Friday, August 28, 2009

Time To Cash Out Of BNK- Its Run On MoMo Now Cash Out!



Sucker Rally As Hot Money Exits The Stock Look at The Biggest Sellers This is topping just in time for Pros to cash out. The party looks like its over.

Lundin refreshes Bankers Petroleum buy

2009-08-20 17:41 ET - In the News

Brien Lundin, in the August, 2009, edition of the Gold Newsletter, refreshes his buy of Bankers Petroleum Ltd., recently $2.76. Mr. Lundin said buy Bankers in October, 2005, at 56 cents, and in March, 2005, at $1.30.

He then said sell some -- half, perhaps -- in April, 2005, at $1.80. Assuming a $1,000 investment for each of the two buys, selling half of the $2,000 investment at $1.80 would have yielded a profit of $1,241.

He said buy again five times between August, 2005, and March, 2009, at prices ranging from 52 cents to $2.14. (The stock consolidated 1:3 on July 30, 2008.) Assuming a $1,000 investment for of the five new buys, and taking into consideration the remaining $1,000 investment after the previous half sale, the total $6,000 investment is now worth $6,883.

On July 13, the company shipped its first batch of oil from Vlore, its new port in Albania. The newsletter editor says Vlore will give the company a chance to ship more oil, more safely. Production is also going well.

At Bankers's Patos Marinza oil field, the company averaged 6,385 barrels of oil per day in the second quarter of 2009, up from 5,864 barrels of oil per day in the previous quarter. Mr. Lundin says the company's liquidity has improved, production has increased and oil prices have risen, making Bankers Petroleum a buy.




Thursday, August 27, 2009

Pescod on Crude

CRUDE OIL
$72.75
+1.33
At $70 a barrel for crude oil there are more
than a few people in the oil patch a little grateful
for what is going on there considering how ugly
things are in natural gas.

With 4 million barrels of production locked
in, in Saudi Arabia and inventory still signifi-
cantly above average levels in the United
States, the price of oil still looks like it could be
vulnerable to some bumps along the way but
for those looking for a little hand-holding about
oil this is probably the chart that will do it for
you.

This shows the production coming out of
Cantarell which was the second biggest oil field
in the world named after a fisherman who found
oil floating to the surface offshore Mexico.
Cantarell is the jewel in the crown of Mexico’s
national oil company Pemex.
The chart to the left shows you what is hap-
pening to this old producer...it’s declining pro-
duction recently at unbelievable rates of as
much as 35,000 barrels a month. One doesn’t
know if it could continue to drop at a level like
this but if it did this field would stop producing
within two years.

That has many implications first of all for
Mexico, suggesting that Mexico an exporter of
oil wouldn’t be able to do that within two years,
plus the national economy of Mexico is so
much dependent on the one third of its’ reve-
nue it collects from Pemex that if Pemex is in
trouble try and balance Mexico’s budget.
Cantarell is all about peak oil and suggests
that down the road oil does have a future.

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