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Gold/Mining/Energy : KERM'S KORNER -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (8040)12/19/1997 2:18:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (42) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURS DECEMBER 18, 1997 (2)

OIL & GAS

Unleaded gasoline futures rose sharply on the New York Mercantile Exchange after Amerada Hess Corp. shut down its 130,000 barrel a day gas-making unit at its large St. Croix refinery. The unit, called a fluid catalytic cracker, suffered an unknown mechanical problem and may take a week to repair. It is particularly significant because it produces the reformulated gasoline used in the Northeast and traded on the exchange.

NYMEX January light sweet crude oil closed up $0.33 to settle at $18.52.

NYMEX January natural gas closed down $0.026 to settle at $2.412.

NYMEX Hub natural gas futures were expected to open a few cents higher Friday in light trade amid talk of steady cash prices and electricity buying in the West, industry sources said.

January over-the-counter business hovered around $2.45 per mmBtu at 0935 EST after settling to the downside Thursday at $2.412 but recovering to a high of $2.46.

Early cash prices at Henry Hub were talked at $2.35 per mmBtu.

Above-normal temperatures are expected to continue in the East and upper Midwest into early next week. However, in Texas, temperatures are forecast to fall to about six to 12 degrees F below normal Sunday.

Technically, traders said January support was at $2.35, a level which held Thursday. Further support was seen at $2.25, which is the low for January this year, and then at $2.14 and $2.05. Resistance was seen at Thursday's high of $2.50, and then at $2.52 and $2.58.

In Thursday's cash, Gulf Coast quotes were steady to down slightly in the low-to-mid $2.30s. Midcon pipes were up about two cents to the low-$2.20s, with Chicago city-gate quoted mostly in the mid-to-high $2.30s. New York city gate prices were mostly in the mid-to-high $2.60s.

REFERENCES

Charts: oilworld.com

NYMEX Reference quotewatch.com


CANADIAN SPOT NATURAL GAS
Mixed Ahead Of Milder Weather

Canadian spot natural gas prices were mixed Thursday ahead of milder weather in Alberta but continued constraints into the northwestern U.S., market sources said.

Spot gas at the AECO storage hub in Alberta was quoted at C$1.36-1.37 per gigajoule (GJ), off one cent from Wednesday.

The transportation charge to the Empress border point in eastern Alberta eased to about 30 cents per GJ, from yesterday's 50 cents, as some interruptible capacity into the TransCanada PipeLines mainline became available, a Calgary-based trader said.

January AECO was quoted little changed at C$1.41-1.42 per GJ.

Following today's high of about -2 or -3 degrees C, temperatures in Calgary are forecast to reach a high of +4 degrees C by Saturday.

Meanwhile, the compressor outage in northern Alberta, which is taking about 150 million cubic feet of gas off the NOVA Corp (Toronto:NVA.TO - news) system, is expected to end Friday.

Spot gas for export at Sumas, Wash., continued to firm, with deals reported done near $2.20 per million British thermal units, up about 18 cents from Wednesday.

Traders blamed the uptick on the ongoing interruptible constraints on Westcoast Energy Inc's ''T South'' mainline.

In the East, Niagara was talked mostly at $1.46-1.50 per mmBtu, down about two cents from Wednesday.

FEATURE STORY

Land Sale Record Of 1997 Will Be A Tough Act To Follow

With 1997 as the record-setting act to follow, governments in Western Canada can only hope next year will be as nearly fruitful in providing top dollars for oil and gas exploration land rights.

Oil and gas producers seeking prospects in Western Canada handed over more than $1.51 billion in payments for rights to some 6.88 million hectares of Crown land in 1997.

The record bonus provided an average per hectare price at $219 -- another all-time high.

Only 1994 came close to the bonus total, when companies provided Al- berta, Saskatchewan, British Columbia and Manitoba governments with $1.42 billion in payments for 7.08 million hectares. That worked out to an average bonus of $199 per hectare.

With the fiscal year ending March 31, 1998, the director of the Al- berta minerals and tenure branch wasn't about to make a forecast for what's ahead. "We don't make forecasts," said David Coombs. "We've still got three months to go in the fiscal year."

The province led the record-setting onslaught in 1997. Alberta totals blew by the previous highs with some 5.15 million hectares hauling in a bonus of $1.15 billion. That topped the $1.01 billion put up for 4.77 million hectares in 1994. The average bonus of $234 per hectare this year topped the previous high of $211 in 1994.

The high figure for calendar 1997 was, in part, thanks to some $183.29 million spent for rights to 366 329 hectares of oil sands, Coombs said. "I don't think we would have done it (topped $1 billion) otherwise."

It was the third time the province gone over $1 billion in a calender year. "It's been a good year," he understated.

The three of the top spenders among producers acquiring land in the first nine months this year have a slightly different approach planned for 1998.

Amber Energy Inc. was one buyer heating up the competition for oil sands. But those purchases could slow for 1998 as the company works to develop its Pelican Lake area interests in northeastern Alberta, said Deric Orton, Amber's vice-president of land.

"We think we have good acreage (at Pelican Lake) and further postings are possible," he said.

It has not yet established the 1998 capital spending budget, Orton said. "We have some postings in some new regions."

Over at Norcen Energy Resources Limited, about $30 million has been budgeted for land in Western Canada for 1998, said Gerhard Shopp, vice- president of exploitation at the company. "It'll be about the same as this year."

He estimated Norcen put about $32 million into land in Western Canada in 1997.

Poco Petroleums Ltd. won't be altering its land-buying strategy next year as it will be putting some $40 million into acquiring rights to properties, Chief Financial Officer John Ferguson said. "It think it will be about the same percentage as last year (1997)."

The company anticipates allocating most of its land purchases into core areas. Poco put about $55 million into land this year, he said.

Besides Alberta, B.C. and Manitoba also set records for bonus pay- ments, racking up $216.77 million and $5.69 million respectively in 1997. Those provinces easily surpassed previous highs of $208.02 million and $4.22 million set in 1994 and 1985 respectively.

"This year (1998) will be a good year as well," said Carol Martiniuk, manager of administration and geology and petroleum registrar with Manitoba Energy And Mines. "But we don't anticipate going higher than levels approached in '97."

She said several new companies came into the province and this helped increase 1997 exploration, both with drilling and seismic.

"We were quite pleased overall with the activity this year," Martiniuk said. "It was a banner year, I think." Improving from 1996, when it raised $122.23 million, Saskatchewan picked up $131 million this year but fell short of the record $199.74 million set in 1994.

FEATURE STORY

The oilpatch came out swinging when Natural Resources Minister Ralph Goodale brought the Kyoto agreement to town Thursday.

"They obviously don't mince words," said the federal minister. "They were very blunt and direct in their assessment."

The controversial deal left Canada agreeing last week at the conference in Japan on global climate change to cut this country's greenhouse gas emissions to six per cent below 1990 levels by 2008-2012.

The Kyoto agreement is open for signature for one year as of March 1998. Then it has to be ratified by 55 countries representing 55 per cent of the CO2 emissions.

"I don't want to underestimate the magnitude of the challenge," said Goodale. "We've all got a lot on our plate to accomplish and it isn't going to be easy."

The minister began his journey to engage all stakeholders by meeting energy organizations as well as CEOs.

"There needs to be open and transparent (talks) and everyone needs to be meaningfully involved. It has to extend far beyond government and has to engage individuals as consumers," said Goodale.

He emphasized statistics show most emissions flow from energy consumption of energy, not its production.

"We made it clear we wanted a say," said David Manning, president of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers. "The membership were pretty outspoken about their concerns over lack of analysis."

A major issue is whether Canada will ratify the Kyoto deal before the U.S., its major trading partner.

"The key thing for us is to watch very closely the actual American conduct. We need to monitor that very carefully," said Goodale. "We need to be sure we're not putting ourselves at a disadvantageous and non-competitive situation with the U.S."

Goodale also insisted Canada is not locked into a specific ratification process.

"The first thing is to complete this consultation process," he said. "That will take one and a half to two years to talk with (everyone). To get the full blown detail of the implementation plan will take that long."

Producers were concerned about the economic impacts of the agreement that could cost billions of dollars and thousands of jobs while putting the country at a trade disadvantage.

"That is the issue they wish to flag with me. How in the Canadian national interest we can all manage this (Kyoto) file so it is a winning situation for Canada and doesn't put us at a national or international disadvantage?" said Goodale.

Goodale said his talks focused on:

- Comprehensive consultations and implementation

- No province, region, or sector called upon to bare undue burden

- No carbon tax

- Broaden and strengthen voluntary emission control efforts

- Energy efficiency with intelligent regulations and incentives

- Co-generation projects and renewable resources

- Emphasis on technology

- Utilize our flexibility tools like emissions trading, joint implementation with credit.

MARKET ACTIVITY

The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 fell 0.5% to 6594.94.

In comparison, the Oil & Gas Composite Index gained 0.3% or 18.52 to 6499.35. Amaong the sub-components, the Integrated Oils fell 0.5% or 45.04 to 8891.03. The Oil & Gas Producers gained 0.6% or 31.38 to 5692.82. The Oil & Gas Services also gained, rising 0.9% or 27.57 to 3005.75.

INDEX CHARTS

TSE 300.............. chart.canada-stockwatch.com

O&G Composite. chart.canada-stockwatch.com

Integrated Oil's.... chart.canada-stockwatch.com

O&G Producers.. chart.canada-stockwatch.com

O&G Services..... chart.canada-stockwatch.com


Poco Petroleums, Berkley Petroleum, Petro-Canada, Anderson Exploration, Talisman Energy, Baytex Energy and Rio Alto Exploration were among the top 50 most active issues traded on the TSE.

No service related companies were listed.

Over on the Alberta Stock Exchange, Enterprise Developement, Justnian Exploration, Lodestar Energy, NTI Resources, Red Sea Oil, Oilexco, Burner Exploration, Cirque Energy, Prarie Pacific Energy, Reeflex Petroleum, Tessex Energy and Fox Energy were among the top 30 most active traded issues.

For other most active categories, go here;

canoe.ca


KERM'S TOP 20 - SPEC 12 - SERV 7 COMPANIES IN THE NEWS

Genesis Exploration has drilled eight (average W.I. 79%) successful exploration discoveries to date in the fourth quarter at Marlboro, Windfall, Oldman (uphole), Entwistle, Highvale, Majeau, Corbett and Brant, all in Alberta.

Production adds are anticipated in the 1200 BOE/d range (90% gas) with 400 BOE/d to be turned on prior to year-end and the rest throughout the first quarter of 1998. This will give the Company an exit production rate for 1997 of 5,500 BOE/d while averaging about 4,400 BOE/d for the year. These results compare favorably with those from 1996: exit rate of 2,400 BOE/d; average 1,550 BOE/d.

Genesis expects its 1997 finding and on-stream costs for proven reserves to come in around $6.00 BOE giving its shareholders a three year average for proven reserves of $5.17/BOE.

The Company is looking for a strong finish with six additional wells to be drilled for year-end. Genesis will exit the year with a solid balance sheet of 1.1 years trailing debt to cashflow and just over six months 1998 debt to cashflow. In addition, 5 mm/day of spot gas was locked in at $2.15/GJ from November 1, 1997 to April 1, 1998. The Company is ready to execute its 1998 capital program and will continue its exploration efforts in Alberta while shooting delineation seismic on the above discoveries with a full-scale development program to follow.

KERM'S WATCHLIST COMPANIES IN THE NEWS

OCELOT ENERGY INC. unit O.J. Pipelines Ltd. has been awarded a $14 million contract to do work on a northwestern Ontario portion of TransCanada PipeLines Ltd.'s mainline. Calgary-based O.J. will replace and lower portions of 30-in. and 36-in. pipe and valves, as well as install pig (internal pipe inspection device) launchers and hydrostatically retest two valve sections. The work is expected to be completed by the end of March 1998.

BONUS RESSOURCE SERVICES CORP. has gone down under, acquiring four double service rigs and other assets of Brisbane-based Superior Well Servicing Rty. Ltd. of Australia. The $8.4-million deal also allows Bonus to manage and earn a stake in three double service rigs operating on Barrow Island, off the northwest coast of Australia. Superior is Australia's second-largest service rig operator. The transaction, subject to government approval, represents Calgary-based Bonus' first international acquisition.

BADGER DAYLIGHTING INC. of Red Deer said yesterday it has closed the $20-million acquisition of Delta Oilfield Construction, a unit of Delta Energy Ltd. The construction division builds small diameter pipelines and provides related services. TSE-listed Badger, a vertically integrated industrial technologies service company operating in the petroleum and utilities industries, paid for the buy with $10 million in cash and two million Badger shares.


OTHER COMPANIES IN THE NEWS

Quite a little news regarding Canadian companies with international operations. Companies in the news included;

CITYVIEW ENERGY CORP. LTD. subsidiary Western Nusantara Energi Pty Ltd ("Western Nusantara") as Operator of the Tanjung Miring Timur field announces that its initial workover program has been completed. Current production is running at approximately 450 barrels of oil per day, of which 160 barrels per day is shareable oil (the non-shareable oil rate now being 290 barrels per day after declining from the original 330 barrels per day). To further enhance production the existing gas compression and processing equipment are being upgraded. It is anticipated that this upgrading work will be completed by March 1998. The production revenue will be credited in United States dollars to the Operator's account commencing in the first quarter of 1998.

CityView Energy also announced that it has acquired from WAPET an AJAX DPC600 360HP Gas Compressor and an 10 MMSCFPD natural gas liquid processing plant for Aus$150,000.00 plus mobilisation costs. This equipment will assist in CityView's gas production plan and will be transported to Indonesia late in 1998.

Also, at Tuba Obi East Block, South Sumatra, CityView's Western Akar Petroleum Pty. Ltd. is pleased to announce that its data review and well engineering studies have been completed and a well site (Location B) has been selected for the drilling of a delineation well TOE#2 during March 1998. The proposed well TOE#2 will be situated approximately 350 metres from the discovery well TOE#1 which flowed 350 bopd with several untested gas zones. The seismic anomaly at Location B indicates that the oil bering sand is structurally more prominent than at TOE#1.

Kerr-McGee And PENDAIRES PETROLEUM Drills Successful Appraisal Well In China

Kerr-McGee Corp said Thursday it had conducted a third consecutive successful appraisal of a discovery well in China.

The oil exploration company said in a statement that appraisal well CFD 2-1-4 had a calculated flow of 2,992 barrels of oil per day and 3.7 million million cubic feet of gas per day.

The well, located on Block 04/36 about 3.5 miles east of discovery well CFD 2-1-1 in Bohai Bay, China, had perforations over an interval from 12,140 feet to 12,336 feet.

Oil gravity was 36 degrees API and no formation water was recovered during the test, it said.

The 13,120-foot-deep well, designed to test the eastern extent of the discovery, is located 3.5 miles east of the CFD 2-1-1, it said.

"The drilling rig Bohai Four is moving to drill the CFD 1-1-1 well," read the company statement. "This 13,000-foot exploratory test will evaluate a large pre-Tertiary buried hill prospect located about four miles west-northwest of the CFD 2-1-1 discovery."

Kerr-McGee said a three-dimensional seismic survey and further drilling scheduled in the new year will give it the information it needs to decide whether to develop the field.

The discovery well tested about 7,000 barrels of oil per day in June 1996.

Kerr-McGee China Petroleum Ltd, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Kerr-McGee Corp, operates contract area 04/36 with partners Murphy Pacific Rim Ltd, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Murphy Oil Corp , and Sino-American Energy Corp, a majority-owned subsidiary of Pendaries Petroleum Ltd .

NAFTEX ENERGY CORPORATION announced that a Declaration of Commerciality has been made with respect to the West Esh El Mallaha (''WEEM'') Concession and a Development Lease, covering an area of 20,200 acres in the south-eastern portion of the WEEM Concession, has been negotiated. A Joint Operating Company is now in the process of being created with the Company's joint venture partner Cabre Exploration (Cyprus) Limited (''Cabre'') and the Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation (''EGPC'') in order to oversee development and bring the Concession on to production.

Production from the two wells known as Rabeh-1 and Rabeh East-1 will begin as soon as a leased early production unit is in place. EGPC have offered full cooperation for the task at hand and it is estimated that production, at an initial rate of 2,500 bopd, will commence in January 1998.

A four well exploration and development drilling program will begin as soon as a drilling rig can be secured. In addition an extensive 2D and 3D seismic program is scheduled to begin in the first or second quarter of 1998 to continue exploration and development of the 222,000 acre WEEM Concession.

EUROGAS CORPORATION released today the following status report on the Company's Sud Nefta well in Tunisia. Intermediate 9 5/8" casing has been successfully set at 3960 meters above the three primary objectives in the Triassic, Ordovician and Cambrian and drilling operations are expected to resume by December 20.

Prior to running the intermediate casing, the well was wireline logged to its current depth. The log evaluation has indicated various zones of interest, which will be tested after the primary targets have been drilled, evaluated and tested.

During drilling operations, a thick zone of pyritized dolomites and anhydrites was encountered, which caused a considerable reduction in the rate of penetration. It is now estimated that drilling operations on the well will be concluded by the end of January, 1998. Results from any operations on the well will be released as conclusive data is acquired.

Other than the excessive delays caused by the unexpected dolomite / anhydrite sequence, the company is satisfied with the well and operations to date.


PETROLEX ENERGY CORPORATION reported the safe return of three personnel who were abducted, on 16 September 1997, from the Santi No.1 well location on the Los Toches Association Contract Area. Two men, Petrolex employees, and one employee of a contractor were reunited with their families on 15 December, 1997.

The Company is encouraged by the release of these personnel and hope that two other Petrolex employees who were abducted from the Rubiales Field in August will be released in the near future.

The Company's operations in Colombia remain suspended pending the release of all abducted personnel and the implementation of the recommendations from the security assessment presently being completed.

Throughout this operational shutdown, management has been continuing with development plans for the Rubiales Field. This has included the commissioning of a pipeline study which has recently been completed, and initiating preliminary discussions regarding financing for the project. It is now common knowledge that excess capacity may become available in the OCENSA pipeline in the near future. The OCENSA pipeline is the major trans-Andean export pipeline running from the Cusiana Field in the western Llanos Basin to the port of Covenas on the Caribbean Coast. The Company has been in positive discussions with the operator of the OCENSA pipeline regarding the possibility of accessing this excess capacity.

In concert with these discussions and the growing awareness of available export capacity out of the Llanos Basin, the Company has been approached by other major international companies with regard to Petrolex's future plans for the substantial reserve base at the Rubiales Oilfield and possible joint-venture arrangements.

RED SEAS OIL (RSO/ASE) announced that drilling of the B1-NC177 well has been completed. Total depth was 8,750 feet. Strong oil and gas shows (later confirmed by electric logs) have been encountered in the Facha, Zelten and Beda formations and the Company is making preparations to conduct four drill stem tests. Testing is expected to take approximately 20 days. The B1-NC177 was drilled on the En Naga North prospect in Block NC177 onshore Libya. The En Naga North Prospect is on structural and geological trend with the En Naga Oil Field less than 15 kilometres to the southeast. Block NC177 is located in the prolific Sirte Basin which produces over 1.8 million barrels of oil per day. Red Sea Oil is the operator and holds a 60 percent interest in the Block. Sands Petroleum AB holds the remaining 40 percent interest. (INTERNATIONAL PETROLEUM)

TANGANYIKA OIL COMPANY (VSE/TYK) announce that against competition from international oil companies, it has been awarded a 100 percent interest in the West Gharib Block. West Gharib is a 2,530 square kilometre onshore oil exploration concession along the western coastline of the Gulf of Suez in Egypt. It is located to the west of large producing oil fields held by Amoco, AGIP and GPC which have original proven oil reserves of over 5 billion barrels The Gulf of Suez Basin is a prolific oil producing region with in excess of 800,000 barrels of daily oil production. Over a dozen international oil companies, including Amoco, Shell, AGIP, Marathon, Pennzoil, British Gas, etc., hold production or exploration concessions in this area.

SEVEN SEAS PETROLEUM Seven Seas Petroleum Inc. (Toronto: SVS.U - news) announced today the completion and results of 34 days of production and reservoir testing of its Tres Pasos No. 1-E well located on the Rio Seco Block of the Emerald Mountain project in Colombia, South America. Maximum actual production rates of 13,123 barrels of oil per day and 5.97 million cubic feet of gas per day with no water were realized from a perforated production interval of 288 feet in the Upper Cretaceous Cimarrona formation encountered approximately 600 feet low to the structural position of this formation in the three previously announced El Segundo wells. This test confirmed drilling results of no evidence of an oil water contact. Actual production rates were limited by the size of the downhole pump. Robert A. Hefner III, Chairman of Seven Seas, said ''The Tres Pasos 1-E well produced at a materially higher rate compared to any well drilled so far on the Emerald Mountain Project. The capability of this well to produce at such higher rates is yet a further indication of a very significant discovery''.

In addition Seven Seas announced that the test equipment used for the Tres Pasos No. 1-E production testing is being mobilized to the El Segundo No. 2-E well to begin initial production testing. Testing of this well is estimated to take approximately 30 to 45 days once initiated.

GHK Company Colombia, a wholly owned subsidiary of Seven Seas, is the operator of the Emerald Mountain project. Seven Seas holds a 57.7% interest in the Emerald Mountain project which encompasses the Dindal and Rio Seco Blocks


PEBERCAN COMPANY (PBC/MSE) has started its first exploration well located on its VARADERO licence in Cuba. This first company well, CANTEL PROFUNDO 1 is a vertical drill hole, with a total depth forecast of 3,200 metres.

This well should penetrate Cretaceous to Jurassic reservoirs lying below 2,000 metres, made of fractured carbonates. Pebercan reminds that the Russians initiated the exploration of these same deep reservoirs. They evidenced below 2000 metres, in two different wells, light oil shows (29 degrees API ) and a gas flow of 70,000 m3/day. These wells, located in the vicinity of Pebercan prospect area, Cantel Profundo, had been stopped due to a lack of appropriate technology .

The rig National 110 UE, which belongs to PEBERCAN company, is used to drill Cantel Profundo 1, and is equipped with the appropriate technology in order to control expected high pressures. The staff in place is essentially made of both Canadian and French engineers and technicians.

CHAUVCO RESOURCES INTERNATIONAL a Bermuda company, is being launched as a result of the strategic alternatives review process undertaken by Chauvco Resources Ltd. (''CRL'') to increase shareholder value. Under the terms of a plan of arrangement approved today, shareholders of CRL receive one share of Chauvco for each CRL share held. Chauvco is an international natural resource company formed for the purpose of acquiring oil and natural gas properties and exploration, development, production and marketing of crude oil and natural gas. Initially, the Company's principal properties, operations and oil reserves are located in Gabon, central west Africa. Chauvco proposes to actively evaluate and secure other international petroleum resource opportunities, principally focusing on west and north Africa and the Middle East.

On December 22, 1997, Chauvco will begin public trading of its common
shares on The Toronto Stock Exchange and The Montreal Exchange under the symbol of CHV. The Company has 51,346,282 shares outstanding.

PACIFIC TIGER ENERGY INC. (PTE/MSE) will be listing as of December 19th, an aggregate of 15,237,901 Common Shares, of which 13,937,901 will be issued and outstanding.

Pacific Tiger Energy Inc. acquires and develops oil and gas prospects in South East Asia. The Company holds an interest in the SW1 Petroleum Concession located in the Phetchabun Basin in the central plains region of Thailand, roughly two hundred miles from Bangkok.

END



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (8040)12/20/1997 4:19:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15196
 
MEDIA / Genoil Inc. Reaches Deal To Get Money Back

Saturday, December 20, 1997
The Financial Post

Calgary junior oil company Genoil Inc. has reached a deal with Montreal affiliate St. GeneviŠve Resources Ltd. over unauthorized borrowings of $5.2 million from its accounts.

Genoil also said Friday it will hold a special shareholders' meeting Jan. 14 in Calgary to seek approval for the reconstitution of its board of directors and a new mandate for the company.

On Dec. 5, the company said money had been transferred from its accounts just before St. GeneviŠve Resources and another affiliate, KWG Resources Ltd., were forced to seek court protection from creditors.

St. GeneviŠve has attributed its troubles to a bid to finance a gold project in Russia.

Under the agreement announced Friday, St. GeneviŠve will pay for Genoil's continuing operations, including rent and salaries.

Any money paid by St. GeneviŠve will be go to reduce the $5.2 million in unauthorized borrowings.

In addition, St. GeneviŠve will pay Genoil $75,000 a week from Friday until the day it obtains court approval of a plan under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act.

Genoil said that money will be used to pay its own creditors.

St. GeneviŠve will repay any money still owing to these creditors to Genoil within three days of the ratification of its restructuring plan.

Genoil's 16.8 million shares (GNOL/CDN) are listed over the counter on the Toronto Stock Exchange's Canadian Dealing Network. On Friday, the stock closed at 18›, down 2›.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (8040)12/21/1997 2:06:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING FRIDAY DECEMBER 19, 1997 (1)

Saturday, December 20, 1997

Japan jitters grip Street
Financial Post

North American stocks fell steeply after news of the third largest bankruptcy in Japanese history, but pared losses as investors went bargain-hunting in the afternoon

The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index fell 59.6 points, or 0.9%, to 6535.34, retreating from its intraday low of 6464.98. Declining issues sharply outpaced advancers 646 to 410. Trading volume was 123.8 million shares, compared with Thursday's 127.1 million shares.

On the week, the TSE 300 was down 106.55 points or 1.6%.

Overall, 13 of the 14 TSE stock groups fell, but several backed up from their lows. The gold subindex ended down 1.5% at 6030.73, compared with its intraday low of 5942.18. The underlying bullion price on the Comex division of the New YorkMercantile Exchange rose US$2.30 to US$289.50 an ounce. In the group, Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX/TSE) fell 70› to $25.45.

The pipeline group was the only one to advance. In turbulent times, investors tend to put their money into pipeline and other stocks that are considered safe havens.

The banks, which traditionally fall into this category, fell 1.2% because the strong price appreciation in the stocks makes them prime targets for investors looking to lock in profits, said Paul Devlin, vice-president of MMA Investment Managers Ltd.

The decline in Asian markets is expected to hurt earnings of computer-related and telecommunication companies in particular. Newbridge Networks Corp. (NNC/TSE) slipped $1.30 to $51 and Northern Telecom Ltd. (NTL/TSE) fell $4.25 to $122.75.

Banks and other financial services issues, which account for 23% of the TSE 300, also dragged the broader market down. Royal Bank of Canada (RY/TSE) slipped $1.10 to $74.95, Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD/TSE) fell 55› to $53.40 and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CM/TSE) dropped $1.10 to $44.50.

Other major Canadian markets closed mixed. The Montreal Exchange portfolio fell 47.69 points, or 1.4%, to 3299.71. On the week it was down 75.17 points or 2.2%. The Vancouver Stock Exchange index rose 0.63 of a point to 596.08. On the week it was up 2.3 points or 0.4%.


HOT STOCKS

Regulatory ruling boosts BCE, sends small telcos lower. BCE Inc. (BCE/TSE), up 35› to $45.25, on volume of 3.2 million shares. Telus Corp. (T/TSE), down $1.10 to $32, on volume of 576,413 shares. Call-Net Enterprises Inc. (CN/TSE), down $1.10 to $21.15, on volume of 428,145 shares. Maritime Telegraph & Telephone Co. Ltd. (MTT/TSE), down $1.25 to $34, on volume of 15,577 shares. The Toronto Stock Exchange's telephone utilities subgroup fell slightly, with many smaller companies losing ground but heavily-weighted BCE moving up. The activity followed a regulatory ruling released after the market closed Thursday, which gave BCE most of a local phone rate increase it was seeking, but held other companies to smaller rises. The regulators also lifted most restrictions on long-distance pricing. BCE was the most active issue on the TSE. It traded for as little at $44.40 and was below Thursday's close of $44.90 until 2:30 EST, when the sentiment changed. BCE climbed steadily in the last hour.

The most likely fate of troubled software maker Corel Corp. is the sale of its principal product lines to U.S. competitors, analysts said Friday. The Ottawa-based company said it does not intend to fire any staff, but such a buyout would almost certainly result in layoffs. This week, Corel revealed preliminary fourth-quarter results that included both a bigger loss and lower sales than had been expected. It will issue formal results in January, but many investors chose to bail out of the stock Friday, sending it down 15%. Corel has about US$2.35 a share in revenue, which, when applied with a reasonable share price multiple of 0.3, gives it a share price of US71›, Stewart says. Throw in its US40› a share in cash, and the stock is worth at least US$1.11, or $1.60. Corel (COS/TSE) closed at $2.17 in Toronto Friday, down 37›, and (cosff/nasdaq) at US$1 1/2 in New York, down 1/4.

Ballard Power Systems Inc. (BLD/TSE), down $8.20 to $105.05, on volume of 157,881 shares. The shares are still up more than $17 after a week of wild moves. First Ford Motor Co. bought 3.7 million shares for $80.80 each, which pushed the stock to $115 on Wednesday. Then on Thursday GEC-Alsthom NV of Paris invested $53 million in a Ballard subsidiary, which knocked the market down.

Shares of Toronto-based Thomson Corp. (TOC/TSE) closed Friday at $37.35, down 25› on volume of 850,197 shares. On the heels of a favorable British competition ruling, London-based Thomson Travel Group has acquired Fritidsresor AB of Sweden, giving it a beachhead in the growing European travel market. On Friday, Britain's Monopolies & Mergers Commission said after an investigation it is satisfied there is sufficient competition in the travel industry. The commission accepts that vertically integrated companies, such as Thomson Travel, which own both retail travel agencies and tour operators, do not work against the public interest and could lead to lower prices for travellers. Nigel Harrison, chief financial officer for parent Thomson Corp., said the timing of the competition ruling and the acquisition was a coincidence. The Swedish purchase, worth about $618 million, gives Thomson Travel a long-sought presence in northern Europe.

Bracknell Corp. (BRK/TSE), up 40› to $4.15, on volume of 62,590 shares. The construction and privatization company said net earnings in the fourth quarter ended Oct. 31 were $4.7 million (18› a share), up from $2.8 million (11›)a year earlier.

BioChem Pharma Inc. is investing US$20 million in a private U.S. biotech company in exchange for its research into hepatitis B treatments and drugs that mimic therapeutic proteins. Shares in BioChem (BCH/ME) closed Friday at $34.40, up 40›, and (BCHE/Nasdaq) at US$24 1/8, up 5/16 on the news. Under the terms of the deal, BioChem will hold 20% of the equity of Massachusetts-based Scriptgen Pharmaceuticals Inc., and five-year warrants for an additional 5% of the company. BioChem receives exclusive rights to Scriptgen's small molecule drug candidates for hepatitis B, a liver disease for which BioChem and partner Glaxo Wellcome PLC are already testing a drug, Lamivudine.

Four Seasons Hotels Inc. (FSH/TSE), up 80› to $40.75, on volume of 24,600 shares. Douglas Ludwig, chief financial officer, told Dow Jones better than expected performance from company managed hotels in Europe and North America will offset weakness from Asian operations. He acknowledged that, except for the recent Asian crisis, Four Seasons had expected to beat analysts' forecasts for fourth-quarter earnings. But it will meet those expectations of between 55› and 60› a share. Four Seasons made 39› in last year's fourth quarter.

Xillix Technologies Corp. has passed its final hurdle for European approval of its medical device for detecting lung cancer. The Richmond, B.C.-based company said Friday its Life-Lung Fluorescence Endoscopy System received the CE Mark for compliance with the Medical Device Directive of the European Union. "They were already available in major European markets such as France and Germany," said Montreal-based analyst Mike Jams of L‚vesque Beaubien Geoffrion Inc. "But this expands the market to the entire Union." The imaging device, which helps doctors locate cancerous and pre-cancerous cells when tissue is exposed to light, is marketed by Olympus Optical Co. Ltd. of Tokyo. Xillix (XLX/TSE) shares closed up $0.18 to $2.18 on Friday.

CHC Helicopter Corp. (FLYb/TSE), down 1.75› to $9.25, on volume of 416 shares. On Tuesday, CHC gained access to the $37 million net proceeds of a $13-a-share financing done in September. The stock price fell $2.75 a share last week.

Botswana Diamondfields Inc. (BWD/VSE), up 20› to $1.70, on volume of 1.3 million shares. Canaccord Capital Corp. crossed one million shares at $1.60 each. The trade was mainly done for tax purposes, said Peter Barnes, chief financial officer.

NEW YORK

Traders are looking forward to next week more than just because Christmas and Hanukah (as well as a lot of vacations) are on the calendar. There's also the expectation that stocks will parlay the remarkable recovery staged Friday afternoon into some gains to begin the week.

True, the Dow still finished Friday's session in arrears, but the fact that the index came way back from the depths of 269 points down and tech stocks led the way as they pushed the Nasdaq into positive territory, has some traders optimistic. That said, trading is expected to ebb considerably from this week's action and many players remained concerned about the outlook for 1998. Activity in Asia's major markets will continue to play a role, but holiday sentiment will dominate.

"I think it will quiet down quite a bit next week," said Eugene Peroni, director of technical research at Janney Montgomery Scott. "The damage we did (Friday) was relatively minor in nature. Triple witching could have played a significant role. Now that we're beyond it, I think we'll get a Santa Claus rally, though it may not be until after Christmas."

As for technical analysis, Peroni said the Dow's breach of 7,800 is a concern, but not "catastrophic." As for the tech-rich Nasdaq, the technician said its turnaround Friday reflects the "oversold" state of many big tech stocks. Peroni listed Motorola (MOT), Iomega (IOM), Compaq Computer (CPQ) and Micron Technology (MU) as examples of industry leads overdue for a bounce, but he is not a proponent of making big bets on the tech sector.

"I'm still cautious because they're in a basic downtrend. You have to be fairly agile to trade the big tech names," the technician said. "Technology has been in a decade-long advance, so much good news is already built in. Until new technology emerges to push the industry on its next leap forward, they're probably going to languish. Maybe the group will be a market performer, but it's losing its leadership role."

Peroni is not alone in predicting that tech stocks are on the wane. In addition, many market mavens say the weakness in tech stocks in the past six weeks or so is a prelude to what will happen to the market as a whole. The exposure to Asia's faltering markets has been cited as the culprit for the declines in technology, and there are worries about earnings of most multinationals that do business in the region. But the performance of the bond market and 3M's (MMM) warning this week -- in which it mentioned slowing in domestic markets -- has many players concerned about economic growth closer to home.

"The real deal is that most people are still forecasting 2% to 3% GDP growth next year. I'm projecting zero to 1% domestic GDP growth," said Scott Bleier, chief investment strategist at Prime Charter. "Lower growth means lower earnings growth and lower valuations."

Noting that earnings growth and low interest rates have fueled the market's advance, Bleier said: "If we take one of those away, there's no reason to power higher. And what the bond market is telling us is that we will have a slowdown."

However, lower interest rates "will continue to prove a floor for themarket," he said, pegging the low 7,000s as the nadir for the Dow.

And what of that bond market? Fixed-income traders -- those who weren't short -- are embracing the current environment, whichmseems only to get better and better. Further unrest overseas and more worries about the performance of the U.S. stock market will continue to generate gains next week for the bond market. There's no data on the docket next week that could shake traders' optimism. And aside from the weekly figures -- like the same-store sales figures and jobless claims -- and Tuesday's final third-quarter GDP report and durable-goods numbers, there's hardly any data atall.

"Technically, things are very positive. To close where we closed (Friday) points to a test of 5.80% on the long bond," said Michelle Laughlin, Treasury market strategist at Prudential Securities. "Part of it is due to Asia and the 'flight to quality trade,' part about revised expectations about profit growth in the U.S. and subsequent revision of asset allocation out of stocks into bonds. Plus, there's a generally favorable backdrop with low inflation, no Fed tightening in the near term, and a budget surplus. Everything is very positive."

Cabletron Systems (CS) reports earnings Monday. Other than that, there are no earning reports of significance on the calendar.

After The Bell

Digital Link (DLNK) warned that it will lose as much as 7 cents per share in the fourth quarter. Analysts were expecting the manufacturer of high-speed digital access products to earn 20 cents per share in the quarter.

Waste Management (WMX) said it has met with Sunbeam (SOC)CEO Al Dunlap to discuss the company's permanent search for a CEO.

BJ Services (BJS) approved a plan to buy back up to $150 million shares.

An FDA advisory panel rejected NeoPharm's (NEO) breast-cancer rug, Neomark. The drug is designed to help doctors determine the extent of the disease, rather than cure it.

Friday's Markets

Unlike Chairman Mao and his followers, Wall Street's "long march" on Friday proved too much for blue-chip stocks to overcome. Dow stocks bounced back dramatically from some early morning losses, but worries about corporate profits and Asia's ongoing woes conspired to send the blue-chip index down 90 points. Tech stocks, however, successfully completed their revolutionary charge, sending the Nasdaq up 1.55 points on the day that began with a woeful start.

Reminiscent of how IBM's (IBM) share-buyback program helped stem the damage the day after "Gray Monday," a repurchase announcement by General Electric (GE) was partially credited withspurring the turnaround Friday; GE increased its share buyback program by $4 billion. In addition to GE's news, the reversal of fortunes in technology stocks helped the major indices close far offtheir worst levels of the session, when the Dow was off 269 points and the Nasdaq declined 37 points.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ($INDUA) stumbled early amid worries about corporate earnings and big declines in Asia's major markets. The index shed more than 100 points in the first 30 minutes of trading, then losses accelerated. Shortly after 11 a.m. EST, the Dow was off 269 points and players were wondering whether the action would trigger a halt in trading. Thereafter, the index began its long climb back toward breakeven. At 1 p.m. the index was off a relatively modest 100 points, then slipped back again before chugging forward through much of the afternoon. The blue-chip proxy rose within 70 points of neutral in the last hour of trading, but finished off 90.21 points at 7,756.29, its first close under 7,800 since Nov. 24. The Dow lost 1.05% for the week.

In contrast to recent history, the Nasdaq Composite Index (COMP) demonstrated strength relative to its blue-chip brethren. The tech-plastered index suffered early-morning losses as well, reaching a nadir of down 37 points 90 minutes into the trading day. With semiconductor and equipment names and Internet-related stocks leading the way, the Nasdaq marched higher in more direct fashion than the Dow, save for a brief dip after about 1 p.m. EST. By 2 p.m., the index was lower by less than 10 points and continued to push higher in the last two hours of trading. The index closed up 1.55 points at 1,524.74. For the week, the Nasdaq slid 0.77%.

The S&P 500 (SPX) finished off 8.52 points to 946.78, and dipped 0.7% for the week. The Russell 2000 Index (RUT) shed 0.32 on the session to 420.03, and slid 0.6% for the week.

Trading activity was the second-highest volume ever recorded, thanks in part to the triple-witching expiration of futures and options on stocks and index futures. On the NYSE, 805 million shares were traded while declining stocks swamped advancers by a 19- to-9 spread. In Nasdaq activity, 802 million shares were exchanged while the breadth of the market favored declining stocks by a 13-to-9 margin.

Overnight weakness in Asia was a prime factor in Wall Street's unease Friday. The bankruptcy of one of Japan's largest food distributors, Toshoku, helped send the Nikkei down more than 5.2%. The filing exacerbated concerns about the state of the Japanese economy, as it was the first large non-financial-related failure in the nation. Korea's stock market also declined more than 5% on worries about what the victory of Kim Dae Jung means for the nation and its ongoing economic crisis. Kim did pledge to support the $57 billion bailout package provided to Korea by the International Monetary Fund. In sympathy with its bigger neighbors, Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index fell more than 3%.

Once again, the worries about international markets and profitability of U.S. corporations worked to the benefit of the bond market. More demand for the perceived "safety" of U.S. Treasury bonds helped send the yield on the benchmark 30-year bond down to 5.92% Friday as prices rose a quarter-point.

Technology Stocks

The chip-equipment makers were showing signs of life Friday, and helped lead the Nasdaq's rebound. Novellus Systems (NVLS) rose2 5/32 to 33 1/4 despite being downgraded by Lehman Brothers to "neutral" from "outperform." The brokerage firm was kinder to KLA-Tencor (KLAC), upping its rating to "buy" from "outperform, and the stock rose 3 9/16 to 37 13/16. Feeling a hit from Lehma down grades were Kulicke & Soffa (KLIC) and Electroglas (EGLS), but losses were only fractional.

Elsewhere in the group, Applied Materials (AMAT) rose 1 7/8 to 30, Lam Research (LRCX) gained 9/16 to 29 1/8, Teradyne (TER) closed up 2 7/16 to 33, Asyst Technologies (ASYT) rose 1 3/8 to 21 3/8, and ASM Lithography Holding (ASMLF) jumped 2 5/8 to 64.

Chip-industry leader Intel (INTC) reversed some early-morning weakness to close up 7/8 to 70. On the NYSE, Texas Instruments (TXN) rose 2 to 45 3/8, Micron Technology (MU) climbed 3 1/2 to 27 1/2, and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) gained 1/2 to 18 3/4.

Among other chip names, SGS-Thomson Microelectronics (STM) climbed 5 to 58 11/16, Lattice Semiconductor (LSCC) rose 3 31/32 to 52 5/8, and Micrel (MCRL) climbed 4 3/8 to 27 3/8, thanks to an upgrade from Hambrecht & Quist.

Among Internet-related stocks, America Online (AOL) rose 1 1/4 to 85, Amazon.com (AMZN) jumped 2 1/2 to 54, Yahoo! (YHOO) gained 3 3/4 to 61 7/8, Excite (XCIT) closed up 1 15/32 to 24 31/32, and Lycos (LCOS) rose 1 7/8 to 36 3/4.

Microsoft (MSFT) continued to suffer under the scrutiny of the Justice Department's antitrust charge. The software maker's stock fell 2 5/16 to 128 9/16 as U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson set a Jan. 13 hearing for arguments on the government's request that Microsoft be held in contempt for violating a court order. Comments from the judge seemed to indicate he is skeptical about Microsoft's claim that its Windows operating systems will not perform as intended without Internet Explorer.

Bear, Stearns recommended investors pare their holdings in Microsoft in favor of Computer Associates (CA). Computer Associates shares closed up 1/8 at 50.

The other big drag on the Nasdaq was Dell Computer (DELL), which fell 2 7/16 to 78 5/16. Other PC makers fared better. Compaq Computer (CPQ) closed off 9/16 to while Gateway 2000 (GTW) jumped 2 15/16 to 33 1/16, and Digital Equipment (DEC) rose 1 to 37 1/4.

Elsewhere in the software sector, Software Artistry (SWRT) jumped 6 1/2 to 24 1/4 on news that International Business Machines (IBM) is buying the company for $24.50 per share. After falling early on, IBM powered back to close up 2 to 102. Fellow Dow tech component Hewlett Packard (HWP) dropped 11/16 to 61 5/16 but well off its worst levels of the day.

Adobe Systems (ADBE) parlayed beating the Street by a penny with its fourth quarter earnings of 56 cents per share into a rise of 2 1/4 to 36 7/8.

Great Plains Software (GPSI) rose 1 5/8 to 22 1/4 after it beat estimates by 2 cents, earning 15 cents per share in its secon quarter.

PeopleSoft (PSFT) continued to demonstrate strength, rising 11/16 to 32 7/8.

3Com (COMS) fell 1/2 to 32 5/8, but finished well off its worst level of the session. On Thursday, 3Com said it earned 4 cents per share in its second quarter, a penny below predictions, according to Zacks, but in line with First Call's consensus. Those expectations had already been trimmed lower after 3Com's warning on Dec. 3. Soundview lowered its 1998 and 1999 earning estimates and kept its short-term "hold" rating on 3Com. BA Robertson Stephens, however, lifted its 1998 and 1999 estimates on the networker.

Elsewhere in the group, Sun Microsystems (SUNW) rose 1 5/8 to 38 11/16, Ascend Communications (ASND) powered up 3 1/16 to 27 5/16, but Cisco Systems (CSCO) slid 1/8 to 53 7/16.

In the wireless space, there was a mixed performance. Motorola (MOT) rose 2 3/16 to 58, while Nokia (NOK/A) fell 13/16 to 69 3/16, Lucent Technologies (LU) slid 1 1/4 to 76, and Ericsson (ERICY) closed off 3/8 to 36 1/4.

National Data (NDC) fell 1 3/8 to 33 after being downgraded by Lehman Brothers to "outperform" from "buy."

Active Issues

The Dow's decline was led by J.P. Morgan (JPM), which once again succumbed to worries about its exposure to Asia despite a rallying bond market, falling 2 7/8 to 116. Other Dow laggards included 3M (MMM), off 2 5/16 to 83 5/8; The Travelers Group (TRV), which shed 2 1/8 to 53; and Merck (MRK), off 3 1/8 to 102.

General Electric fell 13/16 to 73 3/16 although the firm's board upped its share-buyback program to $17 billion from $13 billion and increased its dividend. AT&T (T), the strongest Dow component of late, rose 2 3/16 to 61 5/16 after Morgan Stanley Dean Witter reiterated its "buy" rating on the stock. Chairman Michael Armstrong has frozen all hiring, set stringent new compensation guidelines, and redirected more than $2 billion in local-phone services spending, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Other Dow gainers included McDonald's (MCD), up 15/16 to 45 15/16; Coca-Cola (KO), which gained 1 3/16 to 65 7/16; and Procter & Gamble (PG), which rose 1/2 to 79 7/8.

Nike (NKE) tumbled 3 7/16 to 40 1/16 after reporting second-quarter earnings late Thursday that missed estimates by 7 cents. The athletic-apparel marker also said it expects negative earnings comparisons for the next two quarters. Goldman Sachs cut its rating on the firm to "market perform" from "market outperform" and Dain Bosworth downgraded the stock as well.

Depotech (DEPO) shed 8 7/8 to 4 1/8 on word that a Food & Drug Administration advisory panel has recommended rejection of the firm's treatment for neoplastic menegitis, which arises from cancerous tumors. SBC Warburg Dillon Reed and Vector Securities lowered ratings on the drug maker.

A profit warning (for its second quarter) from Briggs & Stratton (BGG) helped send the stock down 3 3/16 to 49 1/16.

Worries about a slowdown in Asia-related traffic grounded the recently high-flying airline stocks Friday. UAL (UAL) slid 1 1/16 to 89 9/16, AMR (AMR) fell 2 15/16 to 124 7/8 and US Airways Group (U) tumbled 2 1/4 to 59 1/8. Those results helped send the Dow's Transportation Index down 30.53 points to 3143.24.

Following J.P. Morgan's lead, most big bank stocks were lower on the session as well. Chase Manhattan Bank (CMB) slid 1 to 108 1/8, NationsBank (NB) lost 2 5/8 to 59 1/8, BankAmerica (BAC) shed 1 7/16 to 73 1/2, BankBoston (BKB) fell 1 11/16 to 94 3/8, and Wachovia (WB) closed down 1 7/16 to 80 7/8.

Oil-drilling and equipment stocks were hit by selling once more. Smith International (SII) slid 2 1/2 to 58 1/8, Schlumberger (SLB) fell 2 5/16 to 74 13/16, Diamond Offshore (DO) dipped 1 3/4 to 45 15/16, Camco (CAM) closed off 1 1/8 to 56 3/8, and Transocean Offshore (RIG) fell 2 to 43.

Big drug stocks were mixed. Pfizer (PFE) fell 2 to 72 1/8, and Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY) lost 1 3/8 to 91 3/16, while Warner-Lambert (WLA) rose 2 3/16 to 120 1/16.

Showboat (SBO) jumped 8 7/16 to 29 9/16 on word that it is being acquired by Harrah's Entertainment (HET) in a deal valued at $1.2 billion. Harrah's said it will acquire Showboat for $30.75 cash per share, or $519 million, and assume $635 million of Showboat debt. Harrah's closed up 1 to 18 3/16.

Incredibly, FIRSTPLUS Financial Group (FPFG) shares jumped 4 9/16 to 33 5/8 although the company said it expects reduced earnings for 1997, 1998 and 1999.

KN Energy (KNE) fell 7/8 to 47 5/8 after agreeing to acquire Occidental Petroleum's (OXY) natural-gas pipeline business for $3.5 billion in cash and debt assumption of $500 million. Occidental closed down 1/16 at 29 3/16.

New York Times (NYT) shares fell 3 3/16 to 61 3/8 afterWasserstein Perella lowered its rating on the media firm to "hold" from "buy."

Chancellor Media (AMFM) rose 3 1/2 to 71 3/4 thanks to some positive comments from Furman Setz, which upped its 1998 and 1998 earning estimates on the firm.

Continental Homes (CON) jumped 4 5/8 to 39 11/16 after agreeing to be acquired by D.H. Horton (DHI) in a stock swap that valued Continental Homes at $44.50 per share. D.H. Horton fell 2 5/16 to 16 15/16.

PacifiCorp (PPW) rose 1 1/8 to 25 7/16 on word that U.K. regulators have cleared the way for its $9.7 billion takeover of Energy Group PLC.


The major overseas markets all closed lower.

London: British shares sank to their lowest level in two weeks as fears that "Asian flu" would spread brought stocks under pressure. The FT-SE 100 index closed at 5020.2, down 148.1 points or 2.9%, and down 25 points or 0.5% on the week.

Frankfurt: German stock prices settled lower with little corporate news to spur trading. The Dax index closed at 4084.75, down 81.49 points or 2%, but up 2.15 points on the week.

Tokyo: Japanese stocks plunged at the close after Toshoku's failure triggered panic selling of companies seen as financially weak. The 225-share Nikkei average closed at 15,314.89, down 846.75 points or 5.2%, and down 589.41 points or 3.7% on the week.

Hong Kong: Share prices ended the session sharply lower, dragged down by the fall in Tokyo. The Hang Seng index closed at 10,405.81, down 348.3 points or 3.2%., and down 208.85 points or 2% on the week.

Sydney: The Australian market closed weaker, undermined by the Tokyo and Hong Kong markets. The all ordinaries index closed at 2528.1, down 35 points or 1.4%. On the week it was up 34.1 points or 1.4%.