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


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10127)4/15/1998 11:15:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1998 (2)

STEALTH BANKER, Con't

They also say that the John Cleghorn mythology that has sprung up since the merger announcement is pretty much on the mark. He really is the former college football champion who still plays for the team. He's the solid citizen who's been happily married for 34 years. He earned $3.2 million last year, but still flies economy. (If you see him in business class, it's because he's used his upgrades.) He takes the subway to work. Or he drives himself in his Chrysler LHS in Toronto, or his Ford Explorer at his 20-hectare spread in the Eastern Townships of Quebec.

Around Knowlton, where Cleghorn has his country house, they talk about how different he is from former BMO chairman Bill Mulholland, who used to roll in Friday night in his limousine and live a fairly reclusive life. In contrast, Cleghorn is seen doing the family shopping at Jimmy's grocery store. He and his wife, Pattie, support the Lac Brome Theatre and the local hospital.

"John is no-frills," says Lloyd Bankson, managing director at J.P. Morgan in New York. Bankson met Cleghorn in a credit analysis course in the 1970s. "He really doesn't care about the trappings of banking. He's a Detroit kind of guy, a General Motors kind of guy."

"Ambitious" is the first word Martin Connell uses to describe Cleghorn. Connell is the president of Toronto based Calmeadow Foundation, which organizes micROEnterprise credit financing to support small business in Canada and the Third World. He has been friends with Cleghorn since their student days at McGill in the '60s. "John's a very straightforward, uncomplicated long-haul thinker," Connell says.

Cleghorn likes to pepper his conversation with mentions of big-picture theorists. He's a devotee of the Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter, known for his theory of "creative destruction," which posits that innovation is crucial to an upswing in the business cycle. "I've always been amazed by the number of companies that started in the 1930s," Cleghorn says. "They had to be resourceful, so they were innovative." He maintains that Canadian banks went through a period of "creative destruction" in the 1980s. "If we'd been Royal Bank of Alberta, we'd be history today."

Schumpeter is a favourite of many corporate leaders who want to justify a range of brutal, social Darwinian behaviour. But Cleghorn is also receptive to non-traditional approaches. He sits on the advisory board of Connell's Calmeadow and understands its aim to provide credit to people with no credit history or collateral, the very sorts that big banks will have nothing to do with. "John was one of the first bankers who understood and was supportive of the concept," says Connell.

More than his academic bent, Cleghorn is defined by a restless, focused energy. "Some of us mellow as we get older," says David O'Brien, chairman and CEO of Canadian Pacific Ltd. and a Royal director, who has known Cleghorn since the early 1970s. "But if anything, John is equally, if not more, intense now."

As the chairman of the 21st Century fundraising campaign for McGill University, which ran between 1991 and 1996, Cleghorn was given the responsibility for raising $200 million. Everyone thought that goal unattainable, given recession and uncertainty over a referendum. When the campaign stalled $30 million short six months before deadline, Cleghorn visited foundations and donors himself. In the end, he raised $6 million more than was targeted. "John's leadership was responsible," says Purdy Crawford, the chairman of Imasco Ltd., who also worked on the campaign. "He never said no."

Chalk some of it up to Cleghorn's fierce competitive streak, a trait he shares with Finance Minister Paul Martin, whom Cleghorn refers to as the "judge and jury" in approving the merger. Cleghorn and Martin have known one another for years, and are said to get along personally. Both belong to the Knowlton Golf Club. They have never played together, though. The reason, according to Cleghorn, is that he doesn't like to lose. "Paul is an excellent golfer. I'm pathetic. He got a hole-in-one last year. He gives me enough abuse. I don't need that on the golf course."

While the football-hero legacy explains some of Cleghorn's makeup, more stems from a constitution that made him decide to become an accountant when he was in Grade 10. Or perhaps it's his border-Scot lineage. He's known to measure everything that he does. Since he was named chairman, he's worked off a time sheet to make sure one-quarter of his time is spent visiting employees and customers.

He is also somewhat obsessive about calculating risk. Required reading within the bank last year was the the fashionable bestseller Against the Gods, The Remarkable Story of Risk, by Peter L. Bernstein. "The only way you win is by diversifying risk," Cleghorn says. He lost London Insurance Group Inc., an acquisition he wanted badly, last summer when Great West Life came in with a $2.9-billion bid; Cleghorn refused to pay more than $2.5 billion. Upping the offer didn't make sense he said at the time.

A megabank that could play on a global scale is something Cleghorn has been working on in his methodical way for years. The Royal had kicked the tires of a number of big U.S. banks over the years, but were put off by the prices. "We knew we only had a few serious options ahead of us if we were going to be a globally competitive bank," Cleghorn says.

The Royal then ran simulations of potential Canadian partners. The Bank of Montreal seemed the obvious match. Besides, BMO was where Cleghorn had his first bank account as a boy. It was the dominant force in Montreal, where he spent most of his childhood.

By December, 1997, as Cleghorn says, "the planets had lined up," meaning that he believed legislative trends and political sentiment in Ottawa would back a bank merger.

On Dec. 19, at a senior management meeting, Cleghorn reviewed the options. "I said to myself, `What's to lose if I go and see Matt?'" He called Barrett and said he needed 15 minutes, maybe half an hour. At 5 p.m., he walked a block and a half up Bay Street into the Bank of Montreal's staff Christmas party. "I asked him, how would you like to build a globally competitive Canadian-based financial institution on a merger of equals?" That's how he remembers it. BMO had been doing their own simulations, says George Bothwell, senior vice-president, corporate affairs, at the bank. Royal was their first pick too. Five weeks later, the bankers had a deal in principle.

Competition law offers the banks a convenient cone of silence when it comes to discussing details of the merger - things like high-level infrastructure or details about pricing, costs, even the bank's new name. It's believed that Cleghorn will hang in for the longer term, while Barrett will stay to smooth the transition for one or two years and leave with millions arising from his options. "He's looking at life now, and she's six feet tall," comments one analyst. (For anyone who hasn't read a newspaper in the past year, that's a reference to Ann-Marie Sten, Barrett's glamorous new wife.)

Cleghorn has said that CEOs should stay in the saddle no longer than six to eight years. That would give him only another two or three years at the helm.

John Edward Cleghorn learned early in life about what he calls "long suits and short suits," or personal strengths and weaknesses. He was born in Montreal on July 7, 1941; but soon after the family moved to Waterloo, Ont., the home town of his mother, the former Hazel Dunham, who was a dietitian. His father, Ned, got a job as the bursar of Waterloo College (now Wilfrid Laurier University). Nine years later, the Cleghorns moved back to Montreal when his father was named associate director and curator of the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts.

The family lived on Victoria Street in Westmount. Cleghorn was sent to the private Selwyn House to pull up his marks in Grade 6, but left because they didn't have a football team. He was a jock as a kid, albeit an earnest one. He liked having a paper route, he says, because he enjoyed meeting with his customers and paying his accounts on time.

Early on, he figured that Latin wasn't one of his long suits, which ruled out law and medicine. He decided to become an accountant after seeing a movie about the profession. His father was encouraging, telling his son that a career as an accountant would offer him mobility and stability.

He graduated from Westmount High in 1958, then went on to McGill, where he played for the McGill Redmen. During the 1960 season, the veteran middle guard was injured. Cleghorn was brought in as a starter. The team went on to win the national championship that year.

After graduating with a Bachelor of Commerce in 1962, he was drafted by the Toronto Argonauts. He turned the offer down after assessing the lineup; he figured that he'd only be bench strength. Instead, he went to Clarkson Gordon in Montreal and received his CA in 1964. Today, he says that he should have stayed longer in the profession. He speaks of the small and medium audits as being "the most fun."

Next, he took a position as a futures trader at St. Lawrence Sugar. He left because he wanted a broader scope, preferably working for an international company. He had come across an article in CA Magazine about the Mercantile Bank, which had just been bought by Citibank. The international scope of the bank appealed to him. He made an approach and was hired in the fall of 1965.

Cleghorn moved up the ranks more quickly at the Mercantile than he would have at one of the big bureaucratic Canadian banks. He started as an account manager in Montreal, then moved to Winnipeg to manage a branch. By the time he was in his early 30s, he was the Western regional vice-president, based in Vancouver.

In 1974, the bank moved him back to Montreal to do much the same job. Stasis had set in, which frustrated him. So he took a 10% pay cut to join the project financing department of the Royal in 1974. The bank's reputation had impressed him. "I had put them up on a pedestal," he says.

David O'Brien, then a Montreal lawyer, worked with Cleghorn soon after he joined the bank. They would travel across the country looking at any loan that wasn't plain vanilla. They worked on the first big financing of Petrocan. "He finds a way to get the deal done," says O'Brien.

Cleghorn was spotted as a young man with potential. He moved up through corporate lending and corporate accounts, before working under Taylor in international banking. Cleghorn spent most of his time trying to figure out how to get into the U.S. market. He spent a year looking at near-banks, financing and leasing companies. Prices were too high. "We didn't want the burden of the goodwill hit on our earnings per share," says Taylor.

In 1986, Cleghorn was appointed president. In 1990, COO was added to his title. In 1994, he was made CEO. People who worked with him say that he was impatient as president, that he wanted more.

In 1993, he spearheaded the $1.6-billion acquisition of Royal Trustco. The deal was his baby. They had to wade through a lot of bad paper. Integration took five years. But the trust company gave Royal access to wealth management, which is another way of saying getting your hands on all of a customer's assets, including RRSPs. This is hugely attractive to banks because profit margins are much higher than for traditional services.

They learned from the mistakes made folding Royal Trust into the bigger bank, Cleghorn says. For one thing, they closed branches too quickly. "The idea is to grow the business, not to shrink," he says. "You want to squeeze the technology side, not the human side."

He was finally given the top job in 1995. "Over the years, with a variety of positions given to him, he was the best person." Taylor says. "He can see the whole picture."

Cleghorn leads by example. Take his frugality crusade, for example. Royal had been known as a high-cost operator among the banks. He wanted to change that. He got rid of the corporate Challenger jet. He cut back on the bank's black-tie events. The in-house barber was chopped. The junk in Hong Kong harbour was sold. Public Relations likes to float the story of Cleghorn going to Druxy's, a deli in the mall under the Royal Bank Tower, for lunch after being appointed chairman.

Cleghorn encourages a team ethos. He delegates. Within the bank, where he's known as JC, Cleghorn is respected. "He's the kind of guy you feel you could go out for a beer with," comments a trader in Action Direct, the discount brokerage arm of RBC Dominion Securities.

"John has dispelled the myth of the banker being removed," says George Cohon, the senior chairman of McDonald's Restaurants of Canada and a board member of the Royal Bank. "He calls up directors and says, `Can we have lunch?' And he takes me out to lunch and says, `George, what can we do better?' John is very hands-on."

Cleghorn's management style, while effective, can be tough and impatient. Don Wells, recently retired executive vice-president, recalls the time that the bank failed in its expansion plans into Australia. "He kept asking me, `Aren't you mad about this?' He followed me down the hall, saying, `You should be mad about this.'"

As for voicing his opinion, Cleghorn doesn't hesitate. At a Liberal fundraising dinner at the Westin Hotel in Toronto last November, he launched into a public tirade against Industry Minister John Manley, whom he had just met. Cleghorn was furious about the politician's critical remarks about banks' inadequate lending practices to small businesses. He felt that they were inaccurate.

"Cleghorn was vehement," says Stephen LeDrew, president of the Liberal Party of Canada in Ontario, who witnessed the scene. "It wasn't very politic. What no one reported was that Manley gave back as good, if not better, than he got." After the exchange, they shook hands.

On the whole, Cleghorn is known to keep his ego in check. "For the grand Pooh-Bah of banking, he handles it well," says one bank analyst. From time to time, though, it surfaces. The same analyst recalls seeing it in meetings after Royal had to take significant real estate losses. "It was pretty embarrassing for them. He was defensive and more than a tad grumpy."

Yet being a banker does not appear to be Cleghorn's only source of self definition. Friends speak of his strong commitment to his family. Around the bank he is known for jealously protecting his personal time. "John takes every holiday he's entitled to," says Wells. "He'll tell anybody who doesn't they're fools."

Cleghorn married the former Pattie Hart, whom he had met while he was at McGill, in 1963. They have three children, all grown. Because of Cleghorn's career, they've moved house a total of 13 times. "Pattie is a real trooper," says Connell.

The couple also weathered Pattie's serious illness in the early 1990s when she developed diabetes and had a lung removed. Afterward, they established the Pattie Cleghorn Fund in Diabetes Research at the Polypeptide Hormone Laboratory at McGill, which is working on a form of insulin that can be taken orally.

On weekends in Toronto, where they live in Rosedale, he and his wife socialize with friends or go to the movies. Titanic is on his list of must-sees, he says, with no apparent irony. But most weekends and longer holidays are spent in the Eastern Townships.

In 1986, Cleghorn accepted an invitation to be chancellor of Wilfrid Laurier University. "He's truly committed to an undergraduate liberal arts education," says Marsden, who was president of Laurier at the time. He throws himself into the role. At convocations, he works the crowd, talking to students and their parents.

There remains more than the suggestion of the college frat boy in Cleghorn. He and his wife even attend Laurier dances. He remains crazy about college football and loves to watch Laurier's gridiron warriors. He's also been known to slip down to Notre Dame on the occasional weekend to catch a U.S. college game. One of his associates refers to his "campus" sense of humour. "He likes to roast people, that sort of thing."

Unsurprisingly, the stock market loves the proposed merger. Royal stock rose 5.4%, Bank of Montreal 18.2% the day that it was announced. Cleghorn and Barrett's campaign to convince average Canadian bank customers will be next to impossible. No one wants potential job losses (something Barrett denies will happen). Few trust that a big bank merger will be in the public interest. Not that that matters. All that the two banks have to do is to make the megabank politically palatable.

"I'm not a politician," Cleghorn protested in a recent interview on CBC Radio. But, increasingly, he has to sound like one. Cleghorn and Barrett have to market the merger as far more than a good business proposition. It's being played as crucial for this country's very survival in the next century, an argument that even some of the most ardent supporters of open competition find a bit rich. Yet Cleghorn is trying to whip up some sense of urgency. "We've got to get them in the water before they land on our beach," he has said more than once, referring to the threat posed by any incoming U.S. banks.

The banker has little patience for people who suggest that the banks have it soft. "Look, this is a competitive world," he says. "People think we're a protected industry, which is not true, and not in business, which is not true."

He talks about niche players coming into Canada to compete in credit cards, mortgages, mutual funds. He talks about the 4% decline in deposits, the 11% rise in mutual funds. He plays the U.S. domination card. Fidelity and Templeton are here, he says, and they're bigger than two of the Big Five in Canada. The potential of big international deals will make for cost efficiencies that will cut costs at home. "Unit costs are important," he says.

Cleghorn actually talks about the greater access to ATMs for Royal and BMO customers that the merger will bring. Even he's had the frustration of losing a card in a Bank of Montreal machine, he says. The merger means that he will be able to use the BMO machine in Knowlton rather than driving to the nearest Royal Bank in Cowansville.

As Cleghorn continues his crusade about Canada's need for a globally competitive banking system, his PR emissary prods him gently to bring the interview to a close so he can attend an early evening reception that the bank is holding to celebrate the Chinese New Year. Asian customers are an important part of the bank's client base.

Cleghorn isn't ready. He's warming to the attention, and has more to say about competition, about banking, about life. "I have a simple philosophy that comes from being a Y camper and counsellor," he says. "You leave the campsite better than when you found it. This is not a threatening statement to tell people to clean up the mess. It's more like, `What did that place look like when you got there? Can you make it look better?' Not better than the next person can make it, but better than you found it."

Cleghorn admits that the banks have done a poor job of explaining themselves. He says he welcomes the debate to debunk banking myth. Even so, the exercise is seen as a technicality. The principals are confident that the merger will go through. "What's going to stop it?" Taylor asks. Cleghorn can't afford to appear as cocky. He's careful to send out the message that the two banks are still in direct competition. "Matt's wining and dining our clients as we speak," he says.

"We're regarded as arrogant and standoffish and not in touch with what Canadians want," he concedes. "If we can get our day in court, we can convince Canadians it's in their interest in the long run. If we can't, we don't deserve it." And he says he's not a politician.




To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10127)4/15/1998 11:25:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1998 (3)

OIL & GAS

Venezuelan PDVSA Sees Lower World Oil Demand In 98

BUENOS AIRES, April 14 - Venezuela's state-run oil firm Petroleos de Venezuela SA (PDVSA) sees global oil demand growing this year at a lower rate of 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd), its President Luis Giusti said Tuesday.

Addressing an oil forum in Argentina, Giusti said PDVSA was making its estimate based on the ongoing crisis in Asia and the warmest winter in 100 years.

''Some analysts are correcting their estimates and put it at 1.6 million bpd but this time we want to be more conservative and are estimating for this year growth of 1.3 million bpd,'' he said.

''Although lower than previously estimated, it still is good demand,'' Giusti said. ''Only two or three years ago we considered growth of 800,000 bpd important demand.''

Global oil demand had grown by 2.0 million bpd in 1996 and a similar amount in 1997, he said, adding that current global oil consumption stood at 75 million bpd.

For information on Argentine companies see (AR/EQIU).

Oil Subsides With No Relief Yet From Glut

LONDON, April 14 - Shaky world oil markets took another downward turn on Tuesday, frightened by the size of the glut in global supplies.

Benchmark Brent blend futures for May loading were 27 cents lower in early business at $13.73 a barrel.

Dealers said the weight of oversupply continued to dictate market direction in spite of the accord among world producers to remove excess oil.

Prices are now $2 a barrel lower than the peak of a short-lived rally after the March 22 pact was announced in Riyadh.

The pact should shave some 1.5 million barrels a day (bpd) from the 75 million bpd global market if pledges from 16 oil producers are met.

But dealers remain sceptical, preferring to wait for solid evidence of the reductions particularly from OPEC producers which have promised to remove 1.25 million bpd from their output.

Independent observers say that world oil output is running so high that even if the pledged cuts are met in full then markets could remain in trouble.

The International Energy Agency said on Friday that supply exceeded demand by a hefty 1.5 million bpd in the first quarter of the year, leaving stocks to build heavily when normally they are drawn down.

''Current supply exceeds demand and stocks are high, suggesting a continuation of a difficult market for producers,'' said the Paris-based agency in a monthly report.

The IEA said it had downgraded its estimate for winter demand among industrialised countries because of mild weather and a marked reduction in deliveries to South Korea.

Further bad news for oil producers emerged on Monday with the news that Iraq was planning to substantially raise UN-monitored oil exports in April.

The Middle East Economic Survey said that Iraqi exports under the UN's oil-for-food exchange were planned at 1.58 million bpd in April from 1.22 million in March.

Crude has lost a large portion of the gains established in a rally after the March 22 producers pact which took Brent to $15.82 a barrel.

NYMEX Crude Falls On Thin Trade, Awaits API Data

NEW YORK, April 14 - NYMEX crude fell on thin volume Tuesday as the market faced a dearth of news and awaited short-term direction from the American Petroleum Institute's stock inventory data.

NYMEX May crude lost 20 cents at $15.12 a barrel, just above the fresh $15.10 low, as the market wrestled with fears that the oil oversupply situation may linger on.

The front-month contract hit $15.60, the day's high, but quickly gave ground, breaking a minor resistance charted at $15.35-$15.40.

''There was very little going on for crude, everybody was just waiting on the sidelines,'' said a NYMEX floor trader.

May heating oil again followed crude's lead, dropping 0.27 cent at 42.54 cents a gallon but for the most part trading above its previous week's low of 42.20 cents and reaching a high of 42.90 on the day.

Traders gave a second look at reports on Monday of two medium-sized cat crackers of Phillips Petroleum and Shell Oil being idled for a week or so.

That served to support gasoline, which closed 0.23 cent higher at 50.05 cents a gallon.

''The refinery problems somehow helped gather support for gasoline,'' said a Refco Energy Group trader.

Along with that, the consensus among analysts and traders polled by Reuters is that the API data will show a draw in gasoline stocks of about 900,000 for the week ending April 10.

API's data, followed by the Department of Energy's more conclusive statistics released Wednesday morning, typically give the market a short-term lift or slide, depending on whether the inventory figures are bearish or not.

Last week, the market rose on gasoline draws in the API and DOE data, but pulled back on Thursday as the market settled down to the realization that there were big gasoline shipments expected in the next two weeks from Europe and turnaround of some facilities was adding to the already brimming stocks on storage.

The market plodded along on Monday, drifting downwards.

Meanwhile, Star Enterprise confirmed after the market closed that it shut a 100,000 bpd crude unit at its Convent Louisiana refinery due to a weekend fire.

A company spokesman said he had no estimate when the unit would be back up. The unit was taken down Sunday morning after it suffered a fire. The spokesman said the second 100,000 bpd crude unit at the plant was running normally.

U.S. Cash Crude - Short-Covering Strengthens WTS

NEW YORK, April 14 - West Texas Sour/Midland on Tuesday gained almost 10 cents in relation to the U.S. cash crude benchmark West Texas Intermediate/Cushing, traders said.

But with the 20-cent drop in the front-month futures contract, the outright price for WTS lost about 10 cents. Most other grades of U.S. crude on the cash market lost outright value in line with the NYMEX.

WTS firmness was caused by several contributing factors, traders said, including short-covering buyers. But the firmness is expected to be lived longer than a day because of of the emerging summer gasoline season, said a trader from a major U.S. oil company.

One trader said WTS differentials to WTI/Cushing should be up to around $2 shortly and go into the $1.90s after June becomes the front-month futures contract on the NYMEX.

''Is it going to go under -$1.80, probably not, but I definitely thing it's going to trade into the $2 range,'' said the trader.

Light Louisiana Sweet/St. James on Tuesday morning strengthened about five cents but by the end of the day was back to Monday's levels. It ended Tuesday talked in a -73 cent/-69 cent range.

It was done Tuesday morning at minus 70/69/68 to WTI/Cushing. But those trades, and they were said to be numerous, were all done before 1000 EDT/1400 GMT. By Tuesday afternoon, LLS was done as low as 73 cents under WTI/Cushing.

WTS was done at -$2.15/-$2.16/-$2.17/-$2.18/-$2.20. By the end of trading Tuesday, it was offered at $2.15 below WTI/Cushing and bid at -$2.19. The front-month NYMEX contract, May, closed down 20 cents at $15.12 per barrel.

WTI/Cushing was talked in a range of $15.18 to $15.24 per barrel.

WTI/Cushing postings-related plus was done at $1.94 and $1.95 over WTI/Cushing, which was a good guide for that crude's worth, traders said.

Heavy Louisiana Sweet/Empire was talked five cents stronger, and done at a $1.15 discount to WTI/Cushing. HLS was talked at -$1.15/-$1.10.

West Texas Intermediate/Midland was talked at minus 38/37 cents and done at -38 cents. Eugene Island crude was talked at minus $2.02 to minus $1.95.

Bonito Sour was talked -$1.75/-$1.65. Mars was talked at -$4.20/-$3.90 and Poseidon was in a range of - $4.70/-$4.20.

NYMEX Hub Natural Gas Ends Firmer In Lighter Volume

NEW YORK, April 14 - NYMEX Hub natural gas futures quietly ended higher Tuesday after some early shortcovering pumped May into the low-$2.50s.

But a waning open interest and mild weather forecasts bridled a sharper uptick, industry sources said.

May finished 2.2 cents higher at $2.501 per mmBtu. June settled up 1.9 cents at $2.533, while other deferred months through this autumn followed closely behind.

''We got range-bound between $2.50 and $2.52. We're outside the channel, and that could have ramifications,'' one trader said, noting basic shoulder month fundamentals were weighing on the market and would likely lead to some minor softening in Wednesday's session.

Futures still held a premium to cash prices, which fell an average of 10 cents today. Henry Hub was quoted at $2.43-2.45, while Midcontinent prices slipped to about $2.30-2.32. Appalachian values were also lower in the high-$2.50s, while New York city-gate was pegged in the mid-$2.60s.

Above-normal temperatures are expected to continue throughout much of the U.S. before cooling in the central U.S. on Thursday and Friday. Warmer-than-normal weather is forecast to remain in the Northeast into next week, while temperatures in the Southwest are expected to warm to seasonal levels by Friday, Weather Services Corp said.

Technically, traders said May resistance was still in the mid-$2.50s, and then at Monday's high of $2.635 and the $2.725 contract high. Support was seen at $2.465, and then at the double bottom at $2.33.

Separately, injection estimates for tomorrow's AGA storage report were plus three bcf to plus 50 bcf, versus a draw of 16 bcf a year ago.

The May KCBT contract settled up two cents at $2.395 per mmBtu.

US Spot Natural Gas prices Soften Early Despite Futures

NEW YORK, April 14 - U.S. spot natural gas prices were suppressed early Tuesday by mild weather, but storage demand surfaced late following NYMEX's recovery, industry sources said.

''Cash came out quite a bit lower, but as soon as the screen started coming up, storage buys began,'' one Midwest trader said, noting the higher-priced deals were reported done in late morning trade.

Stifling cash prices, however, were forecasts still calling for above-normal temperatures throughout much of the U.S. through midweek. Cooler weather is expected to seep into the Midwest on Thursday and Friday, Weather Services Corp said.

Henry Hub swing gas traded in the low-$2.40s early and the high-$2.40s late, indicating a daily loss of about nine cents.

Dragging cash higher prior to nomination deadlines was a recovery on NYMEX. May futures bounced into the low-$2.50s after dipping to a low of $2.465 on Monday.

Similarly in the Midcontinent, prices fell an average of six cents to the low-to-mid $2.30s.

Chicago city-gate gas began trading in the mid-$2.40s before stepping back up into the high-$2.40s, still off a few cents from yesterday.

In the West, southern California border prices eased only three cents to about $2.55-2.58 as scheduled maintenance on Pacific Gas Transmission's system kept supplies fairly tight.

Permian prices were quoted about seven cents lower at $2.25-2.28, while San Juan values slipped to $2.19-2.26.

In the Northeast, New York city-gate prices slipped into the mid-$2.60s, while above-normal temperatures in the region were expected to remain in the region into early next week. Appalachian values on Columbia were also lower in the mid-to-high $2.50s early and about $2.58-2.61 late.

Meanwhile, early estimates for Wednesday's American Gas Association storage report show that the gap to year-ago will likely widen. Estimates were showing an injection of three bcf to 50 bcf, versus a draw of 16 bcf a year ago.

Canadian Spot Natural Gas Prices Mostly Steady In West

NEW YORK, April 14 - Canadian spot natural gas prices remained fairly strong in Alberta Tuesday, supported by continuing tight supplies in the region, traders said.

Spot gas at the AECO storage hub in Alberta was quoted again at C$2.30-2.31 per gigajoule (GJ), while May business was reported done at C$2.25-2.27.

One-year prices at AECO were also quoted a little higher at C$2.48 per GJ.

Temperatures in southern Alberta are forecast to rise to a high of about eight degrees Celsius on Wednesday and Thursday, a Calgary based trader said.

At Sumas, Wash., export gas prices also held in the low-US$1.90s per million British thermal units (mmBtu) today due to a firm demand on the West Coast and scheduled maintenance on Pacific Gas Transmission's system.

The maintenance at Station 5, which is affecting about 200 million cubic feet per day, is expected to be completed Wednesday.

Gas for export at Niagara, however, fell another three cents to about US$2.59-2.60 per mmBtu in response to yesterday's sharp downward move on NYMEX and a waning demand in the region.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10127)4/15/1998 11:38:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1998 (4)

TOP STORIES

Gulf Canada Resources Gets French Permit For East Coast Oil Exploration
The Financial Post

Gulf Canada Resources Ltd. announced yesterday it has signed an agreement with the French government that puts it back into oil exploration off Canada's East Coast.

The deal, concluded this week, allows Gulf to look for oil in an 800,000-acre block south of the French islands of St.-Pierre and Miquelon.

The fact that Gulf is doing business with the French is ironic given that recently departed Gulf president J.P. Bryan ruffled some francophone feathers two years ago when he suggested in a message to hard-core Quebec separatists: "If a small, isolated group of you want to go back to France, we'll get you a boat."

The comments from the Texas-born Bryan sparked such a large public outcry Gulf had to install extra phone lines to handle the complaints.

But Gulf spokesman Dennis Martin said yesterday the Bryan controversy didn't surface during the current talks, which were held directly with the French government.

Under the agreement, Gulf has been granted an exclusive three-year permit to explore a block 90 miles south of the islands. It is part of a larger 5.4-million-acre exploration block, in which Gulf has a 100% interest. The area has been under an exploration moratorium since the late 1960s after being embroiled in boundary disputes between the Canadian and French governments that have since been resolved.

Gulf said the Newfoundland and Nova Scotia governments are involved in boundary discussions in the area. If negotiations are successful, Gulf will expand its drilling program. A commitment well in the French area is scheduled for 2000.

Ian Doig, the author of a Calgary-based oil and gas newsletter, said it's ironic the company is going back to Canada's offshore through an agreement with the French government after walking away from its interest in the Hibernia field in 1992 following losses of nearly $300 million. Three years later, it sold its interest in the Terra Nova field, scheduled to start producing in 2000, for $25 million.

Martin says Gulf is focusing on areas in which it can have a dominant role.

Fracmaster CEO Gets 13% Pay Hike
The Financial Post

The president and chief executive of Canadian Fracmaster Ltd. saw his salary rise by 13% in 1997 while his bonus more than tripled, according to the annual information circular released yesterday.

Les Margetak collected about $300,000 in salary last year, up from $265,000 in 1996. The big bump came from his bonus, which soared to $200,000 from $60,000.

The Calgary-based company said officers and employees can earn performance based awards. Fracmaster's profit nearly doubled in 1997 to $43.4 million from $21.9 million.

Neither Margetak nor Alfred Balm, former chairman and CEO, exercised stock options in 1997. The only senior executive to profit in this way was James Mullin, senior vice-president of Russian operations, who made $602,500 from selling 30,000 shares. He garnered $160,000 in salary and almost $92,000 in bonuses.

Enersul Smiles
Calgary Sun

Just A Few Yellow-Filled Boxcars Ago The Sulphur Industry Was A $2-Billion Business In Our Country. Now It Runs At About $250 Million A Year

Calgary Sun

Over at the Calgary Convention centre yesterday, industry analyst James Hyne of HYJAY Research and Development was telling us how one day it will again be a $2-billion business.

Sulphur is, of course, a natural byproduct of oil and natural production, and about 80% of it is used to produce sulphate phosphate and turned into fertilizer.

Some 85% of sulphur is produced in Alberta, so even though Hyne was rueful about the depressed prices in this traditionally cyclical industry, it's still a pretty big business for us.

And perhaps that's why there was little gloom on the faces of those attending a luncheon sponsored by Procor Sulphur Services in which it announced its name change to Enersul Inc.

Indeed, it was grins all over the faces of the likes of president Lorne G. Peppler, executive vice-president Terry Draycott, and vice-presidents Jim Hoover, Vic Uegama and David Brosteaux. John Price, president of subsidiary, Tiger Industries Inc., was all smiles, too, as was Irene Kaye, Enersul's executive assistant and public affairs top honcho.

Peppler, one heck of a nice fellow, said "Enersul" stood for "energy and sulphur" and more clearly identified the company's activities.

Peppler then flashed on the screen one of the best promotional commercials -- informercials -- I have ever seen.

To view it, you'd have thought Procor/Enersul was at the leading edge of the world's space-age technologists. And perhaps it is.

Procor started some 46 years ago as a small sulphur handling and processing company.

Today, its markets span the globe from Africa to South America, and from Asia to Europe. In 1970, a related company developed a process called 'slating' -- which I won't even start to try and explain -- but which drastically, or perhaps I should say dramatically, cut down on environmental and other woes association with the industry. Procor is, by all accounts, a world leader.

Peppler and his fellow-executives -- and all staffers at every level -- plan to assure it stays that way.

"Our strength is global, and so is our perspective," he said, with a confidence that wasn't at all boastful.

A very likable man, by any measure.

"If we're not growing, them we're going backwards," he said, "and this company and this industry has no intention of going backwards."

I believe him, too.

When you mention sulphur to some people, a glazed look may come over their eyes.

But there are big, and bigger wheels involved in the Canadian sulphur industry than you might imagine.

Enersul itself does about $125 million a year in business, with some $45 million in offshore sales.

Plus on the board of Alberta Sulphur Research Ltd. itself are the likes of Louis Auger, president of Shell Canada, and Pierre Simard, treasurer of Shell Canada; Lorne Friberg, vice-president of Sultran Ltd.; Doug Helgeland, vice-president of Talisman Energy, and executives Bill Armstrong of Chevron, John Hepton of Petro-Canada, Marc Tremblay of Amoco and Rick Smith of Husky Oil.

These fellows are in the oil and gas big leagues, and they are in the big leagues of the suphur industry, too.

Workers Protest Shell's Use Of 'Union Of Convenience'
Fort McMurray Today

Several tradesmen held up a delivery truck on its way to Shell Canada's pilot plant site north of Fort McMurray for about two hours Saturday.

They were protesting the use of a "union of convenience," said James Fougere, representative of the Ironworkers union local 720. He explained the Christian Labor Association of Canada is comprised of several companies banding together to block out the Alberta building trades.

Fougere said about 10 men from several unions including the laborers, pipefitters and boilermakers took part in the roadblock. The truck they stopped was delivering a module made in an Edmonton shop which uses CLAC, said Cam Stilwell, organizer for local 488 of the Plumbers and Pipefitters Union .

That is "contrary to what we like and contrary to what other places (in Fort McMurray) are doing," he said. Stilwell said the roadblock was to send the message to Shell that Fort McMurray is mostly union. "And the lads weren't overly pleased to learn this company would be making these modules and coming up under their noses," he said.

Stilwell said both Syncrude Canada and Suncor Energy used the same method of module building in the past, because there are more craftsmen in Edmonton, but they used union shops. He said the unions don't like CLAC because of its policy of non-confrontation. "If you're representing the guys how can you not be confrontational?"

Stilwell said the Alberta building trades also shun CLAC because of its policy of bargaining six months behind the rest of the unions and paying employees 25-33 per cent less. "That raises questions. Why are they allowed to do this? Why don't they try to get parity?" Shell spokeswoman Tara Black explained the module delivered last weekend is part of a small pilot plant the firm is building in preparation of a $1-billion oilsands operation. She said the protesters didn't talk to Shell about their concerns.

"Typically the union issues are between the union and the contractor," she said. "We competitively bid everything. Bidders included union and non-union. We maintain a competitive process and do not disqualify qualified contractors on the basis of their labor affiliation."

Black said the CLAC is a "registered and serious union."

She noted some union contractors declined to bid on the pilot plant because they had a high work load all ready. Black also added Shell will be using 800-1,300 construction workers a year when the main portion of the plant is built.

"We think there'll be a lot of opportunities for a lot of people," she said.

Merger Move Unnecessary
Edmonton Sun

A prospective partner in developing the former Solv-Ex Corp. oilsands project near Fort McMurray announced yesterday it has agreed to merge with its sister firm, International Reef Resources Ltd. (IRR).

United Tri-Star Resources Ltd. (UTS) said yesterday it will be the surviving company and will inherit $7 million in cash, with no debt.

Robert Hanson, senior vice-president with UTS, said his Toronto Stock Exchange company has a 31% stake in the Alberta Stock Exchange-traded IRR.

The two share the same Toronto address.

IRR has a fine coal recovery technology used to make pellets of coal dust in tailings ponds. It is finalizing coal supply agreements in Pennsylvania and West Virginia, Hanson said.

UTS has a 22% stake in a joint venture with Koch Oil Sands Limited Partnership to develop leases 5 and 52 in the Athabasca oil ands.

The partners are also evaluating techniques to extract metals and minerals from the oilsands tailings.

Solv-Ex is involved in a restructuring under the Companies Creditors Arrangement Act in Canada and under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in the U.S.

The joint venture, which Koch will operate, is subject to court approval in the United States and Canada.

Hanson said approval of Koch's purchase of 78% of Solv-Ex and UTS purchase of a 12% stake on top of the 10% it already owns is expected to occur by the end of April.

The UTS-IRR merger is to be presented to shareholders for approval June 25.

Solv-Ex started construction on its experimental oilsands extraction plant in 1996. It filed for court protection from creditors last July.

Westfort Energy Announces Right To Earn Additional Reserves

Westfort Energy, Ltd. (WT/TSE) announced hat the company has negotiated a new farmout agreement for the rights to exploit any additional oil or gas zone which might be encountered at the intervals from 12,000 feet to 16,630 feet during drilling of its upcoming deep Norphlet development well. That well is scheduled to drill to 17,350. Whitney Pansano, President of Westfort, said with the new farmout, the company can now test, evaluate and develop any oil and/or gas zone found at any depth encountered in its initial Norphlet test well, from the surface to the center of the earth, on the same terms and conditions as the company's earlier farmout agreement.

Included in the additional zones is the prolific smackover gas reservoir, which according to a report dated March, 1996 by Tierney & Associates, independent reservoir engineers, contains calculated recoverable gas in excess of 314 billion cubic feet gas. Of this, after processing, the quantities of gas constituents available for market are estimated to be: 66.6 billion cubic feet methane; 1,068,091 long tons of sulfur and 185.9 billion cubic feet of CO-2. The product value for the methane and sulfur was estimated to be over $165,000,000, while no value was calculated for the CO-2 due to a lack of available market prices at the time of the report, although a nearby operator was known to be paying $0.53/MCF at the time. In 1969 Shell Oil Co. tested the No. 1 Mashburn well flowing at a rate of 6.8 million cubic feet gas per day with over 5,000 psi tubing pressure. Gas analysis yield was 23.5 percent methane, 65.8 percent carbon dioxide, 9.3 percent hydrogen sulfide, and 1.4 percent nitrogen. Due to a lack of market at the time, the well was completed as a shut in gas well and was never produced.

Additional terms of the new farmout agreement require Westfort to pay 350,000 shares of common stock upon signing the agreement and an obligation to commence operations to develop any new formations discovered in the intervals 12,000 feet to 16,630 feet within 36 months beginning June 1, 1998.

Barra Resources Inc. Enters Into Strategic Alliance With A Private Oil & Gas Company

Barra Resources Inc. (ASE: BAO) announced that the company has entered into a strategic alliance with a well funded private oil and gas company, the principals of which have an extensive successful track record in exploration and mineral rights acquisition.

Under the terms of the alliance, Barra and the private company will cooperate to exploit prospects identified on certain of Barra's current lands, acquire additional lands and working interests and also jointly participate in future prospects developed by either party. The intent of the alliance is that each party will share equally in the assets developed as a result of this alliance. The private company will provide the funding for the initial phase of property acquisition and drilling. Barra will be the operator for drilling and operating activities resulting from this arrangement.

The parties have until December 31, 1999 to equalize their respective contributions, which may be in the form of new drilling and land acquisition expenditures or existing assets. The alliance does not provide for specific funding commitments, however it is anticipated that a total of $1.5 to $2 million will be expended through December 31, 1999.

The alliance provides Barra with the opportunity to immediately develop opportunities in certain of its core areas and acquire complementary assets without utilizing existing banking facilities or seeking new equity financing.

Moiibus Resource Corp. Closes Production Purchase

Moiibus Resource Corporation announced it has closed the purchase of 50 Boe/d of production and 1,700 net acres of undeveloped land from a non-arms length party for 1,195,349 common shares as previously announced on March 27, 1998. The common shares were issued at a price of $0.43 per share, subject to a one year hold from the date of closing. This transaction increases the Company's production to 100 Boe/d and outstanding common shares to 8,796,606.

Renco Resources (RNRS/CDN) Announces Drilling Update

Further to the Company's news release of March 10, 1998, the Company is pleased to announce preliminary drilling results regarding the first well drilled on the Caney Unit One project in Oklahoma. This project is being developed in conjunction with Commonwealth Energy Corp., and the Company's wholly-owned subsidiary, Renco Energy Inc. (the "Subsidiary").

Well logs indicate an oil sand in excess of 80 feet thick with 17 percent porosity in the Bartlesville zone. The well was drilled to a total depth of 1414 feet.

The well is currently being completed and should be on production shortly.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10127)4/15/1998 12:21:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1998 (5)

INTERNATIONAL

Primeline Energy Awards Contract for 3D Seismic Survey

Primeline Energy Holdings Inc. (VSE/PEH.) Primeline Energy Holdings Inc., (PEH.V) reported on the progress of the appraisal programme of the "Vicky" (LS 36-1) discovery, located in Block 32/32 of the East China Sea.

Following last year's successful drilling/testing of Vicky-1 well and a very encouraging post-well evaluation, the Company has been focused on an appraisal programme, initiating with a 3D seismic survey over the discovery. After an international tender, the Company has negotiated and awarded the 3D survey contract to China Offshore Geophysical Corp. (COGC) based on technical capacity and cost (estimated at US$1.5m). COGC is the pre-eminent Chinese geophysical company with much offshore 3D seismic survey experience. The survey will commence on or about 1st May 1998 and will be completed in early June. The processing and interpretation of the data will then take approximately 4-6 months with evaluation results expected at year end. The Company will then announce its plan with respect to the next round of drilling.

The 3D seismic data is important for selecting the location of the appraisal well(s) to further define the hydrocarbon reserve of the Vicky (LS36-1) discovery.

Primeline owns a 75 percent interest in Block 32/32, a 6,000 sq. km. (1.5 million acres) concession in the East China Sea. Primeline is exclusively focused on oil and gas exploration and upstream business opportunities in China. The Company's shares are listed on the Vancouver Stock Exchange under the symbol "PEH".

Trade-Americas: Energy Integration, another Key Summit Theme
Inter Press Service

Next weekend's second Summit of the Americas in Santiago will back initiatives towards freeing up -- and thus boosting -- investment and trade in goods and services in the hemisphere's energy sector.

"Energy is like the glue of hemispheric integration," U.S. Secretary of Energy Federico Pena said at the last meeting of energy ministers in Caracas. "It is the motor of development," his Venezuelan counterpart Erwin Arrieta added.

Venezuela, the continent's leading oil exporter and the United States, the world's top consumer of oil, have been pushing since the first Summit of the Americas in 1994 for energy cooperation in the region to keep up with the negotiations on the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA).

At next weekend's summit in Chile, the 34 presidents will approve an accord reached by the energy ministers designed "to promote policies and processes to facilitate trade in energy sector goods and services," in accordance with the commitments assumed by their governments in the framework of the FTAA.

Demand for energy in the Americas is growing fast, from a current consumption level of 25 million barrels a day of oil and a deficit of five million barrels, expected to double by 2010.

At the January meeting in Caracas, Pena unsuccessfully pushed for a commitment by the 34 countries involved in the FTAA process to amend their legislation and tax policies and create instruments to facilitate the freest possible flow of energy "by the year 2000."

The United States would like the energy sectors of the rest of the countries in the hemisphere to operate like its own, where private operators own all segments of the industry, the State is simply a mediator and auditor, and markets are open to trade.

Such a regime favors low-cost energy, which U.S. industry needs to compete with Europe and Asia, opens fields for sales of capital and intermediate goods and pushes up the value of the shares of its oil companies, supplied with new stocks and horizons.

But Latin America is building a wall along its northernmost border to fend off U.S. pressure. "Mexico is not discussing, and does not plan to discuss, its legislation on hydrocarbons from now to the year 2005," said Mexican Energy Secretary Luis Tellez.

The Mexican hydrocarbon industry is nationalized and closed to foreign investment. Venezuela's has been partially opened, a route being followed by Ecuador and Brazil and already taken by Argentina and Trinidad and Tobago. Colombia, a relatively new exporter, has a mixed regime.

Mexico is consuming an increasingly large proportion of the oil it produces. But while Mexico protects that key sector, Venezuela is in favor of opening its oil industry to trade, parallel to the FTAA.

According to the agreement reached by the ministers in Caracas, the Santiago summit should decide that the policies and processes facilitating trade in fuel should move ahead in line with the negotiations on the rest of the FTAA -- in other words, that trade in energy should also be opened up when the free trade zone goes into effect in 2005.

High level officials with Venezuela's Foreign Ministry told IPS that the Santiago declaration would also lay out the guidelines for "articulating" negotiations in energy, infrastructure, science and technology with the FTAA process by means of "communicating ducts."

Meanwhile, there are other governments and especially companies located all along the arch stretching between the United States as consumer of oil and Venezuela as supplier that would welcome speedier and more intense negotiations in the energy sector than for the rest of the goods and services to be discussed in the talks on free trade.

A "coordinating secretariat" to monitor the region's energy agenda emerged from the Caracas meeting, comprised of representatives of the Venezuelan and U.S. governments and the Latin American Energy Organization.

One unique characteristic of the energy sector is that trade and investment are almost always two sides of the same economic operation. The same company that invests in the extraction of oil transports it to its own refineries, for example, and sells it in its own petrol stations.

The Santiago Summit will also propose measures to stimulate the development of the necessary physical infrastructure -- such as oil pipelines and electricity grids, including cross-border systems - - for the transportation of energy products.

Other two items have been on the agenda since Miami: cooperation for supplying the countryside with electricity and for the raising and efficient use of the funding necessary for developing alternative sources of energy.

The region is looking towards an "alliance" for the sustainable use of energy, which would encourage projects using clean and cheap alternative sources, while fighting subsidies and advocating market prices to discourage waste.

But above all, the Santiago gathering will take up the aim of energy companies for the free market project to serve as a lever to boost business and links between national stocks, production, transportation and markets.

Caspian Sea: Falling Oil Prices Will Delay Foreign Investment

A top Western energy consultant says falling oil prices could cause foreign firms to postpone investments in the Caspian oil and gas fields, and delay plans to build export pipelines from the landlocked region.

Andrew Apostolou, a consultant on Central Asia from Oxford University, also says the economic crash in southeast Asia, that has caused stocks and currencies to dive in Indonesia, South Korea and Thailand, may help depress global oil demand and prices for some time to come.

Apostolou spoke to RFE/RL at a conference -- entitled Current Trends in Transitional Economies -- at the Center for Euro-Asian Studies at Reading University, outside London.

Apostolou disputes some commonly-accepted generalizations about the oil and gas reserves of the Caspian, the richest fields of which are located in Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan.

He says claims that the hydrocarbon reserves are the second largest in the world after the Gulf are probably exaggerated, and appear to originate from a U.S. National Security Council estimate in 1995 that the region has 200 billion barrels of oil and gas.

Apostolou said western energy firms put the figure smaller at 60 thousand million barrels -- about the size of the reserves located in the North Sea, albeit still large enough to sway global energy trade.

But plans to open up the Caspian reserves have been thrown into doubt by the world oil glut that has seen oil prices fall to their lowest level in real terms in years, partly because of a fall-off in Asian demand but also because of a proliferation of suppliers.

The Caspian region is at a disadvantage because its energy reserves are located in an out-of-the-way region far from world markets and in countries that are landlocked. Apostolou points to the failure so far to build a commercially viable and large-scale export pipeline west to Turkey, south to Iran or east to China.

Says Apostolou: "I don't see a pipeline being completed for maybe four years. The problem is that the longer the delay, the worse the prospects get. At the moment we have a very serious oil glut problem. And if we don't get some sort of stability in oil prices, I think you are going to see foreign firms starting to delay investments in the Caspian region."

Apostolou says Kazakhstan is desperate to get a pipeline link to western markets; while Turkmenistan, with the fourth largest reservoir of natural gas in the world, could be producing 10 times as much as right now, but both "can't get their product to market."

Apostolou also says a plan to build a 3,000 km pipeline from Kazakhstan across Xinjiang to eastern China does not make commercial sense, given present low oil prices, the 3 thousand million dollars construction cost, and the expected very high transit fees.

Apostolou is skeptical about grandiose claims that the Central Asian region is poised to become the site of a 21st Century Silk Road: a high-tech superhighway, or land bridge, linking Europe and Asia with motorways, railways, and fiber optic cables.

Historically, he says, Europeans have always found it easier to get access to east Asia by sea rather than overland. Even today, the region is very isolated in the "back of beyond", and remains sparsely populated.

Kazakhstan, five times the size of France, has only 17 million people. Apostolou says the Central Asians themselves, imagine that their countries are less peripheral than they are.

Says Apostolou: "The mistake the governments have made is to sit around and think that 'we are right at the center of the earth, at the center of everything'. If you go to Uzbekistan, there's a big globe, where they've replaced a statue of, I think, Karl Marx, and there's a huge Uzbekistan in the middle of it, the size of Latin America. Well, I'm sorry, you're not (at the center of the world.) You're marginal to the world economy and you have to integrate."

Apostolou says the governments in the Caspian region are telling their people that the new petrodollar wealth will be spent on improving living standards and redressing the imbalances left over from the Soviet era. But he says the "titular nationals" of the region -- the Kazakhs, the Turkmen and the Azeris -- are actually going to benefit least from the opening up of the new oil and gas fields.

Says Apostolou: "The people who are going to benefit overwhelmingly are urban groups who tend to have a knowledge of the specific energy sectors and who are close to the government. The Azeris, Kazakhs and Turkmen are still mostly rural, mostly quite poor, and mostly in large families. And they're not going to benefit that much."

UK Oil Firms Flock To Kuwait Hoping For Role

Major British oil and gas firms will be offering their services to Kuwait next week in the hope that a policy change will eventually allow them a role in the Gulf Arab producer's upstream operations.

British Ambassador to Kuwait Graham Boyce told reporters on Tuesday some 22 specialised firms, including British Petroleum (UK & Ireland: BP.L) and the Anglo/Dutch Shell Group (RD.AS)(UK & Ireland: SHEL.L), will participate in a British oil and gas show which opens in Kuwait on April 19.

The two global giants ''are very interested in Kuwait's plans to maximise Kuwait's oil production capabilities,'' he said. Boyce was referring to Kuwait's plan to raise capacity, currently at 2.4 million barrels per day (bpd), by one million bpd early in the next century.

Upstream operations in Kuwait, which has 10 percent of the world's proven reserves, remain firmly controlled by the state and fully owned subsidiaries of its Kuwait Petroleum Corp (KPC) despite renewed talk of a possible policy change.

''We are always keen to do more...making an even greater contribution to Kuwait's own plans to enhance productivity from the oil fields and develop related industries,'' Boyce said.

BP and Shell, like some French and U.S. oil majors, already have technical accords with Kuwait and hope to upgrade them to some form of participation in upstream operations once a policy change is introduced.

But Boyce said such a move could take several years although the U.S. embassy in Kuwait earlier said it could come by 1999.

''I think it is quite a long process,'' Boyce said. ''Clearly, if Kuwait is going to bring in foreign oil companies to play a greater role in development it has to be very carefully thought of.''

Kuwaiti officials and Western oil executives earlier told Reuters the Gulf Arab state was eager to grant foreign oil firms a role in its oil industry to boost production but it was still searching for a formula acceptable to Kuwait's parliament and foreign bidders.

There is some opposition in Kuwait to the production-sharing formula adopted by some other oil-producing countries.

Industry executives said the Supreme Petroleum Council (SPC) favoured a foreign role based on yield-linked cash incentives, a formula which could work around constitutional limitations, but details are still under consideration.

The government came under attack in parliament last year when talk of granting foreign firms a role in upstream operations resurfaced. Some MPs said production sharing would be a violation of the country's constitution.

The government and the SPC, Kuwait's highest oil policy decision making body, ''are discussing means and ways of developing production methods with foreign participation. It must benefit us and the foreign firms must also gain,'' a senior official earlier said.

Parliament's financial committee last month drafted an amended privatisation law which dropped an earlier clause prohibiting the privatisation of oil producing projects.

The full parliament is expected to discuss the draft law by the end of 1988.

Kuwait, a member of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, has a quota of 2.19 million bpd.

Gabon's Oil Production Seen Stable Till 2000

Gabon's oil output is likely to remain at current levels until 2000, oil minister Paul Toungui said.

''Output in 1998 is expected to be 18.3 million tonnes (365,000 barrels per day) compared to 18.0 million tonnes in 1997,'' he told journalists.

Toungui said he hoped an oil licensing round launched last year, involving huge areas in the deep offshore area, would result in major discoveries and revitalise the oil sector in the next century.

Ordinary Gabonese are starting to talk about the ''post-oil'' years, recognising that without major new discoveries, Gabon's oil output will probably start to decline at the start of the next millennium.

Edinburgh-based oil analysts Wood Mackenzie said in a report in December that 12 new oil field developments in Gabon with start dates from 1998 onwards would yield an average of 10 million barrels of recoverable reserves.

This compares with three new deep water field developments in Angola, further south along the same coastline, which will yield in excess of 700 million barrels apiece.

Elf-Gabon, a subsidiary of France's Elf Aquitaine (ELFP.PA), has traditionally exerted a stranglehold on Gabon's oil sector but this is changing as the age profile of Gabonese oilfields matures and the company relinquishes licensed acreage to smaller, nimbler independent companies with low overhead costs.

''Major companies like Elf and Shell see a field of less than 100 million barrels as hardly worth considering, while some of the independents will go in and work on fields of even three million barrels,'' a senior official working for a small oil company in Gabon said.

''Those big companies are moving out but if you get a major strike in deep waters here they will come swimming back like fish,'' he added.

Elf is shifting its attentions towards the giant fields further south, particularly in Angola, and in its place are coming companies such as U.S. based Amerada Hess (AHC) and Forcenergy Inc (FEN), France's Perenco, and Canadian companies Chauvco Resources International Ltd (CHV.TO) and Ocelot Energy Inc (OCEa.TO).

South Africa's Energy Africa reached a complicated blanket agreement with the Gabonese government last year over a number of different concessions and holds options to participate in some 80 percent of currently licenced territory.

Italy's Agip (AGIS.CN) has also moved in and by taking three large offshore concessions last year it became the largest holder as operator of licensed acreage in Gabon, displacing Elf.

Elf still remains the top equity producer of oil in Gabon.

The oil company official said that Elf's traditionally dominant position in Gabon was to a large extent the result of previous political leverage the company held in the former French colony, but times had changed.

''I truly think that particular type of favouritism is a thing of the past,'' he said.

He said 13,500 km of seismic data was already available for the 13 blocks offered for the latest deep water licensing round, for which bids need to be submitted by October.

These blocks lie in water depths of up to 4500 metres and because of the cost of drilling in such deep waters, bids for the licensing round are likely to be submitted almost entirely by consortiums led by the major oil companies.

''I think Gabon is no longer the private hunting ground of Elf,'' the oil company official said. ''This acreage in the licensing round is almost certainly going to be distributed entirely on the basis of the quality of the bids.''



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10127)4/16/1998 8:39:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1998 (1)

MARKET WATCH

Street Extends Win Streak

Bay Street and Wall Street each stretched their winning streaks, despite a decline in financial services stocks. Weakness in Canadian banks was nullified by a surge in telecommunication issues


The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index rose 37.12 points, or 0.5%, to 7817.65 - its 14th record close this year. About 134.6 million shares were traded on the TSE, up from 132.2 million shares traded Tuesday. Trading value amounted to shares worth $2.8 billion. Advancers outnumbered decliners 583 to 508 with 280 unchanged

The TSE 100 rose 1.69 points to 475.28.

Of the TSE's 14 index groups, the financial services sector was one of only two losers, down 1.05 per cent; the transportation group slipped 0.20 per cent.

"We had a real nice day on the TSE without the participation of the banks, which I found very interesting," said Pat Blandford, senior vice-president with Midland Walwyn Capital.

"To me, this is quite heartening, that the growth in the market is more widespread than just the bank stocks."

While the technology-heavy U.S. Nasdaq market reached its first new high since April 3, several Canadian high-tech companies posted impressive gains.

Northern Telecom closed up $3.15 at $90.80 and Newbridge Networks was up $2.65 at $40.10.

But Canada's big high-tech winner was Fonorola Corp., which gained $22.20 to $66.40 on TSE-leading volume of 4.8 million shares after Call-Net Enterprises made a $1.6-billion bid for the Montreal-based telecommunications carrier.

Fonorola (fon/tse) soared $22.20 to a record $66.40 after Call-Net said it will buy the long-distance telephone rival for $1.6 billion. Call-Net shares (cn/tse) rose $1 to $26.

Among other telephone companies, Telesystem International Wireless Inc. (tiw/tse) rose $2.40 to $33.50, BC Telecom Inc. (bct/tse) gained $1.55 to $57.25 and Teleglobe Inc. (tgo/tse) jumped $1 to $66. BCE Inc. (bce/tse), the country's largest telecommunications company, rose 50› to $59.10.

Losses by financial services stocks like Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce limited the advance.

Banks suffered modest losses amid fears the Bank of Canada will increase interest rates to shore up the loonie, which closed down 0.26 cent at 69.51 cents US.

Bank of Montreal was the biggest loser among the banks, slipping 70 cents to $85.40, while Toronto-Dominion Bank lost $0.60 to $71.40. Fairfax Financial lost $50 to $550.00

Shareholders were cashing in after strong gains in the sector thanks to merger mania in the U.S., Blandford said.

"There's still a discipline in the market," Blandford added. "People are savvy enough to take their profits if they think things are getting ahead of themselves."

Base-metals producers benefited from a shift out of some bank stocks. Another boost for the metals and minerals index, which climbed 1.8%, came from higher commodity prices. Noranda Inc. (nor/tse) rose $1.35 to $28.50 while Alcan Aluminium Ltd. (al/tse) rose 55› to $46.40.

Merchandising issues gained 2.26 per cent. George Weston Ltd. gained $5.10 to $154.10, Hudson's Bay Co. $1.30 to $33.70 and Sears Canada $1.45 to $26.80.

Utilities stocks rose 1.61 per cent.

Other Canadian markets finished mixed.

The Montreal Exchange portfolio rose 8.37 points, or 0.2%, to 3947.87. The Vancouver Stock Exchange fell 1.86 points, or 0.3%, to 634.22.

U.S. stocks rose to records after Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin said the Group of Seven nations' policy is unchanged, easing concern that a push to strengthen the Japanese yen would cut overseas demand for U.S. assets.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 52.07 points, or 0.6%, to a record 9162.27.

About 683.4 million shares changed hands on the Big Board, up from 617.4 million shares traded on Tuesday.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 3.57 points, or 0.3%, to 1119.32.

The Nasdaq composite index gained 20.23 points, or 1.1%, to an record high of 1863.26.

Computer-related companies rallied on optimism that profit growth will pick up in the coming months.

International Business Machines Corp. (ibm/nyse), up US$3 9/16 to US$109 11/16., led the Dow's advance.

Compaq Computer Corp. (cpq/nyse) gained 15/16 to US$26 3/4 after its first-quarter net income fell to US$16 million, or US1› a diluted share, matching the average estimate of analysts polled by First Call Corp.

The world's largest personal computer maker had earlier warned that weaker than expected demand would hurt first-quarter profit.

Microsoft Corp. (msft/nasdaq) rose US$2 15/16 to US$91 3/8, Computer Associates International Inc. (ca/nyse) gained 15/16 to US$55 7/16, BMC Software Inc. (bmcs/nasdaq) rose US$3 1/8 to US$90 and Adobe Systems Inc. (adbe/nasdaq) rose US$1 9/16 to US$48 1/4.

Coca-Cola Co. (ko/nyse), one of the 30 Dow components, fell US$1 1/8 to US$76 11/16 after it reported profit that matched estimates, while AMR Corp. (amr/nyse) surged US$6 5/8 to US$153 7/8 after the parent of American Airlines said earnings rose 91%, beating forecasts.

Major international markets were also mixed.

London: British shares finished lower after a promising start gave way to an uninspiring opening on Wall Street. The FT-SE 100 index fell 30 points, or 0.5%, to 6074.1,

Frankfurt: German shares surrendered early gains to close slightly higher as dealers looked for further consolidation today. The Dax index rose 13.69 points, or 0.3%, to 5388.47.

Tokyo: Stocks closed lower, pulled down by blue-chip property sales. The Hang Seng index lost 49.28 points, or 0.4%, to close at 11,371.06.

Hong Kong: Japanese stocks edged higher ahead of a meeting of the Group of Seven industrialized nations due to buying of high-tech and blue-chip issues. The 225-share Nikkei average closed at 16,299.30, up 21.98 points.

Sydney: Overseas buying, aimed mainly at banks, catapulted Australian stocks to a record finish for a second straight day. The all ordinaries index closed at 2870.5, up 29.6 points or 1%.

Pressure Mounts On Canadian Dollar
The Financial Post

The C$ renewed its decline yesterday, losing almost a third of a cent amid speculation the Bank of Canada may once again be forced to raise interest rates.

Analysts said the currency market is increasingly coming to the conclusion the C$ will only strengthen if interest rates are raised to parity with U.S. rates.

"There is the view that the Bank of Canada is going to come in and tighten [rates] to eliminate the spread," said Sherry Cooper, chief economist at Nesbitt Burns Inc.

Rate parity would attract more international investment to Canada and send the C$ higher, she said. It closed yesterday at US69.51›, down US0.31›.

While the gap in rates might be a drag on the C$, the speed of the recent slide, which came on the heels of a half-cent tumble on Monday, had analysts baffled.

"There is nothing I can see that has happened in the past few days that would have pushed it lower," said Avery Shenfeld, senior economist at CIBC Wood Gundy Securities Inc.

Bank governor Gordon Thiessen told the media in Washington yesterday the C$'s economic fundamentals remained strong. He would not comment on its recent tumble.

The bank has raised its key overnight lending rate to 5% from 3.5% last fall, largely in response to C$ weakness related to plunging commodity prices after a near collapse in many Asian economies.

Another 50-basis-point rise in the bank rate to 5.5% would lift short-term interest rates to equal those in the U.S.

The central bank raised the bank rate 50 basis points in late January after the C$ hit a record low of US69.10›. The currency rebounded to pass US71› last month, aided by excitement that a Jean Charest-led Quebec Liberal party could remove the separatist threat from the province.

In the absence of new positive developments, Shenfeld said, traders may be testing technical levels of support.

The currency fell into weaker territory when the US$ passed $1.4250 (a C$ at US70.15›).

Yesterday's midday low was US69.46›, just above another technical point of support of US69.44› ($1.44).

Shenfeld said the bank may raise rates if the C$ falls below US68.97› (a US$ above $1.45).

TRADING PLACES

Gordon Capital was legendary - its innovative style, singular leadership and machismo, the bane of Bay Street. But those days are gone. Its secretaries are no longer offered breast enlargements as bonuses. Its profits are no longer windfall. There's a new team at Gordon now, where sharing power is the belief du jour.

The question is, is anyone a believer?

The memo fluttered through the corporate finance department in the downtown Toronto offices of Gordon Capital Corp. It was Monday, November 17. A meeting had been called. Tuesday. Four p.m. Board room. Be there.

A sense of unease had been growing within the group, even before this missive, the mood beset by the arrival two weeks earlier of three people: Brad Cameron, decamped from Lehman Brothers Canada; Chris Burley, from Smith Barney Canada; and Rod Baker, who had moved to Gordon from his family's private firm. This team had been anointed a triumvirate of seers who would remake corporate finance, part of a remake of Gordon writ large, which we will get to.

The new boys had conducted interviews with their charges the first week of November. There had been prognostications, out there on the street, where there are no secrets, that Gordon's corporate finance was about to be eviscerated. There were rumours, too, that Cameron, Burley and Baker had negotiated fat compensation packages - as high as $1.8 million for two years in Cameron's case. This was not at all in keeping with the old Gordon, where compensation was predicated on deal flow.

The Gordon insiders looked at one another, attempting the uncertain calculation of who in this new iteration - and there had been many - was a keeper and who would be blown out. Would such decisions be made on the basis of deals landed in the past year or two? Or, perhaps, relationships with corporate titans going forward was the key? Neither of the above? Who knew?

On November 18, 17 people were fired. When the group in Toronto returned to their desks, their computers had been disconnected

The big moment was mere hours away. But there was a twist: Not everyone had received the memo. Whatever did that mean? Were the recipients the in-group or the out-group? The uninvited had received quiet asides. Do not come to the meeting, said the voice. Where was Dilbert when you needed him?

As the appointed hour approached, the uninvited headed up to Canoe, the sleek restaurant that serves as a favourite Gordon boŒte. The invited marched into the board room. Two outplacement experts were there from KPMG, not an encouraging sign. The news was swift, and it came from Brad Cameron, the words now ringing disjointed in peoples' memories. "Spending a lot of time." "Strategic options." "Going forward." There would be a smaller, more focused team at Gordon, Cameron told the gathered, and you're not on it. Good luck with your respective futures.

By the time the old guard, some of whom were very young and had not been at Gordon for very long, got back to their desks, their computers had been disconnected. Perhaps a touch zealous.

Earlier in the day, Cameron had flown to Montreal and put a pistol to the forehead of Gordon's corporate finance department there. In Vancouver, Ted Cape, shipped to British Columbia mere months before to begin building a corporate financepresence on the coast, was fired over the phone. Stephen Jakob, a member of the mining group in Toronto, was tracked to the R‚lais Christine in Paris, a small select hotel that Jakob and his bride had chosen for their honeymoon. Jakob had arrived in Paris feeling relatively secure about his future at Gordon. The mining group had led on the SouthernEra issue (diamonds, private placement, $17 million) and was co-lead on Greenstone (gold, bought deal, $54 million). As a result, Gordon had beat the street in the mining business just the previous month. In most years, mining contributed close to 20% of Gordon's corporate finance business. Just before leaving Gordon's offices on Thursday, Jakob had met with Cameron and Baker. The new rulers sought Jakob's views on redesigning the department. The tˆte-…-tˆte certainly felt inclusive.

It was just before dinner, Paris time, when Cameron spoke to Jakob again. The strategy of the firm had changed. There was no room for him at Gordon. Jakob had not expected to be tested on the "for richer, for poorer" part quite so swiftly. He drank a little more than he should have that evening. "Gordon is an empty shell," he says now of corporate finance. "They're starting from, if not zero, close to ground zero." In all, 17 people were let go.

The firm lived and died by the legendary Connacher, who was slapped with a 90-day trading ban in 1993. He was never the same again

Brad Cameron does not have the cast of a carpet bomber. Boyish-looking at 40, blond, affable, a father of five, Cameron has been through these doors before. In November, 1994, he left RBC Dominion Securities' virgin mergers and acquisitions department to join Gordon's corporate finance group. He lasted precisely 12 months. There had been the odd highlight: Advising Gerry Schwartz on his failed attempt to take over Labatt was one. But Gordon became progressively destabilized, the debates between the partners increasingly antagonistic, the outlook grim.

Gordon had had a legendary past, and that was part of what originally lured Cameron to the firm. Built in the image of Jimmy (The Piranha) Connacher, Gordon was a boutique brokerage that crafted its reputation on its trading prowess in the 80s - particularly its mastery of the so-called block trade, in which a minimum of 100,000 shares change hands. Connacher also introduced the bought deal, in which the firm bet its own capital by taking entire share issues for its own account. Gordon's client base was institutional, meaning that its focus was pension funds, mutual funds and corporations. Retail investing - pushing money for regular folk - was for sissies.

Those are merely the mechanics. The Gordon power, its great strength, was its ability to make quick decisions and act. That was a product of Connacher, who for a time was the greatest practitioner of brokering in the country. He forged close alliances with the likes of Edper, the Toronto Bronfman empire, and much business went Connacher's way as a result. It was from this time that stories of breast augmentation offered up to secretaries as a form of year-end bonus grew and grew and grew. The firm's machismo aroma was legendary, and many bright, young people offered themselves up to it.

Con't



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10127)4/16/1998 8:54:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1998 (2)

MARKET WATCH

Gordon Capital, Con't

But that was long ago. Externally, the banks bought other brokerages; as a result, their capital bases, breadth of services and the troops of workers hired to sell those services grew exponentially. Internally, there was a front running scandal and a bond debacle that stomped on the firm's capital. In 1993, Connacher was banned from trading for 90 days, which, from a regulatory point of view, seemed a mere slap on the wrist. Still, those who knew Connacher said he was never the same again. That he had led the firm in a virtual vacuum, that he had failed to move the magic to younger partners spawned a succession crisis. In 1994, it was announced that Gordon would be steered by committee, with Connacher, Ron Lloyd and Jeff Green at the helm.

Committee rule was a disaster. There were complaints that in this "inverted pyramid of greed," as one ex-Gordonite puts it, the younger partners were not getting their fair share. There was talk, too, of selling the firm (ScotiaMcLeod and Midland Walwyn were two that came forward). There were dire predictions for the future. "People were wondering how Gordon was going to continue to prosper in the new environment," says Cameron. "I was of the view that we didn't need to make a big change. We just had to do what we were doing better."

In the fall of 1995, Richard Li, one of two scions of the multibillion dollar Hong Kong based clan, picked up control of Gordon. It seemed a somewhat romantic purchase. After all, Li had worked at Gordon in the late 1980s, when he was barely in his 20s and Gordon was riding high. He had a small piece of the firm, 15%; the fall acquisition increased it to 50.1%, majority control that comes with a so-called golden vote. Now it was Li who would determine Gordon's future, and it was Li who would take the company there. He spoke of merchant banking and of how Gordon could be a point of light in Asia. The firm's traders, who thrived on short term investing, balked, as did its senior partners, for whom the absence of a controlling shareholder had been part of the firm's appeal.

For Brad Cameron, it was an emotional and stressful time. There were offers, which he passed on. Instead, he headed out on his own, advising OMERS, the mighty Ontario pension fund, before joining Lehman. The Li purchase, says a Gordon insider of the time, "didn't look smart. It didn't give us anything." Cameron will only say that "Given the background, I think we basically had no choice but to do the deal."

Gordon continued its rudderless course for a time. Finally, in March of 96, Li presented the man who - at least, this is the way it was seen at the time - would lead Gordon to a new land. He held a small press conference, speaking in his oddly guttural tones, sipping tea poured by his girlfriend. He described this firm that he would control but would not steer - how it would become a "beachhead," as he termed it, for growth abroad. His presentation seemed discordant with the Gordon crisis, ignoring the crippling troubles at home.

To Li's left sat the new head of Gordon: not Moses, but Ken Davidson, just out of the CIBC, where he had put out fires on such corporate files as Olympia & York and Edper. Davidson knew risk, but he did not know the brokerage business, so he took a pragmatic approach: Study the business, steady the firm and lure top talent to carry out a new strategy. The trouble, according to some who became disillusioned with Davidson's stewardship, was that he didn't have a clue what that strategy should be. And it was difficult, in a bull market, to persuade the street's top talent to come to Gordon and give Davidson a strategy. The first and most obvious issue was corporate finance.

In December, 1996, Davidson named Dennis Dewan, partner in a small brokerage that Gordon had swallowed that year, as the new department head. Dewan was presented, says a former co-worker, as "the man with the plan." That same month, Davidson hired Ted Cape, who is rumoured to have negotiated a big-figure, no-cut contract before he would walk through Gordon's doors. (Neither Dewan nor Cape would agree to be interviewed for this story.)

Dewan believed, or came to believe, that Gordon was disturbingly dysfunctional. From corporate finance types who did not connect with clients often enough, to friends of Jimmy who remained in Gordon's employ, to out-of-control expenses, changes needed to be made.

Before Dewan arrived, there had been missteps. Gordon bailed on a $674-million debt issue for Sherritt International, Ian Delaney's play on Cuba. Gordon had been lead underwriter on Sherritt International's first share issue, in 1995. The relationship with Delaney was Jeff Green's, and Green did the architectural work on the subsequent deal. Then, Davidson pulled the plug, citing nervousness about the Helms-Burton Act and potential retribution. But against whom? The Li family has extensive investments in the United States. Davidson sits on the board of Richard Li's Century Pacific Group and is his point-person on matters far more wide ranging than the brokerage business. In the end, Griffiths McBurney served as underwriter. Aside from the way the Sherritt affair looked on the street, there was the disappointment of the big five-figure cheques that the people in corporate finance did not collect - not at all the Gordon of old.

Davidson tried, as he says, to "be out there, on file and available" to the country's business elite. Laidlaw? "I met with [Jim] Bullock several times." Husky? "John Lau is a friend of mine." But Davidson had other matters to attend to, including alliance discussions in the United States with brokerages Bear Stearns & Co., Jefferies & Co. and Donaldson Lufkin & Jenrette Inc. The U.S. firms were eager to get access to Asia, and Gordon, through Li, could offer that.

So the job of rebuilding corporate finance fell largely to Dewan, who quickly learned what Davidson already knew: It was difficult to lure "proprietary brains," as they say within Gordon. The firm was messily run. Everyone knew that. It had fallen lower and lower in brokerage rankings. In the mid-1980s, it was third in underwriting. Now, it isn't in the top 10. Its market share in trading, once in the double digits, is now a soft six. Make it five. Its corporate finance revenues, at roughly $50 million in each of the past two years, could have been better. Much better.

It is not clear when Ken Davidson decided that Dewan's efforts were inadequate. Sometime in the summer of 1997, he says. So what was it, precisely, that wasn't working? He prefers not to use names, but he will say there were two possible directions for the company. One is the bank model, sized down: offering a broad range of services pushed to market by large numbers of employees. The other approach: a trim, tightly focused group that offers a small menu of services. The former, we can infer, was Dewan's stated intention, for it was this that Davidson began to reject last summer.

The ground started to shift under Dennis Dewan's feet in July. Davidson announced the hiring of Terry Shaunessy from Gryphon Investment Counsel Inc. Shaunessy has a 20-year history on Bay Street, including years as an analyst at Merrill Lynch and portfolio management at Gryphon. He moved to Gordon to run the firm's research department and had a clear idea of what needed to be done. "It has to be research that gives the firm its cachet," he says, explaining that offering a bank-like slate of services is a mug's game, and trying to build a firm on trading expertise is yesterday's game. The objective became producing the best information on the street in six sectors - traditional areas such as mining, and growth sectors such as health sciences. Research would now lead the firm - a radical departure, says Shaunessy.

In early October, in what now appears a last-ditch effort, Dewan tabled a 30-point action plan that championed a tighter focus and seemed to reflect Davidson's latest thinking, which in turn reflected Shaunessy's thinking. It was too late. Davidson had already hosted a dinner at the Tom Jones steakhouse in downtown Toronto, a "closing dinner," as Shaunessy calls it, featuring Cameronet al. Davidson had his new team, and he could sum up the challenge they faced succinctly: "Costs too high. Quality too low." On November 3, Dennis Dewan introduced himself to Brad Cameron. The next day, he was gone.

In his days at Dominion Securities, Brad Cameron worked with Chris Burley and Rod Baker. "We move each other's minds," he says. "This industry is all about moving peoples' minds." The opportunity presented by Davidson - to work with this same group - was similar to a start-up, leveraging off of what still is a franchise: the Gordon name. "I did not want to come back and be just another special interest group in this firm," he says. "I wanted to come back in the context of a management team that could make decisions." Davidson swears the power has been pushed down to this new generation. It extends to Bob Barootes in sales and Gerry Gravina in trading. Add John Warwick, who has been at Gordon for eight years, and Davidson will say he has put together the best of the brightest. Gordon is still being run by committee, just a bigger one.

The new generation says that, at least thus far, the power has been theirs; now they have to prove they know what to do with it. "We need to get back in the business of being a strong competitive edge to get this firm back into the limelight," says Cameron. And what might that competitive edge be? "The honest advice business," he says.

It works like this: Gordon develops tight relationships with smart entrepreneurs. The smart entrepreneurs seek successful transactions, priced right, fully subscribed, a success going forward. Underlying the corporate analysis is insightful, independent research, they say. Then, the institutional equity clients, the "buy" side of the street, are meant to look to this same research in helping them make their investment decisions. "It's principal thinking," says Cameron. "Our clients are our principals, be they corporate issuers and entrepreneurs trying to make moneymaking decisions or institutional equity clients trying to make money in the marketplace." In trying to increase deal flow, says Cameron, other firms have stopped thinking this way.

And no wonder. Trading now draws a mere three to five cents a share to any brokerage's revenues. And there are no longer any trading tricks that are proprietary: The bought deal has long been a Bay Street standard. The margins are in corporate finance - underwriting share issues, for example. In this, a brokerage can reap as much as 5% of the face value of the deal. Gordon will be selective in this line of work, says Cameron. "We have a relationship right now with Ian Delaney and Rai Sahi [Russel Metals] that the rest of the street doesn't have," he says. That seems a stunning statement in light of what happened to Sherritt. When Davidson ordered that Gordon would not close that deal, Jeff Green handed the file over to Griffiths McBurney. The incident made Gordon look like a firm of, well, bankers. Delaney declined to be interviewed. Green left Gordon in December. "This business is still a relationship business," says one fund manager who relied on Green's corporate intelligence. "Jeff Green was the glue at the place." In February, yet another Sherritt deal went to market, led by Griffiths McBurney. Five other underwriters participated. Gordon was not among them.

Terry Shaunessy is sitting window-side at Canoe, a cigarette and a Scotch at the ready, playfully reliving the past horrors of his days as an analyst. Like the time he got behind Pagurian Corp. and its sister company, International Pagurian, merchant bank creations of Christopher Ondaatje. Shaunessy got way ahead of the party on the Pagurians, a believer, a young acolyte. He can't exactly recall the price that his buy recommendations went out at before the stocks went south. After the wipe-out, he remembers what it was like to face the choice of telling clients either that he had deceived them or that he was naive. He chose to tell them he was merely stupid. He recalls how convinced he was that Dome Petroleum would never, ever fail. There are many on Bay Street who remember the Dome Pete days, of mustering the courage to change their buy recommendations to sells, the grief they took from the sales desk for that, and from the clients who bought shares on their say-so. "The analyst is now wearing this thing, and it's a pig, and all of a sudden the reception from institutional clients is frosty," says Shaunessy. That, he adds, is the other side of making money. In a hot market particularly, the temptation is huge to get behind any old thing. Instead, Shaunessy proposes a motto, like a Boy Scout: "We will do corporate finance only when it is in the interest of institutional clients." It sounds very high-minded, very moral. It doesn't sound like Gordon. That is the point. This is not an exercise in public relations. It is time, says Shaunessy, to say, "I'm going to tell you the real story. I'm not the mouthpiece for the company."

Shaunessy says he told Ken Davidson that this iteration is "your last chance to set this thing straight." He figures Team Gordon will know in 12 months if it's working.

Ken Davidson is holding onto his keys. He does not have the smooth, glossy pelt of the men who have made it to the top of what is, let's face it, a business of high self image people who massively exaggerate their value. For someone whose intellectual arrogance and elliptical style have been known to drive workers to drink, Davidson is surprisingly likable. Down-to-earth. He describes his time at the CIBC: "They wanted to make changes in risk and they said, `How'd you like to go to risk?' And I said, `How'd you like to leave me alone?' And I ended up going to risk."

Davidson describes himself as Gordon's "transition person." And anyone who wants to interview him had better get it right. "The worst thing that could happen to me would be if this story came out as some sort of command-and-control historical enterprise. That's incorrect and of no value to me at all." He is, he says, a representative of Richard Li's equity: "My arrangement with the Lis is very simple. I told them, `I will get you the future. I will not be the future.' "

It seems to have taken a long time. "It has taken me 20 months," he says. "I thought it would take 10." Now, he suggests, Gordon is ready for battle, and its competitive advantage, he says, is its people. But that's what any of the non-bank-owned brokerages would claim. And the chief complaint about Davidson is that he offered assurances to the previous people, too, people like Stephen Jakob, who would walk through that open door of Davidson's during the bull market of 97, when employment offers were in the ether. Should I stay or should I go, he would ask. Davidson, says Jakob, encouraged him to stay. "The assumption in all of this is you're faultless in making the changes you have to make," says Davidson. "You're never faultless."

More changes are on the way. Gordon has a large back-office staff that occupies much of the space directly below its trading floor, where Jimmy Connacher would stand at 7:30 a.m. and get everyone revved for another frenetic day. The task of reshaping the back office has been taken up by Rod Baker, who hopes to spin it into a stand-alone entity. The structure of this is not yet clear. Baker knows that nerves are frayed. "Change is always difficult," says Baker, 32. "We are sensitive to the people side of the business."

Brad Cameron offers a quick Gordon tour, past the windowed board room where the morning meetings are held, round the corner to the corporate finance clearing house, where the first snapshot is of empty desks, then the core group that remains. A little further on is Jimmy Connacher's office, and there he sits, sucking on a thin, tipped cigar, talking on the telephone. One thing has not changed at Gordon: Jimmy Connacher is not for interviewing.

At the other end of Connacher's office sits Bob Fung, a man who single-handedly landed big corporate finance business and who personifies the old Gordon as much as Connacher himself. He is casually dressed, as is Connacher. Cameron says Fung does not really work here. He's just tidying up some old business. Connacher, too, has some files to clean up, though it's not entirely clear what they are. They say Connacher would love to have Richard Li buy out the shares he holds in the firm, estimated at between 10% and 14%. Davidson denies that Connacher is handcuffed in any way. There is talk about a big, swish farewell fete for Connacher in the spring, something high profile enough that the celebration would martyr Jimmy, and he would be gone once and for all. No one will elaborate. This is a sensitive issue.

When it happens, the power will not just have passed down, but will be seen to be passed to this new generation, whose aim is to run Gordon as a collegial collective. This is not some titular transfer of power, not "one of those sham things," says Davidson. Will it work? Davidson knows there are those on the street who bet that it won't. "I know there are many people in this industry who categorically disagree with me," he says. "Perhaps the single command and control is right for this company, in time. My experience is a good team will kill a single individual any time."

Interesting turn of phrase. On January 30, Scott Riddell, Steve McDaniel, Andrew Lees and John Lloyd-Price, survivors of the November purge and virtually Gordon's entire corporate finance team in Calgary, walked out the door. Calgary is, of course, Gordon's base for its coverage of the oil-and-gas industry, a sector that consistently pulls in more corporate finance revenue than any other. The four escapees headed over to Midland Walwyn. Brad Cameron said he was unconcerned - Chris Burley was to take over in Calgary. That was the plan all along. "He's the future," says Cameron. "We've made a big bet on him."

Ken Davidson has made a big bet, too. Curiously, at the end of an interview, he turns the tables. "What," he asks, "do you think of the plan?"