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Nobody talking, I think that's understandable, there isn't much to talk about with our buyer on hold for now. There are endless possibilities that KA could come up with, a JV, new drill in NM, ND, or Wy. who knows. I think our buyer knows and I think they will be back. For now I'm willing to sit on this and wait to see what happens.
I think $700.00 will only buy 100,000 shares.
Since pps went to .007 I would say a buy. I been trying to figure out who it is that is accumulating Hemi shares and I wonder if it isn't Mccloud Energy. If they become a majority shareholder wouldn't that put then in a good position to deal with KA, just an idea???
It doesn't really matter to me now, it's all history. The point is I learned not to believe everything written on a message board even if the person writing it thinks it to be true.FWIW Lowman I believe you said what you thought was right at the time. It takes a couple years of dealing with these pink CEO's to realize they don't always tell the truth. GLTU
That wasn't you buying was it? Maybe someone knows something.
I hardly think that someone who talked to KA and he mentioned he was still in business can be considered a pump and I doubt anybody but the two of you would.
Reazo, tho I am disappointed in the way things have gone with Hemi, I have to agree with your thoughts on the current situation and do not intend on selling any shares of Hemi at this time.KA appears to be still working trying to make Hemi whole again so I will wait to see what he comes up with.
Kels good luck with your strategy when it comes to dealing with Hemi. Yes, we have both learned a good lesson here, one that will not be repeated. For those that are considering getting involved in the pinks there is a lot to be learned by reading the posts over the last few years. Take the time and read it and you will save yourself a lot of money and grief ( defined as: intense emotional suffering caused by a lose) GLTA
Ok, now that I fully understand your opinion and trading strategy with Hemi let me just say that I wish I could turn back the clock a couple of years when Lowman was here pumping Hemi and I was stupid enough to buy it all, exist Lowman, and along comes Kels to take his place. I have learned a great deal from both of you when it comes to investing in the pinks, never listen to the slick talking educated people that appear to have all the answers, chances are they are wrong about everything and just trying to suck you in so they can flip the stock and leave you the bagholder. Live and learn.
Kels, do you really think that anybody cares to hear how you have been flipping this stock? I think it is time for you to hibernate. Your usefulness to Hemi and the shareholders has come to an end.
It is a shame that someone who knows what is going on with ALRY doesn't speak-up. There has to be a few people around that have a little DD on what they are up to. This is why I have stopped getting involved in any more pink stocks. I don't have much skin in the game on this one ,just enough to keep it interesting. I find most pink CEO's to be disgusting in the way they treat their shareholders. If these jerks all went broke tomorrow the world would be better off.
As I see it Lowman, you are right, and things have never looked better for CTGI as they do right now. FWIW GLTA
We not only got to our 200 ma, we are way beyond it now. Don't know what KA has going on but things are looking better for sure.
Gregg there are probaly 20 people that respect your posts for every 1 that doesn't. I would not let it bother me. Most people that are still in this do not post.
Thank You for the info.
I have heard about this other board but have not been able to find it. Could someone please give me directions to this site.
A lot of volume for a company thats not doing anything!!! Maybe KA will surprise us with a pr.
It does make you wonder what might be going on with Hemi. I still hold 2% of their stock ,so you know I've got my fingers crossed. GLTA
I will never invest another penny in a pink stock , not ever, at no time. I believe if everyone did the same we could stop the corruption that has taken over these markets.
Right, the trading action on this stock shows there is a huge amount of insider trading, how many shares have been traded in the last month? Get serious.
And you know all this for sure!! Facts, we want facts. Not opinion. Business is bad for all small o&g companies, not just Hemi.
I also welcome you as the new mod. I know you have been around for a long time. Let us all hope Hemi has a return to better days. GLTU
You were not impressed with your meeting with KAA. And might I ask where and when this meeting took place? Just like all the rest of the people that bring up topics like this, never any facts just opinions and we all have one.
With the dollar plunging again and with oil, gold and other resources soaring, it’s clear to me that the next phase of this great natural resource boom has begun.Will Hemi be able to take advantage of this boom in the future? If Hemi can find a way to stay solvent just maybe there is a future for the company down the road. A small chance I know, but being down 90%, why sell now.
Gee, maybe Hemi is just getting started.
America's Huge New Source of Oil
By Matthew Badiali, editor, S&A Resource Report
Mexico's colossal Cantarell field was once the second-largest oilfield in the world...
Cantarell funds 40% of Mexico's annual budget. Those petro-dollars paid for universities, built a $12 million sports stadium in Chihuahua, erected a giant flagpole in Nuevo Leon, remodeled churches in Yucatan, and constructed swanky government offices in Oaxaca.
But according to a recent Wall Street Journal article, oil production from Cantarell peaked in 2005 and has fallen 75% since then. The golden goose is a dead duck... and its decline cost the government $14 billion this year.
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The same thing is happening in Indonesia, Iran, and Venezuela. Indonesia went from a proud member of OPEC to a net oil importer. Venezuelan production peaked in 1997 and is down 27% since then. Iran's production peaked in 2005, but has only fallen 2% so far... The worst is yet to come there.
A lot of factors contributed to the undoing of these great oilfields – bureaucratic mismanagement and socialist daydreaming are key culprits – but behind it all is a simple, unavoidable fact of geo-engineering. That fact is going to make a few energy investors rich... Here's why:
Oil recovery comes in three stages: primary, secondary, and tertiary. The early part of oil production flows under the natural pressure of the field – the iconic gusher of the oil industry. Oil escapes into the well, where it can be pumped to the surface. That's easy work. But primary production will only get about 10% of the oil in the field to the surface.
Eventually, production exhausts the field's natural pressure. Then the engineers begin to replace the natural pressure by pumping water or natural gas into the field. That allows the companies to recover 20% to 40% of the oil left in the field. But it also means 60% to 80% of that oil remains trapped underground in so-called "depleted" fields.
Tertiary recovery, or enhanced oil recovery (EOR), employs more sophisticated techniques to recover another 25% of the original oil in place. That means companies can recover 50% to 100% as much oil as the field originally produced.
When you consider the U.S. has pumped 75 billion barrels of oil since 1977... that means, conservatively, we could recover another 35 billion barrels of oil from known fields.
A lot of the big oil companies scrapped their EOR plans in the '80s, when the price of a barrel of oil wallowed in the teens. Now that oil is back up around $70, EOR is viable again... and it represents a huge "new" source of oil.
EOR companies in the U.S. spend between $20 and $25 per barrel to produce light, sweet crude oil. That's in line with the industry's average cost to find and develop each barrel of oil. And it's well below the cost of developing fields offshore or in tar-sand deposits.
Right now is a terrific time to buy these kinds of oil plays. On average, the market values oil companies at about $14 per barrel of reserves. But you can buy EOR companies for half that – about $7 per barrel of reserves.
You see, most oil companies are valued on their "proven" reserves, meaning these oil holdings have been scrutinized and can be "economically and legally produced under existing economic and operating conditions." That's the SEC's standard: that the reserves can be produced today.
But by definition, most of the oil reserves held by EOR firms can't be produced today... That's why these companies are using unconventional techniques. EOR companies have to describe them to investors as "probable" reserves. And the market doesn't pay for "probable" – certainly not nearly as much as it does for proven.
The market distinction between proven and probable reserves suggests probable reserves are more risky, that maybe there isn't as much oil as the company says. But the fact is, this isn't speculative drilling in virgin territory. Domestic EOR companies are working in 100-year-old oilfields that have been measured, assessed, assayed, developed, and produced over and over. Everyone knows the oil is there.
As soon as the rigs start pumping out petroleum, the SEC's bureaucrats can no longer ignore those reserves. The EOR companies can shift them to the "proven" category, and the market will respond by bidding up the value of those barrels.
China's New Gold Rush
These Commodity Stocks Are on the Brink of Disaster
Oilfield reclamation technology is actually the future of the entire U.S. oil industry. It's safe, inexpensive, and will get cheaper over time. According to a 2006 study for the Department of Energy, the U.S. has about 210 billion barrels of oil that it can recover using EOR techniques. That's nearly 10 times today's proven reserves.
With prices so low, now is the time to buy these companies. Out of fairness to my S&A Resource Report subscribers, I can't reveal the names of my favorite EOR plays. But I can point to new technology like EOR to remind folks that the world still has a tremendous amount of oil waiting to be unlocked.
It's simply taking more innovation to find it. The winners of that innovation race will make for terrific speculations.
Good investing,
I care not to discuss the situation because it is all for nothing if Hemi does not return to become a viable business. Most all money is lost at this time. You can go on and on,but it means nothing. Either Keith comes up with a plan for the company or he goes under. You can talk til the cows come home and it will not change a thing.
Kelseyf, could it be there is still a rabbit in the hat? Some may call me a fool, but I never sold a share of Hemi stock.
Nice post kelseyf and I am in agreement.
Thank You wallwizz for the update.
I think you should add at the end of your sentence=== in my opinion
I have heard NO rumors, however, it is time to get the ball rolling and if something came out tomorrow I would not be surprised. Let me just say that I have not given-up on Hemi and its management.
Could it be a rumor? Maybe, maybe not. I really do not know. However, it is hard for me to believe that with O&G going up Hemi management is sitting around doing nothing. A joint venture with another o&g company at this time just might be what is needed to get things moving.
Kelseyf, I follow a lot penny stocks that are doing just as Hemi is doing in these current economic times. Hemi is following smart business practices at this time, they will return to fight another day. GLTA
The Farmer's Almanac defined blue moon as an extra full moon that occurred in a season; one season was normally three full moons. If a season had four full moons, then the third full moon was named a blue moon.
Hemi's CEO has already said that they are waiting for a better economy. You can accept it or not. What happens to the pps at this time makes no difference to me. What is important is that they do what is needed to keep the company strong enough to survive this downturn and come up with a plan to increase production. Will it happen? You say no, I say maybe. Only time will tell.
Check the trading, all buys, and we drop 40%. RIGHT.
Thanks for the info, we will let these other two guess at what that means.
Still all-in, just waiting for things to get better.
FROM THE CEO OF Hemi:
Economic conditions in both the stock market and the oil and gas industry remain tough and uncertain as we go forward into 2009. We are faced with volatility and unpredictability in the markets that make projecting and budgeting for many of our future undertakings extremely difficult, especially in the area of projecting time frames for the return of capital expenses. Hemi remains debt-free; the management team has been aggressively working to reduce expenses, conserve capital, while considering offers from third party entities interested in purchasing other non-core assets that are either underutilized or non-performing/producing. These steps have insured that Hemi has weathered the current economic storm thus far and will be able to do so in the future.
When Keith is ready he will let us all know, until then sit back and relax.
And down 41% on 6300 shares, Sad
Did't they go off the BB at around .09. We are still at around .09., so if we drop to .04 I figure they might be selling. IMO