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PRD Predator Oil & Gas Holdings Plc

10.00
0.00 (0.00%)
26 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
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
  0.00 0.00% 10.00 9.50 10.50 10.00 10.00 10.00 454,201 08:00:00
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Crude Petroleum & Natural Gs 0 -2.56M -0.0045 -22.22 56.25M
Predator Oil & Gas Holdings Plc is listed in the Crude Petroleum & Natural Gs sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker PRD. The last closing price for Predator Oil & Gas was 10p. Over the last year, Predator Oil & Gas shares have traded in a share price range of 5.65p to 21.25p.

Predator Oil & Gas currently has 562,502,088 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Predator Oil & Gas is £56.25 million. Predator Oil & Gas has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -22.22.

Predator Oil & Gas Share Discussion Threads

Showing 10701 to 10722 of 17350 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
05/9/2022
09:01
Same old same old.

Pump the share price before the meeting:

"What do peeps think the share price will be...........?"

" tight squeeze"

" they won't be getting my shares"

" there must be news release before the meeting or why have one?"

The only certainty for the week is that there will be a fall in the share price on Friday.

Be careful.

helpfull
04/9/2022
07:50
No hold up as yet…
nametrade
03/9/2022
21:41
What is the Morocco hold up?
danmart2
03/9/2022
08:52
15m will be returned to the CEO ( the shares borrowed) and then 85m will be the new available authority to issue shares whenever another placing is to be done . Standard practice.Looking forward to Thursdays presentation.
jungmana
03/9/2022
08:30
Resolution no. 7 (Authority for the directors to allot Ordinary Shares)This resolution seeks Shareholder approval for the authority for the Directors to allot sufficient Ordinary Shares to give the Directors flexibility in issuing shares for additional capital as required for the early initial development of Compressed Natural Gas in the Guercif Licence and for further production wells thereafter to scale up production.The Directors be duly authorised in accordance with the Articles of Association of the Company (the "Articles") to exercise all the powers of the Company to allot, issue, convert any security into, grant options over, create share warrants or otherwise dispose of Equity Securities (as that term is defined in the Articles) as if the pre-emption rights set out in the Articles did not apply to such process described above, such power to be limited up to a total of 100,000,000 Equity Securities provided always that this authority shall expire at the later of the conclusion of the Annual General Meeting of the Company to be held in 2023 and 15 months from the passing of the resolution but, in each case, during this period, the Company may make offers and enter into agreements which would, or might, require Equity Securities to be allotted after the authority ends and the Directors may allot Equity Securities under any such offer or agreement as if the authority had not ended.
bigsi2
03/9/2022
08:28
https://materials.proxyvote.com/Approved/99999Z/19840101/NOMNP_514665.PDFResolution - authority to issue a further 100m shares
bigsi2
02/9/2022
18:09
Nord Stream 1 is not coming back online and I would say unlikely to do so anytime soon. This a result of the to be introduced price cap on Russian oil, in return have stated "Russia would halt oil and petroleum products supplies to countries deciding to cap the Russian oil price".

Our MP's certainly have it in for the ordinary folk already struggling. Gas price should rocket as we enter the cold period ahead.

thesaint5
02/9/2022
14:02
You mean this Eamon Ryan?



Just another representative from the WEF.

bad gateway
02/9/2022
12:05
News Monday?Drilling sept to oct as per update
bigsi2
02/9/2022
11:32
As much as I am a fan of prd. I dont see Ireland bearing fruit anytime soon. The politicians there are stuck in some weird delusional world where everything will hinge on uk honouring its obligations. Whilst the uk is hinged on Norway honouring their obligations. Meanwhile, those in the know in uk are buying wood and coal, just in case! My guess is it will all go pete tong later this winter, say a cold snap next feb. There will then be political chaos in Ireland and only then will mag mell and the like come to the fore.

Hopefully by then, Morocco will come good anyway. GLA

pv1972
01/9/2022
14:13
Drilling news?It's due
bigsi2
31/8/2022
18:29
Twitter crew on this at the moment :)
daar
31/8/2022
08:48
That "buy before the drill" strategy might end up costing you money. There's no free lunch. Everyone knows the score. Watch out for the "sell before results" avalanche. Let what happened with Mou-1 be your guide. There is risk here.

Be careful.

helpfull
31/8/2022
07:30
Good on him and about time imo.
bad gateway
30/8/2022
12:45
Given that the drill is to happen September/October I see little chance of it breaching the rising support line. The chart is saying that the stock should go to 20p minimum pre drill and since some de-risking has happened from MOU-1 then 30p is plausible.



free stock charts from uk.advfn.com



Yes be careful and of course streetwise.

mariopeter
30/8/2022
09:18
Despite all the huffing and puffing of the share price prior to the drill, the chart still indicates a fall to the 4-5p region is on the cards.

Be careful.

helpfull
30/8/2022
08:55
Yep....should be a triple..........
pro_s2009
30/8/2022
08:10
An easy double from this level by October spud imo. Top up and sit tight
jungmana
29/8/2022
01:11
There is palpable air of crisis within the Irish energy sector right now that is eerily redolent of banking in 2007. And just like the financial crisis, this has nothing to do with external factors, not President Putin of Russia, not the war in Ukraine nor the Nord Stream pipeline.

Just as the weakness in the financial system was rooted in the toxic loan books of the banks, not in the collapse of Lehman Brothers, this is a crisis that is entirely home baked. SSE Airtricity’s enormous price hikes announced on Friday represent an immediate headache for the government and a huge worry for Irish households and businesses. It is forecast that UK energy bills are headed for near £7,000 (€8,250) a year next year. There is talk that businesses in certain sectors will shut up shop and lay off staff rather than suffer higher energy bills.

Ireland may face a similar scenario to that of the UK. The goalposts for next month’s cost of living budget keep moving. Yet there is a deeper malaise within the Irish energy system that should not be masked by the present bout of soaring energy inflation. With or without the war in Ukraine, Ireland was already heading for a deepening supply crisis this winter after five years of poor planning.

The prospect of rationing and levies for power usage at peak times is not related to the rising cost of gas. It is down solely to how badly we have run and planned our energy system. As reported here today, there will be a €100 levy on every electricity bill next year to pay for “imperfections” on the grid; essentially to cover the system’s failings.

As the country faces its greatest energy crisis in close to 50 years, it’s therefore surprising that Ireland does not have an energy minister. Responsibility falls to Eamon Ryan, minister for transport, climate, environment and communications. Indeed, it seems that Ryan is the minister for practically everything else but energy. There is not even a junior minister with responsibility for energy. That, quite frankly, is bizarre.

It ensures that energy is only ever seen through the prism of climate and the environment. Energy policy is hugely important to Ireland’s climate change ambitions, yet it cannot be viewed in such splendid isolation.

Back in 2007 when Ryan was actually the minister for energy, the now Green Party leader introduced a round of offshore oil and gas licensing by highlighting Ireland’s vulnerability as an energy importer.

In banning future oil and gas exploration some 14 years later Ryan pointed to Ireland’s dismal record in oil and gas exploration, with two strikes in more than 50 years. It is far from sure that recoverable fossil fuels resources lie beneath the ocean bed, he logically argued, whereas it is indisputable that Ireland has one of the richest wind resources in Europe. The future is wind.

Ryan is right, yet at present renewable energy’s limitations are clear. Wind contribution to the grid can fluctuate from 30 per cent to less than 1 per cent. That will not change wildly with new renewable capacity. The country will continue to have a need for fossil fuel to generate electricity until storage technology improves.

Yet Ryan and his government colleagues seem happy that those fossil fuels be imported. Extensions to existing licences, not covered by the ban, at both Providence Resources’ Barryroe field off the Cork coast and Europa Oil’s Inishkea field close to the Corrib field are both sitting on his desk, slowly gathering dust.

If both fields were developed, and there is no certainty they will be, it is possible that by the time they are exhausted, hydrogen storage will be advanced enough to step into the breach.

Yet there is no appetite in government to support existing permit holders. As the Corrib field exhausts, the island of Ireland will rely entirely on gas piped through the Moffat interconnector in Scotland. The country will cede its energy sovereignty to the UK, quite possibly under a Sinn Fein government. The people’s populist party is naturally against offshore exploration.

In June a senior official in the Commission for the Regulation of Utilities said that it would not make sense to become reliant on a single source of gas “no matter how reliable it is”.

A review of Ireland’s energy security is under way — it has been running since November 2019. Laughable.

The scary part is the absence of debate. There is an overriding orthodoxy that rejects the very mention of fossil fuels. That is very 2007.

pro_s2009
28/8/2022
14:20
Yes but the irish gov don't work for the irish peoples good they work for the WEF's 2030 global agenda of depopulation and climate alarmism.
They won't do anything oil/gas related without being dragged into it kicking and screaming imo.

bad gateway
28/8/2022
12:23
Ireland is going to have to do a number of LNG projects. The gas problem is getting worse next year........
pro_s2009
27/8/2022
01:45
Golden age of hydrocarbon investments........ from five and a half minutes in..



.

pro_s2009
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