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To: Crocodile who wrote (9242)2/25/1998 9:20:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1998 (2)

FEATURE STORY

Petro-Canada To Sell Propane Unit

Edmonton Sun

Observers estimate offering of ICG shares through new income trust fund will bring in $250-million

Petro-Canada plans to sell its retail propane business, ICG Propane Inc. of Calgary, by offering shares through an income trust fund.

Although no price has been disclosed for the initial public offering, industry observers expect Calgary based Petrocan to fetch roughly $250-million for the wholly owned propane subsidia

Petrocan spokesman Robert Andras declined comment yesterday.

A preliminary prospectus filed with securities regulators says Petrocan has hired RBC Dominion Securities Inc. to be the lead underwriter in a deal to create the ICG Propane Income Fund.

ICG, Canada's second-largest retail propane company with 950 employees, accounts for 30 per cent of the country's market for propane and related services.

"Propane isn't a growth business for Petro-Canada. It's not a core business," said Robert Hinckley, an analyst with New York-based Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc.

The prospectus doesn't reveal what Petrocan intends to do with the proceeds of the propane sale.

But Mr. Hinckley said Petrocan will concentrate this year on natural gas exploration and development in Western Canada, as well as help nurture its offshore Newfoundland oil projects and chain of gasoline stations.

When Petrocan first got into the propane sector in 1990, the company saw an opportunity in cars and trucks being converted to the fuel, he said in an interview yesterday.

However, the prospectus says many provincial tax incentives to promote alternative fuels such as propane are being phased out, including those in Ontario, British Columbia and Alberta.

On the other hand, traditional markets for propane remain strong, the document says.

ICG has about 100,000 customers, including businesses with storage tanks in the residential, commercial, industrial and agricultural sectors.

The company runs a fleet of 277 bulk delivery trucks and dozens of other types of trucks.

By turning ICG into an income fund, Petrocan is following the lead of Calgary-based Norcen Energy Resources Ltd.

Norcen sold 90 per cent of its Superior Propane Inc. division for $486-million during an income trust fund sale in two stages -- in late 1996 and mid-1997. Superior Propane is Canada's largest retail propane venture, with a 40-per-cent share of the market.

Andrew Wiswell, a former senior vice-president at Gulf Canada Resources Ltd., became ICG's president and chief executive officer last April during a company shakeup.

ICG lost $1.36-million in 1996 on revenue of $340-million, but began turning things around last year. For the first nine months of 1997, the company earned $1.72-million on sales of $227-million.

Cash flow in the first nine months of last year rose 1.8 per cent to $17.8-million.

Investors will be able to pay for the ICG Propane Income Fund's trust units in two instalments, the prospectus says. The first payment is due upon the closing of the deal -- expected within weeks -- and the second payment is tentatively slated for one year later.

By buying the units, which likely will be listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, investors will be entitled to receive quarterly cash distributions that will vary, depending on ICG's financial performance.

Petrocan paid $235-million for ICG in 1990, and originally toyed with the idea of selling it or turning it into an income trust in late 1996.

The prospectus says Petrocan and ICG will continue to share some administrative costs for several months. For instance, Petrocan expects to enter a "product supply agency agreement" with ICG in which Petrocan will negotiate on ICG's behalf to ensure a competitive supply of propane.

ICG relies on numerous propane suppliers, including Petrocan and Calgary-based Amoco Canada Petroleum Co. Ltd.

Besides using its trucks to transport propane, ICG leases rail cars.

"Although the Canadian retail propane market is considered relatively mature, opportunities for growth in the traditional segments of the market have been identified," the document says. Potential growth markets include rural regions where propane could be a cheaper energy source than electricity and more practical than fuel oil, it says.

FEATURE STORY

Cuban Drilling Defended
Genoil Confident About Outcome

Calgary Sun

Calgary-based Genoil Inc. defended itself yesterday against allegations it broke the anti-Cuba Helms-Burton law by drilling for oil in the Caribbean nation.

Officials from the exploration and production firm confirmed it is being investigated by U.S. officials for its activity on two parcels of land and an offshore block in Cuba.

But Genoil is not doing business on land expropriated from U.S. citizens, company president Robert Maxwell said yesterday.

"We've done nothing to contravene the law and we're confident the State Department will be satisfied with that once they've looked into the situation," he said.

Reports surfaced earlier this week that Genoil and two British firms were being investigated for striking deals with the government to drill on land taken from U.S. citizens after the 1959 revolution.

The Genoil property in question -- two blocks the company hopes will be lucrative oil producers -- were once owned by an American company in the mid-'50s.

But the property was later purchased by Cuban nationals -- who have since became U.S. citizens -- without ever producing significant amounts of oil, Maxwell said.

Under Title 4 of Helms-Burton, the U.S. can bar any executives or shareholders of companies who break the law.

FEATURE STORY

Oman Says Would Cut Oil Output If OPEC Did

Reuters

Oman, a non-OPEC member, was ready to cut its oil output to boost low crude prices if OPEC members did the same, its oil minister said in remarks published on Monday.

''We are ready to reduce our oil production to stop the decline in prices if the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries takes a similar decision to cut production,'' Oil Minister Mohammad bin Hamad bin Seif al-Ramhi told the Saudi-owned Asharq al-Awsat newspaper.

Asked about Oman's January call for an unscheduled meeting of fellow Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) oil ministers over low oil prices, the minister said: ''The call is still in place and we are waiting for the results of current contacts between OPEC members.''

The international benchmark North Sea Brent crude fell to $14.22 last week, the lowest level since April 1994, but has since recovered to around $14.75.

But traders said news that United Nations secretary general Kofi Annan had reached a deal with Iraq eased tensions of a possible U.S.-led military strike and added bearishness to the market.

Oman has in the past offered to coordinate its output policies with OPEC, GCC and even non-OPEC states such as Norway when prices fell sharply.

The medium-sized Gulf producer of around 900,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude briefly cut its output by five percent in 1994 to support a move by the 11-member OPEC to perk up prices.

The newspaper quoted Ramhi as saying OPEC members Saudi Arabia, Iran, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) were capable of restoring the balance to oil prices and urged these countries to coordinate production to help achieve this.

FEATURE STORY

Klein Concerned About Oil Plunge And Impact On Alberta

Calgary Herald

Encouraging signs for peace in Iraq have produced an uneasy calm in Alberta's oilpatch with plummeting oil prices.

The cost of light crude on the New York Mercantile Exchange plunged 87 cents US to $15.31 US a barrel Tuesday -- its lowest level since April 1994. Share prices also declined for many of Canada's big oil producers.

"It's potentially a financial crisis for the oilpatch. It depends on how long these prices last," said Wilf Gobert, an oil industry analyst at Peter's & Co. in Calgary.

Some analysts predicted oil prices could drop another $2 US a barrel if the tension between Iraq and the U.S. continues to ease following news of a tentative deal to allow UN weapons inspectors access to Iraq's sensitive sites.

Premier Ralph Klein said Alberta's energy revenues could be in for a shock if Iraqi oil exports double under a proposed UN deal. Klein was set to travel to New York this week where he will meet financial analysts. Klein said he's concerned about the potential impact extra Iraqi exports could have on Alberta's oil royalty revenue.

"There are these global incidents that could create a bit of a shock," Klein said. "I'd like to get as good a handle as I possibly can (from the analysts) on the trends and these global incidents, what impact they might have on our bottom line."

Alberta expects to take in nearly $700 million in royalties from crude and synthetic oil in the 1998-99 fiscal year. It also anticipates another $1.8 billion from natural gas sales, coal and Crown land leases.

Those forecasts are based on oil averaging $17.50 US per barrel and natural gas at $1.70 Cdn per thousand cubic feet. A $1 US decline in the price of oil over the year would cut $152 million from Alberta's revenues while a 10-cent Cdn drop in the price of gas would pinch $209 million.

Oil prices have fallen 30 per cent this year.

The UN "oil-for-food" deal to meet humanitarian needs of Iraqis has been increased from $2 billion every 180 days to $5.256 billion. But there are concerns whether Iraq can produce that much oil.

Alberta Energy Minister Steve West predicted Iraqi exports would double under the UN deal to three million barrels a day -- twice Alberta's daily output.

Extra Iraqi oil would worsen a world oil glut, he predicted.

The glut has been caused by rising output from countries inside and outside the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, sagging Asian demand growth due to economic problems and a warmer-than-usual winter.

"Ultimately, low prices will induce OPEC to take remedial action," said a New York-based analyst. Others predict OPEC will need to meet soon on production cuts.

Gobert cautioned Alberta oil companies are somewhat insulated from the volatility in world oil markets. "In the international community it's much more relevant to talk about oil only," he said.

"In North America, Canada especially, you have to look at oil and natural gas. One thing that is significantly better than it was in (the oil price slumps) 1986, 1988 or 1995 is that at least right now natural gas prices are much stronger."

Alberta natural gas was up three cents to $1.63 Monday.

After record-breaking results in 1997, the Alberta energy sector has been showing signs of retrenching this year. PanCanadian Petroleum Ltd. is laying off 200 workers and several companies have said they will shut in production at some high-cost wells.

Gobert said the real impact of lower oil prices likely won't be felt until later this year.

Patricia Mohr, vice-president of economics at the Bank of Nova Scotia noted the price of some grades of heavy oil is about $13 a barrel in Alberta and that price persists it could cause companies to rethink some announced projects.

Others are more optimistic. Alberta Energy Co. spokesman Dick Wilson said this could be a time to seek out new opportunities.

FEATURE STORY

Slumping Prices Prompt Well Shutdowns

Canadian Press

Slumping oil prices have forced oil companies to shut down hundreds of heavy oil wells in Alberta. "It's very negative," David Wolf of the Small Explorers and Producers Association of Canada said Tuesday. "The industry is in for a little rough weather here."

Husky Oil and Gulf Canada have shut down more than 200 heavy oil wells since the beginning of 1998, with more closures to come if oil prices continue to slump.

The price of oil has plummeted about 30 per cent over the past year, dropping to a four-year-low of $15.31 Tuesday.

The Alberta government based its revenue projections on an oil price of $17.50 a barrel US, but it believes this downturn is just temporary.

"We always expected there would be some pull back in some of the programs," said Alberta Energy Minister Steve West.

The slumping prices are not expected to affect production or expansion plans in Alberta's oilsands industry.

Low oil prices have hit the heavy oil sector the hardest, as heavy oil prices in the past year have averaged $8.50 less than the refined oil price - a margin of more than 50 per cent. High supply and low demand of heavy oil has been the culprit of low prices.

The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers believe several factors have sent oil prices in a downward spiral - an over-supply in Venezuela, off-shore oil coming on the market, and the Asian crisis.

And like a wolf licking its chops, large American oil companies are poised to gobble up vulnerable cash-strapped Canadian companies, said David Manning, president of the association.

Large American companies will take advantage of low oil prices, the weak Canadian dollar, and a tough market to raise capital, Manning said.

"Put all those together and you are an America firm, Canada is looking pretty tasty," he said.

Financial companies are predicting these soft prices to effect all oil sectors.

"Everyday we are talking to a different company who is trimming their spending budget and their cash-flow estimates," said Wilf Gobert of Peters and Company, a Calgary-based investment dealer.

"We think there are more cuts coming," Gobert added.

Low oil prices are forcing Alberta energy companies to switch its focus from oil to gas.

"It will be a total turnaround," said Dale Tremblay, senior vice-president of Precision Drilling, the largest drilling company in Canada.

Last year, Precision drilled 51 per cent oil wells and 30 per cent gas wells. It expects to drill 50 per cent gas wells and 30 per cent oil wells in 1998.

As gas prices have risen in the past year, so has production. And with two Canadian gas pipelines expanding, gas prices will increase, Tremblay said.



To: Crocodile who wrote (9242)2/25/1998 9:32:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1998 (3)

OIL & GAS

NYMEX

Crude Oil

Crude Oil Ends Off 46-Month Low, Iraq Deal Focus


Crude oil futures at the New York Mercantile Exchange Tuesday closed just off a 46-month low reached Monday, unable to shake off the bears as the U.N.-Iraq pact appears for the moment deterring a clash in the Gulf.

NYMEX sweet light crude for April delivery closed off six cents a barrel at $15.31, down from a high of $15.56. The market had opened at $15.50 -- just about the level traders had predicted but soon treaded lower, reaching a low of $15.30 for the day.

March heating oil was up 0.14 cent to 42.67 cents a gallon while March gasoline was down 0.72 cent to 47.56 cents a gallon, ahead of the American Petroleum Institute's release of weekly inventory data.

''The market is trying to digest the news about the agreement brought back by the U.N. Secretary General,'' said a trader, who noted that details were being awaited by all quarters.

He was referring to an accord negotiated by U.N. Chief Kofi Annan with the Iraqi leadership which provides for ''immediate, unconditional and unrestricted access'' of U.N. teams to inspect eight Iraqi sites suspected of storing weapons of mass destruction.

The arms-inspection issue, in which Iraq had prevented U.N. teams from inspecting the suspected storage sites, had caused the current Gulf crisis.

Annan, speaking to reporters at U.N. headquarters in New York, exuded confidence the agreement he negotiated in Baghdad would have Security Council support, although details would have to be worked out and explanations given, he said.

U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Bill Richardson immediately raised some doubts on the agreement and said further clarifications were needed.

Earlier in the day, U.S. Secretary of State Medeleine Albright, in testimony before a congressional panel, said there were ''questions and ambiguities'' in the agreement and that the U.S. would work to close ''any loopholes.''

Their positions reflected the cautious stance by President Bill Clinton who said Monday that while he would give the agreement a chance to work, Iraq faced ''serious consequences'' if it did not honor the accord.

In the meantime, a U.S.-led military force in the Gulf will remain there, ready to act if Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein violated the agreement.

''The devil is in the details,'' said a NYMEX trader, saying much hangs in the balance because the full picture ''is unclear.''

Morteza Zarringol, head of Iran's Majlis (parliament) oil commission was quoted as saying in the Iranian newspaper Farda that Iran had been awaiting signal from Saudi Arabia about a Saudi move to cut production to prop up the currently depressed crude prices.

''Despite Iran's lobbying during recent weeks we haven't received a green light from Saudi yet (indicating it would cut output),'' Zarringol told the newspaper.

''Unless Saudi Arabia reinforces oil prices in the oil market for political considerations, it will not reduce its production,'' Zarringol was also quoted as saying.

''It's hard to figure out the market at this point, it's a little bit contrary,'' said Chris Schachti, a trader at Atlanta-based GSC Energ. He noted there was buying on ACCESS overnight and early trading forecasts were for an upside.

IPE Brent for April ended flat at $13.83 a barrel, with short covedring and fund bying helping it hold steady after sharp losses amid the U.N.-Iraq deal.

With the world oil glut remaining and with the prospect of the oversupply situation continuing with the expanded ''oil-for-food'' deal the U.N.Security Council approved for Iraqlast Friday, it is hard to see why prices will not continue to fall, said Southeast Energy's Tom Mooney.

"I don't see anything to prop it up" at this time, he said.

Natural Gas

NYMEX Hub Natural Gas Mostly Ends Up On Short Covering


Natural gas futures mostly ended higher Tuesday in a fairly active session, boosted by short covering ahead of March's expiration tomorrow though prices remained in the recent technical range, sources said.

March climbed 3.7 cents to close at $2.216 per million British thermal units after trading today in a fairly narrow range between $2.175 and $2.23. April settled 3.5 cents higher at $2.262. Other months ended flat to up 2.7 cents.

''They couldn't break it down early, but there was a lot of resistance (in March) above $2.215. We look stuck here, but I still think March could flush out to the $2.13-2.15 area on the close tomorrow,'' said one Midwest trader, noting the spot contract was set to expire Wednesday.

But despite more mild weather this week and a significant storage overhang versus last year, traders said cooler weather next week and attractive spreads still favored up front buying.

Withdrawal estimates for Wednesday's weekly AGA storage report range from 60 bcf to 100 bcf. For the same week last year, stocks declined 63 bcf. Overall stocks are nearly 300 bcf, or 26 percent, above year-ago levels.

Forecasts this week still call for mostly above normal U.S. temperatures, with levels in the Midwest expected to climb to as much as 12 degrees F above normal. But cooler, more seasonal Northeast and Midwest weather is forecast for the weekend, with some below normal levels possible by early next week.

On the technical side, traders agreed March was stuck in a range. Key support was still pegged at $2.15, followed by $2.03. Major resistance was seen in the $2.32-2.35 gap, and then at $2.435 and $2.50.

In the cash Tuesday, Gulf Coast swing quotes were little changed in the low-to-mid teens. Midcon pipes also were flat in the $2.06-2.11 area. Chicago city gate gas was still talked in the low-$2.20s, while New York also was unchanged in the high-$2.30s.

The NYMEX 12-month Henry Hub strip rose two cents to $2.382. NYMEX said an estimated 74,272 Hub contracts traded, up from Monday's revised tally of 47,038.

U.S. SPOT GAS

U.S. Spot Natural Gas Prices Hold In Tight Range


U.S. spot natural gas, like futures, traded in a tight range on Tuesday, stalled by bearish weather patterns and general uncertainty in the market, industry sources said.

Swing gas prices at Henry Hub were pegged at $2.18-2.20, steady from Monday's levels and still clinging to NYMEX's March gas contract, set to expire Wednesday. In the western Texas market, Permian prices also remained fairly steady at $2.02-2.03, while San Juan values stuck to about $2.00-2.02. Southern California border prices edged a little higher to the low-to-mid $2.30s as cooler than normal weather in parts of the Southwest kept some buyers in the market.

Cooler-than-normal weather is expected to cover the southern half of the U.S. next week, with the coolest weather likely in the Southwest.

However, normal to above-normal temperatures are forecast to continue in the Northeast and upper Great Lakes region next week.

In the Midcontinent, prices stayed at $2.07-2.10, with Chicago city gate still quoted at $2.22.

In the East, New York city gate prices were flat again in the mid-to-high $2.30s, while Appalachian prices on Columbia were quoted at $2.25-2.28.

Separately, withdrawal estimates for Wednesday's American Gas Association storage report ranged from 60 bcf to 100 bcf,

CANADA SPOT GAS

Canada Spot Natural Gas Prices Flat Again In Slow Trade


The Canadian spot natural gas market remained steady again on Tuesday in light trade, industry sources said. Spot gas at the AECO storage hub in Alberta was talked unchanged at C$1.62 per gigajoule (GJ), while March also still hung at C$1.62. Summer business was also quoted flat at C$1.64. Traders said the lack of spread between months left forward trading very quiet.

Weather Services Corp forecasts show highs in Calgary near 40 degrees Fahrenheit (F) and lows in the 20s F over the next few days.

Trading at Sumas, Wash., was also quiet amid talk of US$1.13-1.17 per million British thermal units (mmBtu).

In the eastern export market, Niagara gas prices were quoted off about one cent to US$2.30-2.34 per mmBtu, with temperatures expected to reach highs of 40 and 43 degrees F on Wednesday and Thursday, respectively.

Meanwhile, NYMEX's March gas contract was still stuck in a range, bouncing today between $2.175 and $2.23.

OIL & GAS REFERENCES

Charts

oilworld.com

oilworld.com

NYMEX

quotewatch.com



To: Crocodile who wrote (9242)2/25/1998 11:28:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1998 (4)

MARKET ACTIVITY

In the U.S., the Dow index was burdened by its oil components with Exxon Corp. off 1-13/16 to 62-1/2 and Chevron Corp. shed 2-3/16 to 77. Oil driller shares also sank with Schlumberger Ltd. dropping 2-7/16 to 72-1/16 and Diamond Offshore Drilling Inc. falling 2-3/4 to 42-3/4.

In Canada, the oils held up as a group after shares in many companies were slashed Monday. Companies with higher leverage to natural gas appeared to fare better. As example, Rio Alto Exploration was the most active oil and the company is a 90%+ gas producer.

Analysts said the easing of Middle East tensions and the Security Council's approval last week of a more than doubling in the U.N.'s humanitarian "oil-for-food" deal with Iraq, puts the onus back on Saudi Arabia to support world oil prices.

MAJOR INDEXES

The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 Composite Index edged up 0.1% or 6.06 to 6948.25.

In comparison, the Oil & Gas Composite Index gained 0.2% or 12.78 to 6218.11. Sub-components were mixed. The Integrated Oil's fell 0.3% or 29.69 to 8770.23. The Oil & Gas Producers gained 0.6% or 33.45 to 5452.33. The Oil & Gas Services fell 1.1% or 28.68 to 2545.95.

INDEX CHARTS

TSE 300.......... canoe.quote.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

NEW PHLX OIL SERVICE SECTOR

bigcharts.com.

lonestar.texas.net

HOT STOCKS

Merit Energy Ltd. (MEL/TSE) closed yesterday at $5.50, up 25›. The 52-week high is $7.35; the low is $3.60. The company said yesterday revenue and earnings jumped dramatically last year (see Earnings) and forecast another good year in 1998 as it teams up with giant Gulf Canada Resources Ltd. to tap oil and natural gas reserves in eastern Alberta.

MOST ACTIVES

Kerms Top 21 - Spec 15 and Serv 9 listed companies appear in bold print.

Rio Alto Exploration, Compton Petroleum, Berkley Petroleum, Norcen Energy Resources, Anderson Exploration and Probe Exploration were among the top 50 most active traded issues on the TSE.

Poco Petroleums gained $0.75 to $14.15, Anderson Exploration $0.70 to $15.75, Imperial Oil $0.60 to $83.10, Alberta Energy $0.55 to $32.85 and Hurricane Hydrocarbons $0.55 to $10.00.

Percentage gainers included Probe Exploration 9.4% to $5.25, Compton Petroleum 8.0% to $1.35, Purcell Energy 7.1% to $1.05, Merit Energy 6.8% to $5.50, New Cache Petroleum 6.7% to $6.40, Encal Energy 6.0% to $5.30, Hurricane Hydrocarbons 5.8% to $10.00, TransGlobe Energy 5.8% to $2.00, Poco Petroleums 5.6% to $14.15 and TriGas Exploration 5.0% to $1.25.

On the downside, Gulfstream Resources fell $0.55 to $6.15, Morrison Middlefield $0.50 to $8.50 and Talisman Energy $0.50 to $39.30.

Percentage losers included Eurogas Corp. 8.9% to $1.73, Gulfstream Resources 8.2% to $6.15, Triumph Energy 7.4% to $2.50, Bitech Petroleum 7.2% to $3.20, Abacan Resources 6.0% to $2.65, Richland Petroleum 5.9% to $3.20, Post Energy 5.8% to $3.25, Morrison Middlefield 5.6% to $8.50 and Pan East Petroleum 5.6% to $1.70.

No new 52-week highs.

Calahoo Petroleum, Founders Energy, Kappa Energy, Pinnacle Resources and Remington Energy reached new 52-week lows.

There weere no service companies listed among the top 50 most active on the TSE.

Shaw Industries A gained $0.80 to $45.65.

Plains Energy Service fell 5.3% to $9.00.

On the downside, Computalog fell $1.75 to $19.50, Ensign Resource Services $1.20 to $26.30 and Artisan Corp. $0.40 to $8.85.

Percentage losers included Computalog 8.2% to $19.50 and Inteer-Tech Drilling 7.1% to $1.30.

There were no new 52-week highs or lows.

AltaPacific Capital, Bearcat Exploration, HEGCO Canada, Stampede Oils, Green River Petroleum, Cirque Energy, Hampton Court, Raptor Capital, Doreal Energy, Jerez Energy, ICE Drilling and Airgen A were among the top 30 most active traded issues on the Alberta Stock Exchange.

Niko Resources gained $0.30 to $5.30, Palmetto Resources $0.10 to $0.90, Total Energy Services $0.10 to $2.45 and Green River Petroleum $0.08 to $1.42.

Percentage gainers included Orion Resources 14.3% to $0.40, Tappit Resources 13.3% to $0.34 and Palmetto Resources 12.5% to $0.90.

On the downside, Avid O & G fell $0.20 to $0.90, Doreal Energy $0.20 to $2.60, Hampton Court $0.20 to $2.60, Progress Energy A $0.20 to $2.35, Canop Worldwide $0.15 to $0.50, Scarlet Exploration $0.14 to $1.06, AltaQuest Energy $0.10 to $2.25, CanBaikal Resources $0.10 to $1.60, Colt Energy $0.10 to $1.17, HEGCO Canada $0.10 to $2.80, Master Downhole $0.10 to $1.25 and Colony Energy $0.09 to $1.36.

Percentage losers included Rapidfire Resources 34.0% to $0.17, Canop Worldwide 23.1% to $0.50, Wild Horse Resources 21.2% to $0.26, Green Maple Energy 20.0% to $0.20, Avid O & G 18.2% to $0.90, Quest Energy 16.7% to $0.25, Dalton Resources 15.8% to $0.32, Oilexco 15.0% to $0.34, Esker Resources 13.3% to $0.52, Cubacan Exploration 13.0% to $0.40 and Scarlet Exploration 11.7% to $1.06.

No new 52-week highs.

Canop Worldwide and NTI Resources reached new 52-week lows.

An excellent summary of most actives covering all four of the Canadian Stock Exchanges can be found at quote.yahoo.com

EXCHANGE INFO

ANALYSIS - FUND MGR.'S - B/H/S - MISC.

Gordan Capital

Berkley Petroleum (BKP-T: $13.05) BUY
Four Foothills Wells Testing


Berkley is involved in four deep exploratory wells in the southern Alberta foothills. All four of these wells have been drilled and cased and are in various stages of testing. Three wells are joint ventured with Imperial Oil (two at 35% and one at 50% working interests), and one is a farm-in on Stampeder Oils/Bearcat Explorations. Full disclosure of these tests will be known over the next two months. In southeast Saskatchewan, Berkley has a new Red River (Ordivician) discovery at Talmage, where it has a 50% interest in two cased wells which are currently being production tested. In the North West Territories, The Bovie C-76 well has encountered natural gas and is now being completed horizontally. The Arrowhead N-65 well has been cased as a commercial gas well, and is now being completed. At Maxhamish, an exploratory test has been cased as a new gas well, but is only thought to be of mediocre productive potential. Our forecasts remain unchanged, with CFPS expected to increase from $0.70 in 1997 to $1.55 in 1998. We are forecasting liquids production of 10,000 bbls/d this year (up 186%), and natural gas output of 175 mmcf/d (an increase of 157%). Berkley has a very strong balance sheet, with a 1998 year-end projected debt/cash flow ratio of 0.7X. This is compared to an average of 1.9X for the intermediate producers that we follow. Our 12-month stock price target is $16.00.

SG Securities Slash Oil Price Outlook To $15/bbl

In London, SG Securities' analysts said on Tuesday they had cut their 1998 forecast for dated Brent Blend crude oil by $2.00 a barrel to $15.00 because of a growing crude oversupply.

SG Securities' analysts John Toalster said there was a ''very weak prospect for oil prices over the next couple of years.''

He said the current oversupply, which he estimated at 1.25 million barrels per day, could rise to 2.7 million bpd by the year's end.

''The weak price outlook is undermining confidence in the (oil share) sector,'' he said.

On Monday, Brent crude fell below $14 for the first time since April 1994 on news that the United States had given cautious backing to a deal reached between the United Nations and Iraq to end a dispute over UN Weapons inspectors.

On Tuesday, shares in oil giant Shell Transport and Trading Co Plc (UK & Ireland: SHEL.L) dropped 0.5 percent in heavy trade on Tuesday after SG Securities cut the stock to ''hold'' from ''outperform.''

Shell was down 1-1/42 pence to 406-3/4 p by 1125 GMT, on volume of 14 million, making it the third most heavily traded stock in London.

SG also repeated a ''sell'' rating on British Petroleum Co Plc(quote from Yahoo! UK & Ireland: BP.L). BP shares were down two pence at 803p.

KERMS TOP 21 - SPEC 15 - SERV 9 LISTED COPMPANIES IN THE NEWS

Crestar Energy Inc. (CRS/TSE) announced their 4th quarter and 1997 results. They focused attention on the fact that they met their year end exit production target.

Crestar met its 1997 exit target rate of 97,000 boe/d, while producing an average of 91,100 boe/d in the fourth quarter of 1997. The production increases led to record levels of revenue and cash flow for both the fourth quarter and full year 1997.

Revenues for fiscal 1997 increased 13% to $575.9 million, resulting in cash flow of $291.3 million ($5.76 per share), 11% higher than a year ago.

Net income for the year was $32.1 million ($0.64 per share) compared with $51.6 million ($1.07 per share) in 1996, primarily due to higher royalties, operating costs, income taxes and depletion and depreciation charges.

Crude oil and natural gas liquids sales for 1997 averaged 43,700 bbls/d, 17% higher than in 1996. Overall, liquids realizations fell 10% to $20.07 per barrel for the year. Natural gas sales in 1997 increased 12% to average 358 mmcf/d. Crestar's average natural gas realizations rose 11% in 1997, to $1.96 per mcf.

Fourth Quarter Results

Volatile commodity prices in the fourth quarter resulted in a 21% decline in average liquids prices, partially offset by a 19% improvement in natural gas realizations. Despite this low price environment, higher production volumes in the fourth quarter of 1997 resulted in a 19% increase in revenues and cash flow. Fourth quarter liquids volumes of 49,700 bbls/d were up 10% compared with the third quarter and 25% higher than the fourth quarter last year. Average natural gas sales of 414 mmcf/d were 13% higher than the third quarter and 27% higher than the fourth quarter of 1996. Net income declined to $4.0 million ($0.08 per share) from $14.8 million ($0.30 per share) in the fourth quarter of 1996.

Exploration & Developement Activity

Crestar drilled a record 493 net wells in 1997, more than double the number drilled last year. This increase reflects our growing inventory of prospects. In the fourth quarter, Crestar drilled 58 net development wells and 47 net exploratory wells. While much of this activity was centered around our Southern and West of Five core regions, we also expanded our new venture exploration.

In the Jenner area, Crestar drilled 26 horizontal wells (including a milestone 100th horizontal well in the area) leading to a production increase of 4,300 bbls/d by year-end. At Little Bow, production climbed 2,300 bbls/d with the drilling of four horizontal infill wells and the tie in of 17 wells to new battery facilities. Completion of facilities at Czar and Hayter added 900 bbls/d. In the fourth quarter Crestar tied in new production from the Turner Valley pool at Dalemead, adding 12 mmcf/d of natural gas. Horizontal drilling and added compression at Three Hills Creek boosted natural gas sales in that area by 8 mmcf/d.

On December 1, 1997, we announced new pool discoveries at Hamburg, Claresholm and Jenner, and the commencement of our 1998 winter drilling program, the most active in our history. At Hamburg, in northern Alberta, we completed our discovery well at 15-21-96-10 W6M, which tested at a rate of 20 mmcf/d of natural gas and 1,500 bbls/d of condensate. Two follow-up wells were drilled in the fourth quarter, with indicated hydrocarbon pay. The wells will be tied in during the first quarter of 1998. Exploration is continuing in the first quarter at Hamburg, Lapp, Clarke/Klua and Peggo/Pesh. Development programs are underway at Vulcan and Niton.

Reserve Additions

Crestar's 1997 reserve additions are a testament to the growing momentum of our full cycle exploration and development program. We recorded significant reserve additions at Jenner, Little Bow, Hamburg and Mantario. Exploration and development activities added established reserves of 56.8 mmBOE, the largest increase in the history of the Company. This represents 196% of Crestar's annual production, up from 132% in 1996. Despite higher industry-wide costs for services in 1997, finding costs for established reserves from internally generated activity averaged $6.30 per BOE, $0.06 per BOE lower than last year. On a proven only basis, Crestar's exploration and development program added reserves of 45.0 mmBOE, at a cost of $7.95 per BOE.

Including net acquisitions, established reserves additions of 96.6 million BOE replaced 333% of production at a cost of $7.69 per BOE. Overall, our capital program added proven reserves of 77.3 mmBOE, replacing 266% of production at a cost of $9.60 per BOE. Crestar's overall finding and development cost includes the cost of the Grad & Walker acquisition. We expect that this acquisition will lead to the addition of further reserves in the future at lower costs as we drill out the targets we have identified on Grad & Walker lands.

Asset Management

Crestar maintains an ongoing program of asset management to increase its interests in core areas and dispose of non core properties. In the fourth quarter, net proceeds of dispositions totaled $25.7 million. Further dispositions in the range of $10 to $15 million will be completed in the first quarter of 1998. In addition, we have offered a number of minor properties and our producing interests in southeastern Saskatchewan for sale. These sales are expected to close in the second and third quarter of 1998.

Outlook

Since its inception in 1992, Crestar has delivered a solid record of growth through a blend of exploration, development and acquisition activity. In the past five years, annual cash flow has climbed to $291 from $91 million. Established reserves have grown an average of 16% per year, outpacing annual production increases of 14%.

Over the last few months, prices of both crude oil and natural gas have declined substantially. If sustained, these declines will lead to a marked reduction in cash flow, despite our significant production increases. Our exploration and development program has strong positive momentum which will lead to continuing production increases. To maintain this momentum in the face of lower commodity prices, on February 18, 1998, Crestar issued 5.25 million common shares to a syndicate of Canadian underwriters for net proceeds of $111.9 million.

For further detail and table data, see newswire.ca



To: Crocodile who wrote (9242)2/25/1998 12:11:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1998 (5)

KERMS TOP 21 - SPEC 15 - SERV 9 COMPANIES IN THE NEWS, Con't

Paramount Resources Ltd. and Berkley Petroleum Corp. updated the ongoing exploration activities in the southern NWT and NEBC.

The Para et al Bovie C-76 60 degrees 20' 122 degrees 45' drilled in winter 1997 has tested gas from a 58 metre zone (average porosity 5.3 percent) in the Middle Devonian. Mechanical problems prevented full evaluation in the vertical well-bore. The companies are currently drilling a horizontal well from the C-76 well bore to further evaluate the prospect.

The Para et al Maxhamish b-57-L/94-0-15 well is cased with only modest gas shows from the Middle Devonian to date. The companies are currently drilling a shallow 1400m test at d-87-I/94-0-14 and one to three additional shallow tests are planned during March. The Para-Berkley Arrowhead N-65 60 degrees 40' 122 degrees 45' well has been drilled and cased to a total depth of 2925m as a gaswell. The well flowed gas at rates up to 28MMcf/d along with formation water while drilling in the Middle Devonian section under-balanced, and production tests will proceed this winter to determine the extent of the gas pay.

The companies are currently drilling a fourth new pool wildcat at Arrowhead O-5 60 degrees 30' 123 degrees 00' and have licenced an additional wildcat at Netla M-23 60 degrees 50' 123 degrees 00'.

Paramount and Berkley both have 50 percent before payout working interests in the NWT wells.

Lexxor Energy Inc. (LXX.A/ASE) has recently acquired drilling rights encompassing 22 sections of acreage (14,000 acres) along a productive Mississippian gas trend in the South Haro area of northwestern Alberta. Six exploratory locations have been delineated by the Company and industry competitors have recently licensed 9 exploratory wells adjacent to and on trend with Lexxor's acreage. Lexxor has surveyed the 6 locations, with drilling dictated by rig availability and seasonal access.

Lexxor is also proceeding with plans to tie-in two recently drilled gas wells adding approximately 800 mcf/d (80 BOE/D) to the Company's production base. The wells, a new pool discovery at Michel/Cardiff near Edmonton (Lexxor 50%) and at Conroy in north east British Columbia (Lexxor 15%) are expected to be on stream in March.

Lexxor has also announced that its Plover Lake, Saskatchewan heavy oil pool has been shut-in temporarily. The Bakken Sand reservoir, which has production capability in excess of 300 BOPD (150 BOPD net) will be brought into production when heavy oil prices recover. Lexxor's first quarter exit rate, excluding heavy oil, is expected to be approximately 450 BOE/D of which 70 per cent is natural gas production.

First quarter activity has focused on the generation of new Alberta prospects by an expanded exploration group. Lexxor is planning an active drilling program following spring breakup focusing on natural gas targets in central and northwestern Alberta and light oil plays in the south central part of the province utilizing $2 million in proceeds from a December, 1997 private placement of flow through shares.

Granger Energy Corp. (GAS.A/ASE) announced its audited financial and operating results for the fiscal year ended November 30, 1997.

Total company production increased 31 percent over the prior year to average 530 barrels of oil equivalent per day. Oil production increased 50 percent to average 477 barrels per day and natural gas production averaged 533 thousand cubic feet per day (mcfd), down from 872 mcfd. Net revenue rose 46 percent to $3,762,000 from $2,576,000. The average gas price received increased 21 percent to $2.00 per mcf, while the average net oil price increased 2 percent to $23.51 per bbl. Cash flow increased 72 percent to $2,096,000 ($0.72 per share basic) from $1,216,000 ($0.46 per share basic) in 1996. Net earnings increased 49 percent to $535,000 ($0.18 per share basic) from $360,000 ($0.14 per share basic) in the previous year.

Granger participated in drilling 22 (6.43 net) wells during the year, including 17 (4.50 net) horizontal wells, resulting in 17 (4.30 net) oil wells, 2 (.40 net) service wells and 3 (1.73 net) dry holes for a 73 percent net success rate. Granger's $6,655,000capital investment program added 17,000 net acres of undeveloped land plus 876,000 BOE's of established reserves, replacing 1997 production 4.5 times.

Granger is currently producing 650 barrels of oil equivalent per day

KERMS WATCHLIST OF COMPANIES IN THE NEWS

Ranger Oil Limited (RGO/TSE) announced their 1997 financial and operating results. Highlights include;

Total proven and probable reserves increased 125 percent, from 174 to 392 million barrels of oil equivalent (BOE)

Additions to proven and probable conventional oil and gas reserves from extensions, discoveries and revisions replaced 250 percent of 1997 production

Oil production increased 32 percent

ELAN Energy Inc. acquired September 29, 1997

Shares in issue increased 27 percent broadening the shareholder base

Substantial additional acreage acquired in West Africa and West of Shetlands

Two potentially high impact wells in the Northwest Territories currently testing

"1997 was a year of building foundations," said Ranger President and Chief Executive Officer, Fred Dyment. "In North America, the ELAN acquisition has added a new heavy oil division with a tremendous resource base as well as tripling light oil production. North Sea reserves have increased 25 percent and significant production growth will follow later this year. Exciting new exploration and exploitation opportunities have been added in West Africa and West of the Shetlands. Together, these achievements position Ranger for continued growth over the next five years."

Production

Oil production increased 32 percent to 38,403 barrels per day. The acquisition of ELAN in the fourth quarter contributed 7,632 barrels per day to annual average production. North Sea oil production increased 12 percent to 26,863 barrels per day with the benefit of a full year's production from the Ninian area acquisition in October 1996.

Gas production declined slightly from 170 to 165 million cubic feet per day in 1997. Non-core property sales and normal reservoir declines in Canada were responsible for the decrease.

Financial Results

Total revenues were US$351 million compared to US$299 million for 1996. Oil prices fell 15 percent averaging US$17.43 per barrel, down from US$20.49 in 1996. This reflected lower world prices as well as the addition of a heavy oil component in the fourth quarter of 1997.

Gas prices increased 18 percent, averaging US$1.70 per thousand cubic feet in 1997. Higher prices in North America accounted for the increase.

Operating expenses increased 39 percent to US$124 million in 1997. On a unit-of-production basis costs were US$5.93 per barrel of oil equivalent compared to US$5.14 in 1996. The increase reflects the greater proportion of production coming from high cost producing fields in the northern North Sea and Northeast British Columbia.

Interest charges increased to US$16 million from US$9 million in 1996. Higher average debt levels associated primarily with the ELAN Acquisition accounted for the increase.

Funds Generated from Operations before tax were US$195 million, compared to US$190 million in 1996. Current Income Taxes increased from US$1 million to US$11 million in 1997. The North Sea accounted for most of the increase, with taxable revenues in 1996 being sheltered from income tax by deductions brought forward from previous years. Current North Sea Petroleum Revenue Taxes fell from US$44 million to US$38 million as a result of lower oil prices. Funds Generated after tax were US$146 million (US$1.38 per share) compared to US$144 million (US$1.46 per share) in 1996.

Depletion and depreciation charges increased to US$131 million compared to US$123 million in 1996. Higher production volumes were responsible for the increase. On a unit of production basis, oil and gas depletion fell from US$6.41 to US$5.85 per BOE. During 1997 the Company also wrote-off US$8.8 million of unsuccessful exploration costs primarily in Algeria.

Earnings before tax were US$54 million compared to a loss of US$14 million in 1996. The loss in 1996 reflected a US$71 million write-down in Angola. Earnings after tax amounted to US$9 million (US$0.09 per share) compared to a loss of US$56 million (US$0.57 per share) in 1996.

Elan Acquisition

Effective September 29, 1997 Ranger acquired ELAN Energy Inc. The purchase consideration of US$517 million included 26.7 million new Ranger shares and US$276 million of additional debt. Proven and probable reserves acquired amounted to 214 million BOE, of which 179 million BOE represented heavy oil. At year end proven and probable reserves, primarily at Cold Lake, were revised downwards by 16 million barrels, mainly due to the decline in heavy oil prices. Average daily production in the fourth quarter of 1997 from ELAN amounted to 8,855 barrels of light oil, 21,424 barrels of heavy oil and 9 million cubic feet of gas. Heavy oil operating costs averaged US$4.87 per barrel. Since the acquisition approximately 2,000 barrels of daily production has been shut-in in response to declining world oil prices and widening differentials between heavy and light oil.

Ranger acquired ELAN's heavy oil business on the basis of adding long-term value for shareholders. Notwithstanding the recent weakness in commodity prices, the Company remains confident of the long-term future for heavy oil in Canada.

Oil & Gas Reserves

Including the ELAN acquisition, total proven and probable reserve additions in 1997 amounted to 238 million BOE. The North Sea accounted for 37 million BOE of additions, reflecting new field developments at Kyle and Columba E, upward revisions for Pierce, Columba B, and Columba D, and the acquisition of further Anglia field gas reserves. In Angola, 8 million BOE was added in respect of the Kiame oil field development. Proven and probable reserves at year-end amounted to 392 million BOE, an increase of 125 percent from 1996. Based on annualized fourth quarter production volumes, the Company's proven and probable reserve life index increased to 13.7 years (9.6 years for proven).

Finding, development and net acquisition costs for additions to proven and probable reserves in 1997 amounted to US$4.25 per BOE for conventional reserves and US$1.98 per BOE for heavy oil reserves.

Capital Expenditures

Excluding the ELAN acquisition, net capital expenditures in 1997 amounted to US$128 million. Exploration expenditures of US$93 million included US$42 million in North America, US$16 million in the North Sea and US$35 million for International, mainly Angola. Development expenditures of US$95 million were concentrated in the North Sea (US$50 million) and Canada (US$36 million). Property acquisitions of US$21 million were in the North Sea while property dispositions of US$78 million were in Canada

North America

Exploration well P-66 was spudded in January 1997 on a large potential gas prospect in the Fort Liard area of the Northwest Territories. In the Fort Norman area an exploration well has been drilled at Nota Creek. Both wells are currently being tested and results are expected shortly. In addition, two new wells have recently spudded in the Fort Norman area.

In March 1997, the Company was successful bidder on 11 offshore Blocks in the US Gulf of Mexico. Seismic evaluation has been carried out and the first exploration well drilled, unsuccessfully. A second well has recently spudded on West Cameron Block 478.

Disposition proceeds of US$50 million resulted from an alliance between the Company and Chesapeake Energy Corporation. Under the alliance, Chesapeake purchased 40 percent of Ranger's interest in the Helmet area of Northeastern British Columbia, outside of the July Lake pool, and future operations in the area will be conducted on a 60/40 basis. Other dispositions included non-core heavy oil properties and the Company's ownership interest in the proposed Alliance gas pipeline.

North Sea

Significant development activity occurred during the year. The Banff and Pierce oil fields were moved towards full-scale production in late 1998 and an additional 20 percent of Kyle was acquired doubling the Company's interest in this oil field satellite development. Infill drilling progressed at several fields with an important horizontal sidetrack successfully completed in the

Anglia gas field.

Two unsuccessful exploration wells were drilled in 1997, one an appraisal of the Selkirk oil discovery and the other a farm-in well on Block 20/10b. A well is currently drilling on Block 44/17a in the Southern gas basin.

In a mini-round award, Ranger acquired a 17.5 percent interest in Blocks 204/14 and 15 West of the Shetlands. This highly prospective acreage is adjacent to the Suilven oil discovery announced by BP earlier in 1997. Drilling of a possible Suilven extension as well as a separate exploration prospect is planned in 1998.

International

During 1997 approval was received for Ranger's first International development, the 8 million barrel Kiame oil field in Angola. The field is owned (100 percent) and operated by the Company. Elsewhere in West Africa, Ranger acquired a 24 percent interest in and became operator of Block CI-26 in the C“te d'Ivoire containing the previously relinquished Espoir oil field. Plans to develop this 100 million BOE field are currently under consideratio

Exploration wells were drilled during the year in Angola (three), Ecuador and Algeria. All were unsuccessful. Further drilling on Angola Block 4 and Ecuador Block 19 is planned for later this year or early 1999.

New exploration licenses have been acquired in Angola deepwater (Block 19), the C“te d'Ivoire (Blocks CI-26, CI-101, 102 and 103) and Peru (Block Z-29). First drilling on each of these substantial tracts is anticipated in 1999. Several giant oil fields have been discovered in the Angolan deepwater over the past year.

Financing

As a result of the ELAN acquisition, total long-term debt, less net current assets, increased to US$423 million at year-end. This represents debt to cash flow ratio of 2.6, based on the annualized fourth quarter cash flow. The ratio should fall below 2.0 as new production and cash flow comes on stream in the North Sea and Angola.

During 1997 the Company's previous short-term bank facilities were replaced with a US$425 million syndicated credit agreement. It is expected that a portion of this will be refinanced in 1998 with fixed-rate long-term notes. A prudent financial position is a key corporate objective and the Company remains committed to maintaining a strong balance sheet.

For further detail with table data, see Message 3522200

New Cache Petroleum Ltd. (NWA/TSE) reportd 1997 results. A successful year of drilling and acquisitions resulted in proven and probable reserves increasing 113% from 9.6 million boe in 1996 to 20.6 million boe in 1997. Proven reserves rose from 6.9 million boe in 1996 to 15.1 million boe in the current year. Proven and probable gas reserves rose over five-fold to 117.1 Bcf in 1997, up from 22.4 Bcf recorded the previous year. Additions were from the acquisition of gas production at Doris, subsequent development and new pool discoveries at Mahaska and Nig Creek.

New Cache replaced 1997 production by a factor of 11.6 times. A more balanced portfolio of reserves evolved in 1997 with gas comprising 57% while oil and liquids account for 43%. Comparatively, in 1996 gas made up only 23% of New Cache's reserve base.

Finding and development costs of $6.75 per boe were achieved based on proven and 50% of probable reserves. The three year rolling average on this basis is $6.46 per boe.

New Cache recorded a drilling success rate of 90% this past year, an improvement over the 78% tallied in 1996. The Company participated in 47 gross wells resulting in 24 gross (5.43 net) oil wells, 18 gross (12.33 net) gas wells and 5 gross (1.88 net) dry holes. The average participation interest was 42%.

Combined oil and gas production increased 31% from an average 2,163 boepd in 1996 to 2,834 boepd for 1997. Gas production increased 183% to 10.305 mmcf/d in the 1997 fiscal year, up from 3.646 mmcf/d in 1996. Oil and liquids production was flat at 1,803 bopd relative to 1996. New Cache averaged 3,538 boepd during the fourth quarter of 1997 compared to 2,239 boepd in 1996. Oil and gas production was 1,930 bopd and 16.080 mmcf/d, respectively during the last quarter. The Company averaged in excess of 5,000 boepd in December, the first month of the new fiscal year.

The Company invested a total of $71.5 million in 1997 with $43.7 million expended on producing property and corporate acquisitions and $27.8 million on conventional oil and gas drilling, land acquisitions, seismic and facilities.

Cash flow increased from $9.703 million in 1996 to $10.112 million for 1997. Cash flow per share declined from $1.17 per share in 1996 to $0.99 per share for the year ended November 30, 1997. Delays in getting on new gas production from acquisitions at Doris and new discoveries at Mahaska and Nig Creek resulted in lower than expected cash flow for the year. Equity issued to finance the acquisitions had a dilutive effect on cash flow per share. Net income was $.384 million ($0.04 per share) in 1997 down from $2.110 million ($0.25 per share) recorded in the prior year. Net income was effected significantly by an increase in the deferred tax rate from 46% in 1996 to 78% for 1997 due to the lower tax basis associated with the acquisitions. However, New Cache has tax and resource pools of $76.5 million which allows full shielding of cash flow well into the future.

Weighted average number of issued and outstanding shares were 10.190 million and 11.596 on a fully diluted basis for 1997.

Cash flow for the fourth quarter of 1997 was $3.109 million ($0.26 per share) compared to $2.536 million ($0.28 per share) for the 1996 period. The Company recorded a net loss of $74,000 ($0.01 per share) in the fourth quarter of 1997. Comparatively, net income of $761,000 was recorded in 1996.

As at November 30, 1997 New Cache had a total bank debt and working capital deficiency of $22.6 million representing a 1.25 debt to forward cash flow ratio. The Company had a working capital deficiency of $2.6 million and no long-term bank debt at the end of the previous year. New Cache currently has approximately 14.1 million common shares issued and outstanding.

Gulfstream Resources Canada Limited (GUR/TSE) recorded a profit of $2,724,631 or 5 cents per share for the three month period ended December 31, 1997. Income for the quarter is more than double the income level of $1,359,814 or three cents per share for the same period in the prior year. Per share calculations are based on 58,876,320 common shares outstanding for the first quarter of 1998 compared to 48,972,294 for the first three fiscal months of 1997.

Financial results reflect payment of a 2 cent per share dividend on December 31, 1997, payable to shareholders of record on December 19, 1997.

Gross revenues for the quarter totaled $11,255,166 compared to $6,384,693 for the same period in 1997. Expenses were $6,618,402 to the end of the quarter compared to $3,521,216 for the prior year period. Operating cashflow was $3,790,299 for the first quarter of 1998 compared to $1,078,894 for the first quarter of 1997.

Expenditures on oil and gas interests totaled $14,977,616 compared to $9,477,482 for the three-month period in 1997. Cash at quarter-end was $34,606,717.

Two additional production wells were brought on stream at Al-Rayyan offshore Qatar in late-November, 1997, increasing thenumber of producing wells in the field to six. Oil production from Al-Rayyan averaged 32 thousand barrels per day in December and 23 thousand barrels per calendar day for the quarter. No production was recorded from Al-Rayyan in the quarter ended December 31, 1996 as commercial production from the field did not begin until January 1, 1997.

A Plan of Development for longer-term development of the Al-Rayyan field has been submitted to the Government of the State of Qatar. In Madagascar, a 320 kilometre seismic program was completed in late November, 1997. Plans are underway to initiate seismic and drilling activity in Oman for 1998. Subsequent to December 31, the Company secured a $73 million, 3-year revolving credit facility with a consortium of international banks.

Encal Energy Ltd. (ENL/TSE - ECA/NYSE) announced operating and financial results for the year ended December 31, 1997. Revenue increased 35% to $167.8 million compared to $124.3 million in 1996.

Funds from operations increased 27% to $84.1 million ($0.81 per share) from $66.2 million in 1996 ($0.64 per share).

Net earnings for the year ended December 31, 1997 were $13.0 million ($0.12 per share) compared to $11.5 million ($0.11 per share) in 1996.

Net capital expenditures totalled $157.6 million in 1997 compared to $109.3 million in 1996. The capital program was financed by cash flow, debt and proceeds from the sales of minor properties.

Net Asset Value per share increased 17% during 1997 to $5.08 per basic common share from $4.35 in 1996.

1997 was another year where Encal improved its cost structure, with General and Administrative costs averaging $1.07 per BOE ($1.26 per BOE in 1996) and operating costs averaging $4.28 per BOE ($4.29 in 1996).

Production averaged 22,436 BOE per day compared to 17,803 BOE per day in 1996, an increase of 26%

Production during the fourth quarter averaged 24,855 BOE per day, an increase of 27% over the same period in 1996.

The exit production rate exceeded 26,000 BOE per day.

Approximately 10,500 BOE per day of new production was added at an average cost of below $15,000 per BOE per day.

Finding and development costs inclusive of all additions and revisions were $6.92/BOE proven and $5.46/BOE proven plus probable.

Net proven plus probable reserve additions amounted to 15.7 million barrels of crude oil and NGL and 132.1 billion cubic feet of natural gas or 28.9 million barrels of oil equivalent.

These reserve additions exceeded annual total production by a multiple of 3.5 times on a proven plus probable basis.

85% of reserve additions were generated by the drilling program

1997 was the most active year in Encal's history with the drilling of 181 gross wells resulting in 66 gas wells and 75 oil wells for an overall success rate of 78%.

Undeveloped land inventory for future exploration activity increased by 20% to 719,500 net acres.

For further detail with table data, see Message 3521985



To: Crocodile who wrote (9242)2/25/1998 12:38:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (16) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1998 (6)

OTHER COMPANIES IN THE NEWS

Merit Energy Ltd. (MEL/TSE) updated their recent activity from the first of the year. Merit was successful in acquiring 2,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day and 275,000 net acres of land from Rigel Oil and Gas Ltd. The assets are located in Southwest Saskatchewan. An estimated 8.0 Mmcf per day of natural gas per day from the properties should come onstream in the second quarter of 1998.

Effective January 1, 1998, an alliance was formed with Gulf Canada Resources Ltd. which covers 420,000 acres in the Company's core East Central area of Alberta. As operator of the alliance, Merit will spend $20 million in net capital drilling 50 wells during 1998. The combination of Gulf's extensive seismic and land base and usage of Merit's processing facilities will allow the Company to maximize operating efficiencies in this key area.

Merit has drilled another 100% working interest discovery well in the Little Bow area of southern Alberta. Preliminary indications on this new pool discovery suggest the well will produce at rates of 4 Mmcf per day from the lower Mannville formation. Additional seismic data is being assembled to define offsets to this location. Merit has approximately 6,500 gross acres of undeveloped land in proximity to the discovery. Production tests are currently underway to prepare the well for tie-in.

In the Manitou area of western Saskatchewan, Merit has drilled a successful 100 percent step-out well in the McLaren formation. Tests indicate the new well will produce at 2 Mmcf per day. This well substantially increases Merit's gas reserves in the area. The Company plans additional drilling in the area on 18,000 net acres of offset lands.

Tessex Energy Inc. (TES.A/ASE) announced that it has entered into a Letter of Intent relative to a Plan of Arrangement with Encounter Energy Inc., a privately held oil and gas company. The new company will be positioned for rapid growth with over $7.0 Million working capital and a current annualized cashflow of approximately $2.5 Million. Current production is 625 BOED which is anticipated to increase to 800 BOED over the next several months. The new Company will operate under the name of Encounter Energy Inc. See Internal Affairs for further information.

Sharon Energy Ltd. (SHY/VSE) announced that the Henning #1-15 well was placed on production February 17, 1998. Production during the first week was stabilized at a restricted rate averaging 1,200 MCFD from one Cretaceous Forbes zone with perforations from 5565-68. The Henning #1-15 well is located in Section 15, T21N-R2W, Glenn County, California. The Henning well is the fourth well drilled in Sharon's Merlin 3-D Gas Project, and the second new pool discovery completed for production. Several additional zones remain to beperforated in the well once production testing has been completed on the initial zone. Equity Oil of Salt Lake City, Utah, is the operator of the Merlin Prospect in which Sharon has a 20% working interest.

Sharon further reports that it has received a proposal for a fifth well in the Merlin 3-D Gas Project from Equity. The Otto Loshe #1-22 will also target the Cretaceous Forbes and is scheduled for drilling later this spring in Section 22, T21N-R2W with a projected total depth of 5,665'.

T & H Resources Ltd. (THE/TSE) is pleased to announce that the Winfield Ranch 17 No. 1-E Well, located near South Fort Stockton, Pecos County, Texas commenced drilling over the weekend. BayTech, Inc. of Texas is operator of the project.

The primary drilling objective will be the Ellenburger Formation at 26,000 feet with the secondary objective being the Devonian Formation. The adjacent Gomez Field to the northwest has produced 4.7 trillion cubic feet (TCF) of gas of the 7 TCF of recoverable reserves while the adjacent McComb Field to the north has produced 50 billion cubic feet (BCF) of the 160 BCF of recoverable reserves and the Puckett Field 15 miles to the southeast has produced 3.8 TCF of the 5 TCF of recoverable reserves.

T&H has paid 20% of the turnkey cost of the drilling and completion of one well to earn a 20% interest in the initial well and a 15% interest in the contract lands. T&H's interest in the initial well is subject to BayTech's 25% back-in after payout. Following payout of the initial well, T&H will have a 15% working interest in all subsequent operations in the entire leasehold of 5,280 gross acres (3,920 net acres).

Pioneer Natural Resources, Inc. (PXD/TSE) announced today test results from the recently drilled Eugene Island Block 208 K-4 well.

The K-4 well is a dual completion which tested at a total rate of approximately 3,200 barrels of oil and 7 million cubic feet of natural gas per day from two intervals between 6,400 feet and 9,000 feet. The well was drilled on the flanks of a salt dome to test potential hydrocarbon accumulations defined by 3-D seismic data. A total of 90 feet of hydrocarbon pay was encountered. An additional interval in the well was completed as an alternate for future production. The well was drilled from existing facilities and began producing immediately.

Pioneer operates and owns 75 percent working interest in the K-4 well located 70 miles south of Morgan City, La. in 100 feet of water. This property was acquired via the acquisition of Greenhill Petroleum in April, 1997. Three additional wells are planned to test similar objectives from the adjacent "J" platform. Pioneer continues to evaluate higher impact exploration opportunities in the field area from deeper horizons.

INTERNATIONAL

Companies

Sands Petroleum AB ( SPB/TSE) is announced that the "Borgny Dolphin" semi-submersible drilling rig has been mobilized from the North Sea and is expected to arrive in the Falkland Islands in early May. Several large, well defined prospects exist on the Company's 6 blocks (Tranche F) offshore the Falkland Islands.

The drilling rig will be shared with 3 other licence holders in the area. Sands' first of two exploration wells is expected to be spudded in October, 1998. The other 3 licence holders will drill their first wells ahead of Sands starting with Amerada Hess as soon as the rig arrives.

Tranche F comprises an area of 1,600 square kilometres and is situated in the North Falkland Basin. Geologically, the North Falkland Basin is similar to the North Sea and is one of the few large sedimentary basins that has not yet been explored for oil.

To date, the Company has acquired 2,625 line kilometres of existing seismic data and 1,600 line kilometres of new seismic data. Several potential reservoir sequences have been identified and include syn- rift sandstones of mainly Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous age; post- rift sandstones and reefal carbonates of Valanginian to Albian age; and others. Various source rock intervals are thought to be present in the Jurassic-Cretaceous sequence and modeling has shown these intervals to be mature for oil and gas. Numerous structures are present in the area including fault-bounded three-way dip-closed structures at the Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous levels.

Sands holds a 100 percent interest in Tranche F.

AltaQuest Energy Corporation (AQF/TAE) announced that it has closed the previously announced acquisition of a natural gas property in the Sylvan Lake area of Alberta. The acquisition, effective December 1, 1997, has strategic value in AltaQuest's existing core area of Sylvan Lake. The upside potential of the property will be realized in 1998 with well recompletions, development drilling and plant optimization. AltaQuest plans to drill five wells in the area this year with netforecasted 1998 exit production from the property expected to be 750 barrels of oil equivalent per day (BOE/d).

AltaQuest plans to drill up to five wells (24.5 percent working interest), starting in June of this year, on its Fiskerton discovery in the United Kingdom. With these wells, and an anticipated pipeline tie-in in June of 1998, net production should average 165 barrels of oil per day in 1998 and exit the year at 630 barrels of oil per day. This production, along with our domestic forecasted production, nets the company an average 900 boe/d and exit 1998 at 1500 BOE/d.

As well, AltaQuest has secured a rig for its next exploration location at Newton-on-Trent (20 kilometres to the west of Fiskerton) and anticipates a spud date within the next two weeks. AltaQuest has a 50 percent APO working interest in Newton-on-Trent, which will test a similar geologic feature as its Fiskerton discovery.

AltaQuest has applied for 100,000 net additional acres surrounding our East Midlands acreage. It is anticipated that the successful bidders will be announced imminently by the Department of Trade and Industry in London.

TransGlobe Energy Corporation (TGL/TSE) announced that it has completed a farm out agreement for the S-1 Block in the Republic of Yemen with Vintage Petroleum International Inc.("Vintage"), a 100 percent subsidiary of Vintage Petroleum Inc., a large U.S. independent exploration and production company based in Tulsa, Oklahoma and listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The agreement will allow Vintage to earn a 75 percent working interest in the S-1 Block by funding 100 percent of TransGlobe's exploration commitments for the first exploration period of 2.5 years under the Production Sharing Agreement ("PSA"). TransGlobe will pay 25 percent of the signature bonus, agents fees and finders fees required to be paid and Vintage will pay 75 percent. The PSA has been forwarded to the Yemen Parliament for ratification which is expected to take ninety days. After ratification Vintage and TransGlobe will commence the first period exploration work commitments consisting of 150 square kilometers of 3-D seismic and the drilling of three exploratory wells.

PIPELINES

The National Energy Board has set down for public hearing an application by AEC Suffield Gas Pipeline Inc. (AEC Suffield) of Calgary to construct and operate a natural gas pipeline from southeastern Alberta to southwestern Saskatchewan. The hearing will commence on Monday, 25 May 1998 at a location to be announced at a later date. Interventions are due by Thursday, 19 March 1998.

The company is applying to construct approximately 114 kilometres (71 miles) of new pipeline and associated control facilities which will begin near the southwestern corner of the Suffield Military Block in Alberta, extend along the southern end of the military block and then northeast to join the TransCanada PipeLines Limited system near Burstall, Saskatchewan.

The AEC Suffield pipeline will have a design capacity of approximately 5.67 million cubic metres (200 million cubic feet) of natural gas per day. The estimated capital cost of the project is $26.2 million.

ENERGY TRUSTS

NCE Resources Group (NCD.UN) announced that NCE Diversified Income Trust has declared a cash distribution of three cents ($0.03) per unit. The distribution is payable on March 6, 1998 to holders of record on February 27, 1998.

EARNINGS REPORTS

Niko Resources Ltd. (ASE/NKO) announced its financial results for the three and nine months ended December 31, 1997.

During the three months ended December 31, 1997 operating revenue increased to $971,000 compared to $447,000 in 1996. Cash flow from operations rose to $510,000 or $0.025 per share compared to $292,000 or $ 0.015 per share in 1996. The Company earned $234,000 or $0.011 per share compared to $260,000 or $0.013 per share in 1996.

For the nine months ended December 31, 1997 revenue was $2,097,000 compared to $892,000 in 1996. Cash flow from operations was $1,106,000 or $0.054 per share compared to $353,000 or $ 0.022 per share in 1996. Net income was $497,000 or $0.024 per share compared to net income of $270,000 or $0.010 per share in 1996.

Merit Energy Ltd. (MEL/TSE) reported 1997 results. Revenue increased 446 percent to $18,893,424, compared to $4,240,782 in 1996, while funds from operations increased 585 percent to $11,358,248 ($0.52 per share) from $1,942,293 in 1996 ($0.17 per share).

Net earnings for the year ended December 31, 1997 were $4,426,587 ($0.20 per share) compared to $410,925 ($0.04 per share) in 1996.

Net capital expenditures amounted to $75,036,093 in 1997 compared to $19,448,710 in 1996. The capital program was financed by cash flow, bank debt and equity. At December 31, 1997 the Company's long term debt was $24.9 million compared to $5.5 million at December 31, 1996.

The Company achieved a 1997 exit production rate of 5,200 Boe per day, a 222 percent increase over the 1996 exit production rate of 1,614 Boe per day.

Fourth quarter 1997 oil and liquids production averaged 854 Bbls per day up 307 percent over the fourth quarter 1996 results of 210 Bbls per day. Fourth quarter 1997 natural gas production averaged 44.9 Mmcf per day up 441 percent over the fourth quarter 1996 results of 8.3 Mmcf per day.

1997 average natural gas production was 26.6 Mmcf per day up 269 percent from 7.2 Mmcf per day during 1996 and oil and liquids production was 678 Bbls per day up 434 percent from 127 Bbls per day in 1996.

Merit drilled 65.7 net (83 gross) wells resulting in 23.6 net oil wells, 30 net gas wells and 1.5 net service wells for an overall success rate of 84%.

1997 activity resulted in net proved and probable reserve additions of 4,069 Mbbls of oil and liquids and 96.8 Bcf of natural gas or 13.7 million barrels of oil equivalents representing replacement of 1997 production by 11.2 times.

Finding costs inclusive of all additions and revisions on a cumulative basis was $5.66 per Boe proven and $4.12 per Boe proven and probable at December 31, 1997. Continuing with the Company's commitment to capital infrastructure, Merit spent $7,095,733 on facilities in 1997 compared to $6,691,591 in 1996. This spending represents 9.5 percent of the capital expenditures for 1997 (34% in 1996).

Finding and development costs inclusive of all additions and revisions on a cumulative basis was $6.71 per Boe proven and $4.88 per Boe proven and probable at December 31, 1997.

Undeveloped land increased 136 percent during 1997 to 187,096 net acres from 79,272 acres in 1996.

For further info, with table data, see Message 3521837

Cotton Valley Resources Corporation (KTN/AMEX) announced financial results today for the six months ended December 31, 1997.

The condensed consolidated net income after tax was $54,403 on revenue of $1,157,985. This compares very favorably with a net loss of $602,116 on revenue of $41,365 for the comparable period in the previous fiscal year. The Company reported revenue of $532,784 and net loss of $78,919 for the second quarter.

"The slight drop in revenue and slight increases in general and administrative expenses from the first quarter to second quarter were due mainly to the concentration of efforts to bring additional equipment and facilities on-line at the Mustang Companies," stated Gene Soltero, CEO and chairman of Cotton Valley. "Of key importance to the Company's strategy, we completed the organization of our Mustang oilfield services operating subsidiaries including Mustang Oilfield Equipment Company, Mustang Horizontal Services, Inc. and, most recently, Mustang Well Servicing Company."

"As a result, our well workover program has begun and is progressing rapidly. Currently, we are now operating our own workover rigs in the Means (Queen) Unit purchased in the first quarter and the Sears Ranch property which we purchased during the second quarter. While it is premature to quantify, initial development is resulting in increased production, revenues and income from oil and gas."

"Finally," concluded Soltero, "we are quite pleased with the progress of our Mustang operating companies. In one quarter, these subsidiaries have put together technical personnel equipment and are really moving forward with our development programs. While that is our primary motivation, Cotton Valley isalso poised to benefit from increasing incremental revenue from third-partyequipment sales and oilfield servicing. For the Company as a whole, we expect our third quarter and fourth quarter of this fiscal year to show materially increasing gains over the results of the first half. The condensed consolidated statement of operations for the first half of FY 1998 and the condensed consolidated balance sheet for December 31, 1997, are attached."

Cotton Valley Resources Corporation concentrates on acquiring and improving Texas and Oklahoma oil and gas properties using new technologies and its own service companies. There are approximately 17 million common shares outstanding.

Granger Energy Corp. (GAS.A/ASE) See Kerms Top 21 - Spec 15 - Serv 9 Companies In The News

Gulfstream Resources Canada Limited (GUR/TSE) See Kerms Watchlist Of Companies In The News

New Cache Petroleum Ltd. (NWA/TSE) See Kerms Watchlist Of Companies In The News

Encal Energy Ltd. (ENL/TSE - ECA/NYSE) See Kerms Watchlist Of Companies In The News

Ranger Oil Limited (RGO/TSE) See Kerms Watchlist Of Companies In The News

Crestar Energy Inc.(CRS/TSE) See Kerms Top 21 - Spec 15 - Serv 9 Companies In The News

FINANCIAL

Berkley Petroleum Corp. (bkp/tse) announced that it has successfully closed its previously announced offering of 2,000,000 common shares issued on a "flow-through" basis at $17.00 per share pursuant to its final prospectus dated February 5, 1998. The offering was underwritten by a syndicate of Canadian investment dealers led by Nesbitt Burns Inc. and First Marathon Securities Limited, and including Bunting Warburg Inc., CIBC Wood Gundy Securities Inc., FirstEnergy Capital Corp., Peters & Co. Limited and TD Securities Inc. Gross proceeds were $34,000,000.

Proceeds from the issue will be used to fund Berkley's ongoing exploration activities.

INTERNAL AFFAIRS

Canadian 88 Energy Corp. (EEE/TSE) announced that it will be proceeding with a normal course issuer bid to purchase, through the facilities of the Toronto Stock Exchange, up to 8,000,000 of its Common Shares, representing approximately 10 percent of Canadian 88's public float of approximately 82,198,834 Common Shares. A maximum of 2 percent of the outstanding Common Shares may be purchased in any 30 day period. Common Shares purchased by Canadian 88 will be returned to treasury for cancellation. Purchases by Canadian 88 can commence on February 26, 1998 and will end no later than February 25, 1999.

Canadian 88 purchased 69,100 of its Common Shares between February 26, 1997 and February 25, 1998 at an average price of $4.47 per share

Tessex Energy Inc. (TES.A/ASE) announced that it has entered into a Letter of Intent relative to a Plan of Arrangement with Encounter Energy Inc., a privately held oil and gas company. The effective share ratio for the transaction will be 1.67 shares of Tessex for each Encounter share. Subsequent to a one for three share consolidation, the new Company will have 14,174,779 shares issued and outstanding and 18,705,720 shares on a fully diluted basis.

In connection with the combination, the current officers of Tessex will resign and be replaced with the current officers of Encounter: John H. Carruthers as Chairman and CEO, Paul L. Mitchell as President, C.A. (Butch) Bauer as V.P. Engineering and Donald C. Ross as V.P. Finance and Chief Financial Officer. All of these individuals have extensive oil and gas experience in both private and public companies. John Carruthers was the founder and president of Lorrac Energy Ltd. which was merged in 1996 to form Tethys Energy Inc. Paul Mitchell was a founder and V.P. Exploration of Amber Energy Inc. until his resignation in late 1996. Don Ross was a founder of Amber Energy Inc. and Intensity Resources Ltd. and has held a number of senior finance positions within the oil and gas industry. Butch Bauer was the founder and president of Maxon Energy Inc. which was sold in 1995 to Neutrino Resources Inc. The current president of Tessex, Mr. Bill Wilson, will retire. The new Company will operate under the name of Encounter Energy Inc.

The Board of Directors of Tessex (Encounter) will be reconstituted by the addition of three (3) new board members: John H. Carruthers, Paul L. Mitchell and William S. Maslechko. John A. Tessari and Robert J. Tessari will remain on the Board of Directors.

Enertec Resource Services (ERS/TSE) announced that it has received approval from the Toronto Stock Exchange to make a Normal Course Issuer Bid to purchase its common shares. Enertec has allocated an initial amount of up to $500,000 to acquire its common shares outstanding. The Company will consider the allocation of additional funds to this bid after assessing the success of purchases made in terms of the initial allocation. However, the Company's purchase of its common shares will not exceed 447,195 common shares, the maximum number permissible pursuant to the rules of The Toronto Stock Exchange governing normal course issuer bids. As of the date hereof, 7,290,182 common shares of Enertec are issued and outstanding. The public float consists of 4,471,949 common shares.

Plains Energy Services Ltd. (PLA/TSE) announces that it has filed with The Toronto Stock Exchange a notice of intention to make a normal course issuer bid to purchase up to a maximum of 1,000,000 Common Shares (5% of the outstanding Common Shares) over the next twelve months. Not more than 2% of the outstanding Common Shares will be purchased in any 30-day period. As of February 20, 1998 the Corporation had 20,994,855 Common Shares outstanding.

The Common Shares will be purchased on the open market by George Gosbee of Newcrest Capital Inc., the Corporation's broker, from time to time through the facilities of The Toronto Stock Exchange. Common Shares purchased will be paid for with cash available in the Corporation's working capital.

Crew Development (CRU/TSE&VSE) announced that Crew Holdings Ltd. proposes to sell up to 1,500,000 shares of Crew Development Corp., through the Vancouver and/or Toronto Stock Exchanges, commencing February 26, 1998.

If these shares are all sold, Crew Holdings Ltd. will continue to hold 3,000,000 shares of Crew Development Corp.

MISC.

The Financial Post listed the following inside transactions;

The Caisse bought 1.7 million shares of Paragon Petroleum Corp. for $3.60 each to hold almost 3.3 million shares. And it bought 110,000 units of North West Company Fund for $13.94 each to hold almost 1.6 million.

Beau Canada Explorations Ltd. - Thomas Bugg, officer, director and holder of more than 10%, exercised one million options for $1.68 or $2 each and sold a one million shares for $2.95 each to hold more than 4.7 million shares directly and indirectly.

International Petroleum Corp. - Ian Lundin, officer and director, exercised 1.5 million options for $4.50 each to hold more than 2.8 million shares. Adolf Lundin, officer and director, bought 150,000 shares in August for $5.85 each to hold more than 7.6 million shares directly and indirectly.

Penn West Petroleum Corp. - Murray Edwards, director and holder of more than 10%, sold 200,000 shares for $13.50 each to hold more than 3.8 million shares directly and indirectly.

END - END



To: Crocodile who wrote (9242)2/27/1998 6:52:00 AM
From: Crocodile  Read Replies (7) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1998 (1)

Friday, February 27, 1998

U.S. stocks pushed higher as investors, undaunted by Wall Street's record run, continued to drive cash into equities. Canadian stocks jumped, buoyed by a surge in resource-based stocks

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 32.89 points, or 0.4%, to 8490.67, after trading briefly above the 8500 level for the first time.
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The Standard & Poor's 500 composite index gained 5.77 points, or 0.6%, to end in record territory at 1048.67.
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The Nasdaq composite index rose 10.63 points, or 0.6%, to a new high of 1777.11.
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About 651 million shares were traded on the New York Stock Exchange, up from 613.7 million shares traded on Wednesday.
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"The market just seems to keep churning higher," said Guy Truicko, a money manager for Unity Management in Lake Success, N.Y.
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"It's the same thing it's always been: low interest rates, low inflation. Earnings have been pretty good. And more important, you have a ton of money flowing into the market."
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Oil producers and drilling companies led the way, after Halliburton Co. agreed to buy Dresser Industries Inc. for US$7.7 billion. Halliburton shares (HAL/NYSE) rose US$2 5/8 to US$46 1/2, and Dresser stock (DI/NYSE) soared US$6 3/8 to US$44 11/16.
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The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index rose 85.57 points, or 1.2%, to 7087.67 - the fifth consecutive day of gains for the benchmark index. About 147.6 million shares changed hands, up from 125.8 million shares traded on Wednesday.
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Northern Telecom (NTL/TSE) gained $2.75 to $75.50, adding to its 30% gain since Jan. 27 when the company announced a 22% surge in fourth-quarter profit.
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"Technology stocks have much better prospects than consumer issues," said Subodh Khumar, chief portfolio strategist with CIBC Wood Gundy Securities Inc. "With growth rates in electronic commerce at 30%, technological investments cannot be postponed and require equipment that companies like Northern Telecom produce."
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BCE Inc. (BCE/TSE), which owns 51.7% of Nortel, rose 70› to $50.75.
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Bank issues gained on expectations that interest rates will remain low. Bank of Montreal (BMO/TSE) rose $1.25 to $77.30, Royal Bank of Canada (RY/TSE) rose 55› to $84 and Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS/TSE) climbed 80› to $35.85.
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Banks gained additional strength after National Bank of Canada reported its fiscal first-quarter profit rose a greater than expected 20% to 55› a share, from 46› a share in the year-earlier period. National Bank shares (NA/TSE) rose 5› to $23.95.
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However, Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD/TSE) fell 30› to $61.30 after its fiscal first-quarter profit failed to exceed analysts' estimates. TD's profit rose 12% to 95› a share from 85› a share a year earlier.
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Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX/TSE) rose $1.15 to $26.45 and Placer Dome Inc. (PDG/TSE) climbed $1 to $17.50 on higher bullion prices as jewellers took advantage of recent declines, traders said.
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Gold demand rose 9% to 2,935 tonnes in 1997, according to the producer-funded World Gold Council survey of 85% of global consumers. The price of bullion climbed US$2.30 to US$294.40 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.
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Oil producers Suncor Energy Inc. (Su/TSE), up $1.55 to $51.75, and Gulf Canada Resources Ltd. (GOU/TSE), up 40› to $8.10, rose after a call for the Organization of Petroleum-Exporting Countries to meet urgently on oil production levels raised hopes for higher crude prices.
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Other major Canadian markets closed mixed.

The Montreal Exchange portfolio rose 47.76 points, or 1.3%, to 3657.57.

The Vancouver Stock Exchange index fell 1.28 points, or 0.2%, to 616.63.

For a scorecard of trading activity on all Canadian Stock Exchanges, go to:
quote.yahoo.com .

REFERENCE: Canadian Market Summary
canoe2.canoe.ca

The major overseas markets all closed firmer.
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London: Britain's leading share index romped to its seventh record close since the start of February, as Wall Street held firm and cash-richinstitutions continued to buy British shares. The FT-SE 100 index closed at 5764.8, up 19.7 points or 0.3%.
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Frankfurt: Germany's blue-chip index pared earlier losses, renewing hopes for further gains in the days ahead. The Dax index closed at 4692.03, up 56.21 points or 1.2%.
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Tokyo: Japanese stocks rose moderately on expectations that a recent fragile market tone and external pressure will soon lead the government to act to boost the economy. The 225-share Nikkei average closed at 16,501.7, up 141.06 points or 0.9%.
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Hong Kong: Stocks closed sharply higher amid speculation that Hong Kong banks may cut prime rates soon. The Hang Seng index trimmed earlier gains but ended at its highest close since Dec. 9 - up 338.04 points, or 3.1%, at 11,224.78.
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Sydney: The Australian share market ended higher. The all ordinaries index closed at 2696, up 20.3 points or 0.8%.

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Commodities prices plunge to 4 1/2-year low -- By DAVID THOMAS -- Economics Reporter The Financial Post
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Commodities prices continued to take a beating in January, as slackening demand from Asia caused the sector to plummet to its lowest level in 4 1/2 years, says Bank of Nova Scotia.
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The Scotiabank commodities price index dropped 2.6% in January, leaving it nearly 14% lower than a year earlier.
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"The downturn in East Asia and a lack of trade credit in countries such as South Korea continued to take a toll on actual demand for commodities as well as expectations," said Patricia Mohr, an economist at the bank who specializes in commodities markets.

The index is languishing at a level "not seen since the autumn of 1993, when Japan and Western Europe were in recession.
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"Market sentiment was exceptionally negative in the first half of January, with short selling of base metals on the London Metal Exchange."
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January's decline was broad-based, with agriculture prices down 3.5% and industrial prices falling 2.5%.
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Within industrials, forest products took the worst hit with a 2.6% drop, while metals and minerals fell 2.2% and oil and gas were off 1.9%. Newsprint prices managed a small gain, but that was more than offset by further weakness in lumber prices and the start of a slide in pulp, Mohr said.
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The benchmark lumber - western spruce-pine-fir two by fours - fell from US$290 a thousand board feet in December to US$280 in January. Prices have since recovered slightly, hitting US$305 last week and US$295 this week.
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Pulp prices are beginning to soften, with the bellwether northern bleached softwood kraft pulp fetching US$550 a tonne in the U.S. this month after trading at US$610 at the end of last year.
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In the stock market, investors are counting on substantial firming in most forest and paper products prices in the months ahead. The paper and forest products subindex on the Toronto Stock Exchange is up 10.2% on the year, compared with a 5.8% gain for the TSE 300 composite index as a whole.
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The paper and forest subindex bottomed out at 3728.99 on Jan. 15 and closed yesterday at 4451.71 for a 19.4% advance.
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Oil prices edged down yesterday, with West Texas intermediate crude closing at US$15.35 a barrel, down US10› and well off its average of US$19.95 in the fourth quarter.

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Japan's foot-dragging seen highlighting G7 rift

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Highlighting a growing rift in the Group of Seven major industrial nations, U.S. efforts to browbeat Japan into boosting its flagging economy in the face of Asia's financial crisis have so far run into a brick wall.
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But as concern mounts in Washington over Japan's failure to do its share to promote stability in the battered region, analysts said Thursday efforts to get any positive reaction from Tokyo had little chance of succeeding for now.
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"The major economic and financial policy-making group in Japan is kind of demoralized," said William Breer, an ex-State Department official who now chairs the Center for Strategic and International Studies' Japan department. "It hasn't got the resilience needed to react to changing circumstances."
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The standoff has heightened fears Asia's woes will have a bigger effect on the United States than previously thought, prompting even Federal Reserve chief Alan Greenspan to join the fracas and warn Tokyo it was not doing enough to prevent its economy from shrinking.
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U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, who led the Western attack against Tokyo at last week's G7 meeting in London, upped the stakes Thursday and warned the issue of Japan's domestic demand had taken on global significance.
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"Domestic demand-led growth in Japan really has become an issue of global economic importance and it is particularly important to their neighbors in Asia," he told reporters.
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In Brussels, European Union Trade Commissioner Sir Leon Brittan said it was vital to act now "at a time when the Japanese economy is in a weak condition and when export-led growth is neither politically nor economically appropriate."
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Tokyo's response so far has been indignant. Vice Finance Minister Eisuke Sakakibara told parliament he did not agree with the G7's assessment that Japan urgently needs to act to boost its sluggish economy.
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But while much of the G7 is up in arms over the subject, analysts said there is little, if anything, they can do in practice -- putting the spotlight squarely on the group's apparent inability to deal with world economic problems.
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"The G7 has lost a lot of its effectiveness and has deteriorated considerably," said Fred Bergsten, head of the Institute for International Economics in Washington and a one-time presidential adviser. "One of the reasons is a failure to work constantly and aggressively on each other's problems."
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Foreign exchange markets seem to agree with that assessment. While they remain downbeat over Japan's economic outlook, they barely moved earlier this week after the G7 promised to avoid excessive currency fluctuations, a comment that was widely read to be directly aimed at the weak yen.
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Hampered by simmering political scandals and faced with waning consumer confidence, Japanese politicians appear in no rush to placate Washington's concerns.
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Talk that Tokyo has begun to cobble together proposals for new stimulus measures raised some eyebrows in the currency markets Thursday, but analysts insist there is little reason for hope before the Japanese government has sent its 1998/99 budget safely on its way at the end of next month.
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Any new package would come on the heels of last week's announcement of a set of measures aimed at supporting the economy and stock market, which overseas critics said lacked the tax cuts or increased spending so desperately needed.
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Rubin said that program "didn't meet the objectives," while Germany's central bank president Hans Tietmeyer warned that, in any case, simply raising spending or cutting taxes was not enough to address Japan's structural problems.
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"We have to keep the pressure up," said Breer. "But the greater question is how to restore consumer confidence and spending in Japan -- and that's not a problem that Washington or London could solve for them."
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Bergsten agreed and said the Clinton administration has to come to grips with the fact that it has little leverage on Tokyo.
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"There's always the theoretical threat that United States could close its markets or tinker with security issues, but they haven't really been wanting to do that," he said.

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To: Crocodile who wrote (9242)2/27/1998 7:40:00 AM
From: Henry Niman  Respond to of 15196
 
CNBC and FT are reporting on hostile takeover speculation regarding GLX and SBH. Details linked to the GLX Alliance table at home.att.net
SBH up 4% this morning.