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DEC Diversified Energy Company Plc

1,114.00
-2.00 (-0.18%)
05 Jul 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
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
  -2.00 -0.18% 1,114.00 1,110.00 1,112.00 1,126.00 1,100.00 1,100.00 268,005 16:35:25
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Crude Petroleum & Natural Gs 868.26M 758.02M 15.9479 0.70 530.45M
Diversified Energy Company Plc is listed in the Crude Petroleum & Natural Gs sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker DEC. The last closing price for Diversified Energy was 1,116p. Over the last year, Diversified Energy shares have traded in a share price range of 822.50p to 1,930.00p.

Diversified Energy currently has 47,530,929 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Diversified Energy is £530.45 million. Diversified Energy has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 0.70.

Diversified Energy Share Discussion Threads

Showing 8776 to 8800 of 10675 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
02/2/2024
07:39
Positive interview. So glad that we now have a new interviewer. I found the voice of the previous interviewer really off putting.
lord gnome
02/2/2024
07:27
Great video. It is clear that he wants to communicate a few things : BBs, a future acquisition, creativity in funding and in maximising value and some of their share price decline is due to redemptions in funds that hold them rather than DEC-specific.
leoneobull
02/2/2024
07:26
I don't know when this interview was recorded, but it was published yesterday.



An interesting look at strategy with the comment that they would also like to get cash to buy back some shares. (rather than the trivial numbers they are buying at the moment).

johnhemming
02/2/2024
06:48
Thanks for that. Good interview.
bazboa
02/2/2024
06:11
New interview with Rusty. Towards the end, seems more BBs are on the cards. The link is on LSE today, at 02:27 hrs.
retirementplan
01/2/2024
22:50
The divergences are puzzling, but the striking metric is that both sides of the pond the trend seemsinexorably to be downward.

The next few months are going to interesting, not least what happens on the ex d this month.

1knocker
01/2/2024
21:28
Closed in New York at $11.90 = £9.34 vs the £9.04 close in London.
bountyhunter
01/2/2024
19:49
I agree, and it would make a good movie. Gripping stuff.

New York is on it's way again this evening, let's hope this is not another false dawn.

bountyhunter
01/2/2024
19:32
Either that or we will see more so decline and a 40% dividend. You could not make it up.
leoneobull
01/2/2024
19:19
The New York chart does look a bit like a coiled spring tonight! (others may see it differently). As M&G have been selling their stake and maybe nearly finished as suggested by Oak Bloke today then possibly we won't have too much longer to wait. The backstop is the XD 87.5c on 29 Feb.
bountyhunter
01/2/2024
19:16
You'd have thought with a 30% dividend the Yanks would pile in and send this to 20 usd
leoneobull
01/2/2024
16:56
Right on queue in New York lol..
bountyhunter
01/2/2024
15:56
Volume of 200k or so here but already over 50k in US. There's probably not going to be a great deal of difference today.


free stock charts from uk.advfn.com

free stock charts from uk.advfn.com

aleman
01/2/2024
15:52
Plans to drill in Tanos when the price gets better came with the acquisition.
aleman
01/2/2024
15:40
Time to buy. Resource depletion arguments over assumptions can be served up to most drillers and diggers. Contract pricing and hedging can ameliorate and exacerbate profits and losses. DEC business model of stewarding older resources runs right up against these issues and are vulnerable to these arguments, however they have proven to be adept at it. As with all in this sector divis can and should be variable. Still a good business and potentially very profitable. A buy at this price certainly
mindthestash
01/2/2024
15:07
So from the recent trading update…
“4Q 2023 average production of 777 MMcfepd (129.5 Mboepd)” and from a sale back in June last year for just 3000 boepd “June, DEC sold a package of non-operated wells in Oklahoma and Texas raising US$40mln from the divestment of around 200 non-core wells, producing around 3,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day.” Makes you wonder

imnotspartacus
01/2/2024
14:18
And they also can infill drill. They never said how much but that they are able to
kaos3
01/2/2024
14:13
Another problem with "decline" figures is that all we know is how much gas has actually been produced. Were I to be running this sort of business I would be inclined to produce less marginal gas when prices are low simply by the act of not turning the taps/valves full on.
johnhemming
01/2/2024
14:09
>Might be time to dump now
Its a business with perhaps a 5-10 year visibility. This year is predictably worse than next year. More importantly we know now next year is better than this year.

We can even do reasonable calculations as to the next few years.

Why is now a good time to sell?

johnhemming
01/2/2024
13:47
Might be time to dump now
scepticalinvestor
01/2/2024
12:28
More from the Oak Bloke..



I'll add the link to the header when I get a chance but time for lunch now!

bountyhunter
01/2/2024
12:14
Anyone who thought it was relevant will have looked it up by now.
fordtin
01/2/2024
12:06
We still don't know what the dividend yield was cut from and if anywhere near 30%, that was my point and one that I don't consider to be irrelevant in the context. Anyway there is no point in arguing endlessly about this so I'm not going to continue asking the same question.
bountyhunter
01/2/2024
11:21
I think we're all agreed the raison d'etre for DEC is as a financial instrument offering a reliable, high dividend income and that any reduction, regardless of the yield for recent buyers, would be very undesirable.

Fordtin makes a very valid point that the yield for existing lth's is more important a consideration than that for people fortunate enough to be buying at current prices.

bluemango
01/2/2024
11:14
You asked "I get the point but what did Gresham cut from to?"

Gresham cut their current financial year’s dividend by 25%, with a vague promise/threat to ‘recalibrate’ future dividends.

If DEC did the same it would result in a reduction of 21.875c (17.18p) per share gross. 14.65p per share net of 15% wht. 12.03p per share net of 30% tax.

Every shareholder will be receiving a yield based on the price of their personal share purchase. I don't know what your yield is any more than you could possibly know mine. All we know is our own personal yield and the yield of any newcomers to the share register.

If you still think the yield for anyone who purchased in the closing auction last night is of huge relevance, I leave you to look it up.


Regardless of personal yields, a dividend cut is still a dividend cut.

fordtin
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