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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Predator Oil & Gas Holdings Plc | LSE:PRD | London | Ordinary Share | JE00BFZ1D698 | ORD NPV |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.25 | 2.70% | 9.50 | 9.00 | 10.00 | 9.50 | 9.25 | 9.25 | 284,112 | 09:36:39 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Crude Petroleum & Natural Gs | 0 | -2.56M | -0.0045 | -21.11 | 53.44M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
23/6/2022 02:24 | In the interests of the original idea of Plus1 coins, I will be awarding 5 coins to all decent informative posts that get multiple ticks up and are useful to readers of the thread. So if you find you start getting coins.......your welcome. | pro_s2009 | |
22/6/2022 16:45 | See this doubling from here. This stock can move real quick! Bouncing from 6p, could happen Thursday/Friday | shares188 | |
22/6/2022 11:15 | The old tree shake and shorters story. Why not throw in MMs games? Love the chart. Everything points to a fall to 4-5p. The trouble with shares like Predator is that it is the same people buying too many shares. Eventually it breaks. Be careful | helpfull | |
21/6/2022 13:19 | Fairly predictable and all too obvious, the shorting gang are tree shaking on the Predator LSE board this week. Allowed me to add around 240k shares at good prices. Thanks fellas | quazie12 | |
21/6/2022 09:48 | One year since the start of the Mou-1 drill. Everyone knows the result don't they? Two placing ago. Directors go and sell shares. Directors come and buy shares. Options. Legal action. Still no test. In Trinny, Ireland and Morocco, Predator has everything everyone requires. So investors are told, ad nauseum. And yet nobody bites. Why not? Love the chart. It allows for a fall to the 4-5p region. What is going to happen to take it there? Be careful. | helpfull | |
21/6/2022 09:46 | L2 2 v 1 6.75/7.25 | pro_s2009 | |
21/6/2022 09:07 | Buying more...nice and cheap. As they say, buy low, sell high..... :) | pro_s2009 | |
21/6/2022 07:12 | now ppl get worried!lol | theonewhoknows2 | |
20/6/2022 19:51 | The big shape on the chart has more or less played out, so it could be a great time to build a stake. | chopsy | |
20/6/2022 19:48 | That's it, BigSi, funding is needed for the drilling. Now a farm out on favorable terms could provide free carry for say 3 wells, if we're lucky, but funding will be required at some stage, hopefully at a higher price. It seems to me however that the iis are got on board low down to keep them sweet and long. The price action says placing to me, why else has the share price halved since April? | chopsy | |
20/6/2022 18:00 | Could be 5p for a proper bounce. Just saying | shares188 | |
20/6/2022 17:56 | Looks like 5p testing , gotta be Something in it | shares188 | |
20/6/2022 17:15 | Latest RNS... Fully funded to meet all well planning and well preparation activities in MoroccoSo not fully funded to complete drill? | bigsi2 | |
20/6/2022 16:52 | A few biggish sells, maybe someone in the know preselling placing shares, what will the price be, surely no more than 6.5p now, that is if there is a placing though it seems likely to me. | chopsy | |
20/6/2022 15:45 | 6.9 to BuySome bad news imminent?? | bigsi2 | |
20/6/2022 12:36 | We will see in court. There was a contract and the contract terms and fine print will be subject to the legal wrangle. I expect PRD to win, well, I expect CEG to do an "settlement" before it goes too far. Thats what I think will happen, lets see. More important for PRD is the Farm Out deal for Morocco..........pos Market cap on 22 million now. Would be worth 100 million with a good farm out deal done for 3 MOU wells to be drilled. | pro_s2009 | |
20/6/2022 12:26 | Predator and challenger spooning each other to line pockets. Should be locked up, not a bs litigation process. Scandalous | doerx2 | |
20/6/2022 11:37 | What is that supposed to mesn | bapr59 | |
20/6/2022 11:34 | o dear.... | theonewhoknows2 | |
20/6/2022 08:34 | Love the chart. Is all the promise of the rise since February about to be blown away with a puff of head and shoulders? Tomorrow will be the 1st anniversary of the commencement of drilling of Mou-1. When will that be tested? Could 6p be on the way? Be careful. | helpfull | |
18/6/2022 01:40 | Can African gas be an alternative to Europe's Russian imports? The European Commission's REPowerEU plan, adopted on May 19, outlines clear opportunities for a continent that has so far provided Europe with just over 10% of its gas consumption. By Cyril Bensimon Published on June 15, 2022 at 17h00, updated at 17h04 on June 15, 2022 With its wheat imports and future grain harvests threatened by the war in Ukraine (with which it largely refuses to be associated), will Africa benefit from a strategic reorientation by Europeans anxious to free themselves from their dependence on Russian gas? The European Commission's REPowerEU plan – presented just 12 days after the outbreak of the Russian invasion and adopted on May 19 – outlines clear opportunities for a continent that has until now provided Europe with just over 10% of its gas consumption, compared to nearly 40% for Russia. And Africa's production capacity is expected to double by 2030, according to a study by Rystad Energy. "The existing pipeline infrastructure between North Africa and Europe as well as historical liquefied natural gas (LNG) supply relationships make Africa a solid alternative for European markets after the Russian import ban," said Siva Prasad, senior analyst at the Norwegian consultancy. Indeed, since the first shots were fired on Ukraine – followed by the European Union's decision to do without two-thirds of its Russian gas imports by the end of the year and to cease them by 2027 – the countries most dependent on Moscow's deliveries have ostensibly turned to African exporters, whether actual or prospective. Italy, whose 45% of gas imports came from Russia before the conflict began, was the first to seek diversification of its supply sources. Four days after the start of the Russian offensive, its head of diplomacy, Luigi Di Maio, was in Algeria, "which has always been a reliable supplier," in his words. On April 11, Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi and ENI CEO Claudio Descalzi followed suit, signing an agreement with Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune to increase imports of Algerian gas by about 40%. In the same breath, Rome was doing likewise in Angola and in the Republic of Congo. Senegalese ambition Germany, the leading European customer for Russian gas, has been looking at Senegal, whose fields shared with Mauritania in the Atlantic should produce 2.5 million tonnes of LNG per year from the last quarter of 2023, then 10 million from 2030. "We are ready, we in Senegal in any case, to work with a view to supplying the European market with LNG," Senegalese President Macky Sall assured German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Dakar on May 22. Mamadou Fall Kane, the Senegalese head of state's energy advisor, said, "The first deliveries are reserved for the Asian market, but there is nothing to prevent renegoti............ | pro_s2009 | |
15/6/2022 09:49 | Motion re:Energy Security. . | pro_s2009 | |
14/6/2022 21:43 | A case of sit and wait for farm out news. | pro_s2009 | |
14/6/2022 15:53 | A little bit too soon, it turns out. Never easy to spot the bottom. That's a massive chart formation since Feb. Where will the funding point sit? | chopsy |
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