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BRNE Blackrock New A

43.50
0.00 (0.00%)
Last Updated: 01:00:00
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Blackrock New A LSE:BRNE London Ordinary Share GB00BGFBMJ27 ORD 5P A RIGHTS
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.00 0.00% 43.50 - 0.00 01:00:00
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
0 0 N/A 0

Blackrock New A Share Discussion Threads

Showing 276 to 288 of 450 messages
Chat Pages: 18  17  16  15  14  13  12  11  10  9  8  7  Older
DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
08/5/2009
21:03
This chart is well on its way now:
gsands
01/5/2009
11:53
Vestas Bulks Up in China
Danish Firm Opens Turbine-Making Site for the Wind MarketArticle
By SHAI OSTER
BEIJING -- Vestas Wind Systems AS of Denmark, aiming to capture more of China's growing wind-energy market, has opened a facility in Inner Mongolia to build a turbine with bigger blades tailored for Chinese conditions.

The Danish company's facility will produce 800 turbines a year when it reaches full capacity by year end, said Lars Andersen, president of Vestas China operations.

Vestas is ramping up production in China at a time Beijing is promoting alternative energy to deal with worsening pollution. China's strong economic growth has been mostly fueled by coal. While coal will long remain the dominant source of energy, the pace of growth in the wind sector has surprised even industry insiders.

Propelled by the government mandates for clean energy, China's wind-power sector is on track to generate 100 gigawatts by 2020, more than triple the original target, Fang Junshi, an official with the National Energy Administration, said Monday.

At present, China gets only a small part of its 700 gigawatts of power from wind -- about 12.5 gigawatts -- but even that is higher than an earlier goal of reaching 10 gigawatts only in 2012.

Mr. Fang said that by 2020, China is expected to have a total of 1,400 to 1,500 gigawatts of power-generation capacity. At that time, he said, coal-fired power generation capacity will be around 900 to 1,000 gigawatts.

Chinese manufacturers have roughly three-quarters of the domestic wind-turbine market, but foreign players are trying to break in by capitalizing on better technology. Last year, Vestas had about 10% market- share in China, the company's second-biggest market after the U.S.

Vestas, which entered China in 1999 with 45 employees, expects to have more than 3,000 by year end. The company has invested $550 million in the country so far. "We are very aggressive in our expansion in China," Mr. Andersen said.

Despite the government's commitment to expanding wind power at a rate that outpaces planned growth in nuclear power, there are still problems in how the wind farms are managed and connected to the nation's larger electricity grid. China's best wind conditions are remote parts of Inner Mongolia, in China's arid north, not far from some of its richest coal mines, but thousands of kilometers away from the power-hungry coastal centers such as Shanghai and Shenzhen.

That has left some wind farms basically stranded. But the country's giant stimulus package includes upgrades to the national electricity grid that could help alleviate those problems. Other wind-power developers complain that China's system of tariff bidding, which gives preference to the lowest bidder rather than the cleanest technology, makes wind-power uneconomical. Mr. Andersen said that system can work when developers know the long-term cost of their energy output.

The new Vestas turbine, the V60, is the first one developed for a particular market, Inner Mongolia, and was designed to be easily packed into trucks for hauling over rough roads, and to operate in low-wind conditions, Mr. Andersen said.

World-wide, Vestas in 2007 produced turbines with a total capacity of 5,000 megawatts. It plans to double its capacity by 2010. In China last year, Vestas sold turbines that can generate 600 megawatts of power.

madoff with cash
30/4/2009
21:04
Looking nice:
gsands
21/4/2009
08:07
Proposal for Sub shares looks interesting. Discount today is difficult to calculate as last nights falls will have an effect but we must still be at about 15%.

I might add a few more to give me more Sub shares. At these levels it's still very much an accumulation game. Whether the price today is 30p or 40p it won't make too much difference in three to five years time.

It might be worth overweighting the ordinaries prior to the issue and letting some of them go afterwards. Keeping a larger holding of subscription shares. A usefull tactic for the smaller private investor.

kinbasket
09/4/2009
21:59
RD,

I only really follow the SPX because the DOW only has 30 stocks in it an can be non-representative as a result (SPX=S&P 500 with 500 stocks).

Tonight we had a very bullish move on the SPX and I think this bodes very well for the remainder of April:

gsands
09/4/2009
10:43
And this chart not suddenly tanking:
gsands
09/4/2009
10:40
But that will depend very much on the SPX punching up and out of this channel:
gsands
09/4/2009
10:38
This is the move I am hoping for over the next few weeks:
gsands
06/4/2009
16:39
NAV still rising and share price still 13.7% behind.
gsands
04/4/2009
01:29
Pushing up through the the warm fertile soil like the spring time flower....


free stock charts from www.advfn.com

gsands
02/4/2009
18:10
Interesting write up on Iberdrola:
gsands
02/4/2009
18:08
Wow! Look at this for relative strength. Definitely one to buy (and BRNE already have!)
gsands
02/4/2009
18:03
Less strong (note the lower low) but moving up quickly today:
gsands
Chat Pages: 18  17  16  15  14  13  12  11  10  9  8  7  Older

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