SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : KERM'S KORNER -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10069)4/11/1998 11:49:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1998 (3)

COMMENTARY
RBC

Crude Oil Commentary:

We've talked at length about the renewed and increased volatility in the crude oil markets - and the recent trading patterns around the OPEC announcement support this view. The oil price rally was over exaggerated, as not only did players go long, but all the shorts had to cover their positions. With no follow up to the meeting as of yet and still much uncertainty as to the commitment by OPEC members, the markets consolidated for a short while and now prices have moved back down to partially fill in the gap that was left as a result of the original spike from the low $14's to mid $16's. Where do we go from here? The answer lies in whether the announced cuts are sufficient to eliminate the overhang in the markets as the excess crude that was being produced (and still is) was not being sold anyway. Are the countries who are cutting production, simply storing the crude? If so, this storage would overhang the markets too and be negative for prices. Our view is neutral to moderately bearish in the near term. Downside risk at the moment $15.00 and then $14.70.

Natural Gas Commentary:

Natural gas prices have shown no signs of weakening. The rally is being fueled by many fundamental factors, the biggest of which is expectations for a warm summer and the associated increase in demand for electricity. Despite thecurrent high price levels, there appears to be more room to the upside. The outlook is that the supply/usage balance is tight and price pressure will continue to develop if temperatures create increased incremental usage. For now we see no signs of prices letting up. The charts suggest higher prices are likely and any pullback should be viewed as a buying opportunity. Resistance is seen at $2.70.

AECO gas prices have also held firm. Lack of what are seen to be sufficient injections into the Nova system have propelled gas prices to levels not seen since March 1994. You've got to wonder why more producers are not scaling into gas hedge positions, especially with the outlook for crude oil so gloomy. Summer Aeco gas is $2.135-$2.155 and winter $2.585-$2.605. Despite some bullish fundamentals (ie. export capacity), these are unbelievable prices and we encourage producers to be hedging - especially summer.

TOP STORIES

Huge Stocks Block Road To Oil Price Recovery

LONDON, April 9 - Bloated world petroleum stocks are likely to inflict more months of price pain on oil producers despite agreement among them to trim supplies, analysts said.

A rare first quarter stock build this year has glutted oil storage tanks, blunting the effect of this month's groundbreaking pact by OPEC and non-OPEC producers to cut back output.

The low pulse of spring demand, when global stocks traditionally are built, means there is little immediate respite for producers on the horizon, analysts say.

''We are looking at a build of 2.5 million barrels per day (bpd) through the second and third quarters,'' said Peter Bogin of consultants Cambridge Energy Research Associates in Paris.

Washington-based consultants Petroleum Finance Company (PFC) predict a second quarter stock build of 1.6 million bpd after 2.5 million in the first.

''The production cut appears to be too small to shrink the second quarter surplus in the crude oil market,'' PFC said in a report.

Lack of storage space means that crude sellers are having to force oil out onto prompt markets, traders say, depressing prices further.

Oil markets have been drenched by a collapse in Asian demand and a mild winter, in tandem with rising OPEC output which peaked at 29 million bpd in March.

Producers' subsequent cutback pact initiated by Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Mexico reversed some of the price losses which took Brent in March below $12 a barrel for the first time in nine years.

But the global glut of prompt oil has since pushed Brent back to around $14.

Stock levels in Japan, the United States and Europe are already 100 million barrels higher than this time last year, says PFC, part of an 800,000 bpd world stockbuild so far this year.

The previous first-quarter stockbuild was eight years ago.

Inventories have also been rising throughout the supply chain through to end-users as producers and lifters battle to keep oil off prompt markets.

''The rising surplus...seems to have been accelerated during March as evidenced by the level of oil at sea and in European and Caribbean independent storage,'' the PFC report adds.

While inventory figures for countries outside the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) are often murky, analysts say they too show major gains.

Cambridge Energy's Bogin estimates that non-OECD stocks are anywhere between 250 million and 350 million barrels higher than this time last year.

Market watchers see little prospect of a revival in Asian demand to help drain inventories. ''We've already halved our growth forecast for the region to two percent this year, taking off around 400,000 bpd,'' said an analyst with a merchant bank.

''That's against Asian growth of around six percent in recent years,'' he added.

There are also widespread doubts over producers' resolve to implement production cuts. Russia's recent 60,000 bpd commitment has brought pledged reductions up to a total 1.725 million bpd.

But New York-based consultants PIRA Energy believe that actual cuts will take no more than 900,000 bpd out of the market with just 700,000 bpd from OPEC.

Meanwhile, prospects that a sudden disruption to Iraqi supply could erase the oversupply have receded, as relations improve over UN weapons inspections.

UN-monitored Iraqi exports rose to 1.3 million bpd in March and with technical assistance could reach two million within a matter of months.

The weight of the oil already in storage means any cut in supply will take several months to filter through to higher prices, the analysts say.

Big discounts for prompt prices versus forward loadings encourages traders to store. Only when supply has been cut back enough to restore the balance between prompt and forward prices will storage bedeterred.

Yet some analysts believe the market's slow turn has already started.

Robert Mabro of the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies argues that producers have already had to shoulder some cuts, as recession-hit Asian customers without letters of credit have cancelled liftings in recent months.

Perhaps the best hope for a swift market recovery comes from the United States, easily the world's largest oil importer.

PFC expects second quarter demand to rise by 1.7 percent as the driving season gets going.

The US Department of Energy said on Wednesday the low oil price was expected to lead to the highest annual increase in a decade in US highway travel and gasoline demand during this summer's driving season.

It said highway travel was expected to jump 3.8 percent and gasoline demand to increase by 2.8 percent between April and September compared with the same period last year.

Oil, Gas Drilling Expected To Dip
The Financial Post

Compared with the exceptional activity of 1997, drilling for oil and gas will slow significantly this year, but the push to fill up new natural gas pipelines is expected to reignite things, starting this summer.

A preliminary, revised forecast on drilling activity for the year, compiled by the Canadian Association of Oilwell Drilling Contractors, predicts the country's oil and gas producers will drill 13,700 wells, down from 16,484 in 1997.

The forecast is expected to be finalized and released to the industry next week.

More than 60% of the wells scheduled to be drilled this year will be looking for natural gas reserves, a big change from recent years when the focus was 60% on light and heavy oil, and the remainder on natural gas.

"1998, on balance, is a breather year," said Greg Pardy, an industry analyst with Griffiths McBurney & Partners in Calgary.

"What is happening, with lower commodity prices, is that you are seeing a cost structure reduction. The exception has been the gas story and that's being driven very strongly by better integration between Chicago and the Alberta market" because of the addition of new pipelines.

Last fall, the association predicted the sector would drill 16,600 wells in 1998, based on input from members representing all the country's drilling companies and 95% of the service companies.

Contractors have a reasonably accurate idea about future drilling activity because rigs are usually booked well in advance.

"To place this in perspective, it's not as good as last year, but it's better than 1996, which until last year was the best year the drilling industry has ever had," said Don Herring, the group's managing director.

"So it's actually going to come in a bit better than 1996 and it will be off of 1997." The industry drilled 12,700 wells in 1996.

"It's not going to be record level, but it's a very active period for the industry," said Bob Hinckley, an industry analyst with Merrill Lynch & Co. in New York.

And it could mean costs for oilfield services, which escalated last year because of an equipment shortage, could ease a bit, he said.

Herring said his members' fleet utilization rate has already dropped to 40% in the second quarter, which is not unusual during spring breakup, but lower than last year. "Last year we had an exceptional year, where producers drilled through spring breakup. We'll see a more traditional breakup and a restoration of activity levels as we go into the third quarter.

"And by the fourth quarter, we'll be back to utilization typical of the high levels of the last couple of years."

Despite the decline in the number of wells to be drilled, contractors will be almost as busy as they were last year because of the industry's emphasis on exploration, which requires drilling at greater depth. Drilling on the average well is expected to increse to nine days, from eight days.

Alberta Energy Surging Ahead
Calgary Sun

No wonder it was a gala night at the Palliser Hotel following the Alberta Energy Company's annual meeting earlier that day.

And no wonder the decorative tulips flourished and flowered throughout the hall.

Despite the decline in oil prices, AEC shares have risen 28% in market value during the first quarter of the year.

When the product you are selling goes down in price, but the value of your company goes up, it's surely a time for celebration.

Former provincial treasurer Jim Dinning -- now with TransAlta Utilities -- was on hand, as was police Chief Christine Silverberg, and so was Air Canada's Alberta and Northwest Territories general manager Graham Edwards.

Former chamber of commerce president Valerie Nielsen made an appearance, as did my old friend from Regina, Paul Hill, of Harvard Resources. Hill comes from one of the most prominent families in Saskatchewan, and one of the most philanthropic families in the entire nation.

Plus several hundred of the city's corporate and cultural elite were in attendance.

I've always been a great admirer of AEC president Gwyn Morgan -- and not only because he has been a staunch defender of our nation's military, and of AEC chairman David Mitchell, and not only because Mitchell is a former governor of the Hudson's Bay Company.

To me, to be a governor of the Hudson's Bay Company is more prestigious than being prime minister. Especially right now. Both Morgan and Mitchell are astute businessmen and patriotic Canadians. We need more like them. They are assisted, by the way, by Dick Wilson, one of the best public relations men in the business.

A truly fine aide. Wilson, as emcee for the night, was both witty and eloquent. Harold Milavksy of Trizec, added his own charm to the event. I might add, Milavsky is a fine supporter of our military, too.

The not-unexpected news was that AEC financial results for the first quarter of 1998 were -- as the media release diplomatically put it -- "negatively impacted" by lower oil and gas prices in the first quarter of the year.

Yet most of us had read about that every day of the week in the daily newspapers, anyway.

Hardly ominous, considering AEC's bold plans for the future and strong financial position.

Morgan pointed out the company's 1998 capital investment program of $800 million is well under way, with first quarter expenditures of $237 million already. This is surely a sign this is a company looking to the horizon.

The AEC board of directors even announced an annual dividend of 40 cents per share, equal to last year's dividend.

This dividend totals more than $45 million, and makes AEC just one of only four senior Canadian oil and gas producers currently providing a dividend to investors.

How's that for bottom-line evidence of a solid company?

Anyway, the annual meeting was an enthusiastic event, and the gala dinner that followed was of great joviality.

Congratulations to all at AEC who have made this company such an outstanding success. Let's hope Ottawa's politicians don't try eyeing with envy its outstanding profits.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10069)4/12/1998
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1998 (4)

Saskatchewan April Oil, Natural Gas Land Sales Drop

REGINA, April 9 - Sales of Saskatchewan government-owned oil and natural gas land rights on April 7 were C$5.8 million, compared with C$8.3 million at the last sale in February, pushed down by slumping crude oil prices, a government statement said.

''The continuing weakness in crude oil prices is contributing to a decline in land sale revenues in all the western provinces,'' Saskatchewan Energy and Mines Minister Eldon Lautermilch said in the statement.

Large sales in past years have left oil and gas companies with large inventories and there is less need for new purchases, he added.

Drilling, however, has continued at a good pace, Lautermilche said.

Some 545 wells were drilled in the first quarter to March 27, an 18 percent decline from the first quarter of 1997, but ahead of first quarter drilling in 1996 and 1995.

The next sale of government oil and natural gas rights was scheduled for June 9, 1998.

Business Leaders Bear Good News
St Johns Eveming Telegram

Members of the St. John's business community can be forgive if they didn't get a great deal accomplished in the city this week.

Most major players left town for Calgary, Ottawa, Toronto or Florida but sent home good news.

The top stories: the Hebron field could contain far more oil than previously indicated; Prime Minister Jean Chretien is coming to St. John's for the SoftWorld IT conference; the College of the North Atlantic is in for a major boost; and, all Newfoundlanders will soon have access to an e-mail/Internet account at their local public library - a Canadian first.

First to Calgary, where some 65 representatives from 52 East Coast oil and gas supply and service companies went at the beginning of the week for the Newfoundland Ocean Industries Association (NOIA) trade mission.

They heard Petro-Canada vice president Gary Bruce predict the East Coast offshore could produce 500,000 barrels a day - 25 per cent of Canada's current light and heavy oil production - for 30 years.

The real excitement was a hint that Hebron will be the next big project on the Grand Banks and that it could hold as much as 600 million barrels of recoverable oil - nearly as much as Hibernia's official estimate.

The estimate usually quoted is 195 million barrels but an executive from Chevron, the operator of the Hebron field, said Tuesday it could run as high as 600 million.

Officials from Chevron did not return calls to the Telegram Thursday but Petro-Canada spokesman John Percic confirmed the 600 million figure is a possibility. Percic cautioned, however, that the figure is at the upper end of the estimated range and includes light and heavy oil.

"There's the possibility a good portion of it is heavy oil," Percic said, "but of course we need to do the delineation drilling."

The drill rig Vinlander is coming to the Grand Banks this summer to drill the field.

Before heading home, NOIA delegates told the Calgary media the trip was a success.

"Trade missions serve as a reminder to Calgary oil companies that we exist, when they're looking at their next projects," Dan Herder, business development manager for Doris Development Canada Ltd. in St. John's and treasurer of NOIA told the Daily Oil Bulletin. "Sometimes they need a bit of a nudge," but that's understandable.

The other major trip of the week was an Operation Online venture to Ottawa and Toronto.

Operation Online, a government funded not-for-profit corporation created to promote Newfoundland's information technology sector, signed an MOU with a group representing IT firms in Ottawa and another with Silicon Graphics Canada, a leading supplier of computing systems and company famous for its Holywood graphics.

The Silicon Graphics deal could be worth millions to the province, Premier Brian Tobin said in an interview Thursday.

"We're moving toward completing an agreement with them that will see them make a significant investment in the province in one of our education institutions," Tobin said Thursday. "It'll be a multi-million-dollar investment on their part, (and) it'll bring the technology to the province."

The College of the North Atlantic is the partner in the deal.

"We haven't finalized it but I expect to be in a position to do so within weeks," Tobin said.

Also In Ottawa, the promoters of SoftWorld `98 - Canada's premier IT conference, which will be held in St. John's this September - lured more industry representatives to St. John's and learned Prime Minister Jean Chretien will be attending.

Cable Atlantic president and SoftWorld organizer Dean MacDonald said the trip was crucial for putting St. John's and the conference on the IT map.

"It had just huge impact for us in terms of getting delegates, a lot of companies expressed interest," he said. "We've been told the prime minister's coming."

It will mark the first time a prime minister has attended the event in the nine years it has been held.

MacDonald, 38, got more good news: he learned he has been named one of Canada's top 40 business leaders under 40 by the Financial Post, the only Newfoundlander on the list.

On to Toronto, where talk of Newfoundland leading the country in economic growth has created renewed interest in the province as a business location.

"Newfoundland and Labrador is seen right now in places like Ottawa, in Toronto on Bay Street, as being a kind of a hot location," Tobin said. "I think what we're doing in going out and promoting the province, I think it's beginning to pay off."

Tobin said he spoke to more than 1,000 business executives in four days and heard several expression of interest in Newfoundland as a location for business

But how much of it was polite talk remains to be seen.

One of the interested individuals was Toronto businessman Arthur Lee, who owns the Solidware clothing company but is better known as the Canadian businessman who paid nearly $500,000 for war medals belonging to Lt.-Col. John McRae, author of In Flander's Fields.

Lee bought the medals at an auction and promptly handed them over to the McRae museum, which had been bidding on the Canadian artifacts until the price went too high.

"(Lee) will be coming to the province and is looking at establishing a plant in Newfoundland, . he's a significant player in this field in this country," Tobin said.

Lee was not available for comment Thursday.

The final rumor from the week away: Newfoundland will soon offer everyone in the province an account on the Internet and an e-mail address through the public library system.

The announcement is expected in the next few weeks.

Enron Oil & Gas Company Announces Two Significant Offshore Gulf of Mexico Natural Gas Discoveries

HOUSTON, April 9 - Enron Oil & Gas Company (NYSE: EOG) announced that gross production from two recent offshore Gulf of Mexico natural gas discoveries -- Eugene Island Block 135 offshore Louisiana and Matagorda Island Block 634 offshore Texas -- could approach 55 million cubic feet per day (MMcf/d) of natural gas and 2,350 barrels per day (Bbls/d) of condensate (19.6. MMcf/d and 950 Bbls/d, net to EOG) during the second quarter of this year.

The recent successful completion of Eugene Island 135 A-3 confirms an earlier discovery in the block. The A-3 well was drilled to a total depth of 19,542 feet and encountered three different natural gas zones below 18,300 feet. The well was completed in one of the three intervals and currently is producing 12.5 MMcf/d of natural gas and 725 Bbls/d of condensate through a 25/64-inch choke with a flowing tubing pressure of 8,750 pounds per square inch. Current gross production from the A-3 well and two other wells previously completed in the Eugene Island 135 discovery is 38 MMcf/d and 2,200 Bbls/d.

EOG is the operator of the Eugene Island discovery and holds a 50 percent working interest. The remaining working interest is held by Seagull Energy Exploration and Production, Inc., 20 percent; CXY Energy Offshore, Inc., 15 percent; and Remington Oil and Gas Corporation [Nasdaq:ROILA], 15 percent. Matagorda Island 634 C-2 was drilled to a total depth of 13,122 feet and encountered five natural gas zones. EOG estimates that the C-2 well will begin production in approximately two weeks at a projected flow rate of 15 MMcf/d of natural gas and 150 Bbls/d of condensate.

EOG is the operator of this discovery well and holds a working interest of approximately 24 percent. The remaining working interest is held by Oryx Energy Company [NYSE:ORX, approximately 30 percent; Chieftain International (U.S.) Inc., 24 percent; and Santa Fe Energy Resources, Inc., 22 percent.

Enron Oil & Gas Company, majority owned by Enron Corp. (NYSE: ENE), is one of the largest independent (non-integrated) oil and gas companies in the United States in terms of domestic proved reserves and is the operator of substantial proved reserves in Canada and offshore India and Trinidad. The company's year-end 1997 reserve base was 77 percent in North America and 90 percent natural gas (69 percent and 86 percent, respectively, excluding deep Paleozoic reserves). EOG is listed on the New York Stock Exchange and is traded under the ticker symbol, ''EOG''.

ACTIVITY UPDATES

Diaz Resources Ltd. (daz/vse) reported further details of it's recently announced farmout in Cameron Parish, Louisiana. This exploration prospect entails the re-entry of a cased well, drilled in 1997, and the side tracking of the new well with the object of encountering gas bearing reservoirs within the Miogypsinoides sands of Tertiary, Oligocene age.

The original well on the prospect encountered significant high pressure gas shows at approximately 17,000 feet, close to the prospective horizon, and was abandoned by the operator without a completion attempt. Geophysical information over the prospect identifies a large structural closure, updip from a well drilled 2.5 miles to the west which encountered 400 gross feet of wet Miogypsinoides sand with hydrocarbon gas shows.

The potential exploration upside, should the prospect be productive, could be as large as 500 billion cubic feet, similar to the South Thornwell field and Lake Arthur fields, located approximately 10 miles to the north of the prospect and which have to date have cumulatively produced 170 bcf and 655 bcf respectively, from the Miogypsinoides Zone.

Initial production rates from the target horizon in adjacent pools have been in excess of 20 mmcf/d, as a result of the extremely high reservoir pressure, 18,000 psi, encountered in the Miogypsinoides Zone. Should the proposed re-entry be hydrocarbon bearing and encounter similar reservoir properties, comparable production rates are anticipated.

As previously announced, Diaz will retain a 5.75 percent working interest, at no cost, following the drilling and completion of the re-entry well, which is anticipated to commence in late May.

Greyhawk Oil & Gas Inc. (ASE/GHK) has acquired an 11.25% interest in 9,200 acres of land offsetting our existing 37.5% interest (11,400 acres) in the Buick Creek area of British Columbia. The lands have multi-horizon oil & gas potential as identified by seismic.

Greyhawk has entered into a farm-out agreement with an intermediate oil and gas company to drill a Baldonnel horizontal well on the existing lands by July 31, 1998. Greyhawk anticipates drilling on the recently acquired acreage in the second and third quarter of 1998.

MISC NEWS - KERM'S LISTED COMPANIES

Carmanah Resources Ltd. (CKM/TSE) announced it has entered into an agreement with Canaccord Capital Corporation and Griffiths McBurney Partners ("the Underwriters") to sell 3,333,334 common shares from treasury on a bought-deal basis at a price of $7.50 per common share. Additionally, Carmanah has granted the
Underwriters an option to acquire up to 666,666 additional common shares, also at a price of $7.50 per common share, until closing of the primary transaction.

Proceeds will be utilized to reduce indebtedness and for working capital which will fund accelerated and expanded development programs at Camar and Langsa in Indonesia.

Following the financing, Carmanah will have 40.5 million common shares outstanding if the Underwriters' option is exercised in full.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10069)4/14/1998 4:07:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1998 (1)

MARKET WATCH

Bay Street rose to its 11th record of the year as the Toronto Stock Exchange financial services subindex broke through 10,000 for the first time. The Canadian $ loses ground. Bank merger mania spurred Wall Street stocks higher.

Canadian and U.S. stocks advanced on a series of U.S. bank mergers and acquisitions.

The news spurred speculation that major Canadian banks also will be consolidated.

The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index rose 34.78 points, or 0.5%, to a record 7655.42.

"Usually, the Canadian dollar selling off is a weight on financial stocks," said Katherine Beattie, analyst with Standard and Poor's MMS in Toronto.

"But the financial sector did really well. Had we not had that bounce there, (the overall TSE index) would have been down."

There were no fundamental economic reasons for the dollar's slide in thin Easter Monday trading. However, some analysts said currency traders have been disappointed that the Bank of Canada has not raised interest rates.

Beattie said the financial sector would likely be subject to profit taking Tuesday. "That's typical after a day based on speculative activity. It's not as if the banks announced greatearnings or anything like that."

Nine of the 14 TSE index groups were lower Monday.

The gold and precious mineral stock group gained 0.67 per cent as the spot price of bullion gained $2.80 US to $310.80 US in New York. Barrick Gold climbed 50 cents to $32.25; Euro-Nevada slipped 55 cents to $25.40.

The TSE communications group gained 0.49 per cent.

Consumer-products issues lost 1.60 per cent; the transportation index shed 1.00 per cent.

Advancers outnumbered decliners 528 to 493 with 274 unchanged in trading of 83.9 million shares worth $1.6 billion.

Hummingbird gained $5.00 to $54.75, Livent $3.60 to $14.75; BioChem Pharma lost $2.25 to $32.00.

Gains by Canada's five largest banks contributed 46 points to the benchmark's advance.

The TSE's financial services subindex climbed 287.56 points, or 2.9%, to a 52-week high of 10,277.38 - the first time the subgroup has closed at more than 10,000.

About 84.5 million shares changed hands on the TSE, down from 115.4 million shares traded on Thursday.

Banks gained after NationsBank Corp. and BankAmerica Corp. agreed to create the largest U.S. bank with assets of US$570 billion, only a week after Citicorp and Travelers Group Inc. said they would link top form the world's largest financial company.

Banc One Corp. also said it would acquire First Chicago NBD Corp.

"Between mergers and U.S. brokerage profits, banks are the only momentum area of the market," said Fred Ketchen, senior trader at ScotiaMcLeod Inc.

Toronto-Dominion Bank (td/tse) rose $2.85 to $68.25, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (cm/tse) advanced $2.10 to $53.50 and Royal Bank of Canada (ry/tse) jumped $2.10 to $89.10 - all record highs.

Other gainers included Livent Inc. and Inter-Tech Drilling Solutions Ltd.

Livent (liv/tse) jumped $3.60 to $14.75, a gain of 32%, after the theater production company said former Walt Disney Co. president Michael Ovitz would invest US$20 million to buy 2.5 million shares of the firm and control 36% of its voting stock.

Inter-Tech (idl/tse) climbed 51› to $2.04 after Precision Drilling Corp. agreed to buy the oilfield services company for $2.10 a share.

Broader gains were limited, with many investors lacking confidence that company earnings will meet expectations.

In the next two weeks Alcan Aluminium Ltd., Falconbridge Ltd., Sears Canada Inc., Avenor Inc., Bombardier Inc., Northern Telecom Inc. and BCE Inc. will report quarterly profits.

Other Canadian markets were mixed.

The Montreal Exchange portfolio rose 25.66 points, or 0.7% to 3865.54. The Vancouver Stock Exchange lost 0.31 of a point to 637.69.

The Dow Jones industrial average advanced 17.44 points, or 0.2%, to 9012.3. J.P. Morgan & Co. (jpm/nyse), the biggest gainer among Dow stocks, soared US$7 1/16 to US$47 5/8.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 0.98 of a point to 1109.69.

The Nasdaq Composite Index rose 4.71 points, or 0.3%, to 1824.95.

About 569.5 million shares changed hands on the Big Board, up from 551.6 million shares traded on Thursday.

NationsBank (nb/nyse) led the charge of the big banks, jumping US$4 7/16 to US$80 7/8, after it and BankAmerica agreed to a $63-billion marriage - the biggest bank merger in history. BankAmerica (bac/nyse) rose US$4 1/2 to US$91 1/8.

First Chicago (fcn/nyse) climbed US$2 5/16 to US$96 1/4 after it said it would link with Banc One in a $30-billion stock swap. Banc One (one/nyse) was unchanged at US$61 3/4.

Other financial issues gained on speculation that they might be next to merge.

Chase Manhattan Corp. (cmb/nyse) gained US$41 5/16 to US$146 9/16, Bankers Trust New York Corp. (bt/nyse) rose US$5 3/16 to US$133 11/16 and Wells Fargo Corp. (wfc/nyse) jumped US$18 5/8 to US$370 3/4.

Shares of K-tel International Inc. (ktel/nasdaq) soared US$8 5/16 to US$14 15/16 after the marketer of recorded music said it will introduce an online music sales service on May 1 called K-tel Express, which will offer more than 250,000 music titles to shoppers on the Internet.

Other Internet business firms gained, too.

DoubleClick Inc. (dclk/nasdaq) soared US$51 5/16 to US$46 15/16 after the Internet advertising company's chief executive, Kevin O'Connor, said on CNBC television that the firm would be profitable next year.

Most overseas markets were closed for an Easter holiday.

Tokyo: Japanese shares finished lower in thin trading as investors showed caution in the absence of further details of the government's economic stimulus package. The 225-share Nikkei average fell 163.54 points, or 1%, to 16,317.58.

Market Caught Off Guard By C$'s Drop
The Financial Post

The C$ tumbled nearly half a cent yesterday, falling back below the US70› level for the first time since mid-February.

The Bank of Canada was forced to intervene in currency markets, selling its US$ reserves and buying C$s in order to minimize the slide, which analysts said was accelerated by thin holiday trading flows.

The C$ closed at US69.66›, down US0.46› in its largest one-day decline in five months.

"The C$'s bucket has once again sprung a leak," said David Ebata, senior Canadian analyst at Boston based Technical Data.

The C$ had been trading steadily lower in recent weeks after receiving a boost last month from the prospect of a Quebec Liberal party victory with Jean Charest replacing Daniel Johnson at the party's helm.

The C$ hit its 1998 high on March 11, when Johnson announced his resignation and Charest became the top candidate. But the currency has fallen back, even after Charest decided to run for the top job.

"This totally caught the market off guard," one trader said of the C$ fall.

Now the Charest factor has dissipated, attention may have returned to some of the negative factors weighing on the C$ for months, said Avery Shenfeld, senior economist at CIBC Wood Gundy Securities Inc.

With the current account deficit growing, Canada must get foreign capital to fund the shortfall and the difference between Canadian and U.S. rates is bad for the C$, he said.

Lower yields on Canadian bonds make C$-denominated securities less attractive than higher yield fixed income investments in the U.S.

Analysts said some traders may be preparing to test the Bank of Canada's resolve again, after getting the bank on the defensive during a 5% slide in the C$ between September and February.

In that period, the bank raised its benchmark overnight lending rate from 3.5% to 5%. The corresponding U.S. federal funds rate is still half a percentage point higher at 5.5%.

Asian Fallout 'Will Reduce' Economic Growth By 25%
The Financial Post

The Asian crisis is set to reduce the rate of global economic expansion by a quarter in 1998, but the fallout will be "relatively mild" when compared with other major shocks of the past three decades, the International Monetary Fund says in its latest World Economic Outlook.

The semi-annual report, made public yesterday, also discounted talk that deflation will prove a real threat, with booming domestic demand in most industrialized countries providing enough momentum to offset weaker commodity prices.

Asia's financial crisis will slash global gross domestic product by one percentage point to 3.1%, the IMF said.

The damage to major industrial economies "is expected to be modest" compared with the effects of the Arab oil embargo of 1974-75, the sovereign debt crisis of 1980-83 and oil market shocks in 1990-91 related to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait.

While the estimated hit to global output is twice the size of the IMF's earlier forecast, released in December, the picture is starting to clear.

"The financial turmoil in Asia that erupted in mid-1997 has abated since January and markets have partially recovered from their troughs," the IMF said.

It echoed some of the comments made by U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan when it forecast the slowdown in

Asia would have a positive effect on major economies by throwing some cold water on red-hot growth.

"On balance, the Asian crisis is likely to exert a moderate contractionary and disinflationary effect on the industrial ... economies, thus reducing the risk of overheating in those countries operating at high levels of resource utilization, in particular the United States."

Some economists warn a recent slide in commodity prices is leading the way to widespread deflation, with prices falling in most sectors.

However, the report said deflation "doesn't seem to be a major risk" and would be held at bay by strong consumer and industrial demand.

The near-term outlook for commodity prices remains cloudy but there were signs prices were bottoming, it added.

"On the basis of futures and forward market prices and other information, the projected level of non-fuel commodity prices for ... 1998 is about 3% above the current level."

Since mid-1997, prices of primary commodities have fallen by more than 10%. The crisis brought higher import costs resulting from devalued national currencies, less credit to finance imports and sharp reductions in demand.

World copper prices plunged 33% between June 1997 and January 1998, mostly because of falling demand in Asia. Timber prices were off 24%, nickel 20%, zinc 16%, hides 15% and soybean meal 11%.

Junior Capital Pools Remain Hot On Alberta Exchange
The Financial Post

Last year's junior capital pool frenzy on the Alberta Stock Exchange hasn't slowed, the exchange says in its first quarter activity report.

Of the 45 new companies on the ASE in the first three months of 1998, 34 were junior capital pools, compared with 24 in the same period last year. They bring the total number of pools to 174, 17% of the exchange's listings.

Tim Daly, vice-president of market surveillance, said yesterday the program is attracting more small companies from outside Alberta. "It's a really good program [by which] to go public."

Bruce Ramsay, president of Acumen Capital Finance Partners Ltd., said interest in the pools is also gaining popularity among a new breed of company, such as real estate firm Torode Realty Ltd. The Calgary based firm, which went public using the vehicle, announced a major transaction and raised $3 million in a private placement in a brief period.

What was once a blind pool is evolving into a "visually challenged pool," said Ramsay, with more companies revealing plans for a transaction ahead of time.

The 12-year-old junior capital pool structure allows smaller companies to raise up to $300,000.

Mike Hill, a Calgary analyst with Acumen Capital, said that despite its successes, the program also allows companies to raise just enough money to get them in trouble, as amounts are frequently not enough to help execute a business plan.

Because of the cap on financing, the program is also subject to abuse as a vehicle for stock promotion, say other industry observers.

"What companies get out of a JCP is the listing, not the capital," said Ramsay.

At March 31, the ASE had 1,020 listings, up from 889 a year ago.

In the first quarter, trading activity, in terms of volume, value and number of trades, was down from the record levels of last year, but picked up toward the end of the period. Volume fell 29% to 848 million, with a value of $645 million, down 53%.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10069)4/14/1998 4:25:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1998 (2)

MARKET WATCH, Con't

TSE Battles Computer Bugs
Priority Is 2000 Problem; No Date Set For New Trading System

The Globe and Mail

The Toronto Stock Exchange is spending $20-million to make its computer trading systems ready for the millennium by the end of this year, president Rowland Fleming says.

But as it prepares for the millennium bug before New Year's Day 2000, the TSE has the twin task of replacing its aging patchwork of trading systems -- which has earned it a reputation for missing deadlines and not delivering on its promises.

The exchange is well behind schedule in introducing a state-of-the-art electronic trading system, and industry players accuse it of not keeping them adequately informed about the situation.

While they wait, frustrated traders have to make do with an upgraded version of a 21-year-old computer system that was not designed, initially, for trading.

Mr. Fleming acknowledges that the 2000 problem is an area in which the exchange cannot afford to make mistakes. All of its trading is now automated, so Canada's premier stock exchange will effectively shut down if the systems are not ready to read Jan. 1, 2000.

"We're deadly serious about doing whatever it takes to make sure that the exchange will operate effectively through the year 2000," Mr. Fleming said in a recent interview.

But he must convince the brokerage community that the TSE is up to the dual task of dealing not only with the millennium bug, but installing an adequate trading system.

Mr. Fleming concedes that the TSE got a late start addressing the millennium issues, because management has been preoccupied in recent years with developing a new electronic trading system. Many members of the brokerage industry blame exchange management for the problems, which began well before Mr. Fleming's arrival three years ago, but continue under his reign.

The central problem is that the exchange's computerized system is slow and not always reliable.

"That's why the TSE in the eyes of its members lacks credibility," said a brokerage executive who asked not to be named. "People have long memories."

The system should be able to transmit buy and sell orders instantaneously, said Peter Erglis, a trader at McDermid St. Lawrence Securities Ltd. But when it is forced to deal with large volumes of trading orders, there can be delays of up to 15 minutes between a change in a stock's trading price at the exchange tower and the price quoted on traders' computer screens at downtown brokerages.

On those occasions, Mr. Erglis said, "you're expecting [a trading order] to flip into the marketplace and it just sits there and sits there."

Another trader said the system handles large volume orders fairly well. But the slow response time is frustrating for market-makers, specialists who typically trade small volumes of a handful of stocks, because they must nimbly and quickly respond to market changes.

"This thing has plodded on and on and on," said Fred Ketchen, managing director of equity trading at Scotia Capital Markets. "This is like a 108 year old person still going to work every day. It may be held together with duct tape and bandages, but it shows up."

The TSE's computer problems date back to the late 1980s, when it began trying to develop an electronic trading system that would allow it to close its trading floor.

The exchange's board of governors voted in 1991 to make the exchange fully electronic. But plans to close the floor were delayed for several years as the TSE fought with floor traders who were worried about losing their jobs, and as it tried to develop a trading system in-house.

Two years ago -- after spending $35-million and more than a half-dozen years on the ill-fated project -- the TSE scrapped the attempt to create its own computer trading technology.

It then started a new project, by purchasing trading technology from the Paris Bourse. The plan was to develop a brand-new computer trading system called Torex (a combination of the words Toronto and exchange), to build on the Paris technology platform with customized software to be written by IBM Canada Ltd.

With the new Torex system under development, last April the TSE finally closed the trading floor, where traders had gathered for decades to buy and sell securities. At that time, about half the stocks were listed on its floor-trading system, which handled most of the volume.

The remaining trades took place on its existing computer assisted trading system, known as CATS. The TSE replaced the floor with an enhanced version of CATS so it could handle all exchange listed stocks. But that was supposed to be an interim measure.

The exchange had planned to replace CATS with Torex by the end of last year. But it missed that deadline because there were several problems with the new system.

The Torex system consists of computer work stations designed to link traders in brokerage firm offices with the TSE's trading engine, which processes records and monitors trades. While hundreds of Torex terminals are already installed in traders' offices, the exchange is still using the old CATS technology as its interim trading engine. CATS was never designed as a trading system when it made its debut back in 1977 -- it was meant to function as an electronic warehouse for non-active TSE stocks.

Mr. Fleming makes no promises about when the new Torex system will be fully implemented. He said the first priority is to address the millennium problem by the end of this year. At the same time, the new Torex system will be tested during the summer and fall. In the event that Torex is not ready in time for the millennium, the exchange is working on making both CATS and Torex year 2000 compliant.

The exchange has retained IBM Canada -- which is already designing the software for the Torex system -- to audit progress on the computer system to ensure that everything is on track with the year 2000 plans, he said.

The TSE must have its 2000 bugs ironed out one year in advance, because the system must be able to handle so-called "good -'til -cancelled" orders by Jan. 1, 1999 -- orders that can expire within one year of being placed.

"I'm not sanguine at all, but I do have a comfort level that our plans are very precise," Mr. Fleming said. "They've been well developed in an enormous amount of detail."

As the brokerage industry anxiously awaits the outcome of these plans, Mr. Fleming is being criticized for making decisions without following the exchange's tradition of relying on input from committees made up of TSE staff and brokerage members, industry sources said.

And while Mr. Fleming said there is "a very close continuous dialogue" between the exchange and the management of the member firms, others fault him for not keeping the industry better informed.

"We are the proverbial mushrooms right now," said McDermid St. Lawrence's Mr. Erglis. "Anything the TSE tells us is long on rhetoric and short on detail."

Members of the exchange's board of governors also would like Mr. Fleming to keep them better informed, said Daniel Sullivan, vice-chairman of the board of governors and deputy chairman of Scotia Capital Markets.

"Most organizations can improve their communication with their stakeholders," he said. "The TSE is no exception."

Annual Meetings Where The Action Is
Calgary Herald

Annual meetings may be a necessary evil for corporate executives, but they offer shareholders a golden opportunity for an inside peek at how companies are being run.

For that reason alone, say financial experts, annual meetings are worth attending.

"If you really want to know what is happening with your investment, then the annual meeting is the place to be," says Paul Ziff, president of the Ziff Energy Group and a former financial analyst.

"It's the one chance ordinary shareholders get to ask whatever they want of company management -- and you never know what you might hear."

Or in some cases see.

At the annual meeting of Alberta Energy Co. Ltd. this past week, president and chief executive officer Gwyn Morgan introduced Gumby, the 1950s cartoon character who has been adopted as the company's "stretch target mascot" (a motivational tool aimed at getting workers to better their personal goals) to a smiling audience.

As the meeting unwound, neither Gumby nor the company's officers on hand faced many questions.

That's no surprise to Ziff, who says Canadians tend to be unduly shy about taking an active role at annual meetings.

"In the United States, the meetings are much more interesting. Things really get going -- especially if people are unhappy with the way in which their companies are being run."

With annual meeting season now in full swing -- because of corporate and legal reporting requirements for companies with Dec. 31 year ends April and May are prime months for annual meetings -- Calgarians are again weighing the pros and cons of heading off to company offices and hotel meeting spaces where annual meetings are traditionally held.

In the past, the opportunity to hob- nob with company officials and perhapsm garner a free lunch along the way has served as an attractive inducement for many shareholders.

And while companies are still given to setting out buffets or snack tables for shareholders, a growing emphasis on corporate fiscal responsibility has meant that more and more annual meetings are turning into austere affairs.

That was obvious at the Toronto Dominion Bank's annual meeting, held this year for the first time in Calgary.

Along with the prerequisite speeches and testimonials from company officials, shareholders were treated to a meagre display of coffee, tea and cookies. The message from bank officials was implicit: we are not an extravagant organization. We will not waste your money.

Nonetheless, shareholders in attendance applauded wildly when one of their number inquired whether lunch would be served.

On the other hand, corporations like Calgary based Alberta Energy Co. are still choosing to fete and treat shareholders when celebrating a good year.

This past week, company chairman David Mitchell invited the 400 or so attendees at the AEC annual meeting to partake of a mouth-watering finger sandwich and desert buffet after the meeting's official business had been concluded.

John Barth of the Canadian Shareholders Association says annual meetings offer investors and potential shareholders a good chance to see if they are in sync with a company's corporate culture.

"Sometimes it's important for your peace of mind as an investor to get a sense of whether a company is extravagant or cost-conscious. And certainly you can get an idea of that from attending the annual meeting. "

Annual meetings can also provide shareholders with a window onto how corporate management views the world.

"You can always tell what management has in mind by the way they set up for an annual meeting," says Keith Davis of Media One Communications.

"If they are open to discussing things with shareholders, there will be microphones around the room and an informal setting. The more formal the setting, the less interested they are in a two-way dialogue."

Shareholder activists argue that annual meetings are the only venue in which company executives are truly accountable.

"I think companies would make fewer big, dumb, expensive mistakes if shareholders were more demanding," says Bob Verdun, a longtime shareholder activist who believes that shareholders have a duty to attend annual meetings.

It's the only way to keep the companies honest, he suggests.

Verdun maintains that "there is a little bit of Bre-X in every company and that corporate executives often want to do things without the shareholders knowing about them."

Bre-X was the Calgary-based gold exploration company whose shares traded atmore than $200 each before an audit of the company's Indonesian gold mines revealed there was virtually no gold on the site, a revelation that caused the company to collapse.

Shareholders across North America lost billions of dollars in that collapse.

Verdun notes that annual meetings also are one of the few places where shareholders can get to see company executives in action -- and in the process make at least a cursory assessment of their abilities.

That includes their character, he adds.

"Everyone I know tells me that you should look at a company's management before putting your money into their shares. Well, this is one place where you can see if they've got what it takes to handle what can be a challenging experience."

Annual meetings also offer perceptive investors or shareholders the chance to learn things about a company before they become common knowledge -- a scenario that can translate into windfall profits or important savings for investors who are quick off the mark.

"If a company talks about an important initiative one year and doesn't mention it the next, it could be a sign that something is amiss," warns Ziff.

Ziff says he has known shareholders who attended annual meetings and were so upset by what they heard that they called their brokers from the hotel lobby and ordered them to sell off their shares before the bad news they had heard hit the market.

"You don't have to be a financial analyst to benefit from what you will hear at an annual meeting," says Ziff. "The common-sense principle applies. If you hear something that doesn't make sense to you, it may not be you that is wrong.

"Company executives are not all-knowing. And the more you know about what they are doing, the more informed decisions you can make."

Quick Facts

Five reasons to attend annual shareholder meetings:

- They offer the opportunity to see company executives in action.

- Shareholders can see firsthand if they feel comfortable with a company's culture or values.

- They provide an opportunity to glean new and potentially lucrative data about the company.

- They are a good place to compare notes with other shareholders.

- You might get a free lunch.

Quarterly Snapshot TSE Price-To-Book Ratios

A snapshot of TSE price-to-book ratios over the most recent calendar quarter can be found at canoe2.canoe.ca

Quarterly Snapshot: Earnings Estimates For Toronto 35

canoe2.canoe.ca