Thursday, May 15, 2008

Pescod Talks These Stocks = Accumulation


Connacher to participate in BNP Paribas Annual Investor Conference
13:26 EDT Thursday, May 15, 2008

CALGARY, May 15 /CNW/ - Connacher Oil and Gas Limited (CLL-TSX) announced today that it is a participant at the 2008 BNP Paribas Annual Investor Conference in the Bahamas on May 16, 2008. Participating in a panel discussion on oil sands at approximately 9:45 AM MST will be Mr. Richard Kines, Vice President Finance and Chief Financial Officer and Mr. Cameron Todd, Vice President, Refining and Marketing.

Connacher's corporate slide presentation is on the website at www.connacheroil.com. Click on the Investor Information link and go to the May 2008 Presentation.

Connacher Oil and Gas Limited is a Calgary-based Canadian oil and natural gas exploration, development, production and refining company. The company's principal assets are its significant bitumen reserves and resources and its 100 percent interest in approximately 98,000 net acres of oil sands leases at or near its Great Divide oil sands project near Fort McMurray, Alberta. It also owns conventional production and reserves at Marten Creek and Three Hills, Alberta and at Battrum, Saskatchewan.

Connacher owns and operates a 9,500 barrel per day heavy oil refinery in Great Falls, Montana and maintains a valuable 26 percent equity stake in Petrolifera Petroleum Limited (PDP - TSX), a public company active in Argentina, Colombia and Peru in South America.


For further information: Richard A. Gusella, President and Chief Executive Officer, OR Grant D. Ukrainetz, Vice President, Corporate Development, Phone: (403) 538-6201, Fax: (403) 538-6225, inquiries@connacheroil.com, Website: www.connacheroil.com













Today is Sprott day

Today is Sprott day

RTGAM

In Canada, Eric Sprott's investment firm, Sprott Inc. begins trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange after a successful initial public offering valued the company at about $1.5-billion.[amp]nbsp;The stock is seen as a play on commodities, given that Mr. Sprott has invested heavily in a number of Canadian commodity producers.Copyright 2001 The Globe and Mail


Stock index futures suggested a higher start on Thursday morning, with investors digesting a number of economics reports, deals and earnings releases. Futures for the Dow Jones industrial average rose 46 points, to 12,925 about an hour before trading begins. Futures for the broader S[amp]amp;P 500 rose 5 points, to 1412.Reports suggest that Carl Icahn is ready to make a move for Yahoo Inc. by installing his own slate of directors, perhaps as early as today.

Yahoo shares rose 44 cents, to $27.58 (U.S.) in premarket trading.General Electric Co., stung by a disappointing first-quarter miss, has suggested that it will seek a buyer for its appliances business in a deal that could be worth between $5-billion and $8-billion.Investors got another glimpse of U.S. consumer spending early on Thursday when J.C. Penny Co. released first-quarter earnings that fell 50 per cent. The upside, though, is that the retailer issued a more upbeat forecast for the second quarter than analysts had been expecting.

The company's shares rose 4 per cent in premarket activity.Meanwhile, the U.S. Labor Department reported that U.S. employment conditions remain weak, with initial jobless claims rising by 6,000 last week to 371,000.In Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 rose 0.9 per cent. In Europe, the U.K.'s FTSE 100 rose 0.4 per cent and Germany's DAX index fell 0.1 per cent in afternoon trading - slim gains considering investors were treated to indications of surprisingly strong economic growth. The European economy grew 0.7 per cent in the first quarter over the fourth quarter of 2007, ahead of expectations. Germany, in particular, recorded its strongest growth in 12 years, expanding at a 1.5 per cent clip, quarter over quarter, that was nearly twice what economists had been expecting.

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