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


To: Crocodile who wrote (9526)3/12/1998 12:08:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1998 (2)

TOP STORY

Oil Price Slump Creates Buying Climate As Archer Resources Sold & Torrington Resources On Sale Block

The Financial Post

One Canadian junior energy company announced it had a buyer yesterday, while another put itself on the block as the impact of declining oil prices and increasing U.S. interest continues to ripple through the Canadian energy sector.

Tough times caused by the prices of crude oil languishing at four-year lows are creating opportunity for other smaller players who want to grow, analysts said.

Archer Resources Ltd. of Calgary has arranged to be sold for $7.60 a share to Dominion Energy Inc. The $183-million price tag is small change for the buyer's parent, Dominion Resources Inc., a US$20 - billion holding company active in electricity generation, oil and gas, financial services and real estate.

Dominion said the deal will boost its gas production capability by 50%. Archer now flows about 72 million cubic feet of gas and 1,500 barrels of oil a day.

Wayne Foo, Archer's president and chief operating officer, said his 70 employees should not be affected by the sale. He hopes the change will enable Archer to become a buyer of some of the assets on the market.

With the strong US$ and growing interest south of the border in Canadian gas reserves, the sale to a U.S. company was no surprise, said Gord Currie, analyst with Canaccord Capital Corp. in Calgary. "I would say the value [Dominion] got was at the low end of the range expected."

The Archer sale was not prompted by financial difficulty. Its 1997 results show revenue grew 22% to $58.8 million from 1996, while cash flow rose 38% to $32.8 million and net income more than doubled to $6.6 million (32› a share).

The financial story was much the same for Torrington Resources Ltd., which said it will open a data room next month for potential buyers. In 1997, the company's revenue climbed 21% to $24.8 million, cash flow jumped 18% to $19.9 million and net income was up 6% to $7.1 million (30›). Tom Budd, an analyst with Griffiths McBurney & Partners in Calgary, believes the time isn't right for gas-oriented firms like Torrington to put themselves up for sale unless absolutely necessary.

If gas prices rise next winter as a result of new pipeline capacity, it's too early to sell. "If I was a somewhat optimistic person on gas," he said, "I would not be selling in this market."

If soft oil prices continue, companies may sell assets at distressed prices and create opportunities for other juniors, he said.

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, low commodity prices combined with high debt to force asset sales and mergers, said Wilf Gobert, an analyst with Peters & Co. in Calgary.

Conditions are slightly different this time around the cycle. "Not only is the debt issue not there, but shareholders have become more militant in maximizing share value," he said.

Canaccord's Currie said six months ago small firms faced challenges to growth because acquisition prices were high and drilling and land costs were soaring. The downturn has altered the picture.

"I think there are opportunities for startups and small companies."

But Gobert said most of the new firms sprouting from current conditions are much smaller than the ones being harvested.

MORE ON SAME STORY

Energy Giant To Buy Archer Resources In Friendly Deal
Dominion Resources Makes Its First Major Foray Into Canada

Globe & Mail

Dominion Resources Inc., a huge U.S. energy conglomerate, is buying Calgary based natural gas producer Archer Resources Ltd. for $183 - million in its first major foray into Canada.

The friendly deal announced yesterday means that Archer would become part of Dominion's empire after Archer shareholders tender to the cash offer of $7.60 a share. The sale is expected to close in late April.

G.E. (Godfrey) Lake Jr., a Dominion executive, said the Virginia based company is interested in making further acquisitions in Canada's oil patch after completing the Archer transaction.

"The oil and gas business has a depleting resource, so we aren't buying Archer just to see it go away. We intend to grow the business," Mr. Lake said. "We'll take advantage of whatever opportunities make sense for us."

He said Dominion, which already owns a 40-per-cent stake valued at $13-million in a natural gas storage facility in the Edmonton area, prefers friendly takeovers.

"We won't scare anybody. We don't behave that way," said Mr. Lake, senior vice-president of oil and gas operations for subsidiary Dominion Energy Inc. of Richmond, Va.

Shares in parent Dominion, which has $20-billion (U.S.) in assets, fell 12 cents to $41 yesterday on the New York Stock Exchange. With 188 million shares outstanding, Dominion has a stock market value of $7.7-billion.

The U.S. giant's assets include electric power plants, natural gas wells, real estate and financial services. Its power generation holdings include Virginia Power, the state's largest utility, whose portfolio includes four nuclear plants, hydro facilities and plants fired by coal or natural gas.

In total, Dominion runs 28 power plants in the United States and Latin America.

Archer must pay a breakup fee of at least $6.05-million (Canadian) to Dominion if the transaction collapses. With no bidding war in the cards, Archer slipped 5 cents to $7.45 a share yesterday on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

"This is no distress sale. Archer is a viable entity and it's healthy," said Grant Bartlett, Archer's chairman and chief executive officer, who founded the junior producer in 1989.

However, Dominion emerged with "a heck of an offer" for Archer, said Mr. Bartlett, who controls about two million Archer shares valued at $15.2-million.

Archer's officers and directors, who hold nearly 17 per cent of company's shares, already have agreed to tender their stock.

Mr. Bartlett, who also owns more than 6 per cent of the National Hockey League's Calgary Flames, said he intends to stay in the oil and gas business "because there are so many opportunities" to start companies from scratch.

Archer announced in January that it had hired Calgary-based investment dealer FirstEnergy Capital Corp. to solicit bids.

"When we started this process, our stock was at $6," Mr. Bartlett said.

Investors have been anticipating a takeover bid, pushing Archer's stock price into the $7-to-$7.60 range in recent weeks.

Mr. Bartlett said Dominion's $7.60-a-share offer looks attractive, considering that crude oil prices are in the doldrums -- down 35 per cent in the past five months -- and natural gas prices are flat.

Archer unveiled its initial public offering at $8.50 a share in mid-1993. As natural gas prices rose, its stock nearly tripled to more than $23 by mid-1994. But after gas prices began slumping later in 1994, Archer shares plunged to $5 in 1995.

It has been producing 72 million cubic feet a day of gas in Alberta in recent weeks. It also pumps a relatively small amount of crude oil -- roughly 1,500 barrels a day so far this year.

Dominion produced 161 million cubic feet a day at its U.S. gas properties, so the addition of Archer's Alberta assets will boost its gas output by 45 per cent.

The U.S. suitor, which plans to keep Archer's staff of 75, stands to inherit about $29-million in Archer debt.

In 1995, Archer sold Alberta properties valued at $56-million to Calgary-based Gulf Canada Resources Ltd. to help pay down its debt, which had grown to $95-million.

Archer also released its financial results yesterday, saying it posted a profit of $6.6-million or 32 cents a share last year, compared with $3.2-million or 16 cents in 1996. Revenue rose 22 per cent to $58.7-million while cash flow jumped 38 per cent to $32.8-million.

For the fourth quarter, the junior producer earned $1.9-million on $16-million of revenue, compared with $1.7-million on $14.7-million for the same period in 1996. Quarterly share profit increased to 9 cents from 8 cents.

FEATURE STORY

Site Tests Pan Out For Mobil Oil Canada

Fort McMurray Today

Using extensive drilling and new seismic technology, Mobil Oil Canada has confirmed there are 1.5 billion barrels of recoverable bitumen on its lease 70 kilometres north of Fort McMurray.

"We are very pleased with the safe, efficient and cost effective program this year," said Nezam Amoozegar, bitumen production manager for the Kearl oil sands mine project.

"We got the results we expected."

Mobil spent about $6 million on the drilling tests which started in November and finished ahead of schedule. In total, the firm drilled 70 core holes, 75 overburden holes, and did 50 kilometres of elector magnetic surveying and seismic testing.

Another 24 piezometers were installed, which are sensors to measure the flow and pressure of underground water. Mobil plans to develop an oil sands mine, extraction facility and related infrastructure at a cost of about $3 billion, on Lease 36.

The construction is projected to start in 2000, with first oil production anticipated in 2003. The Kearl oil sands mine study used a new two-dimensional seismic technology called High Fidelity Vibratory Seismic, developed and patented by Mobil.

"The technology may not be of interest to people who don't work in oil sands," noted Mobil spokesman Shawn Howard.

"But this was the first land survey in Canada using this new technology.

"It shoots some pretty wild pictures. They're a lot more detailed...much clearer. You can shoot shallow targets with the quality of resolution never before thought possible." That allows the firm to see what's in the ground much easier, although Amoozegar said core samples must still be tested.

He said the 1.5 billion barrels of recoverable bitumen, which is enough for a 30-year project, could translate into a similar amount of synthetic crude oil.

"It depends on the technology used for upgrading," he said. Howard said Mobil is still studying the mine and upgrading plans.

"We're a good six to eight months from filing a development plan application (with the provincial government)," he said.

"The critical path now is the selection of our upgrader. We're looking at five sites. When we make that decision it will affect our schedule for regulatory filing," said Howard.







To: Crocodile who wrote (9526)3/12/1998 12:31:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1998 (3)

FEATURE STORY

Fun Around The World

Calgary Sun

Dale Simmons, chairman of the Simmons Group, Inc., a Calgary-based, domestic and international oil service company, has a very simple mission statement: "Join the drilling business -- see the world."

Which is precisely what Simmons has been doing during 36 years at the helm of the Simmons Group. He's done well workovers in frozen Siberia and well drilling deep in the Indonesian jungle.

He's worked on an island in the Red Sea as well as way out in the West Australian outback and many other places in between.

"We operate 22 rigs worldwide," explains Simmons.

"Our international operating office is in Donnington Castle, England, and we have rigs in France, Spain, Kazakhstan, Indonesia, Albania, Vietnam and El Salvador."

But Simmons Group is also very busy domestically. It has been Canada's foremost driller for Saskatchewan potash, the biggest potash bed in the world.

The company owns and operates the natural gas pipeline into Syncrude at Fort McMurray.

From its Lacombe field office, it operates 10 service and workover rigs and 14 industrial rigs which keep 100 rig staff busy doing well servicing, boring and coring all over the province.

"We're expanding the service end of the business," says Simmons.

"It's a stable business and a good bed for a drilling contractor."

Until 1996, Simmons operated 27 drilling rigs them in order to concentrate on its growing international operations.

"We've been international since 1981," says Simmons. "We felt it was a good time to sell and expand operations overseas."

Operating internationally is much different from operating domestically, says Simmons, especially with respect to the amount and diversity of equipment the company needs. "We need to have more assets than just rigs," says Simmons. "We need our own trucks, cranes and camps and the logistics involved in getting a rig from place to place are more complex."

Simmons says he's had a lot of fun in the drilling business, which was a good way to combine the two things he likes to do. "I've always liked drilling rigs and I've always liked international travel," he says. "I just liked the whole business."

FEATURE STORY

Geco/Prakla awarded seismic study contract 3/12/98


A contract has been awarded for a seismic study of recently acquired acreage on the Grand Banks by four major oil companies.

Petro-Canada, Chevron Canada Resources, Mobil Oil Canada Properties and Norsk Hydro Canada Oil and Gas Inc. said Wednesday the contract went to Geco/Prakla, a unit of Schlumberger.

The seismic work will be done on acreage located approximately 25 kilometres south of the Hibernia oilfield and 25 kilometres southwest of the Terra Nova field.

The program will cover portions of three exploration licences which the companies acquired in 1996 and 1997 and will enable the companies to finalize locations for a drilling program on the acreage.

The program is to be carried out this summer and will involve acquiring approximately 1,000 square kilometres of three dimensional seismic data over a two-month period.

Geco/Prakla will acquire the data using the marine vessel Geco Orion, which will be based out of St. John's for the program.

Petro-Canada will operate the seismic program on behalf of the four companies.

FEATURE STORY

More Offshore Bids 3/11/98


The Canada Newfoundland Offshore Petroleum Board is once again feeling the waters off Newfoundland to see if major oil companies are interested in exploration.

The CNOPB announced its 1998 call for bids Tuesday, offering exploration licences on 13 new parcels, more than half of which are outside the Jeanne d'Arc basin.

The minimum bid for each parcel is $1 million.

Six of the parcels are located in the Jeanne d'Arc Basin, home to Hibernia, Terra Nova, Whiterose and Hebron. Three parcels are in the Outer Ridge Complex, two are in the Flemish Pass and two more are in the North Grand Banks Basin.

Successful bidders are issued a nine-year exploration licence and must drill a well generally estimated to cost at least $50 million - within the first five years.

The bidding period closes Sept. 16 at 4 p.m.

FEATURE STORY

Exploration Firms Look To Merge 3/12/98

The Evening Telegram

A St. John's-based oil and gas exploration company holding petroleum land rights in western Newfoundland has agreed to merge with a Vancouver based exploration firm.

The board of directors of Imperial Venture Corp. said Wednesday the company has reached an agreement to merge with TKO Resources Inc.

Imperial Venture, headed by Steven Millan, chairman and chief executive officer, holds 100 per cent rights to two parcels of land on the province's west coast.

The parcels are the onshore Harry's River block of 84,000 acres; and the offshore Bonne Bay block of 399,000 acres.

Imperial Venture's board said TKO will issue 19,761,000 shares for the 6,587,000 issued and outstanding shares of the St. John's company.

In addition to the issuance of stock, TKO will issue options and warrants to replace those existing in Imperial Venture at the time the agreement is signed. The agreement is subject to the approval of the Vancouver Stock Exchange.

"This transaction represents a strategic move on the part of Imperial Venture and TKO Resources to improve the merged entities' position in the oilpatch and to explore a world class opportunity on the East coast of Canada," the board of directors said.

The Imperial Venture board said preliminary exploration on the Imperial Venture onshore block has identified a number of prospect leads.

The Harry's River block has potential prospects of 50 million to 100 million barrels of oil equivalent (BOE) recoverable, the company said. BOE is a measure of the total energy potential from oil and gas combined.

"Three prospect leads with total potential recoverable reserves of 395 million barrels are identified with an additional 100 million barrels possible on the upside," the board of directors said.

Imperial Venture said its offshore acreage is covered by 2,400 line kilometres of seismic and several major structures are defined.

The Bonne Bay block has potential prospect sizes of 100 million to 500 million BOE recoverable with four prospect leads, the company said.

Total potential recoverable reserves of 931 million barrels have been identified.

The other members of Imperial Venture's board are Ted Best, principal of The Foste Group, a business and economic consultants group in Calgary; Jack Bolter, petroleum geologist and former president of Pointer Exploration, which recently merged with Pan Atlas Corp.; and George Langdon, president and exploration manager of Imperial Venture.

FEATURE STORY

Environmental Company Gets $4.5-Million Contract 3/12/98


SCC Environmental Group Inc., a St. John's-based environmental company, has been awarded a $4.5million contract in South America.

Paul Antle, president and chief executive officer of SCC, said the contract in Ecuador is to treat drilling muds and cuttings produced by a major U.S. oil company at an oilfield installation in the rain forest.

SCC is currently a subsidiary of Stratos Global Corp. of St. John's but discussions are under way for the possible sale of the environmental firm to interested parties.

Meanwhile, in announcing the South American contract Wednesday, Antle said the company will use its thermal phase separation (TPS) technology to extract the drilling fluids from the mud, rendering the solids inert and recovering the drilling fluid for reuse.

The company made a decision in 1997 to heavily invest in the TPS technology and focus on promoting the application of the technology to the oil and gas sector, Antle said.

"Apparently, the investment and enhanced focus has paid off for the company."

Antle said drilling muds and cuttings are the byproduct of drilling oil wells.

He said the TPS technology is attractive to the oil and gas industry because it enables soil to be replaced on the drill site with no environmental impact. Also, the drilling fluid can be recovered and reused by the oil company in its continued drilling operation.

"So there is a double saving and a very positive environmental benefit."

SCC is currently pursuing contracts in Ecuador, Peru, Colombia, Venezuela, Mexico, Australia, New Zealand, Brunei, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, Antle said.

Meanwhile, Stratos Global said in its annual financial report, released Tuesday, that it is in the process of divesting itself of the environmental firm.

In order to position SCC for sale, Stratos Global has reclassified SCC as a discontinued operation, for accounting purposes.

As a consequence, Stratos Global has taken a $1.7-million writedown, which includes SCC's $625,000 operating loss in the fiscal year ended Oct. 31, 1997, Antle said.

He said the loss resulted from an increased investment in the TPS technology and securing permits and contracts throughout the globe.

Antle and Derek Woods, Stratos Global's president, have said discussions are under way with interested parties concerning SCC. The discussions are expected to lead to "a positive announcement in the very near term."

FEATURE STORY

Irvings And McCains Face Off Over Gas

The Financial Post

Two of the most powerful families in Atlantic Canada have joined opposing camps in a new battle for the rights to distribute Sable Island natural gas in the region.

The Irvings have joined Vancouver-based Westcoast Energy Inc. as a 50/50 partner in a bid to distribute the gas in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

Westcoast is already a partner in a consortium building a $1-billion pipeline to move the gas from Sable Island to the eastern U.S. The $3-billion project led by Mobil Corp. won government approval late last year.

The McCains, through Harrison McCain, are among a group of 23 New Brunswick investors that joined forces with Consumers Gas Energy Inc., a subsidiary of Calgary-based IPL Energy Inc., to seek the rights to distribute natural gas in New Brunswick. Consumers has 1.4 million customers in Ontario, Quebec and upper New York state.

The McCain family controls McCain Foods Ltd., while the Irving family controls Irving Oil Ltd. Consumers, which has a 67% stake in the bid, estimates it would cost $300 million to set up a city distribution network and another $200 million for lateral lines.

IPL is also a partner with Nova Scotia Power in a bid to win the distribution rights in Nova Scotia. Sable Island gas is expected to start flowing through New Brunswick and Nova Scotia to the eastern U.S. in November 1999.

A decision on who wins the distribution rights in both provinces is expected this year.

FEATURE STORY

West Meddling Behind Oil Slide, Say Gulf Papers


Gulf Arab newspapers on Thursday voiced suspicion that the slump in world oil prices had been steered by Western powers happy to break up the Arab-led Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and benefit from cheaper energy import bills.

With oil prices shadowing their lowest level in nine years, some Gulf newspapers said the combination of flagrant production violations by OPEC-member Venezuela and a move by the United Nations to get Iraq to export more oil were more than mere coincidence.

Other papers said the West's pleasure with falling petroleum prices was part of the pay-back for the crippling 1973 Arab oil embargo and a way for industrialised countries to cut the price of their own exports during Asia's economic slowdown.

''...It is the interest of the West to buy oil at very cheap prices, to push Venezuela to flood the market and to pressure the U.N. to issue a decision to double the value of Iraqi oil exports,'' the al-Kahleej newspaper in the United Arab Emirates said in an editorial.

Referring to press reports that Venezuela had been used by the United States to pressure OPEC and control prices, the Emirates News daily ran a leading commentary under the title ''Suspicious moves.''

''...The timing of the (U.N.) resolution and the insistence of the U.S. and its allies on its implementation despite Iraq's reservations is a clear indication of the true intentions behind such as resolution,'' Emirates News said.

''It (the resolution) is closely related to the blow to the oil producing countries amid declining prices and the looming blow to OPEC from Venezuela to destroy its foundations,'' the state-owned paper added.

Iraq and the United Nations will close four days of talks on Monday on an expanded ''oil-for-food'' program that would allow Iraq to export $5.256 billion of its oil over six months rather than the current cap of $2.14 billion.

The higher export level, which would go into effect in June if agreed by Iraq, has undermined sick oil markets which have lost 40 percent of their value in the last five months.

Venezuela has long ignored its OPEC quota, pushing OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia aside to become the main source of America's oil imports and boosting the 11-member's group output to its highest level since 1979.

The UAE's al-Bayan newspaper said in an editorial that the industrial countries had been keen to ''exterminate'' OPEC ever since the Arab producing countries used oil as a strategic weapon by cutting off the West's oil supplies in 1973.

''Since then the big industrial countries have been planning how to exterminate OPEC. They looked at developing alternative sources of energy and oilfields outside OPEC countries,'' al-Bayan said.

Another UAE newspaper, the Gulf News, said the drop in oil prices meant an overhaul in economic planning.

''The UAE has made a giant leap in its economic development by using oil revenues. Now it is time to succeed in the post-oil era,'' the Gulf News paper said in an editorial after a UAE minister call for restraint in government spending amid falling oil revenue.

OPEC ministers, including those in the Gulf, have blamed the oil price slide on a combination of factors including higher OPEC and non-OPEC production, a mild winter in the northern hemisphere and Asia's economic slowdown.



To: Crocodile who wrote (9526)3/12/1998 12:51:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (13) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1998 (4)

FEATURE STORY

Mideast To Be Main U.S. Oil Supplier By 2010-Study


Middle East crude sales will grow to account for about half of North America's imports by 2010 from 20 percent currently, according to a study by the Centre for Global Energy Studies published on Wednesday.

The London-based think tank made the prediction in a report on the strategic importance to the United States of Middle Eastern oil.

''On the face of it, the current clash between the United States and Iraq is about weapons of mass destruction,'' it said, referring to a long-running dispute between the two countries over U.N. weapons inspections.

''However, as was the case with the 1990 Kuwaiti crisis, the deeper issues concern oil and how to secure 'unfettered access' to Middle Eastern supplies now and in the future.''

A summary of the report said that the CGES expected world oil demand to grow by 18 million barrels per day between 1996 and 2010, with incremental net oil imports/exports accounting for 85 percent of this growth, or 15.3 million bpd.

At 11.5 million bpd, the Middle East's contribution to the growth in world oil trade would be 75 percent of the total.

Although Latin America would remain a major oil-trading partner for North America, the Middle East would become North America's major supplier of oil by a long way by 2010, accounting for about half the region's imports.

''The thought of an extra 234 very large crude carriers plying the Cape route between the Gulf and the United States in 12 years time to help satisfy the United States' voracious appetite for oil explains rather succinctly the U.S. strategic interest in the Middle East,'' a summary of the study said.

At present only 20 percent of North America's oil imports come from the Middle East as against 45 percent from Latin America.

The International Energy Agency sees total world oil demand rising from 71.7 million barrels per day (bpd) in 1996 to 75.1 million bpd in 1998.

COMMENTARY
RBC

Crude Oil

Unfortunately for most, the fundamental picture still looks bleak. With U.N. inspectors now back at work, Saudi Arabia (the largest member of OPEC) standing firm on its production output and indications that the OPEC cartel may be in jeopardy because of the inability to control output, the market appears vulnerable to further downside. Additionally, recent figures would suggest that global demand is not keeping up with pace of supply. Support remains at the 1993/1994 low of $13.90/13.95.

The technical picture continues to show no signs of a short/medium term rally. Stay short until further notice.

Natural Gas

NYMEX gas prices continue to trade in a tight range but are still vulnerable to a fall towards $2.00. There have been no new fundamental issues of note. The technical picture remains neutral with a flag formation forming suggesting a potential breakout within two weeks. The AECO market remains quiet. Product: BTU Swap - a producer can swap natural gas exposure for oil exposure (in the belief that over the predetermined period crude prices will rally by more than gas). For example, for the period Nov '98-Oct '99, producer sells 10,000 MMBtu of gas and receives floating NYMEX less x then enters into a swap with RBC whereby he/she pays RBC the three day NYMEX average and in return receives monthly WTI divided by 7.6. (this is at historic lows). Settlement occurs each month. This trade makes sense if you believe the average oil price will rally by more than the gas price as indicated by the respective forward curves.

OIL & GAS MARKETS

World Crude

Oil Prices Slip As Early Confidence Fades


World oil prices were under pressure again on Wednesday despite early help from supportive U.S. industry stock figures.

Benchmark Brent blend crude for April last traded at $12.97 a barrel, still above a nine-year low of $12.85 touched on Monday, but well short of the intra-day high of $13.27.

Early gains were built on bullish weekly data from the American Petroleum Institute that showed U.S. stocks of crude and refined products fell against expectations of increases.

But the effect of the figures wore off as the market day drew to a close, with traders complaining of a lack of confidence.

Brokers also drew little hope for a market awash with crude from next week's long-scheduled meeting of a small group of Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries ministers due to review supply and demand.

A decision last year by OPEC to raise its output ceiling by 10 percent for the first half of 1998 has contributed to a slide of $8 a barrel in Brent's price since October.

The meeting of OPEC's market monitoring committee in Vienna on Monday will try to recommend ways that the 11-country organisation can shore up prices.

But the committee has no power to adjust the group's system of production quotas.

''Unless they (OPEC) do something drastic you'll see the market come off,'' said one broker on London's International Petroleum Exchange.

''If they leave things unchanged there will be more pressure on the price.''

Market sentiment drew brief support from a comment by Venezuelan Energy and Mines Minister Erwin Arrieta that the meeting could lead to a full extraordinary meeting of the cartel to discuss the price crash.

But without agreement from OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia there is no prospect of such a meeting.

OPEC has watched helpless over the past five months as prices have fallen more than 40 percent from last year's average of around $19.30.

Apart from the OPEC increase, the market has been hit by a collapse in demand wrought by Asia's financial crisis and a mild northern hemisphere winter.

A deadlocked dispute over production levels between Saudi Arabia and the cartel's biggest quota buster Venezuela dimmed the chances of prices holding.

Venezuela last month pumped 30 percent above its agreed quota of 2.6 million barrels per day and has rejected calls by Saudi Arabia and others for restraint.

The kingdom, angered by its fellow OPEC founder member, on Sunday said it would not act alone to support oil prices and signalled it was prepared for a long struggle to retain its market share.

Washington-based consultants The Petroleum Finance Company described OPEC as paralysed by the battle of wills between the two producers and said prices would need to fall further to soften entrenched positions.

Further pain is in prospect later in 1998 when a United Nations plan to more than double the value of its ''oil-for-food'' deal with Iraq will see several hundred thousand barrels of extra oil inundating markets.

The deal to raise the export ceiling to $5.2 billion every six months from $2 billion will start when an aid distribution plan being negotiated in New York is agreed.

NYMEX Crude

NYMEX Crude Falls After Rising On Stock Draws


Crude futures at the New York Mercantile Exchange fell, with sellers coming in late in the session, wiping out the day's early gains propelled by bullish inventory data.

NYMEX April crude closed at $14.18, down eight cents from Tuesday's close. Early trade had lifted front-month crude to the day's high of $14.56, a level from which it quickly backed down, hitting a low of $14.15, which was also Monday's low.

Heating oil for prompt delivery lost .56 cent to close at 40.27 cents a gallon. Unleaded gasoline for April delivery was up .60 cent to 46.85 a gallon.

Early trading got a lift from American Petroleum Institute's inventory data for the week ended March 6, released late on Tuesday, which showed draws in crude, gasoline and distillates and a big rise in refinery runs. The data differed with many analysts' expectations.

The Department of Energy released its own statistics Wednesday morning, also showing stock draws and an increase in refinery utilization.

''We are seeing a repeat of the previous days' trading pattern,'' in which market-moving news or technicals lift the market in the morning, but gives way in the afternoon when no solid support takes place, she said.

''Those who have been reluctant to sell a month ago when it appeared the Iraq situation could not be resolved are now saying it's safe to sell,'' she said.

U.N. Secretary Kofi Annan, who struck a deal with Iraq on February 23 that opens that country's presidential compounds to U.N. weapons inspectors, was at the White House Wednesday.

Annan talked with President Bill Clinton about the deal, which headed off a U.S.-led military strike against Baghdad for refusing to give U.N. weapons inspectors unimpeded access to suspected weapons sites. Such a strike could conceivably unsettle the oil supply situation in the area, according to market watchers.

With Annan seated at his side, Clinton told reporters that the U.S. would consult U.N. allies before taking any unilateral military action, but insisted there was sufficient authority under existing U.N. resolutions to strike if the inspections process broke down.

Before Annan clinched the deal with Iraq, the U.N. approved an increase in Iraq's ''oil-for-food'' program. Iraq could export as much as $5.256 billion of oil over six months, up from the currently allowed $2 billion, with proceeds going to humanitarian needs of Iraqi citizens.

Market watchers consider the increase bearish, but await results of a survey by U.N. teams to be sent this week to Iraq to see what can be done to improve Iraq's oil infrastructure so it can produce enough to meet the higher monetary target.

With the global oversupply situation unresolved, some analysts see crude future prices going further down.

Jim Ritterbusch, a trader at Sweeney Oil in Chicago, said he sees nearby crude dropping ''to below $14.00'' a barrel.

He said he does not see the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries moving to do anything to lift prices at this point, even with Venezuela saying an emergency meeting was possible after a production monitoring committee meeting in Vienna next week.

''I don't think Venezuela's (latest) statement is a big deal,'' he said. ''There must be at least some plan, a cohesion among producers, which sadly you don't have at this point,'' he said.

''If you cannot do it within a formal organization, you certainly can't do it across the world,'' he said.

NYMEX Natural Gas

NYMEX Natural Gas Ends Slightly Higher In Light Trade


NYMEX Hub natgas futures settled a little higher Wednesday, fueled early by firmer cash prices but stalled late by lethargic trade, industry sources said.

April finished on a quiet note at $2.172 per mmBtu, up 3.5 cents. May ended 2.7 cents higher at $2.206, while other deferred months were flat to 2.4 cents higher.

A slightly lower-than-expected AGA withdrawal figure of 54 bcf was seen as mostly bearish in the marketplace.

''It's pretty bearish. They're continuing to build, and it shows they'll have more gas in storage this summer than last year,'' one Texas-based trader said.

But April remained fairly steady on ACCESS, swaying between $2.16 and $2.175 at 1420 EST.

The AGA report indicated stocks as of March 6 were at 39 percent of capacity and 316 bcf ahead of a year-ago. In the East, stocks were down 45 bcf to 39 percent full, while producing region stocks tacked on one bcf, and the West eased 10 bcf.

In Wednesday's cash market, Henry Hub was quoted at $2.22-2.27, with the lower-priced deals surfacing late. New York city-gate was talked mostly in the mid-$2.80s, while prices in south Texas hovered in the low-$2.20s.

Most traders said they were expecting the continuing cold weather to support cash prices again on Thursday. Temperatures in the Chicago area are expected to moderate slightly to about 10-15 degrees below normal Thursday and to two to six degrees below normal Friday and Saturday. Colder air is forecast to return by Sunday.

Forecasts for Tuesday through Saturday were calling for below-normal temperatures across most of the region west of the Mississippi River, though above-normal temperatures are expected to cover the Northeast and the Great Lakes region. Seasonal weather is forecast for the remainder of the U.S.

Support and resistance failed to budge from On the technical side, April failed to retest support at $2.12 or resistance at $2.185 this afternoon after a marginal upswing this morning. Further resistance was seen at $2.23, $2.30 and $2.355, while support was pegged at $2.105 and $2.06.

According to a Reuters poll, most traders are expecting a withdrawal of 60-70 bcf in today's American Gas Association storage report. This compares with a 57 bcf withdrawal a year ago and a 47 bcf decline in last week's report.

NYMEX said an estimated 31,462 Hub contracts traded, off from Tuesday's revised tally of 34,616. The 12-month strip rose 1.8 cents to $2.354.

Meanwhile, April KCBT futures ended up 3.3 cents at $2.085 per mmBtu.

Separately, KN Energy said a line break this morning on its 12-inch gas line northwest of Denver, Colo., did not affect mainline supplies. The line, which serves only two industrial customers, including the Coors brewery in Golden, ruptured at 0815 CST and resulted in no explosion or injuries.

Canada Spot Natural Gas

Canada Spot Natural Gas Lower On Warmer Weather


Most Canadian spot natural gas prices eased on Wednesday as forecasts for warmer temperatures proved accurate amid ample supply, traders said.

Spot gas at the AECO storage hub in Alberta was discussed at C$1.70/1.725 per gigajoule, down about four cents from Tuesday.

The lower values had been expected as a result of a warm Chinook wind that blew into southern Alberta on Wednesday as well as higher field receipts on the NOVA intra-Alberta pipeline system, a Calgary-based trader said.

Above-freezing weather was expected to continue in the region until the weekend, when high temperatures were forecast at minus -2 to -5 Celsius and low temperatures were forecast at about -11 Celsius, Environment Canada said.

At the borders, gas at the Huntingdon-Sumas border point in the west was discussed as high as US$1.64 per million British thermal units early, but retreated to about US$1.55, down about four cents from Tuesday.

Traders said a combination of warm weather in the Pacific Northwest and tight transport capacity on the Northwest Pipeline had pressured prices.

Gas at Dawn and Niagara in eastern Canada was quoted anywhere between US$2.39 and US$2.44 per mmBtu, about even on average from Tuesday.

U.S. Spot Natural Gas

U.S. Spot Natural Gas Inches Higher But Sellers Emerge


U.S. spot natural gas prices posted marginal gains Wednesday, but momentum diminished as some industry players took profits from the past two sessions of robust buying on cooler weather, traders said.

''There was a lot of excitement in the morning, but we softened up at the end of the day as buyers realized they had enough supply,'' one trader said.

He said activity was thin amid a shortage of market players, most of whom were attending a GasFair conference in Houston. Volume was expected to return to normal Thursday as the industry conference concludes, he said.

Next-day Henry Hub prices held steady Wednesday at $2.22-2.27. Meanwhile, NYMEX April natgas futures swayed at the $2.16 level from early highs of $2.185.

Colder-than-normal temperatures in most of the U.S. continued to support demand, but further gains were stymied as normal weather was forecast to return to the eastern half of the country next week, traders said.

In the western Texas cash market, Permian and San Juan prices picked up three cents to $2.19-2.24. Southern California border prices retreated to $2.38-$2.43 on Wednesday, off five cents from yesterday's close.

In the Midcontinent, prices were flat at $2.19-2.24, while Northern at Demarcation settled mostly unchanged in the mid-$2.30s.

Chicago city-gate hovered in a range of $2.30-2.38, with most trades pegged at $2.36.

New York city gate prices continued to firm, jumping about 15 cents to the mid $2.80s, while Appalachian gas on Columbia gained five cents to $2.33-2.38.

In generation news, Texas Utilities' 1,150 megawatt (MW) Comanche Peak 2 nuclear power unit recovered full power Wednesday after tripping off line last weekend due to a loss of its turbine cooling water pumps.

Traders said this week's natural gas storage report should have little impact on prices. U.S. natural gas storage levels were expected to fall by 60 to 70 billion cubic feet (bcf) when weekly American Gas Association (AGA) data are released later today, industry sources said this week.

In the last report, overall storage fell 47 bcf, just below Reuters poll estimates of 50-60 bcf. Stocks rose to 313 bcf, or 31.7 percent, above a year ago.

END - END








To: Crocodile who wrote (9526)3/13/1998 9:38:00 AM
From: Crocodile  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1998 (1)

Friday, March 13, 1998

Bay Street stocks shrugged off a tepid Wall Street performance, powering past 7400 for the first time and setting their fourth straight record as investors' confidence grew

The Canadian market got off to a lacklustre start, trading in negative territory for most of the morning session. But it started to gather strength around midday and never looked back, fuelled by investor appetite for interest-sensitive stocks and sharp gains in some blue-chip manufacturing stocks.

The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index rose 56.45 points, or 0.8%, to 7402.29, after hitting an intraday low of 7333.3. About 109 million shares changed hands on the TSE, down from about 141 million shares traded on Wednesday.
ÿ
The gain was also good enough to outpace New York, where the Dow Jones industrial average dropped 16.19 points, or 0.2%, to 8659.56. "I'm breathless," quipped Richard Hutcheon, president and chief investment officer at OHA Investment Management Ltd., in reaction to the market's bull run. ÿFully invested in the market, the money manager said he is just sitting on
the sidelines enjoying the ride.
ÿ
Still, he is troubled that the market is being driven primarily by a select group of stocks: the big banks, telephone companies and the likes of Northern Telecom Ltd. Indeed, the blue-chip TSE 35 index closed up 0.9%, while the TSE 200, which includes more mid-sized stocks, gained only 0.2%. ÿ"You'd like to see the buying more broadly based" to indicate sustainable
strength, Hutcheon said.

The TSE financial services index rose to a 52-week high of 9679.89, with Toronto Dominion Bank (td/tse) gaining $1.15 to $64.25. ÿThe bank stocks, despite their record-setting gains, remain inexpensive relative to the rest of the broader market, said John Kellet, vice-president equities at Royal Bank Investment Management Inc. They are trading at about 14 times estimated earnings, compared with more than 20 times for the overall TSE 300, the fund manager said. In addition, the bank stocks remain cheap compared with their valuations in the 1960s, the last period of low interest rates and inflation, Kellet noted.
ÿ
The Montreal Exchange market portfolio kept on its record pace, adding 27.09 points, or 0.7%, to 3774.3.

The Vancouver Stock Exchange composite index gained 1.49 points, or 0.2%, to 622.63.
ÿ
For a scorecard of trading activity on all Canadian Stock Exchanges, go to:
quote.yahoo.com .

REFERENCE: Canadian Market Summary
canoe2.canoe.ca

On Wall Street, stocks ended on a mixed note, with the blue chips the target of profit-taking after back-to-back record closes and the Nasdaq composite index posting a modest gain, rising 7.21 points, or 0.4%, to 1764.06. In the broader market, advancing issues led declines by a small margin on moderate volume of 598 million shares on the New York Stock Exchange.
ÿ
Investors also paused ahead of today's U.S. producer price report, while some transferred their enthusiasm - and money - into bonds.
ÿ
"It's a healthy day. We are not spiking up or down, but we are marking time and the market needs a rest," said Tony Dwyer, chief market strategist at Ladenberg Thalmann in New York. "What's exciting today is the bond market is acting very strongly, the [long bond] yield is well below 6%."
ÿ
The Dow index was weighed down by weakness in traditional investor favorites like Chevron Corp., General Motors., Merck & Co. and Procter & Gamble Co.
ÿ
Chevron (chv/nyse) was off US$1 1/16 at US$82 15/16, GM (gm/nyse) fell US$1 3/16 to US$71 15/16, Merck (mrk/nyse) was down 7/8 at US$129 1/16 and P&G (pg/nyse) fell US$2 3/8 to US$84 3/16.
ÿ
The rally in the Nasdaq index was fueled by Amgen Inc. (amgn/nasdaq), which gained US$3 3/8 to US$5 3/8 after analysts said the company would benefit from relaxed new federal reimbursement guidelines for patients taking its Epogen drug.
ÿ
Major overseas markets closed mostly lower.
ÿ
London: Britain's benchmark index lost ground for the first time in five sessions as Dow losses and a strong pound knocked the market back. The FT-SE 100 closed at 5794.8, down 35 points or 0.6%.
ÿ
Frankfurt: German stocks drifted before recovering slightly in late trade. The Dax 30 index closed at 4839.6, up 6.84 points or 0.14%.
ÿ
Tokyo: The Japanese market closed lower amid investor disappointment over a lack of government action to revive the economy. The 225-share Nikkei average closed at 16,575.22, down 180.92 points or 1.1%.
ÿ
Hong Kong: Stocks tumbled as cautious investors took profits when the market failed to break through key resistance levels. The Hang Seng index lost 216.38 points, or 2%, to 10,902.47.
ÿ
Sydney: Australian stocks closed higher, underpinned by News Corp., which was bid higher after its American depositary receipts soared Wednesday on Wall Street. The all-ordinaries index closed at 2719.5, up 4.7 points or 0.2%.

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B of M stays bullish on Canada -- By DAVID THOMAS -- Economics Reporter The Financial Post
ÿ
The effects of the Asian financial crisis will not be severe enough to knock Canada and the rest of the world's leading economies off their strong expansion, according to a forecast released yesterday by Bank of Montreal.
ÿ
Canadian gross domestic product will expand 3.6% in 1998, the bank estimated. That forecast retains the bank's position as the most bullish among economics groups at the big banks.
ÿ
Moreover, B of M is expecting to see the economy continue to expand rapidly, averaging annual growth of 3.3% between 1996 and 2001. Last year, it grew by 3.8%.
ÿ
"The Canadian economy remains robust at present," the report concluded. "We expect to see real GDP continue to rise above its longer-term potential rate."

The economy's potential growth rate is about 2.75%, by its estimate. Above that, the economy generally tends to start to overheat, leading to inflationary pressure and higher interest rates, which push growth back down below potential.
ÿ
Solid underpinnings for growth include low inflation and interest rates, strong jobs growth and an improving fiscal position for the federal government.
ÿ
Sectors that will outperform the economy are machinery, business services and plastics manufacturing. ÿ"We expect that machinery producers will lead all sectors in terms of output growth in 1998." The sector is due for an 11.5% expansion this year and a still-strong average growth of 5.5% from 1999 through 2000.
ÿ
In contrast, mining, forestry, tobacco, beverages and public services are expected to see below-average growth.
ÿ
The bank is counting on a 3.5% expansion in the global economy this year and growth of "close to 3%" in the U.S.

The report said Canada can look forward to one million new jobs within three years, taking the jobless rate from 8.9% now to 7.5%.
ÿ
February's statistics, due this morning, are expected to show the rate edged down to 8.6% or 8.7% as the economy springs back after January's ice storm in central Canada.
ÿ
The lowest big bank forecast for GDP growth in Canada this year comes from Bank of Nova Scotia at 3%. Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce expects growth of 3.3%, but Jeffrey Rubin, chief economist at the bank's subsidiary CIBC Wood Gundy Securities Inc., is more pessimistic, calling for 2.8%.

He doesn't expect much of an impact from Asia but predicted the increase in the bank rate from 3.25% to 5% since last June will boost the savings rate and slow consumer spending.

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