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RKH Rockhopper Exploration Plc

13.375
-0.075 (-0.56%)
19 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Rockhopper Exploration Investors - RKH

Rockhopper Exploration Investors - RKH

Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Rockhopper Exploration Plc RKH London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
-0.075 -0.56% 13.375 16:35:05
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
13.75 13.60 13.75 13.375 13.45
more quote information »
Industry Sector
OIL & GAS PRODUCERS

Top Investor Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 19/4/2024 00:18 by gozzie2
Yeah great investor Drayton ?? 10 years and he's still waffling sh1te lol ??If he'd listened to GOZZIE2, he could have been holding 10 X the number of shares ???Oops???Clueless ???
Posted at 25/3/2024 14:11 by gozzie2
Well the old job dodger is talking some sense these days ???FACTBootledodgerPosts: 619Price: 12.70No OpinionRE: Godders99 and LaticsToday 13:56No thanks....i've got better things to do with my time.I've seen Galileo/G1/Oil Brat/Marlon Monkey et al come and all go. All telling everyone how certain this was to happen.Amazingly here we again - certain of pumping oil....yet at a tiny Mcap.My point is - far too many on here just want to hear everything is going fantastically, marvelously well. I don't. I am sick of reading "i think", "I believe". I'm only interested in facts, you actually, generally, only post facts - but this obsession with so called negative posters is odd.I understand the likes of Godder went on a bit too much - but the problem is...a lot of what he said is unfortunately true.I'll be here til the end...I am praying the information coming through will this time result in getting to where LT investors have dreamt of for so long.
Posted at 11/3/2024 19:09 by factsandfigures
The Falklands Islands has been talked-up as the next big thing in oil exploration terms many times in the past. Industry giants, including Royal Dutch Shell, explored without any success back in the 1990s, and there was another flurry of interest in 2010 when a rapidly-rising oil price sparked an UNSUCCESSFUL prospecting rush.



A number of small A.I.M listed oil exploration companies including the now defunct Desire Petroleum, along with Falkland Oil and Gas, Argos Resources, Borders & Southern and Rockhopper Exploration all raised money from investors that foolishly believed untold riches awaited.

Hopelessly optimistic comments started appearing on investor bulletin boards (including ADVFN) with many saying Britain’s willingness to fight to reclaim the Falklands from the Argentine invasion in 1982 was the only proof needed that large quantities of oil could be pulled from the South Atlantic.

This proved to be extremely poor judgement and after that initial frenzy, the oil price collapsed to under $40 per barrel and quite rightly the City of London turned it's back on oil exploration around the Falklands Islands.

Since then very little has actually happened in terms of extracting Oil and Gas from around the Falkland Islands leaving shareholders in Rockhopper Exploration PLC very much out of pocket.
Posted at 07/3/2024 16:44 by seedoftongo
When he’s gone the ridicule will keep going for a while before petering out .
A year or so later , some investors will meet others they remember from here on a different thread, and they may look back and laugh at that absolute plonker Gozzie2 .
“ Remember that nob from RKH “ they are likely to say ….

That’s how he will be remembered .
Posted at 07/3/2024 12:23 by seedoftongo
Stinging attack by nut .

“Seed freak “.

However do I respond to that ??

Anyway …
Is it later than you thought ?

A survey of ADVFN investors found that it was actually later than most investors thought it was .
This was when they were confronted with the evidence ( the actual time ) versus what they perceived it to be .
Gozza Goslin was the first to discover this phenomenon amongst other absolutely pointless drivel emanating from this oafs mega gob …
Remembers folks , it’s most likely later than you think it is , should you guess the time and then look at the actual time .
Posted at 01/3/2024 15:35 by gozzei2
This is a serious financial chat site for Rockhopper investors, not missing persons chum. Take it up with Plod.

All the best
Posted at 21/2/2024 23:17 by gozzie2
I have been watching videos lately of all the great investors. They are all saying there is likely to be a crash coming ,with all the debts of countries and the printed money .I'm amazed how much money is lost in the stockmarket. Mum wouldn't touch it with a bargepole, as she doesn't like risk .
Posted at 15/2/2024 17:59 by seedoftongo
Gozza , you don’t count when it comes to financial decisions of other investors .
They laugh at you and ignore anything financial you say .
I’m being honest when I say that no one gets laughed AT as much as you on ADVFN.
Posted at 08/1/2024 18:42 by gozzie2
What a wonderful track record this ball and bat has lol..SRM Advisers, Europe's largest 2006 hedge fund start-up, run by ex-UBS proprietary trader Jon Wood, has rebranded itself Aedos Advisers and the firm is bringing a new fund to market. Aedos is named after the Greek goddess of modesty and humility.Wood, who is not involved in the risk management or the investment management of the Aedos fund, continues to run the SRM Global Fund.Jonathan Wood is a British hedge fund manager and donor to the UK Conservative Party. He is the founder of the hedge fund SRM Global. He donated £500,000 to the Conservative Party in 2010.[1]Wood was born in Yorkshire and grew up in Whitstable, Kent, the middle of three children. He studied economics at Loughborough University. He was a successful trader at UBS, reportedly earning $2.4 billion for the bank over a six-year period.[2]He was an investor in The Gadget Shop and, after the firm went into administration, he later filed a lawsuit for £100 million against former partners Tom Hunter and Chris Gorman. He alleged Gorman and Hunter had privately acquired Birthdays, ruining a potentially lucrative merger between the retailer and the Gadget Shop. The lawsuit which cost £100 million was dismissed: Gorman and Hunter had made a loss on their acquisition and the judge described Wood as "evasive"[2] and "a very hard and calculating man".[2][3] According to The Times, it was following this lawsuit that he was nicknamed Keyser Söze after the "crime lord" in The Usual Suspects film – a nickname he doesn't like.[2]According to The Wall Street Journal, Wood set up SRM Global Fund in September 2006 raising about $3 billion but by July 2008 the value had fallen by 85%. It was a major investor in Northern Rock which was bailed out by the UK taxpayer in September 2007 and nationalized in February 2008. Investors were not allowed to withdraw money. SRM is registered in the Cayman Islands, with offices in Monaco.[4] Wood blamed the British and American governments for the Financial crisis of 2007–08 saying that Lehman Brothers and Northern Rock should not have been stopped from trading.[5
Posted at 19/6/2023 15:12 by gozzie2
UK court may seize Spanish sovereign assets amid international arbitration quagmireUK court may seize Spanish sovereign assets amid international arbitration quagmireBy Max Griera | EURACTIV.com Est. 5min 6 Apr 2023Content-Type: News?The orders issued by UK's High Court grant Blasket the option to be compensated with the Spanish cultural embassy premises in London (Instituto Cervantes), its bank accounts, and the Catalan government's embassy building. [Shutterstock/Kauka Jarvi]? EURACTIV is part of the Trust Project >>>Languages: Français       Spanish sovereign assets in London, including the country's cultural institute premises and its bank accounts and the Catalan government's embassy building, may be seized as part of a World Bank international arbitration decision against Spain, which faces claims worth €2 billion related to renewable energy subsidy schemes, according to a UK High Court order from 27 March seen by EURACTIV.The Spanish government slashed a generous renewable energy subsidies scheme back in 2013 to cut down public spending, putting investors who relied on the funds for their projects under financial hardship.Affected investors have been fighting for compensation at the World Bank's arbitration body (ICSID), initially amounting to €8 billion but reduced to €2 billion after years of litigation.The claims have been brought forward under the Energy Charter Treaty, an international convention which allows companies to sue signatory countries over decisions that affect their energy investments.Out of the 51 existing cases, 21 have been resolved in favour of the investors, while another 24 await a final ruling, Associated Press reports. So far, Spain has refused to pay any outstanding amounts from resolved cases.ICSID rulings can be enforced in any state party to the arbitration body, such as the UK, where Blasket Renewable Investments LL registered a €40 million compensation that Spain has yet to pay.Seizure frenzy: Buildings, bank accounts, and official jetsThe orders issued by UK's High Court grant Blasket the option to be compensated with the Spanish cultural embassy premises in London (Instituto Cervantes), its bank accounts, and the Catalan government's embassy building.The court order, however, is not definite and can be challenged. "The court does not demand to pay any amount yet, Instituto Cervantes [Spanish cultural embassy] has been granted two months to invoke state immunity", sources from the Spanish Ministry of Ecological Transition told ABC.The High Court had previously issued a similar order in favour of investment firms Antin Infrastructures Luxembourg S.r.l and Antin Energia Termosolar BV, which froze €120 million from a €925 million payment due from The London Steam-Ship Owner's Mutual Insurance Association to Spain as compensation for the 2003 Prestige ship oil spillage.Investors affected have elaborated further on lists of Spanish seizable assets, which include the government's official Falcon jets used by Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez and his ministers.The UK's Foreign Office declined to comment as "these are ongoing legal proceedings".Up to the European Commission?The Spanish government has refused to pay any outstanding compensation arguing that the payments "may be contrary to EU law and constitute illegal state aid", a spokesperson from the Ministry of Ecological Transition said.The government awaits a resolution from the Commission before proceeding with any payment, a standard procedure under EU law.The Commission preliminarily qualified the Antin payment as illegal state aid in July 2021, according to a letter from the Commission to Spain and Antin seen by EURACTIV. However, the letter also invites both parties to provide arguments to form a final decision, yet to be reached.Law firm Kobre & Kim, representing Antin among other investors, filed a complaint with the European Ombudsman accusing members of the Commission's legal service, headed by Spaniard Daniel Calleja Crespo, of bias and conflict of interest in favour of Spain.In the complaint, investors argue the Commission's legal service supports Spain in proceedings, while it supposedly conducts an independent state aid investigation.In January, the UK's High Court prevented the Commission from participating in the Antin case, arguing that the Commission is "demonstrably not neutral", the Financial Times reports.The Ombudsman complaint was closed beginning of March because "the complainant had not first turned to the Commission with their issue, " an Ombudsman spokesperson told EURACTIV.The Commission did not respond to a request for comment by the time of publication.'The EU is shooting itself in the foot'This battle comes as the EU is trying to counterbalance the effects of the US Inflation Reduction Act, a subsidy package for electric vehicles, batteries, and renewable energy projects with the potential of hampering green investments in the EU.Green energy investors argue they fear the safety of investments in the country because of the lack of legal certainty brought by Spain's refusal to pay the arbitration awards, which undermines efforts to shift to renewable energies."If you take the bigger picture, the EU is shooting itself in the foot by supporting Spain in this [avoiding arbitration payments]", Prof. Dr Nikos Lavranos, a Netherlands-based expert in EU law and investment arbitration, told Associated Press."You cannot trust that they can follow through with their agreements, so I think you do shake investors' confidence", he added

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