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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Diversified Energy Company Plc | LSE:DEC | London | Ordinary Share | GB00BQHP5P93 | ORD 20P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.00 | 0.08% | 1,291.00 | 1,292.00 | 1,295.00 | 1,306.00 | 1,281.00 | 1,281.00 | 25,130 | 09:05:26 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Crude Petroleum & Natural Gs | 868.26M | 758.02M | 15.9479 | 0.81 | 613.15M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
26/11/2023 08:04 | Give us the link to F20 | t 34 | |
26/11/2023 06:42 | The F-20 form (which seemingly few people read) heavily implies that dividends will reduce and perhaps cease in favour of capital appreciation. This is typical behaviors or US stocks in general. Dividends are only a 'thing' in the UK. | carcosa | |
26/11/2023 02:39 | If this divi goes anything like the last two, expect a 6.5/7p rise a few days prior to the ex-div date then a fall twice that size in the days following. It may get interesting next week. | cassini | |
25/11/2023 15:55 | I'm assuming that, given the Q2 dividend payment is not due until 29th December which is after the 1:20 consolidation effective on 5th December, the Q2 dividend (and Q3 dividend announced on 15th November) will both be adjusted by x 20? Therefore each should be 20 x 0.04375 USD = 0.875 per share, per quarter with an annual dividend of 3.5 USD compared to current 0.175. | bluemango | |
24/11/2023 11:26 | About this time! :-) | skinny | |
24/11/2023 11:04 | Yes, the market seems to have classified all too many of my holdings as falling into the 'Trotter brothers enterprises' sector and rated them accordingly this year. I live in hope that means I have multiple opportunities to become a millionaire next year! | 1knocker | |
24/11/2023 09:37 | Just keep adding and averaging down, lowest so far is 68p and highest 1.07 and a few dividends but still in the red. | oneillshaun | |
23/11/2023 17:58 | 1knocker - gave you a thumbs up, but unfortunately 'Next year Rodney' is sold out! | fordtin | |
23/11/2023 17:37 | It would be nice to think that one of these days DEC shares might be worth rather more than £14, especialy as £14 is not worth what it was !! Next year Rodney, next year we'll be ....[those who know their Only fools and horses will be able the fill in the rest]. | 1knocker | |
23/11/2023 14:58 | No USA today and, surprise surprise ... we are up, and holding our gains into the afternoon. | wildchild | |
23/11/2023 14:49 | People haven't got £14 to buy a share with? I thought fractional shares were more for behemoths with $500+ share prices... | cassini | |
23/11/2023 14:43 | Fractional shares would have to be held through something. | johnhemming | |
23/11/2023 12:31 | I think fractional shares are now to be permitted in ISAs. Probably not soon enough for this consolidation though! | 1knocker | |
23/11/2023 11:45 | Consolidation of shares email . | action | |
23/11/2023 10:02 | re post #6317 "1400p share price on AIM." DEC is a ftse250 company. There are 46 companies trading at over £10 per share in the ftse250, but only 35 companies trading for less than £1. | fordtin | |
23/11/2023 09:59 | @Lorse I think once they are on the NYSE they'll review their London listing. O&G cos typically get a higher rating on the US markets, so the share price will probably move up 30% from where it is now, but London could easily be a drag on that. As you say small cap investors will be put off by a 1400p share price on AIM, yes liquidity could be affected in London. They'll understand this, and frankly they are right to move to the US because they are a US co and for the other reasons I've mentioned. | drradcliffe | |
23/11/2023 08:47 | Justiceforthemany - £14 is unlikely to help the liquidity or bid/offer spread, no? | lorse | |
22/11/2023 18:07 | The sudden talk about litigation is having access to the pleadings for a case. AUIU DEC have been on the responsible side of the industry when it comes to Methane Emissions and plugging. Personally I like to understand the broader picture. (I bought a few more shares recently to make sure all my holdings are multiples of 20). | johnhemming | |
22/11/2023 17:58 | It's not new but there are developments. Here are a few thoughts after a little reading. It looks like there is LOTS of federal funding has already been passed to plug wells - over $5bn in funding to states and grants to operators - but the surge in financing has been thrown at an embrionic industry with lack of equipment and workers. The sudden excess of demand over capacity means they do the jobs that pay best in the market which will have risen in price and account for different numbers being chucked about. DEC's defence will likely be that is is expanding plugging as fast as it can. It's growing plugging teams will gradually plug more but where they plug now will be driven by prices offered at state and private level. The limited number of plugging teams will naturally go where states or private companies offer highest prices, which will have been lifted by the a sudden flood of taxpayers' money into the market. DEC will likely not be plugging some its own wells where they are not easy to access or are not offered grants. The different actions at state govermenmt level in dispensing federal money - partly because of their own staff shortages with the right skills needed - seem to be distorting the market. Landowners in some of these areas will rightly feel aggrieved but if the plan is to get around to them when plugging teams are expanded sufficiently and/or when those states involved sort out their own inadequacies in dispersing funds, then I'm not sure how there is great fault with DEC. There's lots of money already there to get on with the job but it takes time to expand financial, administrative and physical infrastructure. Again, there seems to be a lot of selective reporting going on but DEC will no doubt be making as much money as it can out of the sudden explosion in demand for its plugging teams. Private operators with grants available and at risk of prosecution will probably offer higher prices to plugging subcontractors than states that have older, more difficult, orphaned wells to deal with but nobody on the hook for them. Costs to plug and money available to do so will vary quite a lot from region to region. Why should DEC plug its own stuff if it gets offered more to plug someone else's. It already has legal agreements on some states for minimum levels of its own wells so any extra capacity there will chase the free market profit. Obviously potential fines in other states will make a difference but there are only limited numbers of plugging teams available and it's more of a case about which wells get plugged first until capacity expands. DEC will argue it is following court-defined minimum agreements and then following the state money and grants, doing its best in a confused new market. DEC is an easy target for journalists but it is states that look to have been slow to process funding and grants and put plugging specifications in place for pluggers to operate to, hopefully keeping out cowboys who will cause environmental damage. | aleman | |
22/11/2023 17:54 | Why all the sudden talk about litigation? None of this is new. | justiceforthemany | |
22/11/2023 16:30 | If the plaintiffs lose their case ..do DEC receive their costs?? | renewed1 | |
22/11/2023 16:05 | 11% It does look like that given some of the plaintiffs were not aware they were so upset before the lawyers contacted them. They then suddenly disliked the look of the oil rigs that were generally on their land prior to purchase of their land. | tag57 | |
22/11/2023 15:29 | johnhemming DEC are now using c$23,000 per well based on current information and they have had an in house team since H1 2022. My post still stands regarding potential costs and plugging rates/capacity. | scrwal |
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