To: Brian Diggle  who wrote (467 ) 2/24/2000 12:06:00 AM From: Apex     Respond to    of 485  
Brian, IMHO, look like another 5 bagger to me. cheers =========================canoe.ca  CP Business News                         INDEX: Business, Forestry,                         Mining, Technology; Stock                         symbol RPP                          TORONTO (CP) -- Everybody's got the fever. Even                         Canada's rough hewers of wood and miners of gold                         are becoming Webheads.                           Repap Enterprises, a troubled paper company                         best-known recently for red ink and executive                         turmoil, caught the eye of investors on Wednesday as                         almost 50 million of its shares changed hands on the                         Toronto Stock Exchange.                           That sent the stock up 50 per cent in one day.                           It closed at 13.5 cents, up 4.5 cents, with no news                         release from the company to justify or explain the                         dramatic increase.                           No company spokesman was immediately available to                         comment, but Fred Ketchen, chief of equities trading                         at Scotia Capital Markets in Toronto, relays an                         interesting tale.                           "The rumour is that this old paper company, which                         couldn't make a go of it as a paper company in recent                         times, is trying to get itself hooked up into something                         high tech," Ketchen said.                           The idea isn't so far-fetched at a time when several                         gold and gem companies in Canada have shifted focus                         to the Internet.                           Sikaman Gold Resources, a junior mining company                         based in Port Perry, Ont., said last week it will change                         its name to SKG Interactive. It has sold its mining                         assets to GeoNova Explorations and will now focus                         on its online retailing arm, NorstarMall.ca.                           Sikaman's stock closed Wednesday at 65 cents on                         volume of eight million shares -- up from 45 cents                         last Friday and 20 cents Jan. 24.                           Also last week, William Resources of Toronto said it                         plans to change its name to William Technologies,                         reflecting its decision to move into technology and                         Internet sectors.                           William, which traded at three cents a share as                         recently as Jan. 18, hit 30 cents Tuesday on 44                         million shares traded. Feb.10 was the heaviest trading                         day with 66 million shares.                           In line with these trends, Nesbitt Burns chief                         economist Sherry Cooper said earlier this week that                         Canada should move away from its traditional                         resource and manufacturing bases and put its faith in                         dot-com companies.                           "Many will call this a bubble," she said. "It is not a                         bubble. It's real."                           Ketchen said stock markets seem "mesmerized" by                         technology companies, so old-style resources firms                         that want to boost share values have taken the hint.                           "All of these things are driven by the dreams and                         hopes of technology somewhere down the way. If you                         can't make it as a mining company, make it as an                         Internet-based company."                           Late Wednesday, Global-Pacific Minerals Inc. of                         Vancouver said it was looking into "viable                         opportunities in the high-technology sector to                         diversify the company's activities beyond the mining                         and mineral exploration industry."                           The gold-base metal mining firm, which has interests                         in China, added: "A news release will be issued if and                         when any significant developments occur."                           Repap is based in Stamford, Conn., and has a giant                         paper complex on the Miramichi River in New                         Brunswick producing coated paper, pulp and lumber.                           On Feb. 1, the company blamed low pulp and paper                         prices for its fourth-quarter loss of $10.1 million,                         which compared with a loss of $7.4 million a year                         earlier. For the full year, Repap lost $48.7 million,                         essentially flat from the year before.                           In early January, former Repap chairman Steven Berg                         announced he was suing company president Stephen                         Larson and the Toronto-Dominion Bank over his                         ouster following a shareholder uproar in 1999.                                                     Copyright © 2000 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.                         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