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To: Condor who wrote (16491)12/17/2003 11:41:24 AM
From: Bucky Katt  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 48461
 
Near their respective yearly lows, I'd have to figure out my avg. cost for CYPB.
ZOLT I have traded in & out of, CYPB has not given me a reason to sell a share this year...
I don't know how much is left in it at this $15 level,
but the chart is really nice.

stockcharts.com[w,a]daclyyay[dd][pc20!c50!f][vc60][iUe12,26,9!Lf]&pref=G

I have to do a lunch meeting downtown, so see you later..
_______________

ps, I predicted this>

Pipeline attack pushes up oil prices

Iraq says Northern pipeline still too vulnerable to restart after new attack over the weekend.
December 17, 2003: 7:17 AM EST


LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices climbed further Wednesday as news emerged of fresh attacks on Iraq's oil facilities and traders bet that figures would show cold weather drawing down U.S. fuel inventories.

London's Brent crude futures for February delivery rose 23 cents to $30.20 a barrel, within 40 cents of two-month highs hit briefly Tuesday.

U.S. light crude rose 13 cents to $33.02, extending gains of more than 10 percent this month.

Prices rose as a senior Iraqi oil official said Iraq's northern export pipeline, closed since March's U.S.-led invasion, had come under fresh attacks at the time of the weekend capture of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.


Adel Kazzaz, head of the North Oil Company told Reuters the latest attack showed the line, which runs from Iraq's Kirkuk oilfields to Turkey's Mediterranean coast, was still too vulnerable to restart.

"It was subject to an attack only three days ago. Security measures remain insufficient to start the pipeline," Kazzaz said by telephone from Kirkuk. Separately, a fuel truck bomb in Baghdad killed 17 people Wednesday.

Iraq's sole oil export option is the southern Basra oil terminal in the Gulf, which has been shipping just under 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) of Basra crude so far this month. Iraq had pre-war export capacity of 2.2 million bpd.