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


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10249)4/22/1998 2:04:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
FIELD ACTIVITIES / First Star Energy Comments On Strachen Well

FIRST STAR ENERGY LTD.
ASE SYMBOL: FST

APRIL 21, 1998

First Star Energy Exploration Update

CALGARY, ALBERTA--First Star Energy Ltd. ("First Star") advises
that the Strachan 3-22-8-39W5M well has reached a total measured
depth of 4,340 meters in the Cambrian. Logging is expected to be
completed on April 23.

First Star, in consultation with its partners, will evaluate
drilling data and wireline logging information to determine
whether the running of casing to total depth is warranted. (First
Star 20 percent BPO, 25 percent APO).

The operator has invoked tight hole status and participants are
not at liberty to disclose any further information at this time.

As reported by news release dated March 27, the well is already
cased to an intermediate depth of 3,420 meters.

First Star is listed on the Alberta Stock Exchange under the
symbol "FST".



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10249)4/22/1998 10:42:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1998 (1)

MARKET WATCH

Strengthening gold stocks boosted Bay Street to its first gains in two days. Big Blue's report of better than expected earnings surprised investors and spurred the Dow to another record.

Canadian stocks were mixed as a wave of robust profits boosted earnings optimism, offsetting another decline in major banks.

The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index rose 11.16 points to 7765.52 after seesawing between a loss of 28 points and a gain of 41 points earlier in the day. About 124.7 million shares changed hands, up from about 100 million shares traded on Monday.

Overall in Toronto, six of the TSE 300's 14 subindexes closed higher, led by a big 4.7 percent jump in the gold and precious minerals index. The index climbed after the June price for Comex gold rose US$3.00 to US$312.60.

The metals and minerals index also pushed the market higher with a 1.2 percent jump. The consumer products sector rose 0.5 percent.

Tempering the gains was a 0.4 percent drop in the financial services sector as investors continued to sell off their bank holdings following Friday's announcement that two more Canadian banks intend to merge.

The paper and forest products sector fell 0.36 percent. ''It looks like (investors) have handed the baton over to the more cyclical stocks,'' said ABC Fund's Irwin Michael, noting the shift away from the banking stocks.

This move came after Finance Minister Paul Martin hinted there is still no decision on the mergers proposed by the country's largest banks.

''There's a little bit of concern here that Paul Martin is sending a message that it's not a done deal with mergers in the banks. There is that doubt,'' said Michael.

Banks posted their biggest three-day decline since Jan. 12. Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (cm/tse) fell 30› to $51.50 and Toronto Dominion Bank (TD/TSE) lost 30› to $66.70. The TSE financial services subindex fell 39.06 points to 10,156.1.

Gains by Barrick Gold Corp., BCE Ltd. and Placer Dome Inc. added 17 points to the index while Northern Telecom Ltd. cut 12.5 points.

Barrick (abx/tse) posted its steepest single-day jump since Jan. 23 after it posted first-quarter profit of $75 million, or 20› a share, on revenue of $305 million in the period ended March 31, compared with a profit of $55 million (15›), on revenue of $306 million in the same period last year. The shares rose $1.75 to $32.40.

Placer Dome (pdg/tse) climbed $1.70 to $21.20.

Among industrials, Magna Cl A gained $3.05 to $106.35; Nortel (ntl/tse) fell $3.70 to $91.70, but its majority owner BCE (BCE/TSE) rose 50› to close at $61.35.

Other Canadian markets ended mixed. The Montreal Exchange portfolio rose 3.74 points to close at 3901.18. The Vancouver Stock Exchange was virtually flat, falling 0.69 of a point to 632.51. The Alberta Stock Exchange fell

U.S. stocks rose after International Business Machines Corp. did not warn of slowing profits in its first-quarter earnings report, suggesting earnings for a variety of companies may be better than expected.

The Dow Jones industrial average gained 43.1 points, or 0.5%, to a record 9184.94.

About 680.7 million shares changed hands on the Big Board, up from about 601 million shares traded on Monday.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 2.69 points, or 0.2%, to 1126.34.

The Nasdaq composite index rose 16.73 points, or 0.9%, to a record 1903.87.

IBM shares (ibm/nyse) rose US$8 3/8 to US$118 after the company said late Monday it earned US$1.06 a diluted share in the first quarter, beating Wall Street estimates by 1›.

Computer chip maker Intel Corp. and Dell Computer Corp. took heart from the news. Intel shares (INTC/NASDAQ) rose US$2 7/16 to US$78 15/16 while Dell (DELL/NASDAQ) rose US$4 11/16 to US$74 3/8.

Chase Manhattan Corp. and Exxon Corp. also advanced after reporting higher than expected first quarter earnings. Exxon (xon/nyse) rose 1/4 to US$73 5/16 after it said it earned US86› a share, US20› better than consensus estimates.

Chase (cmb/nyse) rose US$4 9/16 to US$139 1/8 after news its earnings grew to US$2.35 a share, US9› better than expected.

Little-known technology companies clicked amid hopes that their links to Internet retailing would drive future profits, analysts said.

The stock price of 7th Level Inc. (sevl/nasdaq) soared US$7 7/16 to US$9 1/4 after it teamed up with WavePhore Inc. to expand its Internet animation technology.

Pfizer Inc. (pfe/nyse) rose for a fourth day, climbing US$2 13/16 to US$116 3/16 on optimism that its new impotence pill will be a best-seller. The stock soared almost 8% Monday and, with value of US$151 billion, Pfizer is now ahead of Merck & Co. as the largest drug company in the U.S.

Major international markets also were mixed.

London: Britain's FT-SE 100 index closed flat in a session dominated by index futures-led trading. The FT-SE 100 closed at 5955, up 0.9 of a point.

Frankfurt: German stocks ended lower, but came off earlier lows after a slight rebound on Wall Street lifted spirits, which had previously been hit by the weakness of the US$ against the mark. The Dax closed at 5388.94, down 53.06 points or 1%.

Paris: Stocks were down 1.5 percent, dragged lower by the weaker dollar and falling bond prices. ''The principal problem today is the dollar,'' one trader said. Traders said dollar stocks, notably oil stocks, could be hit hardest by profit-taking. In currencies, the dollar was looking less robust and lost nearly a pfennig in early trade.

Caracas: Stocks closed ahead for the second straight session in line with firming oil prices, but an expected rise in Venezuelan interest rates could cut short any rally, brokers said. ''Investors are watching oil prices and worried about interest rates,'' Profimerca broker Eduardo Franco said. The bolsa's 15-share (IBC) index edged up 0.2 percent to end at 6,992.02 points on trade of 173 million shares worth five billion bolivars ($9.4 million), according to preliminary figures from the exchange.

Sydney: The Australian stock market ended moderately weaker due to profit taking and a negative lead from Wall Street overnight. The all ordinaries index closed at 2866.4, down 6.1 points or 0.2%

Wellington: New Zealand share prices closed mostly lower, with brokers noting uneven buying interest during the session. The NZSE-40 Capital Index fell 16.33 points, or 0.7 percent, to 2,310.46.

Tokyo: Shares rebounded after skidding for three straight days. A temporary halt in futures selling by life insurers and other institutional investors helped lift share prices, traders said. The benchmark Nikkei Stock Average of 225 selected issues rose 128.57 points, or 0.82 percent, closing at 15,825.67. On Monday, the index had slipped 6.70 points, or 0.04 percent.

Hong Kong: The Hang Seng Index, the Hong Kong market's key indicator of blue chips, fell 183.37 points, or 1.6 percent, closing at 10,968.26. On Monday, the index had gained 150.31 points. Brokers said share prices fell in reaction to Monday's announcement that last month's unemployment rate stood at 3.5 percent, an increase of 0.6 percentage point from the previous month, and 1 percentage point above the 2.5 percent figure from the end of January.

Jarkarta: Dealers at the Jakarta Stock Exchange said there was selling across the board after Bank Indonesia, the nation's central bank, raised interest rates by between 3 and 6 percentage points in an attempt to strengthen the rupiah. The stock exchange's key Composite Index fell 10.449 points to 497.707. Inflation and unemployment are soaring in Indonesia as it weathers its worst economic crisis since the 1960s. The slump was spurred by a plunge in the value of the rupiah last year.

Manila: Share prices closed lower on profit-taking. The Philippine Stock Exchange index of 30 selected stocks fell 5.12 points, or 0.2 percent, to 2,151.48.

Taipei: Share prices closed lower as investors remained worried about the prospects for technology stocks. The market's key Weighted Stock Price Index fell 68.36 points, or 0.8 percent, to 8,440.20, following Monday's 2.5 percent fall.

Seoul: Share prices closed higher in what brokers described as a technical rebound following recent sharp falls. The main Korea Composite Stock Price Index rose 3.48 points, or 0.7 percent, to 439.21.

Singapore: Share prices closed mostly lower on renewed jitters sparked partly by the interest rate increase in Indonesia, dealers said. The Straits Times Industrials Index fell 1.2 percent, or 18.05 points, 1,492.34.

Kuala Lumpu: Malaysian share prices closed lower as investors found more reason to sell amid flagging confidence in corporate stability. The benchmark Composite Index fell 10.31 points, or 1.6 percent, to 623.98.

Bankok: Thai share prices closed mixed. The Stock Exchange of Thailand index edged up 0.86 point, or 0.2 percent, to 435.23.

Competitive? Canada's #10

LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) -- Japan fell to 18th place on the list of the world's most competitive countries last year, while the United States stayed in the top spot, a survey to be released today shows.

Canada retained its number 10 ranking.

Japan's drop in the World Competitive Yearbook annual rankings reflects its economic crisis, the report said. It was in second place five years ago.

The U.S. retained its No. 1 place thanks to free-market policies like privatization and a flexible labor market, the survey said. The study compares the competitiveness of 46 countries by measuring economic strength, government policies, financial services, infrastructure, management, science and technology, education and training.

Singapore and Hong Kong held second and third places, respectively.

NAIC Annual Top 100 Stock Survey of Investment Clubs Shows Industry Diversity; PepsiCo. Knocks Motorola From Number One Position
National Association of Investors Corp.

Highlights from NAIC Better Investing Magazine, April 1998

PepsiCo, Inc. unseated Motorola as the most popular stock among America's investment clubs for 1998, according to the National Association of Investors Corp. (NAIC). The not-for- profit organization of investment clubs and individual investors published its annual ranking of the 100 most popular and widely held common stocks of investment clubs in its Better Investing magazine this month.

Fourteen new companies from eight different industries broke into the Top 100 this year, indicating a healthy diversity among various industries. Less than half of the fourteen new stocks are high technology oriented, showing that investment clubs also view other industries as having long-term growth potential.

Tricon Global Restaurants, a former PepsiCo. subsidiary spin-off that includes Kentucky Fried Chicken, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell, replaced McDonald's Corporation [NYSE:MCD] in the number four position on its first trip to the Top 100. The Golden Arches dropped down to number eight.

Other newcomers to the Top 100 list solidify the fact that clubs have been investigating industries other than technology, consumer products and healthcare that usually make up a large portion of the Top 100. Global Marine, Inc. (No. 68), an offshore driller and oil and gas explorer; Monsanto Co. (NYSE:MTC -No. 77), an agricultural biotechnology and life sciences firm; and United States Filter Corporation (NYSE:USF -No. 79), a water industry leader and acquisitor; have caught the attention of many of America's investment clubs.

Investment clubs may be diversifying, but they have not ignored high technology stocks. Oracle Corporation (Nasdaq:ORCL -No. 24), Gateway 2000 (No. 54), Compaq Computer Corporation (NYSE:CPQ - No. 63), Cabletron Systems (No. 71) and Sun Microsystems (No. 90) all broke into the Top 100 this year for the first time, and Intel Corporation (Nasdaq:INTC) advanced to the number two position from number five last year. Although volatile and sometimes difficult to grasp, the high technology sector is today's major direction for commerce and proves to be a wide path for future growth.

''Even when companies move down in ranking, it seems that the number of clubs holding the stock and the number of shares continue to increase. This indicates that our members hold stocks for a long period of time, which is one of the four key NAIC investing principles, and a key to stock market success,'' said Kenneth Janke, NAIC President and CEO.

NAIC encourages its members to follow four principles when investing, that include buying growth stocks, diversifying portfolios, reinvesting dividends, and holding onto a stock for the long term while investing a set amount each month, regardless of market conditions.

More than 5,489 clubs participated in the 15th annual NAIC survey -- an increase from the 4,600 clubs that responded last year. A chart showing the Top 100 stocks, ranked by number of clubs holding them in their portfolios, can be found on pages 40 and 41 of the April 1998 issue of Better Investing.

NAIC is a national, non-profit organization of investment clubs and individual investors, based in Madison Heights, Michigan. Founded in 1951, NAIC is dedicated to increasing the number of individual investors in common stocks, and to providing a program of investment education and information to help its members become successful, long term, lifetime investors. NAIC currently has over 700,000 members
representing more than 36,000 investment clubs. The average NAIC member invests $38 per month in an investment club. The aggregate monthly NAIC membership investment of new money exceeds $42 million. The total holdings of NAIC members exceed $64 billion.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10249)4/22/1998 10:52:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1998 (2)

OIL & GAS

Oil Firmer as Iraq Rhetoric Touches Nerve

LONDON, April 21 - Oil prices firmed on Tuesday, pushed higher by rallying U.S. product prices and verbal skirmishes between Iraq and the United States over U.N. arms inspections.

Benchmark Brent blend for June loading closed 12 cents up at $14.51 a barrel on the London futures exchange, but down from a session peak of $14.68 in a bout of late profit-taking.

A strong performance by heating oil on New York markets, gasoline in paricular, helped to nudge crude prices higher.

But exchanges between Iraq and Washington over arms inspections also gave the market a supportive tone.

Dealers said prices drew strength from a commentary in Iraq's most influential newspaper Babel that the United States had sent its defence secretary to the Middle East to prepare for a military strike against Iraq.

Further support came from a warning that low prices could cut as much as 100,000 barrels per day (bpd) from U.S. crude output as smaller producers are forced to shut in marginal wells.

A new study by the head of the Independent Petroleum Association of American (IPAA) forecast U.S. production to drop to 6.3 million bpd this year, undermining the country's longer-term balance between supply and demand.

''As bad as oil prices are, the reality is that we will be challenged to meet demand,'' said George Yates, IPAA chairman. ''The longer-term outlook for oil is very positive and we need to invest with that in mind.''

The market was also underpinned by reports of a first sale of 1.85 million barrels of oil under a German tender to buy 22 million barrels of North Sea crude over the next six months.

''We're looking at the Iraq news and also the German tender. They're both supportive,'' said one London dealer.

He cited concern over a discussion at the U.N. Security Council expected later this week of a report by weapons inspectors that they had made almost no progress in the past six months in verifying that Iraq had destroyed any remaining weapons of mass destruction.

Such verification is a key condition for lifting sanctions. Downward pressure on prices has come from traders' scepticism that Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) producers, committed to 1.25 million barrels a day (bpd) of reductions, will do as they say.

To date this year, Brent has run $5 a barrel lower than the average of $19.80 over the past two years, giving producers every incentive to stick by promised pledged output cuts.

The Iraqi newspaper Babel, owned by President Saddam Hussein's eldest son Uday, said in a front-page editorial on Tuesday: ''William Cohen's tour in the Arab homeland aims at consulting with American allies to identify what should be done against Iraq.''

''This means that guard dogs start barking again to prepare the ground for an aggression that was impossible to commit because of world condemnation,'' the paper said.

Cohen has been on a Middle East tour to reassert U.S. support for the stalled Middle East peace process.

The United States, which maintains a strong military presence in the Gulf, threatened a few months ago to launch military strikes against Iraq to force it to comply with U.N. resolutions, particularly those on U.N. weapons.

The threat of force was averted when U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan struck a deal in February with Iraqi leaders guaranteeing inspectors could enter any site in Iraq including eight disputed ''presidential sites.''

In Washington, State Department spokesman James Rubin on Monday accused Baghdad of failing to cooperate with weapons inspectors despite Annan's agreement with Iraq.

He said the time was far away when U.N. sanctions imposed for Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait could be lifted.

NYMEX Crude Up As May Expiry, Gasoline Rally

NEW YORK, April 21 - NYMEX crude oil and refined products futures posted gains Tuesday, ahead of the expiration of the May contract and after getting a lift from gasoline, which rallied on expectations of supportive inventory data.

May crude settled at $15.45 a barrel, up four cents on the day. The buying surge pushed the May contract to a high of $15.61 in the afternoon after trading range bound in the morning and dropping to a low of $15.18 before rebounding.

''Some profit-takers came in as we moved up,'' said one trader, ''and that knocked us down a bit at the close.''

The June contract settled at $15.98, up by seven cents.

Refined products rallied in anticipation of draws in stock inventory data for the past week from the American Petroleum Institute.

A survey by Reuters showed that analysts and traders were expecting a build in crude of 2.2 million barrels in the API data for the week ending April 17.

The forecasters also expect a draw in gasoline stocks by 1.0 million barrels and a draw of 500,000 in distillates, mostly heating oil.

They also expect a drop in refinery runs by 0.5 percent, reflecting the outage in several U.S. refineries last week. Gasoline remained strong, with the May contract settling at 52.68 cents a gallon, up 0.26 cents. May heating oil finished at 44.04 cents a gallon, up 0.37 cent.

''The current price of crude is not bad,'' considering the fundamental oversupply, said John Lichtblau, president of the New York-based Petroleum Industry Research Foundation.

''But the price averaged nearly $20 a barrel last year and the reason it is still down is that by and large oil stocks are still somewhat excessive,'' he said.

"That means oil prices may still go lower," he said.

In the morning, early selling pushed the May crude contract down. Last week, crude rose on the back of a gasoline led rally and on developments concerning Iraq, whose ruling party demanded the lifting of U.N. sanction on Thursday.

Crude again dropped Friday, on profit-taking, and Monday on luckluster, sideways trading.

The Iraq demand was ''not viable,'' observed a market watcher, after U.N. arms inspectors said they have virtually had made no progress in the past six month in their task to examine Iraq's claims that it has destroyed weapons of mass destruction, which was a condition for the lifting of the sanctions.

Based on that report, the U.S. on Monday accused Iraq of failing to cooperate with the U.N. arms inspectors despite an agreement with the international body that defused threats of an American military attack.

State Department spokesman James Rubin said this means the time is ''far away'' when tough U.N. sanctions on Iraq could be lifted.

In the latest on the verbal skirmish between Iraq and the U.S., an Iraqi newspaper owned by President Saddam Hussein's eldest son, Uday, commented on a Middle East tour by U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen. It said the tour ''aims at consulting with American allies to identify what should be done against Iraq.''

''This means that guard dogs have started barking again to prepare the ground for any aggression that was impossible to commit because of world condemnation,'' the paper said.

''The exchange of words is somehow holding crude up,'' said one market player, although analysts said the market tended to discount any escalation of the situation.

U.S. Cash Crudes Up As May NYMEX Contract Expires

NEW YORK, April 21 - On the day of the NYMEX May contract expiration, U.S. cash crude differentials gained on Tuesday, led by robust gains for Light Louisiana Sweet/St. James. Traders said the 10-cent gain for LLS was more a factor of short-covering than of any fundamental reason.

Light Louisiana Sweet/St. James gained more than 10 cents in differentials to the U.S. cash crude benchmark West Texas Intermediate/Cushing.

''Some of the bigger buyers of LLS were watching it weaken recently and kept waiting for it to go down even further, but when it started to rise a little, they all jumped in buying to keep from being left out,'' said a trader for a major U.S. oil company.

After rising to as high as 70 cents below the benchmark WTI/Cushing, LLS finished Tuesday in a range of minus 77 cents to minus 73 cents.

Outright prices for cash crudes were up slightly, boosted only four cents by the NYMEX. The May contract on the NYMEX settled up four cents at $15.45 per barrel.

The exchange-for-physicals (EFP) premiums traded Tuesday at 10, 11 and 12 cents. By the end of the day it was talked around six cents, so the cash benchmark WTI/Cushing was talked $15.50 to $15.57 per barrel.

Postings-related WTI/Cushing values continued to fall because of the widening spread between May and June crudes, traders said. At end of trading Tuesday, WTI/Cushing postings-plus was talked $1.80/$1.83.

West Texas Intermediate/Midland was done at 36 cents under WTI/Cushing as well as 37 cents under.

West Texas Sour/Midland was done Tuesday at $2.16 under and $2.15 under WTI/Cushing and was talked five cents stronger than on Monday, at -$2.15/-$2.10. But later on Tuesday, a -$2.19 deal was reported done.

Bonito Sour was talked at -$1.68/1.63.

NYMEX Hub Natural Gas Clambers Higher Early With Cash

NEW YORK, April 21 - NYMEX May Hub natural gas futures clambered higher early Tuesday in tandem with firmer cash prices, fueled early by rumors of a pipeline rupture, industry sources said.

May, breaking through first resistance early, was up 8.1 cents at $2.55 per mmBtu at 1146 EDT. June was similarly firmer at $2.60, up 8.5 cents, while other deferred months in 1998 were up five to eight cents.

Traders attributed the strength to an early uptick in cash and technical buying after the $2.44 low held in Monday's session.

The cash market quickly tacked on gains this morning, with Henry Hub quoted early at $2.44 and recently offered at $2.48. Midcontinent prices were similarly stronger in the mid-$2.30s, while Permian quotes were heard around $2.30. Chicago city-gate values were also higher in the low-$2.50s.

Triggering more buying, traders said, was the circulation of news that a pipeline may have ruptured. Industry sources noted that a small fire on Pacific Gas and Electric's system on Monday affected only about 20 million cubic feet per day. The company was not available to confirm this news or provide further details.

After breaking through $2.526, where the 14-day and 18-day moving averages converged, the next technical level traders are eyeing is $2.56. Further resistance was pegged at $2.635 and then at the $2.725 contract high. Support was seen at $2.47-2.48, and then at $2.44, $2.40 and the $2.33 double bottom.

Forecasts are calling for slightly above-normal temperatures across the Northeast and upper Midwest this week, becoming even warmer in the Midwest and Texas by week's end. Southwestern temperatures are expected to run eight to 14 degrees above normal before turning cooler late this week.

Early injection estimates for Wednesday's American Gas Association storage report ranged from 10 bcf to 50 bcf, versus a draw of seven bcf a year ago and an injection of 22 bcf a week ago.

As of 1045 EDT, 15,160 Hub contracts had traded on NYMEX.

On KCBT, May jumped 6.8 cents to $2.443.

U.S. Spot Natural Gas Prices Rally Higher Early

NEW YORK, April 21 - Buyers surfaced early in the U.S. spot natural gas market on Tuesday, thereby pushing prices several cents higher, industry sources said.

Cash prices at Henry Hub moved into the mid-to-high $2.40s today, with quotes heard as high as $2.50 per mmBtu. This compares with an average price of $2.40 on Monday.

In the Midcontinent, prices traded up about two to three cents to the low to mid $2.30s, with Chicago city-gate pegged in the low-$2.50s.

In the West, where temperatures were hovering several degrees above normal, southern California border prices rose five cents to about $2.60-2.61.

Permian prices stepped up an equal amount to about $2.30, while San Juan values similarly firmed to about $2.20-2.21. Waha gas traded mostly at $2.36-2.37, sources said.

El Paso said it has scheduled to shut down one of three compressors at its Bondad station on Thursday morning for four hours, starting at 0900 MDT.

In the Northeast, New York city-gate prices jumped into the mid-$2.60s to low $2.70s, while Appalachian values on Columbia climbed into the low $2.60s.

Forecasts are calling for slightly above-normal temperatures across the Northeast and upper Midwest this week, becoming even warmer in the Midwest and Texas by week's end. Southwestern temperatures are expected to run eight to 14 degrees above normal before turning cooler late this week.

Early injection estimates for Wednesday's American Gas Association storage report ranged from 14 bcf to 50 bcf, versus a draw of seven bcf a year ago and an injection of 22 bcf a week ago.

Canada Gas Prices Hold In West, Strengthen In East

NEW YORK, April 21 - Canadian spot natural gas prices were mostly steady in the west on Tuesday but were propelled higher in the east by a NYMEX rally, industry sources said.

Spot gas at the AECO storage hub in Alberta was quoted again at C$2.28 per gigajoule (GJ), while May business moved a little higher to C$2.27-2.28 from C$2.25 per GJ.

One-year business at AECO was talked at C$2.47-2.49 per GJ.

''NOVA's linepack was on target at 12.8 (billion cubic feet per day),'' one Calgary-based trader said, noting the balanced supply on the system kept trading fairly quiet.

Also keeping demand at a minimum were forecasts calling for temperature highs in the high-60s to low-70s F on Wednesday and Thursday.

In the export markets, Sumas, Wash., gas traded mostly unchanged at US$1.94 per million British thermal units (mmBtu).

In the east, prices at Niagara tacked on about five cents to US $2.58-2.62 per mmBtu as May futures rallied to a high of $2.58.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (10249)4/22/1998 11:11:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1998 (3)

TOP STORIES

Top 20 Listed Petro-Canada Reports Big Drop In Profits

Weak oil prices and plunging revenues hammered profits at Petro-Canada in the first quarter, cutting the big oil company's earnings by nearly two-thirds.

Petro-Canada reported Tuesday it made a profit of $36 million for the January-March quarter, down from $104 million in the same 1997 period. Sales plummeted to $1.27 billion from $1.65 billion

The Calgary-based energy producer said lower prices and falling production, offset improved profit margins from the company's refining and gasoline marketing business.

Petro-Canada also said it's reviewing capital spending in light of current weak worldwide energy markets and the company warned it could cut capital projects if oil prices remain low for a prolonged period.

"The current low crude price environment promises to make 1998 a challenging year for the exploration and production business," Petro-Canada president Jim Stanford said in a release.

Stanford, added, however, that Petro-Canada's profitable gasoline operations and the company's heavy production of natural gas will help cushion the blow from weak oil prices, down about 30 per cent from last year.

In addition, 1998 will be the first full year of production from the Hibernia offshore oil project, while Petro-Canada's proposed gasoline marketing joint venture with U.S.-based Ultramar Diamond Shamrock Corp. should also begin to produce cost savings for both companies.

Crude oil prices averaged $19.07 Cdn a barrel during the first quarter, compared with $28.32 a barrel in the 1997 period, while natural gas prices averaged $1.75 per thousand cubic feet, down from $2.42 a year ago.

A breakdown of Petro-Canada's operations showed:

Quarterly operating profits in oil exploration and production plunged to $2 million from $86 million last year because of lower oil and natural gas prices and lower production. That was mainly because Petro-Canada sold non-core properties after the first quarter last year.

Refining and marketing profits rose to $63 million from $50 million because of higher margins refinery efficiencies.

Petro-Canada's 20 per cent share of Hibernia production amounted to 7,700 barrels of oil a day in the first quarter and should hit about 12,000 barrels a day over the entire year.

The development off the coast of Newfoundland is projected to reach peak production of 135,000 barrels a day in the first half of 1999. By the end of this year, Hibernia should have six producing wells pumping oil.

As Reported By Calgary Sun
PETRO-PLUNGE

Claudia Cattaneo

A 97% drop in earnings from exploration and production shaved Petro-Canada's first-quarter profit to $36 million (13 cents a share), from $104 million (38 cents) a year earlier.

Not even higher margins from its refining and marketing operations could offset weakness in crude oil prices and lower production volumes, the company said yesterday.

The earnings were lower than forecast by 15 analysts polled by First Call Corp., who expected an average of 18 cents a share.

Plans for $1.1 billion in capital spending are under review -- and if there is further oil price deterioration, spending may be cut, the company warned.

"The current low crude price environment promises to make 1998 a challenging year for the exploration and production business," said president and chief executive officer Jim Stanford.

"We expect that, for Petro-Canada, the effect of this environment will be mitigated by our industry-leading refining and marketing operations and our significant exposure to natural gas."

Cash flow was $260 million (96 cents) down from $389 million ($1.44); revenue was $1.27 billion, down from $1.65 billion.

Earnings from refining and marketing were $63 million, up from $50 million, supported by high-asset utilization and the low cost of heavy oil, which reduced the price of feedstock for its refineries.

But net earnings in its exploration and production units were slashed to $2 million from $86 million. First-quarter production also declined to 168,600 barrels daily from 179,500 BOEs.

Nonsence Or Good Sense - PanCanadian Petroleum Demise

Sagging Oil Prices Tarnish Jewels In CP Ltd. Crown

Vancouver Sun

Sagging commodity prices have lowered the ante at Canadian Pacific Ltd. and left the storied conglomerate's investors holding three of a kind instead of a straight flush. Of CP's five core businesses, PanCanadian Petroleum Ltd. was the only subsidiary to post waning profits for the first three months of 1998, the company said Tuesday.

Coal sales were also flat during the quarter at Fording Coal Ltd., which managed to eke out a modest profit improvement despite lower prices, thanks in large part to the faltering Canadian dollar.

And while three out of five ain't bad, it was clear at CP's annual meeting in Toronto that chief executive David O'Brien is thinking about how to improve his company's hand.

"We must examine each of our businesses and determine which of them can compete most successfully and how many of them we can support," O'Brien told shareholders beneath the ornate crystal chandeliers of CP's Royal York Hotel.

"In the course of time it is likely we will have to narrow our focus further."

PanCanadian, one of Canada's largest oil producers, saw its first-quarter profits slump to $35.6 million for the quarter from $113.9 million last year.

"We would expect probably to be in fewer businesses then than we are -----TD-----," O'Brien told a news conference after the meeting.

"I can't tell you what we will keep and what we may sell over a period of time, but the idea is to focus in a little more . . . on expanding our horizons on a more limited number of companies."

O'Brien made pointed reference to expansions underway at CP Ships and planned for CP Hotels, where the company hopes to capitalize on feverish growth in the hotel sector.

Then there's the Canadian Pacific Railway, where quarterly operating profits jumped 142 per cent to $150 million in 1998, thanks to new efficiencies, falling costs, lower fuel prices and the booming domestic economy, which increased freight traffic.

That leaves Fording and PanCanadian, although analysts think it's unlikely CP would unload the oil and gas group - arguably its strongest asset and a cash cow in times of strong oil prices.

"I would think they would be pretty reluctant to divest of it; it's a pretty big part of their operation," said Michelle Weise, an analyst with Canaccord Capital Corp. in Vancouver.

"I think Fording would be a more likely candidate."

Despite a five per cent drop in Japanese coal prices, operating profits at Fording rose 15 per cent to $35 million while net profits inched up to $18 million from $17 million last year.

Fording is also pinning its hopes on a $150-million mine in Mexico that produces wollastonite, a ceramic-based mineral used to make plastics and as an asbestos substitute.

Some analysts suggested O'Brien - a former PanCanadian chief executive with a long history in the Alberta oilpatch - would be loathe to unload a company that's dear to his heart.

But Weise was quick to point out that O'Brien has to listen first to the shareholders of Canadian Pacific when it comes to maximizing value, which could well mean any of the company's five subsidiaries could one day be up for sale.

"Even with them building the other businesses, that doesn't mean that they won't get rid of them," she said.

"PanCanadian is (O'Brien's) baby . . . but he's at CP Ltd. now, and he has to think about the benefits of the overall company. Just because he's an oil guy doesn't mean that's not something they would look at getting rid of."

Other analysts said it would be folly for CP to get rid of a company that over the years has contributed the lion's share to its parent company's value.

Since the onset of the Asian crisis, oil prices have hovered near the $15 US-a-barrel mark and have battered crude producers like PanCanadian.

"I would not think that PanCanadian is a non-core asset just because there's a low crude price," said John Clarke, an energy analyst with Deutsche Morgan Grenfell in Toronto.

"Since the 1970s the price of oil averaged $18 to $20 a barrel, and this is a 10-year low," he said. "I'm not expecting a rapid rebound, but I'm certainly expecting oil prices to come out of this."

O'Brien told shareholders the company has already sold about $4 billion in assets since 1996 - half of that coming in the last year - and invested $2.5 billion in new capital.

Canadian Pacific Railway has doubled its operating income since 1993 and expects to spend more than $1 billion in 1998 on expanding capacity in an effort to build consistent profits, he said. CP Ships posted record results in 1997 with operating income climbing 32 per cent.

Canadian Pacific Hotels is even considering building a new hotel on a parcel of land on the edge of Toronto's waterfront district, O'Brien said.

Serv 10 Listed Canadian Fracmaster Taking On The World.
Oilpatch globalization keeps Fracmaster's Les Margetak sharp

The Financial Post

An accomplished back-country skier, Les Margetak once fell off a six metre cliff because he was chatting with companions and not looking where he was going. Today, the 44-year-old president and chief executive of oilfield service specialist Canadian Fracmaster Ltd. is staying alert as he guides his company around the crevasses of the oil and gas business.

Globalization in the oilpatch means the Calgary-based firm with annual revenue of about $500 million is a possible acquisition target. Sniffing around are U.S. firms that trade at higher price earnings ratios, have increased liquidity to attract wider institutional following and can use the more powerful US$ to fund any cash portion of a takeover offer.

Margetak's other concerns are serious as well. The list includes political instability in Russia, the company's prime market, commodity prices, the energy industry's greenhouse gas emission levels, staff retention and development of new technologies.

"I need excitement," says Margetak. "If it's not exciting, why do it?"

Fracmaster, which has 1,000 employees worldwide, specializes in a technique called fracturing. Material is injected at high pressure down a well bore to open small cracks in a formation and increase oil and gas production.

Its key markets are Canada, the U.S. and Russia, the last providing most of 1997 earnings. Fracmaster also has a contract to work on more than 700 wells in China and sees the country as another area of focus.

Marcel Brichon, an analyst with Global Securities Corp. in Vancouver, likes Fracmaster's management and balance sheet. While he acknowledges the company took risks by plunging early into Russia, he thinks it may also succeed in China, despite its reputation for tortuous bureaucracy. "If there's a company that's going to succeed, I would guess it's going to be Fracmaster," he says.

The company's international experience draws attention, adds Michele Weise, an analyst with Canaccord Capital Corp. in Vancouver. "They have established markets and I think it makes them a very attractive takeover target for some of these big [service] companies."

Fracmaster's emergence as a world player in the pressure pumping market was the result of the high costs of Canadian oil production. To compete domestically, it had to come up with low-cost technology and educate its producer customers to accept innovations. "Canadians aren't blessed with the best reservoirs," Margetak says. "We've had to squeeze every drop of production out of our reservoirs for years."

He argues his company was actually more vulnerable to a takeover last fall when former chairman and chief executive Alfred Balm sold his 67.5% stake. That, says Margetak, would have been the time for someone to take control. As it was, several institutions snapped up the shares.

Balm's exit gave management a chance to do its stuff, and it's been busy. In the past six months, Fracmaster and partner Yukos, a large Russian producer, used their joint venture, Uganskfracmaster, to acquire Intras, another Russian service company that had been wholly owned by Yukos. In the U.S., besides buying the 50% of American Fracmaster it did not own, the company made several deals this year for U.S. based service firms and assets.

Fracmaster also obtained a listing on the New York Stock Exchange (FMA/NYSE) to increase its profile with U.S. investors, who now account for 20% to 25% of shareholders.

Investors aren't too excited on either side of the border. Since Balm's exit, Fracmaster's total return (price and dividend yield) has slumped 13.1%, a fall that almost matches the 14.2% decline in the Toronto Stock Exchange's oil and gas index over the same period.

On the TSE, Fracmaster shares (FMA/TSE) have been trading just above the middle of their 52-week range of $27.25 to$11.25.

Despite this performance, analysts and industry players say the company has good staff, provides quality service and is a leader in carbon dioxide fractures, which are well suited to gas wells. They also say it's near the front of the pack with coiled tubing, a relatively new method of drilling wells that minimizes formation damage and increases production.

The only major knock against Fracmaster is its perceived weakness in research and development, particularly in coming up with proprietary chemicals that give it a competitive edge.

It's also dwarfed by multinational competitors. The proposed merger of Halliburton Co. and Dresser Industries Inc. will create a giant with US$16 billion in annual revenue; second-ranked Schlumberger Ltd. has yearly revenue of about US$11 billion. The "size matters" philosophy is rolling through the oilpatch as well as other sectors.

Fracmaster's most often mentioned potential acquirer is BJ Services Co. of Houston. The U.S. company moved into Canada in 1996 with a hostile takeover of Nowsco Well Service Ltd., a service firm that once rivalled Fracmaster in size. Nowsco shareholders benefited from the prolonged battle - BJ eventually upped its offer by 75% and paid $35 a share.

Global's Brichon says Fracmaster is also a target because of the trend for acquirers to go after niche players with particular expertise, in Fracmaster's case, fracturing and coiled tubing.

"It's a huge opportunity for the U.S. companies. I'm actually surprised that we haven't seen more interest," says Canaccord's Weise.

But Margetak is not a fan of the bigger-is-better mantra. He doubts one firm can be the best in all areas of the oilpatch and provide one stop shopping. A decision on offering integrated services is still some distance off.

"It's a few years out for us. We'll be able to show good, solid growth to our shareholders, year on year, over the next three or four years before we bump up into that question mark."

The business plan for the next few years calls for earnings to come equally from North America, Russia and new ventures. It also calls for putting a new idea into the field within two years of conception.

"Being the size that we are, we have to be nimble and we have to be able to get new ideas, new R&D, to commercialization quickly," says Margetak.

Canadian Oil Sands Warns Of Distribution Cut
The Financial Post

Canadian Oil Sands Trust, one of the 10 owners of the Syncrude Inc. oilsands project in northern Alberta, may have to cut distributions to about $1 a unit, from $1.80 last year, if oil prices remain at today's levels.

But the trust's managers told a feisty annual meeting yesterday it's now well capitalized to put up its 10% share of Syncrude's $6-billion expansion costs.

Given today's oil price environment, "it's a reasonable distribution level and it's in line with expectations," said analyst Brian Ector, with CIBC Wood Gundy Inc. in Calgary.

"It provides a stable cash distribution through the expansion years so unitholders benefit by receiving the distribution and they benefit from the expansion, when completed."

The trust was created in June 1996, when PanCanadian Petroleum Ltd. monetized its 10% share in Syncrude for $385 million.

The trust, which is still managed by PanCanadian, raised another $92 million in new equity in February when it issued four million units at $24 each. It also restructured its debt and increased its lines of credit to $250 million.

Units (COu/TSE) closed at $23 yesterday, down 25›. Although unit values are well below their October high of $28.70, investors are looking beyond near-term weakness in oil prices and see value in the underlying asset base, Ector said.

When Syncrude's expansion is complete in 2007, the trust's share of production will be twice today's.

The trust has also garnered enough financial flexibility to help bankroll part of the Syncrude expansion, the $1.5-billion Aurora mine, which is expected to be completed sooner than scheduled to help reduce overall costs, said chief financial officer Robert Fotheringham.

Revenue for 1997, its first full year of operation, from the sale of its portion of Syncrude production, was $209.5 million, and net income was $51.2 million. Distributable income was $41.4 million ($1.80 a unit).

But the high rate of return failed to impress some unitholders at the meeting, whose complaints ranged from the trust's lack of outside directors, to directors' compensation, to its way of accounting for its rate of return.

Another sore point was the 15% interest paid to PanCanadian, up from 11%, on 1,000 preferred shares awarded when the trust was created. Schultz said that's the price it had to pay to acquire an asset of such a high quality.

Exxon, Amoco Report Lower Profits For First Quarter

IRVING, Tex. (AP) - Weaker crude oil prices helped drive down profits by 13 per cent at Exxon Corp. and 43 per cent at Amoco Corp. in the first three months of the year, the huge energy companies said Tuesday.

Exxon, the world's biggest oil company, still beat Wall Street's expectations for the quarter. But Amoco's results were significantly below what analysts had expected.

Texas based Exxon, which owns Canada's biggest oil company, Toronto based Imperial Oil Ltd., said it made $1.89 billion US in the January March period. That's down from $2.18 billion in the same 1997 period.

Revenue fell to $30.2 billion from $35.2 billion in the year-ago period.

Crude oil prices were about one-third lower than last year due to the slowdown in Asian economies, mild winter weather and a surplus of crude oil supplies, said Exxon chairman Lee Raymond.

"Exploration and production earnings were adversely impacted by substantially lower crude oil prices which have been under pressure and falling since early in the fourth quarter of 1997, averaging about $7 per barrel less than the first quarter of 1997," Raymond said.

But he said chemical and petroleum product sales rose. Chemical earnings benefited from lower feedstock costs and sales volumes were up.

Meanwhile, Chicago-based Amoco reported net profits fell to $386 million, down from $674 million, a year ago. Revenues fell 15 per cent to $7.6 billion from $8.99 billion.

"Despite the current level of prices and earnings performance, we believe the strategies and plans we have in place will lead us to future growth and increased profitability," said Laurance Fuller, Amoco's chairman and chief executive.

"We also continue to identify ways in which to improve efficiency and streamline operations."

Spokesman Jim Fair said no wholesale layoffs of the company's 42,000 worldwide employees were foreseen, although there may be some job cuts on a "unit by unit basis, but that's always going on."

Petroleum products results rose, reflecting improved sales margins and volumes, the company said.

U.S. Oil Output at Risk Due to Low Prices, Group Says

NEW YORK, April 21 (Reuters) - Low prices could cut as much as 100,000 barrels per day from U.S. crude oil output as smaller producers are forced to shut in marginal wells, the head of the Independent Petroleum Association of America warned Tuesday.

In a new study, the IPAA forecast U.S. production to drop to 6.3 million bpd this year, undermining the country's longer-term balance between supply and demand.

"As bad as oil prices are, the reality is that we will be challenged to meet demand," George Yates, IPAA chairman, said. "The longer-term outlook for oil is very positive and we need to invest with that in mind."

Falling U.S. output will force an even greater reliance on imports, Yates added.

The IPAA study predicts oil imports will reach 10.7 million bpd within two years, accounting for 55 percent of the country's demand. This year's imports should top the 10 million bpd mark for the first time.

Independent producers have been particularly hard hit by the oil price collapse, with benchmark New York oil futures prices still more than 30 percent below last fall's levels despite a recent recovery. IPAA noted much of the forecast decline in production will come from independent marginal wells, which account for more than a million barrels daily of the country's output.

Nevertheless, Yates added that prices should soon stage a recovery. "I believe this is the bottom of the market," he said. "I don't think the current low prices are a permanent condition."

The recovery should be helped by solid growth in U.S. demand. The IPAA's forecast puts U.S. oil demand at 20.4 million bpd within two years, fueled by a robust economy. By 2010, consumption will hit nearly 24 million bpd, according to a forecast by the IPAA released at its fourth annual oil and gas investment symposium.