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GKP Gulf Keystone Petroleum Ltd

113.50
3.20 (2.90%)
26 Apr 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
  3.20 2.90% 113.50 112.90 113.50 114.50 112.00 112.30 933,497 16:35:29
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Oil And Gas Field Expl Svcs 123.51M -11.5M -0.0517 -21.91 252.03M
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 110.30p. Over the last year, Gulf Keystone Petroleum shares have traded in a share price range of 81.70p to 154.60p.

Gulf Keystone Petroleum currently has 222,443,000 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Gulf Keystone Petroleum is £252.03 million. Gulf Keystone Petroleum has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -21.91.

Gulf Keystone Petroleum Share Discussion Threads

Showing 658026 to 658047 of 705375 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
28/6/2022
13:48
Debt is less expensive than equity because it is less risky since interest payments have priority over dividends and debt holders are paid back prior to equity holders in the event of bankruptcy. Debt is also cheaper than equity because interest expense acts as a tax shelter while dividends are paid out of after-tax income.

Optimal capital structure theory does suggest a limit to the amount of debt a company should employ in its capital structure.

Companies with consistent cash flows can tolerate MORE debt in their capital structure while a company with volatile cash flows will have less debt and more equity in its capital structure.
==============================
So a company apparently staying independant about to embark on a 1 bn dollar capex expansion , that has huge consistent FCF ........... decides to not bother ....LOL
...............

giant_canine
28/6/2022
13:46
well that's the 6th time i've been forced to read the same post....
goatcam
28/6/2022
13:40
Debt is less expensive than equity because it is less risky since interest payments have priority over dividends and debt holders are paid back prior to equity holders in the event of bankruptcy. Debt is also cheaper than equity because interest expense acts as a tax shelter while dividends are paid out of after-tax income.

Optimal capital structure theory does suggest a limit to the amount of debt a company should employ in its capital structure.

Companies with consistent cash flows can tolerate MORE debt in their capital structure while a company with volatile cash flows will have less debt and more equity in its capital structure.
==============================
So a company apparently staying independant about to embark on a 1 bn dollar capex expansion , that has huge consistent FCF ........... decides to not bother ....LOL
...............

giant_canine
28/6/2022
13:38
Its all you today Paul, all you!
goatcam
28/6/2022
13:36
Where's Condog ??
giant_canine
28/6/2022
13:33
Debt is less expensive than equity because it is less risky since interest payments have priority over dividends and debt holders are paid back prior to equity holders in the event of bankruptcy. Debt is also cheaper than equity because interest expense acts as a tax shelter while dividends are paid out of after-tax income.

Optimal capital structure theory does suggest a limit to the amount of debt a company should employ in its capital structure.

Companies with consistent cash flows can tolerate MORE debt in their capital structure while a company with volatile cash flows will have less debt and more equity in its capital structure.
==============================
So a company apparently staying independant about to embark on a 1 bn dollar capex expansion , that has huge consistent FCF ........... decides to not bother ....LOL
...............

giant_canine
28/6/2022
13:32
"check out all the biggest oil producing companies in the world.
They ALL use bonds plus equity to finance their businesses."

Well for a start we are not one of the biggest oil producing companies in the world are we Paul. We are a little oil company who's one customer has a history of simply not paying.

goatcam
28/6/2022
13:21
Debt is less expensive than equity because it is less risky since interest payments have priority over dividends and debt holders are paid back prior to equity holders in the event of bankruptcy. Debt is also cheaper than equity because interest expense acts as a tax shelter while dividends are paid out of after-tax income.

Optimal capital structure theory does suggest a limit to the amount of debt a company should employ in its capital structure.

Companies with consistent cash flows can tolerate MORE debt in their capital structure while a company with volatile cash flows will have less debt and more equity in its capital structure.
==============================
So a company apparently staying independant about to embark on a 1 bn dollar capex expansion , that has huge consistent FCF ........... decides to not bother ....LOL
...............

giant_canine
28/6/2022
13:21
Turvart - check out all the biggest oil producing companies in the world.
They ALL use bonds plus equity to finance their businesses.
GKP no longer needs to obviously.
'
Turavrt - they already have it right!
If they selling up - then pay off the debt from internal funds, it adds around 40p/share to profits for shareholders on that sale.
.............
If you intend to be a going concern its bonkers. So they obviously dont

giant_canine
28/6/2022
13:19
LOL. Turvart - Paul's been wrong about so so so many things over the years, and he'll be wrong about his conspiracy for paying off the debt.
goatcam
28/6/2022
13:19
Debt is less expensive than equity because it is less risky since interest payments have priority over dividends and debt holders are paid back prior to equity holders in the event of bankruptcy. Debt is also cheaper than equity because interest expense acts as a tax shelter while dividends are paid out of after-tax income.

Optimal capital structure theory does suggest a limit to the amount of debt a company should employ in its capital structure.

Companies with consistent cash flows can tolerate MORE debt in their capital structure while a company with volatile cash flows will have less debt and more equity in its capital structure.
==============================
So a company apparently staying independant about to embark on a 1 bn dollar capex expansion , that has huge consistent FCF ........... decides to not bother ....LOL
...............

giant_canine
28/6/2022
13:17
It does make sense to pay off the debt, I remember many small oil companies in March/April 2020 when the oil price dived and some of the astute companies had oil hedged some didn't and they struggled to pay their debt.

If I win the lottery I won't pay off my mortgage, that's what your basically saying LOL.

turvart
28/6/2022
13:17
Turavrt - they already have it right!
If they selling up - then pay off the debt from internal funds, it adds around 40p/share to profits for shareholders on that sale.
.............
If you intend to be a going concern its bonkers. So they obviously dont

giant_canine
28/6/2022
13:17
LOL another copy and paste job by the board's resident nutter
goatcam
28/6/2022
13:14
Debt is less expensive than equity because it is less risky since interest payments have priority over dividends and debt holders are paid back prior to equity holders in the event of bankruptcy. Debt is also cheaper than equity because interest expense acts as a tax shelter while dividends are paid out of after-tax income.

Optimal capital structure theory does suggest a limit to the amount of debt a company should employ in its capital structure.

Companies with consistent cash flows can tolerate MORE debt in their capital structure while a company with volatile cash flows will have less debt and more equity in its capital structure.
==============================
So a company apparently staying independant about to embark on a 1 bn dollar capex expansion , that has huge consistent FCF ........... decides to not bother ....LOL

giant_canine
28/6/2022
13:14
GC,

Maybe you should be on the BOD and tell all the others they have it all wrong LOL.

turvart
28/6/2022
13:14
I wasn't saying they can't, GC, I was saying it doesn't make sense for them to do it.
pensioner2
28/6/2022
13:13
Oh I see P2 - Gcam suggested it ...quelle surpris?
giant_canine
28/6/2022
13:12
easy - they make turkey stop the pipeline.
goatcam
28/6/2022
13:10
You have an underline in your avatar. :-)
pensioner2
28/6/2022
13:09
P2 I never mentioned Baghdad stopping exports ??? How on earth could they or would they?
giant_canine
28/6/2022
13:07
GCam seems very agitated - no doubt being super bullish - Broadfraud even more so.
LOL

giant_canine
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