a big oil discovery in the South Atlantic, in a move which may also lead to a sale of the Aim-listed explorer. Any new partner will have to weigh up the political risk of entering the Falklands, which remain a flashpoint in relations between Britain and Argentina. Buenos Aires continues to claim sovereignty over the islands it calls Las Malvinas, and has been highly critical of the recent drilling campaign there. Last year, Mercosur, the South American trade bloc, banned Falkland-flagged ships from docking in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay. Last year Rockhopper held informal talks with Cairn Energy about entering the Sea Lion project, the people said, but they did not result in a deal. The two are not currently in talks, though contacts between the two companies could be renewed in the coming weeks. Indian and Korean oil companies are also expected to show an interest, one of the people said."
HARRYCAT
- 16 Jan 2012 12:17
- 5699 of 6294
Liberum broker note today:
"The persistent rumours linking Cairn to Rockhopper are difficult to believe. They do not play to any of Cairn’s strengths and would appear to be a poor use of its resources. HOLD.
The Sunday Times reported that Rockhopper (market cap US$1.2bn) has appointed BOA Merrill Lynch to find a partner to help manage and finance the development of the Sea Lion discovery in the Falklands. It is widely believed that Sea Lion contains at least 300 mmb oil and will cost more than US$2bn to develop. Rockhopper appears to have neither the expertise nor the finance to progress the project. There is speculation that the auction could lead to a full takeover and the STimes claims that Cairn Energy is considering such a move. Cairn completed the initial phase of drilling offshore Greenland in 2011 with 8 unsuccessful wells, writing off US$1.1bn. After completing the part sale of its shareholding in Cairn India to Vedanta Resources, Cairn had net cash at end 2011 of US$4.7bn, US$3.5bn of which is to be returned to shareholders. Cairn also retains c.22% of Cairn India which could realise c.US$2.4bn (post potential CGT). Cairn has no plans to drill in Greenland until it brings in a partner to share the costs of exploring. It is unclear when in 2012 this will be achieved or on what terms. So, at present, Cairn has US$3.6bn liquid assets that can finance future Greenland costs and new ventures.
We would view any partnership with Rockhopper negatively. Cairn adds value through exploration and has retained no field development expertise (particularly offshore). It would be better if it maintained its focus on exploration or returned all liquid assets to shareholders than pay a premium to get bogged down in a field development in a region of significant political risk.
The share price currently reflects the value of its cash (215p) and Cairn India stake (112p) less 35p for ongoing G&A and exploration costs. We believe this is about right (PT unchanged at 280p). There appears to be nothing in the price for the value that could be monetised from a partial sale of Greenland but, while this offers upside, it does not appear sufficient to us to make us want to buy the shares. Any move to use resources for an acquisition of a significant development project would make the shares less attractive."