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GKP Gulf Keystone Petroleum Ltd

136.50
-1.90 (-1.37%)
19 Jul 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Gulf Keystone Petroleum Ltd LSE:GKP London Ordinary Share BMG4209G2077 COM SHS USD1.00 (DI)
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  -1.90 -1.37% 136.50 132.80 136.30 137.40 134.60 136.50 650,681 16:35:14
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Oil And Gas Field Expl Svcs 123.51M -11.5M -0.0516 -35.27 308.21M
Gulf Keystone Petroleum Ltd is listed in the Oil And Gas Field Expl Svcs sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker GKP. The last closing price for Gulf Keystone Petroleum was 138.40p. Over the last year, Gulf Keystone Petroleum shares have traded in a share price range of 81.70p to 155.60p.

Gulf Keystone Petroleum currently has 222,698,655 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Gulf Keystone Petroleum is £308.21 million. Gulf Keystone Petroleum has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -35.27.

Gulf Keystone Petroleum Share Discussion Threads

Showing 644351 to 644371 of 710850 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
15/10/2021
09:02
H7 642710

double posting

attyg
15/10/2021
09:02
H7 642710

I think that is indeed the case.
However, institutions love dividend paying shares as they can then use them to pay out dividends themselves.
So although existing instis may not re-invest dividends, others will be attracted to buy GKP because it is now looking like a safe dividend paying stock - and one that is massively undervalued.

attyg
15/10/2021
08:25
According to LSE the Institutions and Hedge funds dont spend their Divi's on more shares.

LOL

highlander7
15/10/2021
08:25
Staying above 220p is supposed to be a big thing charty wise?
officerdigby
15/10/2021
08:21
So predictable with a yearly div of 34 p plus
s34icknote
15/10/2021
08:11
Looks like more divis being spent here.
shortsqueezer
15/10/2021
08:08
Oil Climbs as Stockpiles Fall at Biggest U.S. Crude Storage Hub
By Julia Fanzeres + Follow
14 October 2021, 00:41 BST
Updated on 14 October 2021, 19:59 BST
Cushing supplies drop as traders send crude to U.S. Gulf Coast
U.S. equities strengthen amid better-than-estimated earnings
Oil rose in tandem with equities after traders digested a U.S. inventory report showing the biggest decline in crude stockpiles at the Cushing, Oklahoma, storage hub since June.

Futures in New York rose 1.1% on Thursday to settle at a fresh, nearly seven-year high with the stock market heading toward its best day since March. Supplies at the nation’s largest storage site at Cushing slid last week as traders sent more crude to the U.S. Gulf Coast for export.

beernut
15/10/2021
07:19
"Charge points to be ‘switched off’ for nine-hours a day to protect grid"


LOL I posted a few times on this.

Quite simply our current old electrical distribution network ( National Grid) is over loaded now. There is no way on earth it will cope with a mass influx of EV all wanting charged and it will take 20 years and £100's of billions to upgrade it.

The theory ( From an EU Directive ) was that we all build Wind turbines to charge all these EV's overnight. Of course our lot of politicians had to follow this when we were members of the EU . ( and doubled our electricity bills to pay for it BTW) Unfortunately some nights the wind doesnt blow - as this lot have just noticed.

So BOJO's Green Policy ( rather Mrs Johnstons green policy ) is all BS purely and simply to get votes.

IMO

highlander7
15/10/2021
06:55
84.75 on 15 min delayed quote. Looking good
shortsqueezer
15/10/2021
06:52
Brent up 1.6% since we closed and rising.
hydrocarbon1
15/10/2021
06:33
Read 2 days ago the uk gov is going to limit charge times for EV’s

You can have cheap fuel but not fill the tank?

Charge points to be ‘switched off’ for nine-hours a day to protect grid
Friday, September 17, 2021 - 09:27No Comments6,498 ViewsCharging, Electric Cars, Electric Vehicles, General News, Government Policy, News, Newsletter, Top NewsMark Salisbury
New electric vehicle (EV) charge points, installed at home and in the workplace from May, will be pre-programmed to switch off during peak hours to ease pressure on the National Grid.

A ‘randomised delay’ of up to 30 minutes, when there is high demand from motorists, will also be introduced as more company car drivers make the switch to EVs away from diesel and petrol.

New chargers will not operate from 8am to 11am and 4pm to 10pm, but owners and fleets will be able to override the preset times to take account of night workers and people who have different schedules.

Public chargers and rapid chargers, on motorways and A-roads, will be exempt, reports The Times.

beernut
15/10/2021
06:20
Goldman Sachs says oil prices could be higher for much longer
PUBLISHED THU, OCT 14 2021 6:46 AM EDT
Abigail Ng
@ABIGAILNGWY
SHARE




KEY POINTS
Oil prices could stay at higher levels in the years to come as demand rebounds while supply remains tight, said Damien Courvalin of Goldman Sachs.
"This is not a transient winter shock like it could be for gas. This is actually the beginning of a material repricing higher for oil," he told CNBC's "Street Signs Asia" on Thursday.
"The fundamentals actually very much support the view of higher prices than we've seen, pretty much since 2014," he said.

Oil prices could stay at higher levels in the years to come as demand rebounds while supply remains tight, according to Goldman Sachs' head of energy research.

Damien Courvalin, who is also a senior commodity strategist, said the market fundamentals warrant higher prices and that the bank's forecast for Brent crude is $85 per barrel for the next several years.


"This is not a transient winter shock like it could be for gas. This is actually the beginning of a material repricing higher for oil," he told CNBC's "Street Signs Asia" on Thursday.

Goldman Sachs' base case is for Brent to hit $90 per barrel by the end of the year.

U.S. crude futures were up 1.26% at $81.45 per barrel, while international benchmark Brent crude futures gained 1.24% to trade at $84.21 per barrel on Thursday afternoon in Asia.

The oil market is in "the longest deficit we've seen in decades," and demand will continue to outstrip supply in winter, said Courvalin. The lack of upstream investment in oil supply while demand grows points to "sustained high prices" at least in the year ahead, he added.

'Warning sign'

What's happening in the coal market — where prices are at record highs because supply shrank faster than demand — is a "warning sign" for oil, Courvalin said.


Oil drilling activity hasn't recovered much on the supply side, while demand is growing, he said, describing the market as being in an "entrenched deficit."

"We're facing potential multi-year deficits and the risk of significantly higher prices," he said.

There needs to be a realization that the transition to cleaner energy will take a long time, and that calls to stop investing in hydrocarbon supply will only create "much higher energy prices in the coming years," he said.


Oil pumping jacks, also known as "nodding donkeys," in a Rosneft Oil Co. oilfield near Sokolovka village, in the Udmurt Republic, Russia, on Friday, Nov. 20, 2020.
Andrey Rudakov | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Despite oil futures climbing more than 60% this year and hitting multi-year highs, Courvalin said oil producers haven't increased supply.

"Demand is rebounding further and we need to really start to see that investment," he said.

Shale producers, however, are focused on returning cash to shareholders.

"That's the key of the sustainability of higher prices," he said, adding that he sees oil demand hitting new record highs in 2022 and 2023.

"The fundamentals actually very much support the view of higher prices than we've seen, pretty much since 2014," he said.

— CNBC's Patti Domm and Pippa Stevens contributed to this report.

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beernut
15/10/2021
05:40
Note


" and is triggering a massive switch to oil products "


Add the fact that the INOC's havent been buying assets for ~ 7 years and we have the makings of the last Oil Boom.

IMO

highlander7
15/10/2021
05:37
Bloomberg

The energy crisis keeps getting worse. Shortages of natural gas in Europe and Asia are boosting demand for oil, deepening what was already a sizable supply deficit in crude markets, according to the International Energy Agency. “An acute shortage of natural gas, LNG and coal supplies stemming from the gathering global economic recovery has sparked a precipitous run-up in prices for energy supplies and is triggering a massive switch to oil products,” the IEA warned. —David E. Rovella

highlander7
15/10/2021
05:35
Hi,BT.
Hope you are well.

Many of the old guard still here and now reaping very large dividends.

The oil hasn't gone anywhere.

Good luck and take care.

fairenough11
15/10/2021
00:17
>> OT CV19
>>hTtps://www.notonthebeeb.co.uk/



This is the guy who successfully conducted lawsuits against DB and VW. It's in English. The Corona Committee has been conducting live, multi-hour sessions to investigate why federal and state governments imposed unprecedented restrictions as part of the Coronavirus response and what the consequences have been and still are for people. Now up to session 73.

Or....

busamitch
14/10/2021
23:29
Hi Howard, hope all good.

And Nestof, you too. And thanks for the reference.

Surprised to see some welcome faces still here - that's what I call stamina!

Have been breeding so a lot less time for this stuff, but shall pop in from time to time to try to catch up.

Cheers, BT.

biggerthus
14/10/2021
22:45
A close tomorrow on or above 214 will be very good. Tight management of the share price means at this rate Golden cross in about a month is my guess.
nestoframpers
14/10/2021
22:06
OT good talk about 9/11
nestoframpers
14/10/2021
21:07
Wow a blast from the pastHi BT
howard smith
14/10/2021
20:30
>> Nest
>> You know Alex Belfield on YT ? he is suing the BBC and Police for harassment.
>>

Of course, and Mr Vine is fighting AB back. Having also been served a COVID liability notice.

busamitch
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