ADVFN Logo ADVFN

We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.

Trending Now

Toplists

It looks like you aren't logged in.
Click the button below to log in and view your recent history.

Hot Features

Registration Strip Icon for charts Register for streaming realtime charts, analysis tools, and prices.

BOE Boeing Co.

220.00
0.00 (0.00%)
Last Updated: 00:00:00
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Boeing Co. BOE London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 220.00 00:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
220.00
more quote information »

Boeing BOE Dividends History

No dividends issued between 21 Nov 2014 and 21 Nov 2024

Top Dividend Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 06/2/2011 01:03 by olive_oil
Hi seagreen,

Yes, I was in the original placement, got the 10% bonus shares because they missed some deadline or something and exercised the half warrants, always having a good feeling about the management of this company. I have got a few mates into this one as well, along the way. Looks like it's going plaices!!

I remembered your comments about MNC and eventually took a punt at 11p which I did in memory of Ash, call me sentimental! Averaged up at 19p after studying the company a bit more. Like BOE, in for the long term.. we shall see.

I'll let you know when I am next in London and we'll meet up.

V, did you get back into BOE?? :)

Cheers,

S
Posted at 19/8/2010 09:00 by seagreen
Americas Petrogas Inc ("API" or Toronto Stock Exchange symbol "BOE") is a Canadian based natural resources company currently focused on business opportunities in Latin America. We are growing our oil and gas exploration and production in Argentina and, with GrowMax Agri Corp. ("GrowMax") we are developing a potash fertilizer plant in Peru.



Potash subsidiary presentation


$10m investment by India Farmers Fertilizer Cop ltd one of the largest Fertilizer company's in India with $7billon revenues


Total market cap$100m ...some believe the potash play is worth $100m in its own right and the oil and gas business is in for free, even though they are on target to grow it to 4000 bopd (gross by April 2011




They also state they will spin out the potash subsidiary in due course although I would prefer them not to.....

The commbined entity should grow to US$3 to $5 bucks

I met the CEO (former calgary oil and gas man)for the second time last year along with the chairman who outlined the potash details I did querry the posibility of Lithium also being produced and whilst he declined to comment at that time I note the presentation now refers to the posibility.
Posted at 12/12/2008 07:26 by westcoastrich
'Cassandra' Blanchflower Leaves BOE After Rate Battle (Update1)
Email | Print | A A A

By Brian Swint

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- David Blanchflower, the first Bank of England official to predict the recession, plans to step down in May after winning a year-long campaign to take an ax to interest rates.

Blanchflower, 56, called for rate cuts every month since October 2007, arguing that weakness in the labor market warranted a stronger response from the Monetary Policy Committee. While his push put him at odds with Governor Mervyn King, the economy is now contracting and the Bank of England has reduced the benchmark rate three times in as many months to a five-decade low of 2 percent.

"He's a Cassandra," said Neil Mackinnon, chief economist at ECU Group Plc in London and a former U.K. Treasury official. "The important thing now is that the MPC understands the severity of the situation. It would have been worse had they continued to bury their heads in the sand."

Blanchflower's decision to leave after his term expires will deprive the Bank of England's nine-member board of its most vocal dissenter and a job-market economist at a time when unemployment is rising the most since 1992. Since October 2007, he voted against King nine times and was the lone rate-cut advocate on seven occasions.

"He deserves credit to take a view so much at odds with the rest of the committee," said Michael Saunders, chief Western European economist at Citigroup Inc. in London. "To do that and be right: that's an achievement. He would have prefered to have persuaded the others as well."




Well done Mr Blanchflower. I think Merv should have gone instead.
Posted at 04/12/2008 10:15 by gsands
Looks like the BoE are on the back foot. They should have been cutting rates back in the summer, but instead they got duped into thinking inflation was the problem by a load of speculators and spivs around the world going long on oil and pushing the price of it (and other commodities) through the roof.

What a shambles.
Posted at 23/10/2008 18:26 by moob
next boe meet in 2 weeks i think though may need an emergency 1% cut before that


Need Gordon/King?Darling to be decisive instead of dithering as the country goes into the toilet
Posted at 30/9/2008 20:36 by moob
when is the nex boe meet
Posted at 26/9/2008 12:56 by gsands
I think this article and the view of the UBS analyst highlights what a bunch of dithering idiots the BoE are:
Posted at 23/9/2008 06:22 by hsbcpremier
cut rates now! whens the next BOE meet?
Posted at 07/9/2008 09:37 by jazza
Thing is, we all know where inflation is going....just check commodity prices.

Inflation will peak later this year and then fall back in 2009. If the BoE want stability, they should cut rates now and raise next year....such that when all are struggling with petrol, gas, electric, food costs (now), they have lower mortgage costs and when the price of petrol, gas etc. ease (2009) they have higher mortgage costs.

Keeping rates on hold now and slashing in 2009 means joe public goes from maximum pain now to a sharply easier picture in 2009....which doesn't promote stability.....instead it promotes the boom/bust cycles that the BoE are supposed to be getting rid of!!!!

Muppets!
Posted at 30/8/2008 08:26 by jazza
moob,

Just days after Blanchflower called publicly for his fellow BoE members to join him in voting to cut rates by 0.5%.

Looks like there is an attempt to strong-arm the BoE into cutting rates.

Personally think cutting rates is the right thing to do...BoE dithering 'cos they are worried about wage-inflation....LOL....have they seen the state of the union movement in the UK?! It's nothing like the 1970's the unions are powerless....cut rates BoE NOW!