Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
A long list and a reminder:
Federal Income Tax
Federal Unemployment Tax
Workers Compensation Tax
Social Security Tax
Medicare Tax
State Income Tax
State Unemployment Tax
School Tax
Sales Taxes (State and Local)
Real Estate Tax
Property Tax
Building Permit Tax
Well Permit Tax
Septic Permit Tax
Utility Taxes
Severence Tax
Corporate Income Tax
Accounts Receivable Tax
Privilege Tax
Inventory Tax
Food License Tax
Fuel permit tax
Inheritance Tax
Interest Expense
Capital Gains Tax
IRS Penalties
IRS Interest Charges
Liquor Tax
Luxury Taxes
Marriage License Tax
Service Charge Taxes
Telephone Federal Excise Tax
Telephone Federal Universal Service Fee Tax
Telephone Federal, State and Local Surcharge Tax
Telephone Minimum Usage Surcharge Tax
Telephone Recurring and Non-Recurring Charges Tax
Telephone State and Local Tax
Telephone Usage Charge Tax
Vehicle Sales Tax
Vehicle License Registration Tax
Recreational Vehicle Tax
Trailer Registration Tax
Road Toll Booth Taxes
Toll Bridge Taxes
Toll Tunnel Taxes
Watercraft registration Tax
Gasoline Tax
Road Usage Taxes (Truckers)
Dog License Tax
Fishing License Tax
Hunting License Tax
Cigarette Tax
Airline Travel Tax
B&O tax
Property excise Tax
And the list goes on and on and on..
Now consider that 100 years ago, none of these taxes existed and we had no national debt! Talk about a growth industry, too bad it is all built on our backs.
Which leads me to the point of this story. Today is Sept 15 which is also the day that 3rd quarter estimated federal taxes for 2006 are due. The government wants its cut of all those short and long term capital gains profits that we have worked so hard for (and they are due now even before the quarter is over). If you don't pay now there may well be additional interest and penalties due as well.
I take a 3 day weekend and come back to the worse day I can remember. One would think the terrorists had struck again looking at the energy and metals sector. I see why OG is dropping with an overhang of supply mainly due to mild weather and no hurricanes, but it seems to me that the same drop in oil prices is good for this nation's and the world economy. More money after buying gas left to buy goods and staples and thus more demand for metals. Today was a day that fear ruled. I'll be looking to snag some good deals in the morning after the dust along with margin calls for some clears. Mostly looking at base metal stocks.
Deathtotaxes, re nickel and manganese substitutions...maybe you are right and then again maybe not. I saw this article in a quick google search:
MUMBAI, September 8: Adulteration is not common only to foods. It can occur in stainless steel utensils used for eating food. Adulteration in the stainless steel utensil business has forced manufacturers to shift their production from utensil grade steel to industrial grade of stainless steel. Isibars, Mukand and host of others stainless steel manufacturers have decided to reduce the production of SS-201 till a time the adulteration in stainless steel stops and it is viable to produce the material.
Ironically SS-201 grade has been developed by Indian researchers. They had managed to replace the costly nickel used in the manufacture of corrosion-free stainless steel by manganese and other alloys. Although nickel constitutes 8-12 per cent of stainless steel by volume, in value terms it is 50 per cent of the total cost. But the replacement by manganese and other ferro alloys reduces the cost of stainless production for utensil grade by 40 per cent, without compromising on the corrosion and brittlenessproperties. This resulted in a drastic fall in cost of stainless steel production in the last seven years, while selling prices have remained stagnant.
As a result of adulteration Isibars was forced to reduce its production of SS 201 from 900 tonnes a month to less than 300 tonnes per month. Sudhir Kumar Gupta, joint managing director of Isibars says that the drastic reduction in the prices has resulted in the company earning negative margins for the product. Spurious adulterated stainless steel in the market have affected the entire industry.
Even Mukand has reduced the production by more than 40 per cent of 201 grade due to the same problem. Cost of production of this grade is close to Rs 20,000-Rs 23,000 per tonne for Mukand. But adulterated stainless steel is available in the market at the rate of Rs 16,000-17,000 per tonne, which is well below the cost of producing this material.
The beneficiaries have been the small scale producers, who are substituting cheap materials for nickel and manganese inutensil grade. All this has made mockery of 201 grades standard of ISI. As for the innocent users this means upset stomachs and host of other problems, because adulterated steel causes a lot of health problems.
Stanu, I see what the book says but I wonder if you agree with their rule to never average down? FWIW, I have done it more often than not and I believe that I have definitely come out substantially ahead by doing so over the last 6 years.
Only a clairvoyant can consistently pick the bottom, if I average down to it, then I am still successful and batting better than 500.
Nickel, I had heard that the big jump in nickel inventories a year ago was caused by a switch of many stainless steel manufacturers to using manganese instead of nickel. They soon discovered that the new mix caused staining in products that were exposed to rain and the weather. Consequently, they went back to nickel and that is why the inventories dropped as fast as they went up and more important why they probably will not jump again like they did a year ago. Honestly, I'm not sure of my source but it may have been c1001 who shared that??
Work into a full position..
It is virtually impossible for one to catch the low price of a good stock value without a lot of luck involved. I think that we can all agree that prices trade both above and below fair value depending on the markets emotions.
I might take an initial 25% position and then continue to add as the price drops. The more it drops the more I will add to it. I will certainly double and triple check my numbers but assuming that there is no change, I will use it as an opportunity to buy more. 80% of the time a stock will drop below the initial buy price. The other 20% of the time one can always still pay up to buy more. When a stock is dropping, fear tends to dominate investor emotions, when it rises it is replaced by greed. Best to take advantage of those emotions, not succumb to them.
Also I have thought some more about how many stocks one should buy with a new $10,000 portfolio. No more than 4, IMO. It would be more educational to follow 10 and pick your 4 favorites to buy. See how your top 4 compare to your top 10. If you are right, your success will encourage more DD. Odds are that picking and buying 10 ends up being a dilution to your talents if you are right. Odds of losing it all when spread among 4 picks is also very slim.
Thanks for the info, doubloon. Thats good to hear especially on days like this.
bbotc, re EZM...Perhaps I misunderstood your comment but EZM is certainly not trading at a 50% premium to LUN in the merger offer, particularly now that LUN is also now up nicely today.
Latest price LUN= 34.49x.0952=$3.28 Can=$2.97 US
That is about a 2% premium.
EZM- Price just spiked to $3 on heavy volume while LUN shows little movement. Maybe we will soon see another buyout offer.
This one has been taking a steady walk down since the merger date was extended. Has anyone heard anything or talked to mgmt?
BWLRf, Huge volume day for BWR on the toronto exchange. Several 1-3 million share trades. I think the market was at first concerned that a big holder may have heard some bad news and unloaded. The big trades have continued at firm prices and the price has since recovered and up nicely. Maybe a big holder heard some good news.
Alright Len and Gilead, I'll give you guys that one. The education curve will be speeded up by spreading it across more stocks with the new $10,000 portfolio AS LONG AS one doesn't do half baked research to come up with 10 stocks and then also takes the extra time to stay on top of them.
Len, I think that in the real world, 10 stocks is too many stocks to own in a $10,000 portfolio, even if risk of ruin theory says its better.Two reasons, first is that the cost of commissions starts to become significant and lowers returns.
The second reason is that losing $10,000 in the market will not kill anybody. If it did they should not have it invested there in the first place. If one has a market disaster or bad luck that wipes out his $10,000 porfolio, he can always go out and build up a new one from his employment income. For some people that will take awhile, for others not long at all. On the other hand, losing a $100,000 is going to be much tougher to replenish, so a basket of 10 stocks to reduce risk seems appropriate there.
I also believe that having too many stocks is not good either. I had 30-40 stocks but didn't have the time to follow them all properly and have taken some hits as a consequence. Also one needs to always be looking for new positions so I think 15 stocks is about right for even most larger portfolios. Obviously, many of them cannot be the sparsely traded, illiquid microcaps that this board often follows though.
Wade, re HSOA...and would you trust a CEO who puts out a fluff PR and then sells millions worth of his own stock in the immediate runup that ensued? Or that makes grandiose predictions of revs and earnings for the balance of the year without a clear explanation as to how he plans to do it? A former employer of his, American Eco, made similiar statements back in their heyday and look at what happened with them...bankrupt.
Thanks, but no thanks and again, good luck.
Wade, I have no dog in the fight over HSOA. I wouldn't buy it but I also wouldn't short it here either. Stocklemon certainly uses some literary license to add "color" to his reports as many bloggers do, but I see that he also makes some valid points as well. As in many things, the truth probably lies somewhere in the middle.
Anyway, good luck with HSOA, I hope it works out for you.
HSOA, Wade, that is quite the Ihatestocklemon site. Talk about twisting of the facts. I hope you're not using him as a credible source. Right off the top, the blogger only mentioned the CEOs buyback of stock after the stocklemon report. I guess it is immaterial to him that the CEO sold millions more worth a few days earlier. Btw, I see that stocklemon only said that insiders had registered to sell those shares and also said who there were. Why they dropped the archive, I don't know, although maybe it was a heads up that it could happen and then when they didn't go through with the sale, he pulled it.
HSOA, Wade, you say that stocklemon puts out deceptive information and yet wasn't it HSOA that put out a special press release first about their exclusive agreement with ARH and then the CEO turned right around and sold millions in stock in the following days as the price was pumped up over the news? Then, when stocklemon called the CEO on it, didn't he then turn around and buy a small portion of it back?
As for your other issue, I believe stocklemon reported that the CEO of the acquired business had registered to sell his shares. I don't know whether he sold them or not as I don't watch it that closely but that guy certainly is an insider in my view. The odds are good that he also took a good look at HSOA before he agreed to be acquired by them
I have looked at a number of stocklemons reports and I believe that they honestly call them as they see them. They have done reports on numerous stocks including pink sheets that can't be shorted. One they reported on is G H L T. I checked up on this myself since they are locally based and turned out their operations were out of a small and vacant warehouse. Rather odd for a $100 million cap company don't you think? I am certainly not saying that I believe HSOA is a scam but I do believe that they have a propensity to promote themselves to a degree that may border on hype. It will be interesting to see if they can actually make the huge increase in sales and profits they have promised for the second half of the year.
Good luck to you but I agree with stocklemon, "caveat emptor" on HSOA
LRT-$3.15 This is a US oil trust with gulf and Florida interests. This one was whacked in the hurricanes last year. Was in the $6-$8 range and dropped into the $2-$3 range and the dividend distributions were suspended. Off shore wells are not expected to re-open but their main asset is the Jay field which is 30 miles inland off the FL panhandle. That operation is run by Exxon. Oil flow was also reduced there while Exxon rebuilds some trunklines.
Just made its first monthly distribution of 2c since last fall. Interesting part is that the petroleum engineers reserve study estimates that by next year the net distributions will be $18.4 million. Deducting 13% for the loss of offshore operations and trustee expenses of $1 mil still leaves $15 mil in net distributions that are required to be paid out to stock(unit)holders. This one sports a market cap of $60 million now so that would be a 25% yield. The estimated PV10 value is $114 mil so it is about half that. I believe this one could double in the next year.
EZM- Growth and Value, I've been following this one. EZM's CEO has commented several times in the past that he doesn't want the company to be eaten for dinner (if it did, he might well lose his job). Lundin is much more closely held so together the risk of a hostile takeover is reduced.
The price has beaten down to near parity now and Lundin is also a good company so I am holding. Still my hope is that either someone else comes along with a better offer or that the merger proposal is defeated as it does require a supermajority of EZM stockholders to pass, 67%.
BWLRF, Skillz, just to show there are two sides to every trade decision, I believe this zinc and copper miner is a good buy here...
Fundamentally, BWLRF should have an excellent quarter coming up and the stock should start rising in anticipation. Technically it has dropped back to a rising trendline in an bullish ascending triangle formation.
As for the industry, zinc inventory stocks took another big drop today and they continue to drop on almost a daily level. Pundits do not see world supply exceeding demand for the metal at least through 2009. Historically, metal stocks are strongest in the fall quarter. Labor day weekend is coming up so ready or not, fall is right around the quarter.
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=bwlrf
Currency conversions Can to USD update- Stockhouse is using a currency conversion rate of .887 today, at least with LIM. I checked a few websites that offered daily conversion rates, and the current rate varied from .9012 to .9025, so Stockhouse's currency conversion tool is apparently not updated daily.
My brokerage shows a conversion rate of .907, so that is off as well, but not nearly as much as Stockhouse. Now, I wonder if it will be off in the other direction when I go to sell. In other words, are we taking a hit on currency versions as well as bid/ask spreads when we buy or sell foreign stocks such as HBM and LIM?
US_Canadian exchange rate ?
I have noticed that conversion prices at the brokerage firms are different than the currency conversion feature at Stockhouse. For example, Stockhouse shows that LIM.to closed at $6.124 yesterday when converted to USD. TDAmeritrade shows that LMGGF (pink sheet equivalent) closed at $6.27 yesterday. A similiar discrepancy occurrs with Scottrade. I don't like to think that I am eating 14c on every share traded. Does anyone know why the discrepancy exists?
Skillz, curious which broker you use. I never seemed to have problems getting fills on BWLRF using Scottrade. Sometimes I did with TDAmeritrade though. I would call them and they would then make a call and make sure my order got filled when there was a problem.
Nickel- Recently the LME allowed shorts to forgo having to deliver nickel on the spot contract by paying a penalty of $300 per ton per day to the buyer. This was done in response to extremely tight nickel supplies. I wondered what happened to manufacturers who were counting on delivery of the metal for raw material in their plants. $300 per day means little if you have to shut down your plant and/or default on your contracts because you run out of raw material.
Here is an article that discusses the problem in more detail. I am not sure what it means to nickel miners such as RNO and LIM except that prices and hopefully their stocks may well continue going up:
First Nickel, Then Silver?
By: Theodore Butler
-- Posted 21 August, 2006
This past week, the investment world witnessed an event that has only occurred rarely in the past. I am referring to the extraordinary developments in the nickel market on the London Metals Exchange (LME), the largest base metals exchange in the world. Due to an unprecedented scarcity of metal, the LME was forced to revise the delivery terms of its nickel contracts. In return for allowing short sellers to delay delivery of metal, a daily penalty fee of around 1% of the contract value was payable by the shorts to long holders.
Here are some excerpts from the LME’s press release of August 16 –
"Those with short positions in nickel falling prompt on Friday 18 August 2006, and on subsequent prompt dates until further notice, who are unable to effect physical delivery an/or unable to borrow metal at a backwardation of no more than $300.00 per tonne per day, shall be able to defer delivery for a day at a penalty of $300.00 per tonne. Those with long positions for prompt on those days who are subject to deferred delivery shall be entitled to compensation of $300.00 per tonne per day
Commenting on the announcement, Simon Heale, LME Chief Executive said:
"Nickel stocks are at historically low levels and we now have a genuine material shortage. Our first priority is to ensure that trading remains orderly and to prevent the risk of settlement defaults."
Although there has been widespread reporting of this event in all the popular media and news services, I have been thunderstruck by how mostly all of the reports have danced around the key fact at the heart of this matter. That key fact is that the LME just declared that its nickel contract has gone into default.
While Mr. Heale states that the action by the exchange is designed to prevent default, the action taken is nothing but a declaration of default, rendering his statement as absurd. Default is a simple word. Any time you unilaterally violate or negate the terms and conditions of any legal contract, that contract is in default. Period.
Moreover, a simple analysis of the situation reveals that the LME is aligning itself with the interests of the naked shorts in nickel, as common sense should tell you that no long holder asked the exchange to suspend the delivery obligation of the shorts.
I must say that it is troubling that with such widespread reporting of this event, the most important fact, the delivery default, seemed lost as a message. But make no mistake; this default is a most serious matter. In fact, as I have written previously, a contract default is the absolute worst event that could befall any exchange. In an instant, a delivery default renders an exchange suspect as an institution. It makes no difference if that exchange has existed for hundreds of years, a delivery default can immediately destroy the strongest reputation. This is the grave risk that the nickel debacle poses to the LME.
The main concern for the nickel market and the LME is that the abrogation of the shorts’ delivery obligation is not the end of problem, even though it may lead to the end of the LME itself. That is because legitimate long contract holders, particularly industrial consumers, have been left in a lurch by the deferral of delivery of actual metal. What do the industrial nickel users now do?
The legitimacy of any exchange or contract is based upon all conditions and obligations being upheld, and not suspended when it is expedient to certain interests. In the case of a futures or forward contract on a physical commodity, the most important conditions and obligations are those which guarantee and mandate how the contract is converted to actual delivery.
Although only a very small percentage of any futures contract normally results in actual delivery of the physical commodity, it is precisely the delivery mechanism that determines the legitimacy of the contract. Take away that delivery mechanism and you take away the legitimacy. Take away the delivery mechanism and all you have left is paper contract with no connection to the commodity involved. This is what has happened to the LME nickel contract – because the exchange has suspended the shorts’ responsibility to deliver actual metal, that contract has become, essentially, worthless to industrial consumers.
The key point here is not that every contract created between a long and a short will result in actual delivery, but that every contract will result in delivery if either party wants it to. Each party to a contract, the long and the short, entered into that contract voluntarily. No one held a gun to anyone’s head, forcing them to buy or sell any contract. It is unfair and illegal that any authority (the LME) intercedes on behalf of either side to override a contract that was entered into voluntarily.
What the LME has done in nickel is relieve the shorts of having to round up actual metal to deliver against their contractual promise to deliver, and unilaterally transferred the obligation to the longs, the industrial user. These industrial consumer longs (and other longs) entered into their nickel contracts voluntarily and legally, with the option of taking delivery. Now they are told, with no warning, they can’t take delivery and must secure metal elsewhere. The shorts don’t have to scramble for material they promised to deliver, the longs have to scramble for material they were legally promised to receive. Nothing could be more unfair.
Furthermore, as long as the shorts’ obligation to deliver nickel is suspended, there is no good reason for an industrial user to buy an LME contract. This is the greatest threat to the LME. And it’s not just deterrence for those buyers who want to take actual delivery. With the delivery mechanism destroyed in nickel, the linkage between the price of real metal and the LME contract is also destroyed. Without the requirement for delivery, the price of nickel on an LME contract and nickel in the real world loses its connection. In this case, the price of LME nickel is merely a figment of anyone’s imagination. What good does it do an industrial consumer to hedge on the LME, if there is no assurance his contract will converge with the price of actual metal on the delivery due date? Without the delivery mechanism, there is no linkage between paper contract and actual metal.
This is the real meaning of the LME’s delivery default. It is also the same thing with the short-side manipulation in COMEX silver. It is a coincidence that this LME nickel disaster has occurred precisely at the same time others and I have been alleging a manipulation in COMEX silver. However, nothing could prove our case more clearly.
A long-side manipulation, evidenced by a concentrated long position and prices higher than would be without the concentrated position, is something the regulators have vast experience in dealing with. While disruptive and illegal, long-side manipulations are usually short in duration and easy to terminate. The concentrated longs, usually speculators, are forced to sell their positions, causing prices to collapse and end the manipulation.
A short-side manipulation, like those in LME nickel and COMEX silver, is evidenced by a concentrated short position and prices lower than would be without the concentrated short position. (The concentrated short position in nickel has been reported in news stories, while the concentrated short position in COMEX silver is reported by the CFTC). The regulators have little or no experience with short side manipulations, and since the concentrated shorts are industry insiders, rather than outside speculators, there is little incentive for the regulators to move against their own.
The real problem with short-side manipulations is that it is very difficult to terminate without great damage because they have a long duration. When a short-side manipulation is terminated, like in LME nickel, it threatens great and lasting disruption to the actual market because the resultant shortage of material causes real hardship with no easy remedy. This is in addition to the damage caused to an exchange or contract involved in such a short-side manipulation, which ends in a delivery default.
Clearly, the UK regulators and LME officials waited too long to attack and resolve the short-side manipulation in nickel. If they had acted responsibly and forced the concentrated shorts to cease their manipulative activities, the delivery default might have been averted. Now it is too late in nickel, as the damage is done. Is it too late for silver?
I think there may still be time for the US regulators to act in silver and avoid a COMEX silver delivery default. But I also have my doubts. That’s because the CFTC and NYMEX/COMEX officials have been dragging their feet on the issue of the concentrated short position. Instead of promptly responding to allegations of manipulation and a looming delivery default, the regulators are stalling. Stalling didn’t benefit the regulators in LME nickel. It only made matters much worse.
In fact, the main, if not only, difference between nickel and silver is that the regulators will never be able to say they were not warned in silver. And if the regulators in silver still do not see how the recent events in LME nickel are directly foretelling what is going to happen in COMEX silver, then they do not deserve to be regulators any longer.
While I will continue to attempt to end the silver manipulation (with your help), it is entirely possible that government regulators and COMEX officials will continue to evade their legal responsibilities and allow the silver manipulation to exist, right up to the inevitable delivery default. That will be tragic, but it will be on their heads.
Fortunately, there is something else that you can do. You can take the debacle in LME nickel as yet another confirmation as what will happen in silver and position yourself accordingly. If there has ever been an exclamation point given to "buy and hold real silver", it has been given to you by the LME actions in nickel. If an exchange that has been in existence for hundreds of years can suddenly terminate delivery obligations in its contracts, how hard do you think it will be for those issuing pool and leveraged accounts in silver to do exactly the same thing? I think anyone holding such accounts needs to have their heads examined.
But the strongest message of the LME default is being sent to the silver industrial consumers of the world, because the biggest potential losers in nickel are the industrial users. If the LME can get away with suspending delivery requirements in nickel, how hard will it be for the COMEX to suspend delivery requirements in silver? Do you think the CFTC will come to your defense? The same CFTC that is stalling on the concentrated short issue in silver? Even more than those investors and speculators dealing in paper contracts, any user who is not stockpiling real silver inventories, in light of what just occurred on the LME, is missing the boat.
I hope the CFTC and the NYMEX does the right thing with this concentrated silver short position and moves against the manipulators. But even if they don’t, there is no good reason for investors and industrial users to not protect themselves and buy real silver. How many wake-up calls are necessary?
I opened a long position in LIM today (actually lmggf.pk) Interesting that with Scottrade, I had to call the broker and pay the higher phone commish ($26). With TDameritrade, I was able to do it online but I could not pull a real-time quote.
Good point curlews, Kitco's concensus #s also show a much lower estimated PE for LIM than INCO. Lim has a 2006 estimated PE of 7.6 vs 12.6 for Inco and for 2007 LIM has an estimated PE of 6.4 vs 13.9 for Inco. Btw. those numbers assume an avg price for Nickel in the $7 range, which is less than half of current prices.
EZM, According to yahoo stats, institutions own 23% of the shares and insiders own less than 1%. Even if all of those were to go along with it they have nowhere near the 65% approval required. I also don't for a minute believe that the institutions will go for this if a better offer comes along. As for the public there was a straw poll taken on Yahoo yesterday and the nays outvoted the yeas by something like 970,000 to 41,000 shares . That was an unscientific poll but it does show a clear bias against doing the deal. I'll predict that this offer will fall on its face unless they set it up so that stockholders who don't vote are counted as votes for approval. Then it might fly (especially if they manage to lose some ballots) Btw, does anyone know if that will be the situation here?
Len...re: zinc inventories, Interesting chart with this presentation from Lundin Mining showing a growing shortfall in zinc production (including all known new mines planned) vs consumption through the year 2010. See corportate presentation august 2006, page 46-47. Certainly makes BWLRF's outlook appear very strong.
http://www.lundinmining.com/corporate/presentations.php
EZM and LUN- The combined company would trade as Lundin Mining and will also trade on the Amex subject to application and approval by the Amex (from PR).
EZM and Lundin merger.
I don't like it. EZM drops in price for the exchange rate to work. That looks like a takeunder for EZM stockholders to me.
From Kitco, analysts have Lundin's 2006 and 2007 forward PEs at 7.4 and 9.7 respectively. EZM is cheaper as its forward PEs are only 6.9 and 4.7.
EZM is also cheaper in terms of estimated cash flow. Lundin is buying a minority interest (49%) in a Russian mine. How politically stable is that? It wasn't that long ago that the Russians screwed us over in CHAR! Merging with EZM does allow Lundin to not have to clean out their bank account to buy their interest in the Russian miner for $125 Mil but what is in it for EZM? EZM's CEO probably gets a big raise since he will be presiding over a company that has doubled in size but that doesn't do me any good.
That being said, I will hold and see what happens. There is no huge insider interest and the merger requires 65% approval by EZM stockholders. There could easily be a bigger offer come out for EZM in the next month.
Tail wagging dog story? It seems to me that those who are doing the best in the contest would have the most interest in it and thus be more likely to trade. Those who are doing the worst have virtually no chance of winning so some are probably thinking "why bother" and don't trade.
BTW, I'm in the middle of the pack and in the middle of the # of trades made too.
EZM- takeover rumors. Here's an article out today (Saturday)that mentions possible suitors for EZM. We could easily see a higher S/P on Monday.
Lori McLeod, Financial Post
Published: Saturday, August 19, 2006
Takeover rumours gave shares of EuroZinc Mining Corp. a big boost yesterday, with research from BMO Nesbitt Burns suggesting the base metals miner's take-out value could be in the range of $4.25 to $4.60 per share.
"Word on the Street is that a deal is brewing," said a source, who asked not to be named.
A EuroZinc spokeswoman declined comment.
EuroZinc's shares rose 9% yesterday to close at a 52-week high of $3.42 in Toronto, on four times their average daily trading volume. At this time last year, the stock was trading well under $1 per share.
A report from BMO's hedge fund sales department puts EuroZinc's net asset value at $3.54 per share. It then added a takeover premium of 20%-30%, putting the miner's potential sale price as high as $4.60 per share.
"If a multiple bidder scenario were to materialize, the premium to NAV [net asset value] could rise," further boosting the price EuroZinc could fetch, according to the report.
Canadian miners Aur Resources Inc., Inmet Mining Corp., and Lundin Mining Corp. might all interested, as could Sweden's Boliden AB, according to BMO.
EuroZinc's primary asset is the Somnicor mine in southern Portugal, Europe's largest underground copper mine. It also owns an idled zinc mine in the region.
Merger and acquisition in the mining sector has been heated lately, as prices and demand stay strong and inventories remain low.
EuroZinc also appears to trade at a discount to its peers, the report said, which could make it an especially attractive takeover candidate.
© National Post 2006
Nickel cupboards are nearly bare forcing the LME to impose trading restrictions on the metal. Here's a new article from Bloomberg (RNO is looking very good now):
Nickel Soars, Prompting London Exchange to Set Limits (Update1)
Aug. 16 (Bloomberg) -- A shortage of nickel drove prices to the highest since at least 1987, forcing the London Metal Exchange to impose trading restrictions for the first time in a year.
After nickel surpassed $29,000 a metric ton, twice its level at the start of this year, the LME ordered the suspension of rules for delivery of the metal. Inventories have plunged 83 percent in the past year.
``We now have a genuine material shortage,'' Simon Heale, chief executive officer of the exchange, said in an e-mailed statement today, explaining the exchange's decision.
The price of nickel, a metal used to make steel rust- resistant, is four times higher than the average of the 1990s because of a surge in demand from China. The high prices have led to a seven-week, $17 billion battle for Inco Ltd., the world's second-largest producer of the metal.
Nickel for three-month delivery jumped $1,645, or 6 percent, to $29,100 a metric ton in London. Earlier, the contract gained as much as 6.4 percent, the most since January 2004.
The extra cost, or premium, paid for immediate delivery of the metal compared with delivery in three months more than doubled to $3,600 a ton, the highest in at least 11 years. Nickel stored in warehouses tracked by the LME has dropped to 6,162 tons this year, equal to less than two days of global use.
The LME ordered that holders of so-called short positions, or bets that prices will fall, can borrow nickel at no more than $300 a ton each day. The exchange last intervened in metal trading in August last year after hurricane Katrina left stockpiles of zinc stranded in New Orleans, pushing the metal to an eight-year high.
`Something Going on'
``There's certainly something going on and somebody has got large short positions'' in nickel, said Stephen Briggs, an analyst at Societe Generale, one of the 11 companies trading on the floor of the LME. ``It's a very tight market but the physical nickel market is rarely as tight as the LME market suggests.''
Posco, the world's fourth-largest steelmaker by output, said two days ago it had a short nickel position on the LME of ``less than 1,000 tons.'' The company commented after the Wall Street Journal's Asian edition reported it made wrong-way bets involving 10,000 tons of nickel. Posco has been scrambling to cover the positions and is being forced to roll them forward at ever greater expense, the newspaper said, citing unidentified metal market sources in London. The company said rumors of such a large position were ``groundless.''
Nickel producer Inco has been the focus of a takeover battle since June 26, when Phelps Dodge Corp. first bid for the Toronto- based company. Teck Cominco Ltd. and Brazil's Cia. Vale do Rio Doce subsequently made proposals, pushing the offer price to C$19.4 billion ($17.4 billion). Teck today withdrew from the race after failing to sell stock to finance its offer.
``It's looking like there's a trader out there with a fairly large short position,'' David Davidson, a partner and senior analyst at Paradigm Capital in Toronto. ``There's not a lot of sympathy out there for someone buying to cover.''
To contact the reporter on this story:
Matthew Craze in London at mcraze@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: August 16, 2006 15:36 EDT
Wade, re HSOA. Companies in construction will typically book revenue one of two ways; either on completed jobs or percentage completion method. They will not normally book revenue for work that is yet to be performed. The verbage is too vague for me to see what HSOA is really doing. HSOA needs to triple their revs in the second half of this year from the first half to meet their revenue estimates. If you believe they can do that without large scale dilution, then there probably is some good value here. To me, it all sounds too good to be true, and I think it probably is.
HSOA, fwiw, here is stocklemon's latest report on the company responding to their latest PR, earnings, and guidance:
http://www.stocklemon.com/08_15_06.html
PYR- They also list PRs on their own website. Production did drop in the Nov 05 qrtr because they shut some production down for awhile as a safety precaution when a hurricane hit nearby.
Copper supplies tightening more? More copper mine strikes may be coming in Canada and Peru. Here's an article from Mining Weekly:
Copper may rise next week on speculation that labor unrest that has cut production at the world's largest mine may spread, further disrupting supply.
A strike over pay at Chile's Escondida, which last year supplied 8,5% of the world's copper, is in its fifth day and has slashed output. Wage negotiations are scheduled at other mines in Canada and Peru. Production has also been lost after a July 23 rockslide at Chile's Chuquicamata mine, run by state- owned Codelco.
“Production is down, and continues to decline,'' said Stuart Flerlage, managing principal at NuWave Investment Corp. in New York. “With strikes in South America pending and the world's two largest mines struggling, this will continue to keep copper prices bid'' higher.
Twelve of 16 analysts, investors, traders and consumers surveyed Aug. 9 and yesterday by Bloomberg News said copper will rise. Four said it will drop.
Strikes and other disruptions have resulted in production lagging behind demand this year. The shortfall, estimated at 200 000 metric tons by UBS AG last month, pushed copper to a record in May. The metal has gained 81% this year.
Copper for delivery in three months rose $95, or 1,l2%, to $7,970 a metric ton as of 7:30 a.m. on the London Metal Exchange. It traded at a record $8 800 on May 11.
Copper for September delivery on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange gained 0,5% to $3,64 a pound. Copper for delivery in October fell as much as 1730 yuan, 2.5%, to 68 220 yuan ($8 556) a ton on the Shanghai Futures Exchange. Chinese prices include 17% tax and a 2% duty.
Workers at Escondida, owned by Melbourne-based BHP Billiton, are seeking a larger slice of the company's record earnings. BHP Billiton, which reports full-year earnings on Aug. 23, said in February first-half net income soared 48% to $4 36-billion.
Workers want salary increases of 13 percentage points above inflation and a bonus of 16-million pesos ($29 350) each.
Chilean annual inflation was 3,8% in July. BHP Billiton has offered a raise 3 percentage points above inflation and a bonus of 8,5-million pesos a head.
Production at the mine has fallen by about 60%since the strike started, BHP Billiton said. The union said output is down about 80%.
Strikes at the Cananea and La Caridad mines, which are controlled by Grupo Mexico SA, also reduced supply this year.
More wage negotiations are scheduled at Teck Cominco Ltd.'s Highland Valley mine in Canada. The management at Antamina, a Peruvian mine owned by BHP Billiton and Canada's Falconbridge Ltd., is talking with workers, and Codelco is due to negotiate with employees later this year.
Codelco, the world's biggest copper miner, will need about three months to make repairs following the rockslide at Chuquicamata. The mine is losing about 576 tons a day of output.
Copper may also gain on speculation the US economy will continue to grow at a steady pace after the US Federal Reserve on Aug. 8 kept the overnight interest rate target between banks unchanged at 5,25%, following 17 consecutive increases.
The dollar has lost about 8% against the euro on speculation the Fed is nearing the end of its cycle of rate increases. A weaker dollar means it's cheaper to buy metals, which are traded in the currency.
“It's all looking bullish: the Fed pausing, the dollar under pressure, demand pretty good, Chuquicamata still affected by the recent rockfall,'' said Andy Cole, a London-based analyst at Metal Bulletin Research. “What more could the bulls ask for?''
NXG-This canadian copper and gold miner did excellent, reporting 29c in cash flow and 25c in diluted earnings for the Q. Net of a tax credit and one time expenses, they still earned over 21c, well above 17c consensus estimates. This one should do well tomorrow, but we shall see.
PYR- I was loading up today as it looks like a buy to me here.
Compare it with ASPN, a longtime board fav:
ASPN's physical reserves dropped last year while PYR's grew by 28%.
ASPN has a mkt cap about 16% less than PYR, while their gas reserves are 39% less, and their oil reserves are a tiny fraction of PYR's.
PYR is listed on the amex while ASPN is a BB stock.
PV10 value of PYR is $28 Mil vs. $5.7 mil for ASPN.
PYR earned 4c last quarter vs 6c for ASPN.
Note: PYR's earnings were untaxed while ASPN's were taxed (ASPN earned 10.7c last Q bf tax)
PYR's annualized PE based on last Q is 6.
ASPN's annualized PE based on last Q is 19.
ASPN's annualized PE based on untaxed earnings is 11.
Some would argue that PYR is still overpriced vs. the reserves but with them growing substantially, I rather doubt it.
PYR has been beat up of late due to Wellington fund dumping over 2 million shares. Once that selling dries up, I expect PYR to revert to fair value which is well north of the current price. While it hit a new 52 week low today, the fact that it closed above it is a positive.
Caveat emptor: All of this is IMO and I could well be wrong..
BHP- escondido, Chile copper strike... My understanding is that the company is offering a $16,000 bonus plus a wage hike of 3% over inflation. The workers want a $30,000 bonus plus a 13% wage hike over inflation.
I think I read somewhere that average wages for the union mine workers are already at $30K per year, so basically they want them more than doubled. I understand that the workers want a piece of the pie but I am also wondering as to what average worker wages are in Chile compared to US and Canada? My guess is that they are a small fraction. It also seems to me that offering a bonus tied to metal prices would be appropriate here.
Makes me also wonder how many of our mining stocks might have new contracts to be negotiated with union workers coming up soon. EZM, BWR, HBM, NXG, TGB etc....
IAIC..I also own a good chunk of shares in this one as well as having it parked in my PS3 garage. I was surprised it sold off so much but I think that investors reacted more to the drop in revs from the year ago quarter rather than the profits which held up nicely. Had the company also noted that revs were up 10% or so over Q1, I think that the market reaction would likely have been much better.
btw, I think the stock is a great buy here, at least for a small position anyway.