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based on the veracity of his past statements i think he just plays one on tv. euroliarman is probably a 19 year old daytrader.
i'm not saying you created the sell-off, but considering the stock is headed back up right now you might want to take advantage of it. LOL
what garbage. you are awful. zero credibility.
as for the geologist, try using your imagination. when i keyed in his iniitials i found several books that he wrote. most academics don't have websites.
spark, excellent DD! i think somebody was fishing for cheaper shares today, and it looks like they got some. then again... so did i. thanks, euroman!!
EFCR is filling the gapper from the AM, everybody... get onboard the Ukraine oil train!
EFCR has international assets in the eastern block, parts of asia, and middle east. plus they've got domestic holdings:
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/060321/20060321005405.html?.v=1
this recent PR may explain the surge in volume lately. big things in the works??
gotta love the chart:
http://bigcharts.marketwatch.com/quickchart/quickchart.asp?symb=efcr&sid=0&o_symb=efcr&f...
BB KING, check out EFCR... GAP IS FILLED!!
i added, too. bought more than 30% more AURC. thanks very much to those generous ones for the cheap shares!
lehac, why was your first post today on this stock about the "bad news"? LOL soooo transparent. basher. get lost.
okay, it's official: EFCR is ready to take off. recent spikes in volume indicate this stock is nobody's little secret anymore...
is the pullback on EFCR done? looks like it's ready for another climb!! if it fills the gap today i'm going to buy a boatload!
EFCR is abosolutely on fire. .0369.... get it while you still can. international oil play.
EFCR has SO MUCH upside from here, IMVHO! it's going parabolic!!!! .0369!!!!
i think EFCR is going to make my whole year. INCREDIBLE!!!
EFCR, folks. it's going to be huge. big breakout. ukraine, us domestic, asian and libyan oil play. get it now while it's still under .04!!!!
yes, indeed, BBKing, EFCR could be a monster! spent all last night looking at filiings and there is A LOT HERE.
EFCR may just be the next OMOG, AMEP, NDOL all in one!
EASTERN EUROPEAN OIL CO WITH HOLDINGS IN THE US, ASIA, LIBYA. UNREAL CHART BREAKING OUT OF DOWNTREND NOW.
RECENT VERY POSTIVE NEWS:
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/060321/20060321005405.html?.v=1
it seems to have been under the radar until yesterday, mid session...
today looking very strong...!
EFCR may just be the next OMOG, NDOL and AMEP all in one!
EASTERN EUROPEAN OIL CO WITH HOLDINGS IN THE US, ASIA, LIBYA. UNREAL CHART BREAKING OUT OF DOWNTREND NOW.
RECENT VERY POSTIVE NEWS:
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/060321/20060321005405.html?.v=1
BUT IT WAS TOTALLY UNDER THE RADAR...
EFCR may just be the next OMOG, NDOL and AMEP all in one!
EASTERN EUROPEAN OIL CO WITH HOLDINGS IN THE US, ASIA, LIBYA. UNREAL CHART BREAKING OUT OF DOWNTREND NOW.
RECENT VERY POSTIVE NEWS:
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/060321/20060321005405.html?.v=1
BUT IT WAS TOTALLY UNDER THE RADAR...
EFCR may just be the next OMOG, NDOL and AMEP all in one!
EASTERN EUROPEAN OIL CO WITH HOLDINGS IN THE US, ASIA, LIBYA. UNREAL CHART BREAKING OUT OF DOWNTREND NOW.
RECENT VERY POSTIVE NEWS:
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/060321/20060321005405.html?.v=1
BUT IT WAS TOTALLY UNDER THE RADAR...
the word is UP.
absolutely. we're in the sweet spot. black-gold to satisfy current demand, gold-gold to hedge against energy related inflation. ethanol, solar, wind and hydrogen to get us all out of this mess! win, win, win, win, win for the investors in A NEW ENERGY PARADIGM!
i've been accumulating STDE, too. still very under the radar. standard energy corp has been developing technology to make ethanol from municipal waste. their facility in development near philadelphia offers a cheaper alternative to customers than landfills and creates ethanol from what would otherwise be buried trash! see the company 10QSB:
http://freerealtime.brand.edgar-online.com/fetchFilingFrameset.aspx?FilingID=4226324&Type=HTML
agreed, agreed, agreed! imagine where this stock will be by the middle of a long, hot summer, gasoline over $4 a gallon. ethanol stocks will be the rising stars in an otherwise bearish market. we've got a winner in INSQ.
thanks, stockhound. i agree with your forecast for OMOG. when i asked "how high can it go?" i was referring to oil, generally, after the iranian president claimed it was undervalued at current levels. this suggests to me that the OPEC nations may be setting up to call america's bluff on our foreign oil dependency and we could require a dramatic increase in domestic supplies, especially if independent producers like venezuela decides to shift sales to china and india rather than us. in that scenario companies like OMOG are in the right place at the right time. so are we, for that matter... imho!
a lot has happened since mid-march, hasn't it? check out this article:
[March 19, 2006]
DJ Iran OPEC Governor Sees No Benefit In Using Oil As Weapon
(Comtex Business Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge)TEHRAN, Mar 19, 2006 (Dow Jones Commodities News Select via Comtex) --Iran's OPEC governor said Sunday that the use of oil as a weapon in the existing tension between Iran and the West over the Islamic regime's nuclear program won't be in the interest of either side.
Hussein Kazempour-Ardebili said if Iran decides to stop its export of about 2.5 million barrels a day of oil to the international market, the price of this commodity might ascend to as high as $100 a barrel, but the higher price won't benefit Iran.
"Prices might rise to around $100 per barrel. But when we don't sell any oil, what difference does it make how much the price is," the Persian daily Sharq quoted Kazempour as saying.
In case of the withdrawal of the Iranian crude from the global market, the conditions will be improved for Iran's competitors to sell their oil at a much higher price and enhance their chances of building production capacity, he said.
Kazempour said, likewise, if consuming countries decide to damage Iran economically and boycott its oil, the long-term prospect will be equally dim for them by losing access to the safe supply of oil from Iran with a production capacity of 4.2 million b/d, of which 2.5 million b/d are exported.
"In other word, the use of oil as a weapon would not have long-term benefits for either producer or consumer side," Kazempour said.
He called attention to Iran's efforts during the 1980-1988 war with neighboring Iraq during which Iran tried to maintain its position as an oil exporting country under circumstances in which Baghdad tried to make the Persian Gulf waterway unsafe for the Iranian oil export by attacking oil tankers.
Kazempour also issued a veiled warning to Arab oil producing countries of the Persian Gulf - particularly Saudi Arabia - who try to encourage the West to place Iran under trade and economic sanctions by assuring them of additional supply of oil in case that of Iran is taken out of the market.
"Everybody knows that security in our region is an integrated one," he said, adding either all parties have it or no country has it, Kazempour said.
Kazempour's sentiments about the necessity of keeping the Persian Gulf safe for all the waterway's member states echoed those of other Iranian government's officials in recent weeks.
Iran's interior minister, Mostafa Pourmohammadi, said last week that if Iran is placed under trade or economic sanctions or its access to the waterway is restricted, it will use whatever means at its disposal to make the waterway unsafe for other oil exporting countries of the region as well.
The bulk of the world oil passes through the narrow Strait of Hormuz over which Iran exercises a lot of control.
Kazempour ruled out the likelihood that the U.S. might use military force to put Iranian oil facilities in southern Iran out of use in case of heightened tension between the two adversaries.
"There is a great opposition in the international public opinion in regard to an attack against oil facilities. Since the world's energy security depends on preservation of oil facilities, irrespective of what country they belong to," he said.
The U.N. Security Council took up Iran's nuclear case earlier this month after the U.N. nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, sent a report asking it to decide about Iran's nuclear activities.
Senior diplomats from the five permanent members of the council are meeting Monday to break their deadlock and reach an agreement on a statement aimed at curbing Iran's nuclear ambitions.
Iran, the second largest producer within the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, possesses 12% and 15% of the world's proven oil and natural gas reserves, respectively.
-By Hashem Kalantari, Dow Jones Newswires; +9821 8896 6230; Hashem-Kalantari@yahoo.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
03-19-06 0847ET
Iran President Says Oil Below Real Value
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By ALI AKBAR DAREINI Associated Press Writer
April 19,2006 | TEHRAN, Iran -- President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Wednesday that the crude oil prices now at record levels still were below their "real value," state-run Tehran radio reported.
In his first remarks on the current price of oil, the hard-line Iranian leader also said developed countries were benefiting most from the high prices.
"The global oil price has not reached its real value yet. The products derived from crude oil are sold at prices dozens of times higher than those charged by oil-producing countries," the radio quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.
He did not say what oil prices should be.
Iran is embroiled in a dispute with the West over its nuclear program. Tehran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, but the United States and some of its allies suspect Iran is trying to develop weapons.
The U.N. Security Council has set an April 28 deadline for Tehran to stop uranium enrichment, which can make fuel for both nuclear energy and nuclear weapons. Earlier this week, President Bush said "all options are on the table" -- including military action -- to prevent Iran from developing atomic weapons.
Ahmadinejad stopped short of saying Iran would use oil as a weapon, a tactic much feared by his antagonists on the nuclear issue. Iran is the world's fourth largest oil-producing country and the second in OPEC.
Meanwhile, the price of oil futures touched a new high above $71 on Wednesday. Light, sweet crude for May delivery rose to a record $71.70 in early morning trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange before dropping back to $70.90 by late morning.
George Orwel, an analyst at the New York-based Petroleum Intelligence Weekly, said he believed Ahmadinejad was not serious but was playing the oil card to resist pressure over his nuclear program.
"They are using the oil as a political football, every time there's an issue with Iran, the oil market freaks out," he said in a telephone interview.
Earlier this week, as oil prices pushed above a record $70 a barrel, ABN Amro broker Lee Fader said the trigger was "heightened fear about (U.S.) military action" against Iran over its defiance of the West on the nuclear issue.
If the United States were to attack Iran, Tehran might try to cripple the world economy by putting a stranglehold on the oil that moves through the Strait of Hormuz -- a narrow, strategically important waterway running to Iran's south.
While discounting Ahmadinejad's seriousness in his Wednesday comments about the value of oil, Orwel conceded the oil industry could not do without the 2.5 million barrels that Iran exports daily.
"Ahmadinejad is trying to show his muscle so that the Bush administration can realize the consequences on the oil market of further confrontation with Iran," Orwel said, adding that he fully expected Iran to threaten to cut off oil supplies if the confrontation with the West continued.
Ahmadinejad urged oil-producing countries, both inside and outside the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, to establish a fund to help alleviate the pressure from high oil prices on the developing world.
the case for hydrogen keeps getting better:
Iran President Says Oil Below Real Value
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By ALI AKBAR DAREINI Associated Press Writer
April 19,2006 | TEHRAN, Iran -- President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Wednesday that the crude oil prices now at record levels still were below their "real value," state-run Tehran radio reported.
In his first remarks on the current price of oil, the hard-line Iranian leader also said developed countries were benefiting most from the high prices.
"The global oil price has not reached its real value yet. The products derived from crude oil are sold at prices dozens of times higher than those charged by oil-producing countries," the radio quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.
He did not say what oil prices should be.
Iran is embroiled in a dispute with the West over its nuclear program. Tehran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, but the United States and some of its allies suspect Iran is trying to develop weapons.
The U.N. Security Council has set an April 28 deadline for Tehran to stop uranium enrichment, which can make fuel for both nuclear energy and nuclear weapons. Earlier this week, President Bush said "all options are on the table" -- including military action -- to prevent Iran from developing atomic weapons.
Ahmadinejad stopped short of saying Iran would use oil as a weapon, a tactic much feared by his antagonists on the nuclear issue. Iran is the world's fourth largest oil-producing country and the second in OPEC.
Meanwhile, the price of oil futures touched a new high above $71 on Wednesday. Light, sweet crude for May delivery rose to a record $71.70 in early morning trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange before dropping back to $70.90 by late morning.
George Orwel, an analyst at the New York-based Petroleum Intelligence Weekly, said he believed Ahmadinejad was not serious but was playing the oil card to resist pressure over his nuclear program.
"They are using the oil as a political football, every time there's an issue with Iran, the oil market freaks out," he said in a telephone interview.
Earlier this week, as oil prices pushed above a record $70 a barrel, ABN Amro broker Lee Fader said the trigger was "heightened fear about (U.S.) military action" against Iran over its defiance of the West on the nuclear issue.
If the United States were to attack Iran, Tehran might try to cripple the world economy by putting a stranglehold on the oil that moves through the Strait of Hormuz -- a narrow, strategically important waterway running to Iran's south.
While discounting Ahmadinejad's seriousness in his Wednesday comments about the value of oil, Orwel conceded the oil industry could not do without the 2.5 million barrels that Iran exports daily.
"Ahmadinejad is trying to show his muscle so that the Bush administration can realize the consequences on the oil market of further confrontation with Iran," Orwel said, adding that he fully expected Iran to threaten to cut off oil supplies if the confrontation with the West continued.
Ahmadinejad urged oil-producing countries, both inside and outside the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, to establish a fund to help alleviate the pressure from high oil prices on the developing world.
Iran President Says Oil Below Real Value
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By ALI AKBAR DAREINI Associated Press Writer
April 19,2006 | TEHRAN, Iran -- President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Wednesday that the crude oil prices now at record levels still were below their "real value," state-run Tehran radio reported.
In his first remarks on the current price of oil, the hard-line Iranian leader also said developed countries were benefiting most from the high prices.
"The global oil price has not reached its real value yet. The products derived from crude oil are sold at prices dozens of times higher than those charged by oil-producing countries," the radio quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.
He did not say what oil prices should be.
Iran is embroiled in a dispute with the West over its nuclear program. Tehran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, but the United States and some of its allies suspect Iran is trying to develop weapons.
The U.N. Security Council has set an April 28 deadline for Tehran to stop uranium enrichment, which can make fuel for both nuclear energy and nuclear weapons. Earlier this week, President Bush said "all options are on the table" -- including military action -- to prevent Iran from developing atomic weapons.
Ahmadinejad stopped short of saying Iran would use oil as a weapon, a tactic much feared by his antagonists on the nuclear issue. Iran is the world's fourth largest oil-producing country and the second in OPEC.
Meanwhile, the price of oil futures touched a new high above $71 on Wednesday. Light, sweet crude for May delivery rose to a record $71.70 in early morning trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange before dropping back to $70.90 by late morning.
George Orwel, an analyst at the New York-based Petroleum Intelligence Weekly, said he believed Ahmadinejad was not serious but was playing the oil card to resist pressure over his nuclear program.
"They are using the oil as a political football, every time there's an issue with Iran, the oil market freaks out," he said in a telephone interview.
Earlier this week, as oil prices pushed above a record $70 a barrel, ABN Amro broker Lee Fader said the trigger was "heightened fear about (U.S.) military action" against Iran over its defiance of the West on the nuclear issue.
If the United States were to attack Iran, Tehran might try to cripple the world economy by putting a stranglehold on the oil that moves through the Strait of Hormuz -- a narrow, strategically important waterway running to Iran's south.
While discounting Ahmadinejad's seriousness in his Wednesday comments about the value of oil, Orwel conceded the oil industry could not do without the 2.5 million barrels that Iran exports daily.
"Ahmadinejad is trying to show his muscle so that the Bush administration can realize the consequences on the oil market of further confrontation with Iran," Orwel said, adding that he fully expected Iran to threaten to cut off oil supplies if the confrontation with the West continued.
Ahmadinejad urged oil-producing countries, both inside and outside the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, to establish a fund to help alleviate the pressure from high oil prices on the developing world.
how high can it go??? it'll be a long, hot summer... gooooo OMOG!!
Iran President Says Oil Below Real Value
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By ALI AKBAR DAREINI Associated Press Writer
April 19,2006 | TEHRAN, Iran -- President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Wednesday that the crude oil prices now at record levels still were below their "real value," state-run Tehran radio reported.
In his first remarks on the current price of oil, the hard-line Iranian leader also said developed countries were benefiting most from the high prices.
"The global oil price has not reached its real value yet. The products derived from crude oil are sold at prices dozens of times higher than those charged by oil-producing countries," the radio quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.
He did not say what oil prices should be.
Iran is embroiled in a dispute with the West over its nuclear program. Tehran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, but the United States and some of its allies suspect Iran is trying to develop weapons.
The U.N. Security Council has set an April 28 deadline for Tehran to stop uranium enrichment, which can make fuel for both nuclear energy and nuclear weapons. Earlier this week, President Bush said "all options are on the table" -- including military action -- to prevent Iran from developing atomic weapons.
Ahmadinejad stopped short of saying Iran would use oil as a weapon, a tactic much feared by his antagonists on the nuclear issue. Iran is the world's fourth largest oil-producing country and the second in OPEC.
Meanwhile, the price of oil futures touched a new high above $71 on Wednesday. Light, sweet crude for May delivery rose to a record $71.70 in early morning trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange before dropping back to $70.90 by late morning.
George Orwel, an analyst at the New York-based Petroleum Intelligence Weekly, said he believed Ahmadinejad was not serious but was playing the oil card to resist pressure over his nuclear program.
"They are using the oil as a political football, every time there's an issue with Iran, the oil market freaks out," he said in a telephone interview.
Earlier this week, as oil prices pushed above a record $70 a barrel, ABN Amro broker Lee Fader said the trigger was "heightened fear about (U.S.) military action" against Iran over its defiance of the West on the nuclear issue.
If the United States were to attack Iran, Tehran might try to cripple the world economy by putting a stranglehold on the oil that moves through the Strait of Hormuz -- a narrow, strategically important waterway running to Iran's south.
While discounting Ahmadinejad's seriousness in his Wednesday comments about the value of oil, Orwel conceded the oil industry could not do without the 2.5 million barrels that Iran exports daily.
"Ahmadinejad is trying to show his muscle so that the Bush administration can realize the consequences on the oil market of further confrontation with Iran," Orwel said, adding that he fully expected Iran to threaten to cut off oil supplies if the confrontation with the West continued.
Ahmadinejad urged oil-producing countries, both inside and outside the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, to establish a fund to help alleviate the pressure from high oil prices on the developing world.
gyrodon, here's your link. http://www.omogoil.com/omog28.pdf
if you appreciate my DD membermarks are always appreciated!
i think there's more to it than this shareholder letter leads one to believe. notice from the date on it this is a bit old. i have no doubt things have progressed since, and many say it's far more in OMOG's favor. notice below from the company website: the lawyer for OMOG is now on retainer instead of hourly and has informed OMOG's managment the properties in quesion may be a much larger number than originally anticipated.
this was the original link for the text that follows, but the OMOG website is "under construction."
http://omogoil.com/legal_updates.html
"An interesting point for shareholders is that when we first engaged counsel, it was purely on an hourly basis. As I mentioned above, counsel has now concluded that there seems to be a wide reaching Corporate Tort going back many years involving a considerable amount of additional Company assets that appear to have been illegally transferred to defendants. Due to these new revelations, Counsel has offered to amend his retainer agreement from pure hourly, to primarily contingency on recovery of items and damages that we originally were not expecting. Which to those who don’t understand the difference means that he is confident enough now that we not only should prevail in our original action, but should recover a significant amount of other assets or financial relief that he is willing to “spec” a good bit of his time on the bet that a percentage of recovery will far exceed his normal $450 an hour rate. This is obviously a positive for shareholders in two ways in that it conserves capital for our new ongoing Oil and Gas efforts and creates an additional incentive for counsel to go after every possible item of fraud over and above our original goal of just recovering known assets and records while putting the cost risk primarily on him. I want to stress that under the new agreement, only a very small portion (10%) of the contingency would affect items that we originally were going after, ie. the 300+ stripper wells, the majority of the contingency comes from recovery and damages over and above these items."
"Additionally, at the suggestion of Nathan, we have increased the litigation team by bringing in an additional law firm to effectively bifurcate the actions and speed up recovery of the original items we were after while not putting pressure to hurry on the expanded investigation which seems to be bearing significant and very valuable fruit."
thanks a lot, rags! good luck!
i spoke with a broker from morgan stanley today. don't quote me on this, but he said not until june. i find that hard to believe, but who knows.
the 5 day chart is a thing of beauty. these are the foothills to what will become mt. everest. all in all, a great day for AURC!
a recent legal settlement went in OMOG's favor. "they" say it could be worth as much as 40-50M. this would place OMOG at .03 per share. it's now trading at .0094...
"they" move markets. i am just the messenger. do your own DD!
and good luck!
they say OMOG could booooosh to .03... now under a penny, folks!
PAPO, OMOG, AMHD, STDE... reacting to iran jitters and tightening supply driven by china and india demand. it's no wonder these tiny domestic oil cos are attracting huge investments. now is only the beginning IMHO. by the end of the summer i predict any of these "baby oils" will have gone sky high.
BLACK GOLD? compare intraday charts of NDOL and AURC. very interesting... looks like NDOL got the pop and then traders flocked over here to AURC and put even more cash to work!
ZHNE (zhone technologies, telecom/broadband/voip play) will release earnings tomorrow after the bell. word on the street is they will suprise to the upside. hot sector. maybe there's something to this rumor. i'm IN.
http://www.zhone.com/
i hope it does WELL for us, no pun intended. chart is looking nice. loved that bounce off of 4.6... folks are chattering about a gapper in the AM...
tradingday is sort of like consulting the magic 8-ball imho, but since so many other traders visit the site i think it's a bullish indicator:
http://quotes.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=PAPO&code=BTDY" target="_blank">http://www.tradingday.com/tbs.html?http://quotes.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=PAPO&code=BTDY
we broke through resistance at .04, now it's time to bust past .06... think we'll see a strong close!
good luck!
seems to be holding up fine. given the run AMHD just had this is great so far to only have a 15% pullback. have to admit i took a bit off the table to play PAPO, but it's coming back to AMHD!
good luck, everyone.
does CHYS have a lot of upside from here? check out this recent PR:
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/060403/clm037.html?.v=50