Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Oil Rises U.S. data shows crude inventories drop, but gasoline stocks up

Oil prices rise
U.S. data shows crude inventories drop, but gasoline stocks up
January 09, 2008
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK – Oil prices rose today after a U.S. government report showed crude oil stockpiles fell for the eighth consecutive week but gasoline supplies swelled.

Fears of further violence in Nigeria, the world's eighth-largest oil producer, also supported prices.

Crude inventories fell by 6.8 million barrels, or 2.3 per cent, to 282.8 million barrels during the week ended Jan. 4, the Energy Department's Energy Information Administration said in its weekly report.

The drop was more than eight times the 800,000 barrels analysts predicted, according to a survey by Dow Jones Newswires. However, gasoline inventories beat expectations, rising sharply by 5.3 million barrels, or 2.6 per cent, to 213.1 million barrels. Analysts forecast stockpiles would climb by only 1.6 million barrels last week.

"This was really a mixed report, not a bullish report," said Tim Evans, an analyst at Citigroup Inc. in New York.

Contributing to the drop in crude oil stocks were efforts by Gulf Coast refineries to minimize their inventories, which are subject to year-end taxes, he said. Crude supplies also tend to rebound early in the year, he said.

"When we have weak gasoline demand, as we do now, and when we have swelling gasoline inventories, as we do now, it's hard to make the case that the overall petroleum market is critically tight," Evans said.

Light, sweet crude for February delivery added $1.36 to US$97.69 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Gasoline prices in the United States climbed 0.66 cent to $2.4805 a gallon.

At the pump, gas prices dipped 0.1 cent overnight to a national average of about $3.10 a gallon today, but remain well above the year-ago average of $2.30 a gallon, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. The Energy Information Administration on Tuesday said gas prices are expected to average more than $3 a gallon through 2009 and peak near $3.50 this spring.

In London, February Brent crude rose $1.04 to $96.58 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

The weekly report also showed that inventories of distillate fuel, which includes diesel and heating oil, rose by 1.5 million barrels to 128.7 million barrels. Analysts had expected a drop of 300,000 barrels.

Heating oil futures rose by 3.06 cents to $2.6669 a gallon. Natural gas prices jumped 11.5 cents, selling at $8.082 per 1,000 cubic feet.

U.S. refineries ran at an average 91.3 per cent of total capacity, an increase of 1.9 percentage points, beating the expected 0.1 percentage point gain, the report said.

Reports that Nigerian militants are planning attacks on the nation's oil facilities also sent prices higher. In a research note, Vienna's PVM Oil Associates noted that the country had "already lost some 15 per cent of crude output capacity" due to violence. Still it forecast increased production of around 2.35 million barrels a day for this year, up from last month's 2.22-million barrel daily output.

Oil was also being supported by a surge in the price of gold, analysts said. Gold futures surged above $880 an ounce Tuesday to their highest level ever, not accounting for inflation.

A monthly EIA report Tuesday predicted oil supplies will be tight this year but ease in 2009. The EIA predicted oil prices will average $87 a barrel this year, up from a previous estimate of $85. The average price will then fall to $82 a barrel in 2009, it said.

A barrel of light, sweet crude surpassed $100 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange for the first time last week.

Canada A slowdown, but no recession?

Slowdown, but no recession?
AP FILE PHOTO
Bottles of Cott ginger ale move down the bottling line at the company's plant in Mississauga, Ont., in 2001.
But U.S. slowdown 'will feel like a recession' says BMO's Sherry Cooper
January 09, 2008
THE CANADIAN PRESS
OTTAWA — Canada and the U.S. are heading for the worst economic performance in five years and may already be in the midst of a mild recession, says a report from an economic forecasting group.

Global Insight Canada has increased the chances of Canada experiencing a recession during the first half of 2008 — two consecutive quarters of negative growth — to 25 per cent.

The chances of the U.S. being in a slump during the same period are even greater, at 40 per cent, the economic forecasting firm said today.

While the report still forecasts both economies to stay above water — if barely — Global Insight’s managing director Dale Orr said last week’s “quite discouraging” employment numbers in the U.S. and weaker industrial production make “us more concerned than we were a month ago.”

On Friday, the U.S. reported that hiring practically stalled in December, driving the country’s unemployment rate up to a two-year high of five per cent. Canada’s next jobs report will be released Friday.

Global Insight says the most likely scenario is that Canada’s economy will grow 2.2 per cent this year, a little better than the U.S.’s 1.9 per cent. Both would be the worst economic performances since 2003.

In that forecast at least, the Toronto-based firm is in line with views presented by Canada’s five big banks at the annual outlook breakfast at the Economic Club of Toronto today.

Economists from the banks agreed that while Canada’s economy will slow from last year’s anticipated 2.8 per cent advance, the retreat won’t be all the way to the negative side.

But Global Insight also argues that the chances of what it calls the “pessimistic scenario” becoming reality are increasing. That would happen if the U.S. housing and financial sectors, already hit hard by the subprime mortgage crisis, weaken further, business productivity and investment slows, and oil prices remain at record levels.

“In this scenario, the U.S. economy declines by 1.7 per cent in the first quarter, 0.5 per cent in the second quarter and moves up to no growth in the third quarter of 2008,” the report says.

Canada will be sideswiped by such a development south of the border, the report says, because of lower demand for exports of softwood lumber, autos and auto parts, resulting in higher unemployment to 6.2 per cent from the current 5.9 per cent.

Even in the pessimistic scenario, however, Canada does not fall into recession, although growth will be microscopic in the first half of 2008 and only reach 1.4 per cent for the year as a whole. The 25 per cent risk of a Canadian recession is based on the U.S. economy performing worse than in the pessimistic scenario.

“If a person wants to be an optimist and think there will be no recession, they can be,” said Orr. “But if you want to be a pessimistic, there is evidence there to support that view as well.”

Orr notes that the odds of Ontario, Canada’s manufacturing heartland, falling into a recession this year are the same as the U.S. at 40 per cent because of the province’s disproportionate dependence on exports.

But even Alberta would suffer under the pessimistic scenario, due to reduced demand in the U.S. for its energy exports.

MARKET SNAPSHOT: U.S. Stocks Down Again As Market Mulls Earnings Ahead


January 9, 2008 1:49pm ET

By Kate Gibson

U.S. stocks bounced around Wednesday as a recession forecast from Goldman Sachs and concern about profit reports ahead offset cheer fueled by a raised 2008 forecast from chemicals giant and Dow industrials component DuPont.

"It is going to be tough to spot bargains when the tone for the U.S. economy and financial stocks is this negative," said Kevin Giddis, fixed-income trading managing director with Morgan Keegan & Co. Inc.

But given the increasingly negative sentiment, a turnaround could be close, Giddis said.

"The recent data suggest that the U.S. economy is falling into recession," Goldman Sachs said in a note early Wednesday, in which it also predicted the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates further in response.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) was off 39.4 points at 12,549.7, with 19 of its 30 components trading lower. General Motors Corp. (GM) fronted the blue chip bleeding, its stock off 5.1%.

The Dow's financial stocks also fared poorly, with JPMorgan Chase (JPM) down 1.8% and Citigroup Inc. (C) off 1.7%.

The index's biggest gainers included E.I. du Pont de Neumours & Co. (DD), which gained 4.7%. .

The S&P 500 (SPX) fell 3.68 points to 1,386.51, while the Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) dropped 13.76 points to 2,426.75.

Heavy metal

On the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures edged higher after surging to a new record high of $894.40 in electronic trading early on. .

Crude-oil futures reversed earlier losses after news that U.S. inventories had declined for an eighth week, with crude for February delivery recently up 60 cents at $96.93 a barrel. .

Volume on the New York Stock Exchange topped 1 billion shares, and declining stocks ran ahead of those advancing nearly 2 to 1. On the Nasdaq, more than 1.5 billion shares exchanged hands, and decliners beat advancers 2 to 1.

As economic worries roiled the equities market, the Bush administration was reportedly considering a rebates and tax breaks to stimulate the economy. .

St. Louis Federal Reserve President William Poole offered a more optimistic view of the economy in an address early Wednesday, predicting a recession would be avoided. .

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is slated to speak Thursday.

Tuesday's washout

On Tuesday, fears that Countrywide Financial would file for bankruptcy -- denied by the mortgage lender -- and AT&T's pessimistic outlook triggered a renewed battering for U.S. stocks, with the Dow industrials falling 238 points, the Nasdaq Composite dropping 58 points for its eighth consecutive fall, and the S&P 500 losing nearly 26 points.

Countrywide (CFC) stock, which on Tuesday fell 8.8%, declined further Wednesday, and was recently down 15%.

"Housing is driving the bus right off the cliff and taking most financial-related companies with it," said Giddis.

For the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000, which lost 266.64 points or 1.8%, Tuesday's close capped the worst five-day start of a year in nearly three decades, with the index down 5.78%, or $1.0 trillion, so far this year.

The bell tolls

After the close of trade, Alcoa (AA) is expected to report a 55% drop in earnings per share, excluding restructuring charges.

Shares of Alcoa were off 1.8%. .

E-Trade Financial (ETFC) jumped 1.3% after saying it will exit its institutional trading desk and that it sold $3 billion in available-for-securities, taking a loss of less than $5 million.

And, shares of MBIA (MBI) fell 13.3% after the bond insurer said it was slashing its quarterly dividend from 34 cents to 13 cents to strengthen its capital.

Overseas, European shares touched a 15-month low, as dismal quarterly sales from one British retailer heightened worries about consumer spending trends. .

In Asia, several markets rebounded from early lows amid bargain-hunting. .

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

01-09-08 1348ET

Copyright (c) 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

Wellington West Announces 2008 Top Picks


January 9, 2008 1:35pm ET

TORONTO (Dow Jones)--Wellington West Capital Markets Inc. announced its top picks for 2008, highlighting nine stocks from five segments of the Wellington West coverage universe that have "potential to outperform their benchmark indices and peers over the year."

In a research report Monday, several Wellington West analysts discussed stocks from the energy, mining, technology, agriculture, and "special situations" segments.

Energy

Analyst Malcolm Shaw cited Calgary oil and gas company Antrim Energy Inc. (AEN.T) as a top pick, saying he believes Antrim is on-track for production of about 30,000 barrels of oil a day by the fourth quarter of 2009. He maintained the stock at strong buy with a C$9.50 target price, but noted that the company's potential 2009 cash flow could drive its share price up to C$16.

Shaw also recommended Sterling Resources Ltd. (SLG.V), which trades on the TSX Venture Exchange, at speculative buy with a C$4.50 target.

Analyst Kim Page recommended Calgary oil and gas producer Breaker Energy Ltd. (WAV.A.T) at strong buy with a C$8.50 target, noting that drilling at the company's Irricana project is driving "extraordinary" light oil volume gains. The company's light oil mix is increasing, Page said, adding that its oil/gas ratio should be 50% or more oil by the middle of 2008.

Mining

Leonie Soltay recommended Toronto resource sector royalty and investment company Franco-Nevada Corp. (FNV.T), rating it at buy with a C$20 target. Soltay's 2008 royalty revenue estimates are supported by strong 2008 commodity outlook, and the company's diversified royalty portfolio and limited costs support a 2008 cash-flow estimate of 98 U.S. cents a share, the analyst said.

Analysts Catherine Gignac and Robertson Velez recommended Inter-Citic Minerals Inc. (ICI.T), citing drilling results from the company's Dachang project in China, which continues to return consistent grades and widths. They rate the Toronto mining company's stock a buy with a C$3.25 target.

"Special Situations"

Analyst Greg Colman recommended Arctic Glacier Income Fund (AG.UN.T), a Winnipeg-based distributor of packaged ice products, at strong buy with a C$15.50 target. He said the company should start to realize synergies in mid-2008 from acquisitions completed in 2007, noting that Arctic Glacier's steady growth story offers "attractive free cash flow generation stemming from seven years of successful industry consolidation."

Analyst Robert Winslow recommended COM DEV International Ltd. (CDV.T) at strong buy with a C$6 target, citing "healthy" macro tailwinds such as the ongoing satellite replacement and HDTV rollout. He added that high U.S. space defense spending is also a positive for COM DEV product demand. COM DEV, Cambridge, Ont., makes space hardware components and subsystems.

Agriculture and Technology

Winslow also recommended agriculture company Cervus LP (CVL.UN.V), which trades on the TSX Venture Exchange, at strong buy with a C$24 target.

Greg Reid recommended technology company IPICO Inc. (RFD.V), which also trades on the TSX Venture Exchange, at strong buy with a C$2.50 target.

Wellington West has investment-banking relationships with all the companies recommended save for Cervus L.P. None of the analysts own shares in the companies they covered.

Company Web sites: http://www.antrimenergy.com, http://www.sterling-resources.co.uk, http://www.breakerenergy.com, http://www.franco-nevada.com, http://www.inter-citic.com, http://www.arcticglacierinc.com, http://www.comdev.ca, http://www.cervuslp.com, http://www.ipico.com

-Tara Zachariah, Dow Jones NewsWires; 416-306-2100

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

01-09-08 1334ET

Copyright (c) 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

PDP+BWR Short + Houses






PDP IS Going To Explode Soon - Buy Cheap Today


Getting No Respect At All- Buy Them While They're Cheap
This Is A Double Within 3 mths


Click For Full .PDF report

AN PDP INTERVIEW WITH ANDY GUSTAJTIS,
ANALYST WITH DOMINICK AND DOMINICK
(As of November 28, 2007)

D.P: There is an interesting play in South America after
what you have mention about Latin America – Petrolifera
Petroleum, which has had a little bit of problems in Argentina,
but for anyone who has seen the seismic on their
projects in Peru gets excited.

A.G: With Peru's Camisea Gas Project, Peru is now on
the radar screen as a country that has the potential for
elephant discoveries.

There is a pipeline into the Pacific Coast; there are moves now underway to bring this gas by
LNG into North America.

I think Petrolifera has a very competent, technical team running the Company.

They have been very successful in Argentina, they hand-picked
the two licenses they got in Peru. They obtained those
licenses before the global oil industry woke up to the opportunities
in Peru. The early seismic is confirming they
have a huge opportunity which will take time but I am not
long the stock for a short term flip.

With success Petrolifera could be a multi-billion Company.

These type opportunities are extremely hard to land.


A.G: Being a little bit of a gambler, I would basically think that Pacific Energy (if they could get this refinancing accomplished and out of the way) could prove to be quite an exciting story. I would put them as my number one favorite. I’m hopeful that we are going to see some new contracts being announced from Sustainable Energy in the next few weeks,
if not months and if that happens, I think the stocks could get some momentum and move to new highs. And I still think that Connacher is so unbelievably undervalued in relationship to what it offers, that I would have to put Connacher as a strong buy here.

Andy Gustajtis is an Officer and Managing Director of D&D Securities Company which is a member of the IDA and the Canadian Investor Protection Fund. His comments are believed to be reliable but we cannot represent that the information is accurate or complete and it should not be relied on as such. D&D Securities Company, its officers, directors or employees from time to time may hold shares, options or warrants on any issue included in this interview. D&D Securities Company has actively participated in financing of ARISE Technologies, Corridor Resources, Connacher Oil & Gas, Sustainable Energy and Pacific Energy. Comments made should not be construed as an offer or solicitation to buy or sell and securities.

From the Stock Bullboards- Curveball Does Your Homework

SUBJECT: To buy or not to buy ... Posted By: Curveball
Post Time: 1/8/2008 22:54
»

Definetly not a stock for the faint
of heart or the exicitable.

Good thing they produce Gold
and Silver along with thier
other metals.

Thought I had better take another
look at the production numbers
with today's prices.

Turns out Q3 was quite good for
BWR - production was up quite a bit.
Hopefully they received a good price
for all that metal that was not
shipped in time to be icluded in
Q3 sales.

I was wondering if it's possible
for BWR to make around .10 cents per
share per quarter using thier
current production (not sales)
figures and here's what I came
up with.

ZINC 65M lbs /qtr @ $1.10/lb = $71M
COPPER 3M lbs /qtr @ $3 /lb = $9M
LEAD 5M lbs /qtr @ $1.20 /lb = $6M
SILVER 700K oz /qtr @ $15/oz = $11M
GOLD 11K oz /qtr @ 800/oz = $9M

Total works out to 106M in sales
at current production rates per quarter.

If direct costs and treatment and
marketing come in at around $60M again
that should give them a profit of
around $46M per quarter (less tax).

I believe the fully diluted share
count is around 475M now. (Credit
the company $30M when/if warrants
are exercised and also for the
addition of the assets of the
merger with METCO's assets).

BWR also holds around $30M of
investment in Taseko Mines and Blue
Note Metals.

Not sure if what they are doing with
all thier cash - I thought they had around
$80M at Sep 30 - according to the
balance they seem to
invested a substaintial amount into
some long-term investment(s)?

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Breakwater To Buy Metco Resources

Breakwater To Buy Metco Resources

djones



DOW JONES NEWSWIRES


Breakwater Resources Ltd. (BWR.T) has reached an agreement with Metco
Resources Inc. (MKO.V) whereby Breakwater will purchase 100% of Metco for 7
million common shares of Breakwater.


Brekawater said this agreement is subject to normal closing conditions
including the approval of regulatory authorities and Metco shareholders at a
special and general meeting expected to be held mid-March.


In Lebel-sur-Quevillon, Metco and Breakwater have a 50/50 joint venture on
properties extending over 15 kilometers in the same deformation corridor as
Breakwater's current deposits. The companies also share the Orphee Deposit.


Breakwater, Toronto, is a mining, exploration and development company that
produces zinc, copper, lead and gold.


-Tara Zachariah; 416-306-2100; A

Rising metals and oil prices could help push Canadian stock markets higher Tuesday

Signs point to market gains in U.S. and maybe Canada

RTGAM



Rising metals and oil prices could help push Canadian stock markets higher Tuesday after they kicked off the week with another dismal loss on Monday, when oil in particular was greasing the skids. Stock index futures in the United States meanwhile are pointing to gains on Wall Street for the second day in a row.

After falling by $2.82 (U.S.) to finish yesterday at $95.09 a barrel, light sweet crude oil for delivery next month is currently up $1.08 to $96.17 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

As well, copper has regained some strength, climbing more than 2 per cent in London trading, where three-month futures on the red metal rose $165 to $7,065 a tonne. "The move is mostly driven by the rebalancing of commodity indexes," Commerzbank analyst Eugen Weinberg told Reuters. "Because industrial metals didn't perform well last year, they are performing well now."

The price also was drawing support from expectations of strong, continuing demand from China.
In New York, the March contract on the Dow Jones industrial average has been climbing this morning and at 7.40 a.m. (EDT) was up 58 points at 12,870. The S&P 500 future was at 1,421.80, ahead 9.7 points and the Nasdaq 100 March contract was up 12.25 at 1,976.

Seven of Europe's nine major indexes are also ahead so far today.
Among U.S. stocks showing unusual gains in European trading are coffee-shop giant Starbucks Corp. and investment bank Bears Sterns Cos., both driven, it seems, by top-level executive changes.

At Seattle-based Starbucks, whose shares have taken a grinding in the past year, founder and chairman Howard Schultz said late Monday that he is taking over as CEO. As for Bear Sterns, the Wall Street Journal is reporting that James Cayne will give up the CEO's post although stay on as chairman, making him the latest high roller unseated by the subprime mortgage debacle.




Copyright 2001 The Globe and Mail

Monday, January 7, 2008

Pescod On Oil And More This Evening




TSX takes another hit

TSX takes another hit


The 2008 trading year continued to deteriorate Monday as the Toronto stock markets sustained another sharp loss on worries about the depth of an economic slowdown in the United States following the release of a dismal U.S. employment report on Friday.
New York markets managed to eke out some gains on hopes of substantial interest rate cuts.

"I think today there's a continuation of what we saw last week that there's worries about how much growth will slow down," said Kate Warne, Canadian market specialist at Edward Jones in St. Louis.

"It's affecting all of the things that are tied into global growth and we're likely to see this continue for a while until people remember that even if things slow down, there is still value in many of these stocks and we'll see a bounce back at some stage."

The S&P/TSX composite index tumbled 159.71 points to 13,618.87 on top of a 200-point fall on Friday. The TSX Venture Exchange moved down 38.68 points to 2,819.98.
The Canadian dollar declined further after a weak Ivey Purchasing Managers Index reading and the December U.S. jobs report helped sink the currency by more than one U.S. cent on Friday.

On Monday, the currency declined 0.43 of a cent (U.S.) to 99.44 cents.
New York's Dow Jones industrials ticked 27.31 points higher to 12,827.49 after plunging 464.64 points in the first three days of 2008 trading.

The Nasdaq composite index was down 5.19 points to 2,499.46 while the S&P 500 index inched 4.55 points higher to 1,416.18.

On the TSX, the energy sector was off 1.14 per cent as oil prices continued to slide from the $100 a barrel mark reached twice last week. The February crude oil contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange moved down $2.82 to $95.09 a barrel. The Canadian Press


Copyright 2001 The Globe and Mail

Dundee Big Buy@ 1.96+Houses BWR + PDP



The year of 'hollowing out' is over

The year of 'hollowing out' is over

Gwyn Morgan
Monday, January 07, 2008

It was the year when the "hollowing out" of Canadian-controlled business became a front-page issue. In 2007, the hotel sector saw Fairmont and Four Seasons go to Saudi Sheiks. Canada's long leadership in global mining moved to a rump position with the loss of Inco, Falconbridge, and Alcan; joining the fate of most of Canada's famous forest products companies.
In full-page ads, Thomas Caldwell of Caldwell Securities lamented: "The loss of head offices and industrial leadership is one of the great corporate tragedies of our time." Industry leaders including the Royal Bank's Gordon Nixon, Manulife's Dominic D'Alessandro and Suncor's Rick George expressed their concern.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty appointed former BCE CEO Red Wilson to chair a group of eminent Canadians to examine changes aimed at encouraging the retention of head offices, and Industry Minister Jim Prentice signalled that takeovers by agencies of foreign governments would be subject to special scrutiny.

These are all understandable responses, but neither business nor government wants to go back to the dark days when Canada's Foreign Investment Review Agency practically destroyed access to foreign capital markets.

In past commentary, I acknowledged that much of my personal motivation for the merger that created EnCana was the continuing series of foreign takeovers in the energy industry. But there is something even more important than keeping big companies Canadian: having a robust stable of enterprises working their way from startups to the corporate champions of tomorrow. One of the two partners that created EnCana was but a fledging startup when I joined it in 1975. And Research In Motion, which built BlackBerry into Canada's most globally recognized brand, was also a fledgling startup just over a decade ago.

In the circle of corporate life, most of today's leading corporations will eventually reach the end of their journey. Rather than mourning the loss of companies at the mature end of their corporate lifecycles, our prime focus should be on fostering the creation of the new startups that will eventually take their place. So the question is: What can we do to encourage the growth of new enterprises?

Clearly it starts with education. In a world where technology pervades almost every aspect of our daily lives, scientific research combined with innovative engineering is crucial. Yet our secondary schools are neither preparing nor inspiring enough kids to pursue the myriad of opportunities in science and engineering.

The next thing needed is entrepreneurship. Junior Achievement volunteers put thousands of hours into stimulating high-school students to think entrepreneurially, but more advanced business experience is needed to prepare for the real world. Great ideas are hatched every day, but most fail from a combination of flawed business plans and poor execution.
Business schools help, but role models and mentorship are crucial. Successful business people are ideal mentors for aspiring entrepreneurs, but the reality is that active business leaders are often hard-pressed by business and family obligations.

This is where uniting the ideas and passion of the young with the experience of the mature is a noble calling for retired business people.

The next big challenge for startups is seed capital. Many successful entrepreneurs tell stories of getting their start by tapping family and friends or mortgaging their house and cashing in the RRSP. Commercial debt is unavailable, and even if it were, taking on debt payments is a bad idea when you can barely keep the lights on. Startups need patient capital.
Enter the "angel investor."

Angel investors need faith in the idea combined with confidence in the entrepreneur. Even then, being an angel requires a sense of humour about the odds. I tell my friends that my record as an angel investor has to get better, because it can't get worse.
Unfortunately, Canada's tax laws are highly negative to investment in risky startups because losses can't be offset against other income. Since the failure rate of new ventures is high, the chance to offset losses may never occur, creating a big deterrent to critical early-stage seed capital. Changes to this part of Canada's tax code may well be the most important thing the federal government can do for our economic future.

There are also the "organized angels," such as the Canadian Youth Business Federation (CYBF). With participation by volunteer business leaders, a small but passionate staff, and funding support coming equally from business and government, CYBF provides both the seed capital and the mentorship needed to nudge new ventures over the starting line. Their theme is lending based on character, not collateral, and both the success and payback rate is very high ... an innovative way of stimulating innovation.

For a company or for a country, the key is having the vision to focus on the right things. The right thing for Canada to focus on is creating an environment where today's young leaders have the best chance of building the Canadian-headquartered business champions of the future.
Gwyn Morgan is the retired founding CEO of EnCana Corp.
© Copyright The Globe and Mail

Canadian oil producers a long way from $100 oil



Mon Jan 7, 2008 4:01am EST

By Jeffrey Jones

CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) - World oil prices have broken the magic $100 a barrel mark but Canadian oil producers will have to wait for much of their own fast-growing but lower-quality production to fetch such a lofty sum.

More than 40 percent of western Canadian oil is classified as heavy, and so it is slapped with varying price discounts to benchmark West Texas Intermediate to account for the extra processing it requires and other market forces.

Recently, the discount has been steep.

"Overall, as world crude prices increase, so do the prices here, but they are fully dependent on what that differential is," said Steve Fekete, a Calgary-based analyst with consultants Purvin & Gertz.

In December, the spread between WTI, the marker grade for the New York Mercantile Exchange, and Western Canada Select, the region's blend of heavy oil, averaged a gaping $40 a barrel, Fekete said.

A BP Plc (BP.L: Quote, Profile, Research) refinery in Toledo, Ohio, a major buyer of Canadian heavy oil, completed a lengthy maintenance shutdown last month and pipeline space allocation issues also affected the market in December, he said.

Today, the discount is about $25 a barrel.

Canada is the largest oil supplier to the United States, topping such others as Saudi Arabia and Venezuela, and companies are in the midst of a spending spree to retool refineries to run more heavy crude, especially in the Midwest.

That is in concert with the expansion of Canadian oil sands output, a pricey and technically difficult effort that now involves most of the world's oil majors. It has brought with it investments in new pipelines and blending techniques to make the bitumen from the oil sands more versatile as a feedstock.

According to National Energy Board estimates, Canada produced about 2.8 million barrels of oil a day in 2007. Of that, 1.02 million was heavy oil or extra-heavy bitumen from Alberta's oil sands, and another 707,000 was upgraded bitumen from Syncrude Canada Ltd, Suncor Energy Inc (SU.TO: Quote, Profile, Research) and Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSa.L: Quote, Profile, Research) oil sands plants.

A series of operational mishaps at upgrading plants run by the oil sands producers in late 2007 pushed up prices for the synthetic crude.

Newfoundland's three offshore projects, Hibernia, Terra Nova and White Rose, produced 388,000 barrels a day.

That leaves just over 500,000 barrels of light oil production, the highest quality crude, in Western Canada, and that number is projected to keep dropping as reserves are tapped out.

This week, benchmark light oil hit, then topped, $100 a barrel for the first time, driven by a combination of falling inventories in the United States, the world's biggest consumer, and geopolitical tension.

It settled down 44 cents at $99.18 a barrel on Thursday, but many analysts do not expect upward pressure to ease soon.

Much of Canada's heavy crude will likely fetch 65 percent to 70 percent of price, due to the lower quality and high fixed costs, EnCana Corp (ECA.TO: Quote, Profile, Research) spokesman Alan Boras said.

His firm produces 134,000 barrels a day of crude, some of it as part of an oil sands production and refining joint venture with ConocoPhillips (COP.N: Quote, Profile, Research), aimed at matching supply with markets. Others firms have forged similar deals.

"We have thick, heavy barrels that are buried in sand, and they need a lot of capacity and capital investment to get them out, additional blending to get them to market and then we're a ways away from those markets, so there's transportation on top of that," Boras said.

"So $100 isn't exactly as it appears."

(Reporting by Jeffrey Jones; Editing by Rob Wilson)

© Reuters 2007. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

Sunday, January 6, 2008

Girding for bear market



MICHAEL STUPARYK/TORONTO STAR
Bay Street bear David Chapman, a technical strategist with Union Securities Ltd., thinks the S&P/TSX composite index could fall as low as 10,500 this year from its current 13,778.58.
Dismissed as a curmudgeonly naysayer by peers with a more bullish outlook, stock market bear David Chapman says there's no room for 'nuance' when the TSX is set to take a massive dive
January 05, 2008

Business Reporter

Meet one of Bay Street's biggest bears.

David Chapman, an outspoken investment adviser and technical strategist with brokerage Union Securities Ltd., is a consummate gold bug who has ruffled more than a few feathers over the years with his doom and gloom forecasts.

He admits that being "ornery" and "contrarian" has often been his gimmick. Nevertheless, some of his calls have been right on the money.

Now he says the time has come to talk turkey about the global credit crunch and the uncertainty plaguing financial markets. His advice for investors? Fasten your seatbelts, folks, because Toronto's S&P/TSX composite index could plunge to 10,500 some time this year. That is even as gold prices appear set to soar to $1,000 (U.S.) an ounce.

"I get accused of being and have been called a `perma-bear.' I've been called all sorts of names," Chapman said in a recent interview from the home office where he has worked since the late 1990s. The space is tight but the commute is short.

Surrounded by a jumble of papers, books and newspapers, he hunkers down each day using charts as the basis for his technical analysis of market movements.

Chapman is intensely passionate about his work but for the novice investor, his methodology can be hard to follow. As a result, he breaks it down like this: "Charts tell you where you've come from and can give you clues as to where it (the market) is going just by looking at a picture."

And when it comes to the nitty-gritty of technical analysis, he explains that only 14 basic patterns exist. All the rest are variations.

Chapman concedes that not everyone buys his prediction that the S&P/TSX composite index, which has enjoyed a five-year bull run, could sink to a potential target of 10,500 this year. Poised to lead the decline are financial stocks, along with consumer, industrials, information technology and real estate issues, he said.

There are, however, no guarantees. It largely depends on how steep the correction gets. "A breakdown down below 13,400 will help target 10,500 for me," he said.

Yesterday, the S&P/TSX composite index fell 199.62 points to close at 13,778.58. It ended 2007 with a 7 per cent gain, a far cry from the double-digit returns generated in recent years. And while more subprime fallout is expected this year, many of Chapman's peers have more bullish outlooks.

Bob Gorman, chief portfolio strategist at TD Waterhouse, has said a bear market is unlikely in 2008 because the subprime crisis is already "embedded in current market prices." He is calling for single-digit returns for both Canadian and American equity markets this year.

Chapman – while bullish on gold and other precious metals along with some energy stocks and agricultural issues – believes the broader market will continue to weaken through the first part of 2008.

He says folks such as him, people who candidly call for market tops and bottoms, are a relatively small minority. "We're looked on as charlatans," he said. "In markets, everybody wants to feel good."

That's because those on the Street have a "vested interest" in pushing the market higher and keeping their clients in it. Consequently, many choose to be "more nuanced" in their commentaries, he said.

"Because that is what they are in business for. They don't make any money with people sitting with their funds parked in cash," Chapman added. ". . . They would never come out and say there is going to be an outright bear market in 2008."

Stock-market bears are the unloved outliers of the financial game. Bears are often dismissed or derided by the many more bullish market players as curmudgeonly naysayers who blindly fixate on the bad side of every economic statistic or corporate earnings report while losing sight of general economic prosperity.

Bill Carrigan, an independent stock-market analyst and Toronto Star columnist, says most people take Chapman's predictions tongue-in-cheek. "Gold bugs perpetually like gold and they are always forecasting the end of the financial system and the free world as we know it . . . which is what he always does," he said. "So he's been a bear in the market for as long as I've known him, about 15 years."

When asked about Chapman's worst call in that time, Carrigan said: "He's been wrong on the market for 15 years. The market has gone up for 15 years. Gold has done nothing for 15 years. Gold just recently hit the high that it hit back in 1980."

Chapman, of course, isn't the only vocal pessimist these days. Merrill Lynch economist David Rosenberg has frequently warned of a deteriorating outlook for the economy and corporate profits, the result of soaring energy costs, tumbling real-estate values and tightening credit.

Seattle hedge-fund manager Bill Fleckenstein, pointing to the credit crisis and the rising risk of recession, has long been warning of a stock-market wipeout on his website and in his MSN.com column.

Robert Prechter is another well-known stock market analyst who wrote the 2004 bestseller Conquer the Crash. In 1987, he predicted the Dow Jones industrial average would peak at 3,600 in 1988.

Websites dedicated to bear forecasts, such as prudentbear.com, provide a drumbeat of dour predictions about a financial system run amok and bound to implode.

A report by Russell Investments earlier this week suggested that bears "now dominate opinion for the first time in several quarters," noting that bullishness toward Canadian broad market equities has dropped from 42 per cent of investment managers to just 28 per cent.

Nonetheless, 77 per cent of those surveyed still expect Canadian equities to post "flat to positive returns" in 2008, the report said. Those same managers, however, remain uneasy with respect to the credit crunch.

"It seems that many managers are cautiously waiting to see how the subprime credit crunch and rumours of a U.S. recession will unfold, while at the same time betting that the Canadian market will be in a position to move ahead over the next 12 months," Timothy Hicks, chief investment officer of Russell Investments Canada, said at the time of the report's release.

He added: "The shift to a more bearish stance on equities comes amid not only the credit crunch, but also a string of negative indicators. This includes evidence of a slowing global economy, downward earnings growth revisions in both Canada and the U.S., and a diminished corporate profit picture.

"Despite aggressive measures by central banks to cut key lending rates and inject liquidity into the market, investment managers appear to be approaching the market with caution."

Chapman, however, has been bearish for years. When he predicted that Nortel's stock would fall to $10 at the height of the tech boom in 2000, some people laughed. Others were outraged.

His analysis at the time, when Nortel's stock was trading well above $100, was that it had formed a classic pattern called a "parabolic runaway." Typically, such movements involve a stock's price soaring to a great peak before collapsing, over time, to where it started. At the time of his Nortel commentary, he advised that money would be better spent on energy, metals and precious metals stocks. Just over two years later, Nortel's stock fell to 69 cents.

"I jokingly issued an apology," Chapman said. "Sorry, I got it wrong. It was worse than I thought."

Saturday, January 5, 2008

Bay and wall street `spooked'

TSX energy sector takes hit, tech stocks retreat in New York
January 05, 2008

Growing worries over the prospect of a recession in the United States weighed heavily on the Toronto Stock Exchange's main index yesterday, while resource issues retreated amid softer commodity prices.

The index tumbled immediately after the opening bell following data that showed weak U.S. job growth in December and rising unemployment.

The S&P/TSX composite index closed down 199.62 points, or 1.43 per cent, at 13,778.58 – its steepest decline in nearly three weeks. All of the TSX's 10 main groups finished lower.

The energy sector pulled back 1.4. per cent as the February crude contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange drifted $1.27 (U.S.) lower to $97.91 a barrel. Sector leader EnCana Corp. gave back 69 cents (Canadian) to $69.87 and Suncor Energy moved down $2.17 to $109.67.

Ivanhoe Energy Inc. shares dropped five cents to $1.50 as it announced it plans to start the second phase of gas exploration at the Sichuan project in China through its subsidiary Sunwing Zitong Energy Ltd.

The financial group moved down 1.2 per cent with CIBC down $2.05 to $68 while Scotiabank dropped $1 to $48.

The tech sector lost 2.5 per cent after an analyst at JPMorgan downgraded chip giant Intel Corp., citing a dip in orders from computer makers and high inventories. Research In Motion Ltd. retreated $8.20 to $103.46. The company makes almost two-thirds of its sales in the U.S. Celestica slipped 12 cents to $5.50.

wall street `spooked'

U.S. stocks had the steepest weekly loss since July.

Apple Inc. and Google Inc., among the best-performing technology stocks last year, tumbled as the Nasdaq composite index declined 98.03 points to 2,504.65.

Apple slumped $14.88 (U.S.), or 7.6 per cent, to $180.05, the biggest drop since April 2005, while Google fell 4.1 per cent to $657.

Intel declined $2, or 8.1 per cent, to $22.67, the most since January 2006.

"The market is spooking itself," said Gene Munster, an analyst with Piper Jaffray & Co. in Minneapolis. "It's natural for people to get nervous when everyone is getting nervous."

The Nasdaq's 5.6 per cent decline so far this year is the worst start since the electronic market opened in 1971.

Bed Bath & Beyond Inc., the largest U.S. home-furnishings retailer, fell $1.21, or 4.4 per cent, to $26.19 after its forecast in its quarterly earnings trailed estimates.

Alcoa, the world's second-largest aluminum company, fell $1.32 to $34.87. Home Depot, the largest home-improvement retailer, fell 86 cents to $24.96, an almost five-year low. Hewlett-Packard, the No. 1 personal computer maker, slipped $2.78 to $46.87.

SLM Corp., also known as Sallie Mae, declined $2.49, or 13 per cent, to $16.67 for the steepest drop in the S&P 500. The biggest U.S. educational lender said it will be more selective in pursuing loan originations and will cut services to borrowers.

The Dow Jones industrial average lost 256.54 points to 12,800.18 while the S&P 500 index moved down 35.53 to 1,411.63.

metals, auto-parts slip

On the TSX, the base-metals sector was off 2.17 per cent with HudBay Minerals down 70 cents (Canadian) to $18.60. Teck Cominco Ltd. retreated $1.02 to $35.

The February bullion contract was down $3.40 (U.S.) at $865.70 an ounce, taking the TSX gold sector down 0.55 per cent as Barrick Gold declined 47 cents (Canadian) to $47.96 after hitting an all-time high Thursday.

Shares of car-parts manufacturers plunged as well. Linamar Corp. fell $1.21, or 6.4 per cent, to $17.74. Martinrea Inc. declined 65 cents to $11.50. Magna International Inc. slipped 56 cents to $74.50, taking a three-day drop to 7.1 per cent.

Shawcor lands contract

ShawCor Ltd., a Toronto-based energy and industrial services company, said it has won a contract worth more than $40 million to provide pipeline coating services for EnCana Corp.'s Deep Panuke natural gas project off the coast of Nova Scotia.

That helped lift its shares 70 cents to $35.80, a gain of nearly 2 per cent.


From the Star's wire services

Friday, January 4, 2008

Toronto stocks slide as resource issues ease

Toronto stocks slide as resource issues ease

Fri Jan 4, 2008 10:50am EST

(Updates numbers, adds details, quotes)

TORONTO, Jan 4 (Reuters) - The Toronto Stock Exchange's main index was down sharply on Friday morning, pulled lower by soft oil prices and worries over the prospect of a recession in the United States.

The index's materials and energy sectors led the way down, slipping 1.3 percent and 0.9 percent respectively, as gold and oil prices eased back from Thursday's highs.

Barrick Gold (ABX.TO: Quote, Profile, Research) was off 58 Canadian cents, or 1.2 percent, at C$47.85, while the gold-mining subsector as a whole was down 1 percent. In the energy group, Canadian Natural Resources (CNQ.TO: Quote, Profile, Research) slipped 88 Canadian cents, or 1.2 percent, to C$74.48.

The key S&P/TSX composite index .GSPTSE was down 131.19 points, or 0.94 percent, at 13,847.01 with all of the TSX's 10 main sectors in negative territory shortly after the open.

The selloff came after two days during which record high oil and gold prices supported the resource-laden Toronto index. Spot gold advanced on Friday, but was still off Thursday's record high of $869.05.

Crude oil was down $1.03 at $98.15 a barrel after briefly touching a record $100.09 the day before.

Weaker-than-expected data on U.S. December job growth also helped undercut the Toronto index, due to heightened concern about the U.S. economy.

"It's all economic data this week," said Paul Taylor, chief investment officer at BMO Harris Investment Management Inc. "So it's really a question of how strong or how weak the underlying economy is."

"Where on Wednesday the U.S. market was strongly down on the (Institute for Supply Management), at least strong commodity prices, principally oil and gold, held (Canada) in, but today that trend is reversing itself," Taylor said.

On Wednesday, the Institute for Supply Management reported that factory activity in the United States shrank unexpectedly in December, raising worries of a recession or stagflation.

The financials sector dropped 0.7 percent on Friday morning. Bank of Montreal (BMO.TO: ) was down 76 Canadian cents, or 1.4 percent, at C$55.28, and Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS.TO: dipped 60 Canadian cents, or 1.2 percent, to C$48.40. ($1=$1.00 Canadian) (Reporting by Leah Schnurr; Editing by Peter Galloway)


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Beware Of Boiler Rooms + How They Work

SEC target Theodore denies boiler room allegations

2008-01-03 17:00 ET - Street Wire

Also Street Wire (U-*SEC) U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

by Mike Caswell

George Theodore, the former chairman of Infolink Technologies Inc., denies allegations that he ran a boiler room in Florida that improperly raised $1.05-million. Mr. Theodore had previously asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination in response to the charges. (All figures are in U.S. dollars.)

In a Sept. 13, 2007, civil complaint, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said Mr. Theodore, 40, was the directing mind behind a 13-person boiler room that sold shares of University Lab Technologies Inc., an unlisted company that purportedly developed dietary supplements. One week after it filed the charges, the SEC secured an emergency injunction freezing University Lab's assets.

In October, Mr. Theodore pleaded the Fifth. He said he was aware of a federal criminal investigation into his activities and, on the advice of his lawyer, he refused to answer the allegations. Since then, no criminal charges have been filed.

In Nov. 23, 2007, Mr. Theodore filed an amended answer to the SEC's case, in which he drops his Fifth Amendment defence. He acknowledges that University Lab raised $1.05-million, but he denies allegations that the company employed salesmen who earned commissions of up to 55 per cent.

He is now discussing a possible settlement with the SEC on undisclosed terms.

SEC's complaint

Mr. Theodore's trouble with the SEC began on Sept. 13, 2007, when the regulator filed a civil complaint against him and University Lab in Florida. The SEC said Mr. Theodore, who also goes by the name George Theodoropoulous, used a Boca Raton boiler room to raise money from 46 investors in the U.S. and Canada. Salesmen under his direction cold-called potential investors, and offered them units of University Lab at 50 cents each. The salesmen said the company had contracts to place dietary supplements in 5,000 stores.

Some investors received a private placement memorandum that the SEC says misrepresented the investment. It failed to disclose that salesmen received stock representing up to 30 per cent of the units they sold, and, although it stated that the minimum investment was $25,000, that University Lab accepted investments of one-eighth of that amount.

On top of a $400-per-week salary, salesmen received commissions between 2 and 55 per cent, depending on their job, the SEC said. Fronters received 2 per cent, closers 7 to 15 per cent and loaders 35 per cent. Salesmen who sold shares to existing investors received the top commission, 55 per cent.

The SEC is seeking an order banning Mr. Theodore from penny stocks and banning him from serving as an officer or director of a public company.

Concurrent with the charges, the SEC secured an emergency order freezing University Lab's assets and appointing a receiver. On Sept. 17, Florida District Court Judge Linnea Johnson ordered Fort Lauderdale lawyer Michael Goldberg to take charge of the company's assets and to begin any legal proceedings necessary to recover investor money. Mr. Goldberg has not yet reported on his progress.

In announcing the case, the SEC acknowledged the help of the Saskatchewan Financial Services Commission and the Alberta Securities Commission. On Dec. 19, 2007, the ASC began a related administrative action against Mr. Theodore. It alleges that he improperly raised $250,000 from 15 Alberta residents for University Lab.

Theodore's answer

In his amended answer, dated Nov. 23, Mr. Theodore denies any wrongdoing. He admits that University Lab raised over $1-million from 46 investors between December, 1999, and May, 2007, but he claims that he did nothing wrong.

Most of his answer contains general denials, with no specifics. For example, his response to the allegation that University Lab paid commissions of up to 55 per cent, only says, "Defendant Theodore denies the allegations as they pertain to him."

Mr. Theodore says the SEC is not entitled to ban him from penny stocks, because the allegations cover a limited time period, they were not egregious, he did not benefit from the alleged fraud and he is not a recidivist violator. Mr. Theodore also says he relied on advice from University Lab's lawyer.

He is asking the court to dismiss the charges.

Since filing his answer, Mr. Theodore has started discussing a possible settlement with the SEC. On Nov. 26, Judge Johnson ordered both sides to agree upon a mediator, and to inform the court of their choice within 15 days. Three weeks later, the SEC filed an unopposed motion for an extension on the deadline for choosing a mediator, saying it is discussing a settlement with Mr. Theodore. The judge extended that deadline to Jan. 28, 2008.

Theodore at Infolink

In 2002, Mr. Theodore was the chairman of Infolink Technologies Inc., a junk voice-mail company that collapsed after media reports that its chief executive officer, Cesar Correia, did not disclose his criminal record. He had been convicted in 1984 for manslaughter, after he killed his abusive father.

Mr. Theodore left the company on Jan. 31, 2003, saying he needed to devote more time to his family and other business interests. He has since moved to Florida, where he now owns a $2.1-million home with his wife.

Infolink, which once traded at 50 cents, went private in December. Mr. Correia bought its shares for 4.72 cents each.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Grenville Gold's chairman sues Bullboard posters

Grenville Gold's chairman sues Bullboard posters

2008-01-02 16:24 ET - Street Wire

by Stockwatch Business Reporter

The chairman of Grenville Gold Corp. is suing three anonymous posters to an Internet bulletin board for defaming him. In a lawsuit filed in B.C. Supreme Court on Dec. 4, 2007, Leonard DeMelt claims that the posters, with the pseudonyms dedere, serod and birdy1, wrote a series of defamatory postings about him on a Stockhouse Bullboard starting on Jan. 19, 2007. In the postings, the defendants accuse Mr. DeMelt of insider trading, high closing, lying and incompetence, among other things.

The first poster, dedere, wrote over 40 posts between Jan. 19, 2007, and Oct. 16, 2007, according to the lawsuit. Throughout his work, there is a theme of scepticism about the company and about Mr. DeMelt's fitness for his job as chairman. He harps on three main issues. He claims that Rakesh Dhir owns a large position in the company, a fact which he says the company should disclose but has not. He accuses Mr. DeMelt of high closing. He also berates Mr. DeMelt for not having an NI 43-101 report for Grenville's properties in Peru.

For example, on Jan. 21, 2007, he wrote: "When someone not listed as an insider or control person owns ten million shares of an issue, directly or indirectly it is the responsibility of the management to see that this fact is disclosed to the public, which in the case of Rakesh Dhir, Anita Dhir and Dhir Enterprizes has not been done with respect to their holdings in GVG. Other members of the De Melt family are also large shareholders, which would normally require insider reporting limitations."

On March 21, he wrote, "GVG promoters have issued themselves and their close friends approximately 15M..that's fifteen million shares and warrants and options at an average price of ten and twenty cents per shares while promoting the company to the public at prices as high as .76 cents per share before even one of their acquisitions has been formally approved NI-43-101 by the TSX."

On April 4, dedere wrote several posts. In one, he said: "It would be difficult to find anyone more inept than DeMelt when it comes to getting the paperwork done. he just doesn't get it. he is impulsive, sloppy and careless. consequently i would bet that HRR has it right." In separate post from the same day, he said: "High saling is a contravention of TSX regulation and policy. Don't do it again. It is pointless as well as dangerous, and another example of the impulsive, careless and sloppy management of this company's affairs."

Mr. DeMelt complains only about one post by the second defendant, serod. This poster does not mention Mr. DeMelt. Instead, he accuses Grenville Gold of being a scam, and raises two concerns. The first is that "Grenville doesn't have any 'mine' to speak of in the Silveria project area." The second is that the company, despite its claims, is not in the process of listing on the stock exchange in Lima.

The third defendant, birdy1, is not as prolific as dedere, but he makes many of the same accusations. Like dedere, he connects Mr. Dhir to several million shares of the company. Like dedere, he writes that Mr. DeMelt is incompetent. On Sept. 13, 2007, he wrote: "These are all 'dirt farms' as far as i can tell. in other words, all the properties are all worthless junk. the only thing that matters is can the promoters arrange a blowoff of their cheap stock?" In the same post, he added, "The delays caused by len demelt and his incompetence have basically run out the clock."

Birdy1 makes other accusations. He calls someone in management, presumably Mr. DeMelt, a "half breed metis cave dweller." He says the police are investigating this cave dweller for stalking a former business associate, that the BCSC is investigating the cave dweller for "activities while defacto control person for Andresmin" and that the cave dweller made "property transactions which contravene securities regulations."

He says that a Toronto broker informed him that Mr. DeMelt had a temper tantrum during a meeting with the broker's firm and "embarrassed everyone in the room." Supposedly, the Toronto people at the brokerage told the Vancouver people to not bring Mr. DeMelt to them again.

Finally, on Nov. 29, birdy1 wrote: "These management people will never have anything to do with any future production on this or any other projects to do with Grenville Gold Corp. Obviously Len and crew chose such a project to allow them to unload their shares on an unsuspecting public."

Mr. DeMelt claims that the postings defame him because they either say or mean that he is a liar, a fraudster, incompetent and untrustworthy. The postings also say he has not reported insider trading and has disobeyed securities regulations. Adding to the libel, all of the above is allegedly well known in the investment and mining communities.

He adds that he will submit evidence at trial about the entire content of the postings "as illustrative of important context in support of the Defamatory Meanings."

Oddly, Mr. DeMelt only claims damages from dedere and birdy1, not serod, and wants an injunction preventing those two from making any more defamatory statements.

Michael Bromm of Lang Michener LLP represents Mr. DeMelt. None of the allegations have been proven in court.

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