Oil now very green.. tomorrow opening should gap up few pips.. watch out 🤫
piscesmonkey ( Date: 03-Dec-2024 17:08) Posted:
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OPEC+ Prepares for Three-Month Extension of Cuts
https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/OPEC-Prepares-for-Three-Month-Extension-of-Cuts.html
13/14 series possible this week..oil related all chiong up ✌ ️ ✌ ️
piscesmonkey ( Date: 03-Dec-2024 15:30) Posted:
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history repeat oct 2019 just take only fewsday go up from 10cents to 20cents
piscesmonkey ( Date: 03-Dec-2024 15:30) Posted:
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This strong buying maybe today can close 130
piscesmonkey ( Date: 03-Dec-2024 15:18) Posted:
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Wah strong buying
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/energy-commodities/oil-settles-lower-after-israel-agrees-ceasefire-deal-lebanon
piscesmonkey ( Date: 23-Nov-2024 15:55) Posted:
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US expects thousands of North Korean troops to enter Ukraine combat &lsquo soon&rsquo
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/nov/23/ukraine-war-briefing-us-expects-thousands-of-north-korean-troops-to-enter-ukraine-combat-soon
Demerits:
Nav 0.09
Burn cash
Depleting reserve
Merit:
Geopolitical factors favouring Rex
Management likes to keep share price high
Nav 0.09
Burn cash
Depleting reserve
Merit:
Geopolitical factors favouring Rex
Management likes to keep share price high
Is indeed a very good n educational article for real investors
LP2020 ( Date: 22-Nov-2024 14:01) Posted:
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please make the long long storey short. get to the important points. thanks
stlimst ( Date: 22-Nov-2024 14:57) Posted:
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agree. many times there is no logic for a price to go up or down, and still if BBs like to play it up or down it will move regardless of the oil price or any news.
stlimst ( Date: 22-Nov-2024 14:57) Posted:
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Still waiting for Iran to strike Israel
tofudidi ( Date: 22-Nov-2024 15:47) Posted:
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standby for next rocket play.... over the weekend will be massive...
piscesmonkey ( Date: 22-Nov-2024 15:44) Posted:
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Oil shoot up liao
In SGX, such articles count for nought!
No impact on share price.
In our small market, what you need is one (or more) BB and they will determine what price the share would be traded.
Have been around long enough.
No impact on share price.
In our small market, what you need is one (or more) BB and they will determine what price the share would be traded.
Have been around long enough.
LP2020 ( Date: 22-Nov-2024 14:01) Posted:
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Gap too far fro. RH petrogas
LP2020 ( Date: 22-Nov-2024 14:01) Posted:
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good article about rex
Joelton ( Date: 22-Nov-2024 11:52) Posted:
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Rex International miffed at &lsquo unloved and undervalued&rsquo label, intensifies bid to raise oil reserves.
The wider energy sector has seen gains in recent years, driven by geopolitical tensions and recovering post-pandemic demand, which have supported prices. However, Singapore-listed oil producer Rex International has experienced a 40% decline in its share price year-to-date, continuing its downward trend over the past five years.
 
Perception is the problem, with the company being an &ldquo unloved and undervalued&rdquo stock, says Rex International executive chairman John d&rsquo Abo in an interview with The Edge Singapore.
 
&ldquo The reality is that we have a hard time persuading the market how to value an exploration and production [E& P] company, because no one&rsquo s looking at risk-NAV and most people tend to focus not on ebitda, but on the bottomline,&rdquo adds d&rsquo Abo, who joined the company&rsquo s board as an independent director in May 2022 before taking up his current role on April 25.
 
For the 1HFY2024 ended June, Rex International recorded a loss of US$10.45 million ($14.0 million), despite seeing a 48.4% y-o-y improvement in revenue to US$158.67 million from increased production to an average of 10,936 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd). 
 
&ldquo We actually made a lot, but again, a lot of it&rsquo s on paper, right? Because you&rsquo ve got to take depletion in oil assets through the profit and loss,&rdquo reasons d&rsquo Abo, who was previously an investment banker with the likes of Royal Bank of Canada, Credit Suisse, CLSA and HSBC James Capel.
 
A hefty tax expense of US$49.1 million in the period largely accounted for the difference due to average production in the company&rsquo s Brage and Yme offshore fields in Norway increasing 103.0% y-o-y to 9,010 boepd, resulting in increased tax by the Norwegian government.
 
&ldquo You take all the oil through the top, all the way down to profit before tax, and then the (Norwegian) government comes and takes 78% of it. But they also helped us a lot because they reimburse you 78% of your exploration spend, so you have that help &mdash almost like an investor, giving you the cash back,&rdquo says d&rsquo Abo.
 
Having had operations in Norway since 2012, d&rsquo Abo says that production coming out of the country will continue to grow, with a discovery in October 2023 of an oil pocket named the Bestla field alongside its normal reserve in the Brage field. This resulted in the Brage field (which now includes Bestla) having 3.41 million barrels of oil equivalent (MMboe) in FY2023, compared to 3.35 MMboe in FY2022.
 
The company also acquired an additional 15% interest in the Yme field in September for US$15.65 million, taking its total ownership of the field to 25%. &ldquo By taking that extra 15% in the Yme field, we&rsquo re actually going to add another 6 million barrels of reserves. So if you add that up, we currently have 20 million barrels, but with more to come, we will have 25 million barrels in the ground.&rdquo
 
&ldquo So again, the more reserves you have, the longer you&rsquo re going to be able to produce and have revenue, and hopefully that pays out dividends and all the rest,&rdquo says d&rsquo Abo.
 
Dealing with an emptying well
 
In 2020, the company struck gold in Oman &mdash literally. It discovered the Yumna field in an offshore block the size of 17 sq km, which it has held since 2012. &ldquo There had been no previous discoveries &mdash I think one well had been drilled, and then there were a few players in there before us, but that hadn&rsquo t been a discovery,&rdquo says d&rsquo Abo.
 
Although this field has successfully flowed for 4½ years, the levels of reserves are naturally depleting and will eventually be drained until no oil remains. In line with the assessment, production from the Yumna field decreased by 56.1% y-o-y to 2,099 stock tank barrels per day (stbd) in the 1HFY2024, from 4,781 stbd a year ago. Reserves also dropped from 5.01 MMboe in FY2022 to 3.62 MMboe in FY2023.
 
Notably, Rex International did not record any revenue from the Yumna field in the 1HFY2024, following a multi-well drilling programme to obtain remnant oil deposits.
 
&ldquo Unless we drill and find more oil, we won&rsquo t be producing any in a year&rsquo s time, and we won&rsquo t have any reserves. What we had in Oman at the beginning of the year was 1.8 million barrels, and we&rsquo ve shipped 600,000 barrels,&rdquo says d&rsquo Abo. 
 
To counter this, he says Rex International is looking for a new partner to buy a stake in its search for new reserves within the Oman block. 
 
He adds: &ldquo We are now looking to bring in a new farm-in partner and that process is starting as of today. It&rsquo s an ordinary course of business, and so we&rsquo re not making a big announcement about it. We&rsquo re working with a professional acquisition and disposal boutique in the oil and gas sector called Gneiss [Energy], to find a farm-in partner for Oman to carry us.
 
&ldquo So again, typically when you get a farm-in partner, they&rsquo re going to take a percentage of the block, but we are looking for them to carry us to fund a couple of wells.&rdquo
 
If Rex International succeeds in finding a farm-in partner, the company will certainly hope to find another reserve within the Oman block, as the infrastructure required for discovery and drilling are already located in the same waters. 
 
Another reason is the company&rsquo s existing familiarity with the Omani government&rsquo s approach to the sale of oil. D&rsquo Abo says that Rex International signed an exploration production sharing agreement with the Omani government which splits the sale of oil into two components &mdash cost oil and profit oil. &ldquo Cost oil is how much you can take off, and profit oil goes to the government. So in Oman, profit oil covers all the taxes, so you don&rsquo t see it at the bottom tax expense, because it&rsquo s already taken at the topline.&rdquo
 
Understanding where the money flows
 
Rex International is also eyeing the waters off the West African country of Benin as part of its diversification strategy, having been awarded an offshore licence to operate recently in 2023.
 
D&rsquo Abo says there will not be a need to drill more exploration wells, as the planned asset, the Sè mè field, has an existing reserve, but production stopped way back in 1998.
 
He continues: &ldquo The reality of oil and gas exploration today is that not many people are really doing it. Why? Because there&rsquo s a lot of discovered oil out there already. So the only people who are doing expensive offshore drilling are the big major corporations, they&rsquo re not going to come and bother looking at these small, marginal fields with 10 million barrels.&rdquo  
 
Like Oman, Benin&rsquo s coastal waters are shallow, which d&rsquo Abo says allows Rex International to apply the same methodology and infrastructure in tapping the Sè mè field. &ldquo It&rsquo s exactly the same in West Africa, because it&rsquo s sitting in about 50 metres of water and it&rsquo s even quicker. You don&rsquo t have to build a pipeline. You don&rsquo t have to take on nearly so much abandonment expenditure, etc.&rdquo
 
The country also has a tax system that the chairman notes is a blend of Norway and Oman&rsquo s, with the government taking on the topline and the tax line. &ldquo Benin is more beneficial to us than in Oman. So from a tax jurisdiction perspective, the terms are more favourable.&rdquo
 
To date, d&rsquo Abo says that the Sè mè field&rsquo s development plan will be submitted as soon as possible for the Beninense government&rsquo s approval, as aligning the historical data required took six months to do so. Once online, the field will add 10.9 million stock tank barrels (MMstb) to Rex&rsquo s reserves.
 
Although Rex International has a carbon capture licence in which d&rsquo Abo notes is a business he is &ldquo keen to participate in&rdquo , as well as ambitions in the potential operation of commercial drones, the company remains rooted in ensuring a healthy and growing level of reserves.
 
&ldquo In summary, in the beginning of 2023, we had around 8 million barrels of oil. We have now added 6 million barrels by buying a further 15% in Yme, we&rsquo ve added 6 million barrels from Benin and that number will go up. We&rsquo ve also added 4 million barrels of resources in the Bestla field, which, as soon as the development plans are approved, will move into reserves,&rdquo says d&rsquo Abo.
 
&ldquo In the space of a year, we have gone from 8 million barrels to 24 to 25 million barrels of reserves. Furthermore, even without accounting for Oman, with Norway and Benin, we will be pretty close to 20,000 barrels of production a day in a year&rsquo s time. This gives me a lot more comfort as the chairman, that we are going to be around for longer.&rdquo