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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
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Shell Plc | LSE:RDSA | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B03MLX29 | 'A' ORD EUR0.07 |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
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0.00 | 0.00% | 1,895.20 | 1,900.20 | 1,900.80 | - | 0.00 | 00:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
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0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
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21/8/2020 07:41 | NOAA United States Department of Commerce NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER and CENTRAL PACIFIC HURRICANE CENTER Nothin to report at present | sarkasm | |
20/8/2020 14:00 | Shell seeking sale of Norwegian business Gasnor - Bloomberg Aug. 20, 2020 9:28 AM ET|About: Royal Dutch Shell plc (RDS.A)|By: Carl Surran, SA News Editor Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A, RDS.B) is in talks to sell its Norwegian natural gas supplier Gasnor, and has approached infrastructure funds and private equity firms about a deal, Bloomberg reports. Gasnor delivers liquefied natural gas to industrial and marine customers in Norway via 22 trucks and two tankers; Shell acquired the business in 2012, paying $74M for shares it did not already own at the time. Shell recently reported its first quarterly loss since the unification of Royal Dutch Petroleum and Shell Transport and Trading in 2005. | adrian j boris | |
20/8/2020 06:33 | TechnipFMC PLC Thursday said it was awarded a contract for engineering, procurement, construction and installation at the Libra Consortium's Mero 2 project in Brazil. The French energy company said the contract, which is valued between $500 million and $1 billion, will cover work at the offshore pre-salt Mero field in the Santos Basin, Brazil at 2,100 meters deep. The project is set to start in 2022, the company said. The contract was awarded by Petroleo Brasileiro SA, head and operator of the Libra Consortium, which also include oil companies Shell Brasil Petroleo Ltda. and Total SE. Write to Cecilia Butini at cecilia.butini@wsj.c (END) Dow Jones Newswires August 20, 2020 01:59 ET (05:59 GMT) | adrian j boris | |
19/8/2020 10:20 | This wealth fund is not the standard for making money. Winter is approaching and a possible conflict in the middle east too. So Buying cruise operators while coronavirus is increasing exponentially is a good way to make money ... | fuji99 | |
15/8/2020 06:15 | Brent Crude Oil NYMEX 44.80 +0.00% Gasoline NYMEX 1.48 +0.00% Natural Gas NYMEX 2.79 +0.00% (WTI) 42.2 USD -0.52% FTSE 100 6,090.04 -1.55% Dow Jones 27,931.02 +0.12% CAC 40 4,962.93 -1.58% SBF 120 3,929.53 -1.56% Euro STOXX 50 3,305.05 -1.31% DAX 12,901.34 -0.71% Ftse Mib 20,028.11 -1.13% Eni 8.179 -0.80% Total 33.5 -1.44% Engie 11.75 -2.16% Orange 9.906 -1.09% Bp 292.65 -2.84% Vodafone 118.68 -1.30% Royal Dutch Shell A 1,171.4 -2.64% Royal Dutch Shell B 1,131.4 -2.50% Tullow Oil (TLW) 25.23 -0.38 (-1.48%) | waldron | |
14/8/2020 09:22 | EPA lifts methane regulations for oil and gas industry Aug. 14, 2020 4:49 AM ET|About: Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM)|By: Yoel Minkoff, SA News Editor Rolling back Obama-era climate regulations, the Trump administration has eliminated federal requirements for oil and gas companies to monitor and repair methane leaks from pipelines, storage facilities and wells. "EPA has been working hard to fulfill President Trump's promise to cut burdensome and ineffective regulations for our domestic energy industry," EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler declared. Proponents of the rule include smaller oil and gas companies that argue the regulations are too expensive, though some of the larger industry players, like Exxon (NYSE:XOM), BP (NYSE:BP) and Shell (RDS.A, RDS.B), have opposed the decision due to their climate change pledges. In July, the Trump administration finalized a rollback of the National Environmental Policy Act, in order to speed approval for federal projects like pipelines, highways and power plants. | grupo guitarlumber | |
14/8/2020 09:22 | EPA lifts methane regulations for oil and gas industry Aug. 14, 2020 4:49 AM ET|About: Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM)|By: Yoel Minkoff, SA News Editor Rolling back Obama-era climate regulations, the Trump administration has eliminated federal requirements for oil and gas companies to monitor and repair methane leaks from pipelines, storage facilities and wells. "EPA has been working hard to fulfill President Trump's promise to cut burdensome and ineffective regulations for our domestic energy industry," EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler declared. Proponents of the rule include smaller oil and gas companies that argue the regulations are too expensive, though some of the larger industry players, like Exxon (NYSE:XOM), BP (NYSE:BP) and Shell (RDS.A, RDS.B), have opposed the decision due to their climate change pledges. In July, the Trump administration finalized a rollback of the National Environmental Policy Act, in order to speed approval for federal projects like pipelines, highways and power plants. | grupo guitarlumber | |
13/8/2020 09:25 | Pilipinas Shell to convert Tabangao Refinery into import terminal Oil & GasDownstreamRefiner By NS Energy Staff Writer 13 Aug 2020 The Tabangao Refinery, which started operations in 1962, had ceased operations since late May 2020 refinery-3613526_640 Tabangao Refinery to be converted into an import terminal by Pilipinas Shell. (Credit: SatyaPrem from Pixabay) Pilipinas Shell, a subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell, said that it will permanently shut down its Tabangao Refinery in Batangas City, Philippines, and convert it to a full import terminal. The company said that the decision will help it streamline its asset portfolio and boost its cost and supply chain competitiveness. Furthermore, the move is expected to bolster the financial resilience of Pilipinas Shell amid the significant changes and difficulties in the global refining sector caused by the Covid-19 crisis. Tabangao Refinery began operations in 1962 The Tabangao Refinery, which started operations in 1962, had ceased operations since late May 2020 to help protect Pilipinas Shell from further deterioration of refining margins, and enable its cash saving efforts. Pilipinas Shell president and CEO Cesar Romero said: “We have the technical capability and financial flexibility to manage and adapt to disruptive conditions. The regional refining margins which have been weak for some time due to the oil supply/demand imbalance in the region, have worsened due to demand destruction from the covid crisis. “As such, it is no longer economically viable for us to run the refinery. It is with a heavy heart that we announce the cessation of oil refining activities in Tabangao.” According to Pilipinas Shell, the demand for fuel products has not returned to normalcy, with several businesses still suspended or operating below capacity, while travel remains restricted because of the varying levels of quarantine curbs across the world. The Shell subsidiary said that a drop in demand can be expected once again as Metro Manila and other major cities and provinces revert to modified enhanced community quarantine (MECQ). Additionally, refining margins, which had a sharp drop earlier in the year, have further gone down and could stay depressed in the medium term, said Pilipinas Shell. As an import terminal, the Tabangao facility is expected to continue to serve the fuel requirements of Luzon and Northern Visayas. Pilipinas Shell said that the North Mindanao Import Facility (NMIF) in Cagayan de Oro, will cater to the increasing energy demand in the rest of the Visayas and Mindanao region. | sarkasm | |
11/8/2020 09:30 | 5. What about the Europeans? BP Plc said in June it was cutting its estimates for oil and gas prices in the coming decades between 20% and 30%, while also expecting the cost of carbon emissions to be more than twice as high as before. As a result the company is reviewing its projects, which could lead to some oil being left in the ground. Royal Dutch Shell Plc, BP and Total SE have written off billions of dollars of assets as the pandemic destroyed oil demand and prices, making some fields unprofitable to drill. The bulk of Total’s impairment applied to Canadian oil sands, which are costlier and more carbon intensive than conventional fields. 6. What type of assets are at risk? BP said Aug. 4 that it’s now targeting a 40% decline in hydrocarbon production and won’t explore for oil in any new countries. The company’s chief of staff Dominic Emery said back in 2019 that complicated projects could be shelved in favor of fields that are quicker to develop. The pressure to curb emissions may prompt companies to leave the most carbon-intensive reserves untouched. Across the industry, projects most at risk include deep-water discoveries off Brazil, Angola and in the Gulf of Mexico, as well as some Canadian oil sands assets, according to Parul Chopra, vice president for upstream research at Rystad Energy A/S. | grupo guitarlumber | |
08/8/2020 08:27 | Hot weather sends natural gas prices surging WTI remains above $41 as it stays in narrow price band By Mella McEwen, MRT.com/Midland Reporter-Telegram Published 5:55 pm CDT, Friday, August 7, 2020 West Texas Intermediate eked out a small gain this week, remaining above $41 a barrel as it continues to be stuck in a narrow trading band. West Texas Intermediate eked out a small gain this week, remaining above $41 a barrel as it continues to be stuck in a narrow trading band. Natural gas prices, however, saw strong gains this week, starting with a 30-cent jump Monday that put it over $2.10 per Mcf on the New York Mercantile Exchange. That was followed by a 9-cent gain Tuesday, then prices slumped lightly Wednesday and Thursday before gaining 7 cents Friday to close at $2.24 per Mcf. That’s well above the $1.80 Mcf at last Friday’s close. “NYMEX Henry Hub posted substantial gains on August 3 and 4 due to an easing of storage availability fears, excessive heat in June and July and more of the same expected in August and signs of strengthening LNG export demand,” Midlander Mike Banschbach, an oil gas, and natural gas liquids marketing consultant, told the Reporter-Telegram by email. “However, prices in the Permian were tempered by the rising basis between Waha and Henry Hub, resulting in a modest 15 cent per MMBtu gain in Waha prices for the fourth quarter.” Banschbach said that if crude prices creep up above $45 a barrel later in the year, prompting Permian producers to drill and complete wells, that will result in more natural gas – associated with the crude production – being put in the market and that will put downward pressure on the Permian natural gas price. WTI on the NYMEX reported three days of gains this week, putting it above $42 a barrel Wednesday before prices slumped the final two days of the week. WTI fell 73 cents to close at $41.22 per barrel Friday, up from $41.04 at Monday’s close. The posted price ended the week at $37.75 a barrel. Bloomberg reported that crude prices were weakened by renewed tensions between the U.S. and China, which the news service said rattled markets already reeling from uncertainty over a new round of economic stimulus to help the economy through the COVID-19 pandemic. According to Bloomberg, crude is testing the upper bound of its recent trading range after hitting a five-month high this week amid shrinking U.S. stockpiles. But taking the wind out of any sustained breakout rally is the spotty recovery in oil consumption, with crude imports into China shrinking in July. Roger Diwan, vice president, financial services at IHS Markit, said in a market assessment that prices are emerging “bruised and battered from the worst of the COVID-19 outbreak” and are now at a delicate point as prices transition to what his company calls Phase II of its three phased of market recovery. The second phase is the “just-in-time& “The record cuts set in motion in May and June by Saudi Arabia and its OPEC+ partners played a pivotal role in accelerating the improbable rebalancing of global oil markets. With demand recovering from April lows and after giving markets an extra month to find their footing, these exporters have now moved from managing the immediate surplus of the crisis towards managing the recovery,” Diwan wrote in his assessment. “The recent display of restored harmony among OPEC+ heavyweights Saudi Arabia and Russia illustrates that the strategic debate within the group over price levels and market share has time to run,” he wrote. “As long as prices hold in the current range, demand concerns will likely help keep the agreement on course. When prices surpass $50 a barrel, potentially lifting capital spending in the United States higher, that is when changes to the tenor of the discussion, and the divergence of interest could start to play out.” | gibbs1 | |
08/8/2020 06:45 | Brent Crude Oil NYMEX 48.53 Gasoline NYMEX 1.32 Natural Gas NYMEX 2.44 WTI 41.53 USD -1.21% FTSE 100 6,032.18 +0.09% Dow Jones 27,433.48 +0.17% CAC 40 4,889.52 +0.09% SBF 120 3,869.15 +0.12% Euro STOXX 50 3,252.65 +0.28% DAX 12,674.88 +0.66% Ftse Mib 19,516.43 +0.21% Eni 7.806 -1.71% Total 32.795 -0.76% Engie 11.625 +0.22% Orange 9.704 -0.35% Bp 287.25 -2.71% Vodafone 116.74 +0.64% Royal Dutch Shell A 1,154.6 -1.80% Royal Dutch Shell B 1,116.8 -1.74% Tullow Oil (TLW) : 25.48: -1.51 (-5.59%) | waldron | |
07/8/2020 12:46 | Chevron may need to close Gorgon LNG over safety concerns Aug. 7, 2020 7:32 AM ET|About: Chevron Corporation (CVX)|By: Carl Surran, SA News Editor Western Australia's government has ordered an urgent inspection of critical equipment on two of the three trains of Chevron's (NYSE:CVX) Gorgon liquefied natural gas plant following safety concerns raised by a trade union. The order raises the possibility that the plant may need to be closed to carry out the inspections of the propane heat exchangers on the two trains by an Aug. 21 deadline to see if the same cracks that are requiring repairs to Train 2 are also present there. Gorgon LNG is one of the world's largest liquefied natural gas plants, with the capacity to produce 15.6M mt/year of LNG; it is 47.3% owned and operated by Chevron, while Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A, RDS.B) owns 25% and Japanese firms hold smaller stakes. Train 2 has been shut since May for planned maintenance, which was extended after a routine inspection of the train's propane heat exchangers found weld quality problems. | grupo guitarlumber | |
02/8/2020 07:43 | BP's prized dividend faces chop after Covid triggers £5.2bn loss BP is scheduled to unveil half-year figures on Tuesday City analysts said BP could cut or shelve its payout alongside the figures By Ben Harrington For The Mail On Sunday Published: 22:31 BST, 1 August 2020 | Updated: 23:02 BST, 1 August 2020 BP is being widely tipped to slash its £6.7billion dividend this week. The FTSE 100-listed oil giant, which is run by Bernard Looney, is scheduled to unveil half-year figures on Tuesday. City analysts said BP could cut or shelve its payout alongside the figures, which have been forecast to show a $6.8billion (£5.2billion) loss in the second quarter of this year. City analysts said BP could cut or shelve its payout alongside its half year figures on Tuesday Colin Smith, an analyst at Panmure Gordon, said: 'We now expect BP to cut its dividend... with the second quarter results.' Analysts at Quest, the cash flow specialist division of Canaccord Genuity, have also placed BP on its 'dividend at risk' list. BP generates the largest dividend payments amongst the FTSE 100 blue chip stocks. Both private investors and big City pension funds and institutions would be upset by the cut. Small shareholders in particular rely on companies such as BP for income in retirement – especially as bank savings accounts now generate almost zero returns. The potential reduction of BP's dividend comes after Royal Dutch Shell cut its payout for the first time since the Second World War. Shell's dividend was slashed by 66 per cent – from $15billion last year to $5billion this year. The move came after the oil price crashed following a massive row between Saudi Arabia and Russia. At one point in April, the oil price in the US fell below zero for the first time in history. Ben van Beurden, Shell's chief executive, said the 'monumental' decision to reset the company's dividend earlier this year was difficult but necessary to preserve the financial resilience of the company against the crisis of 'uncertainty'. BP, though, opted not to cut its dividend, which at the time surprised many City analysts and investors. Analysts expect BP will next week unveil a $6.8billion loss for the second quarter. During the same period last year, it generated a $2.8billion profit. Experts also expect BP to reveal that it will take between $13billion and $17.5billion of non-cash charges following financial blows and exploration write-offs. The latter could total between $8billion and $10billion. Aside from BP, other FTSE 100 dividends could be at risk this week. Diageo, the Johnny Walker to Smirnoff drinks giant, is also scheduled to announce full-year results which may include a cut in its shareholder payout. Royal Dutch Shell cut its payout for the first time since the Second World War The company will come under pressure to reduce the dividend after the closure of pubs and hospitality venues for months due to lockdown hammered its sales. Last year, Diageo handed shareholders £1.6billion in dividends. The total amount of dividends paid out by British firms is expected to halve this year as companies look to preserve cash. Some of the most reliable dividend payers including BT and HSBC have slashed their payouts. Research by investment firm Octopus Investments found many income-focused fund managers have already removed BP from their portfolios over fears for the dividend. The proportion of equity income funds that include BP dived from 61 per cent in January to 43 per cent by the end of May. | sarkasm | |
31/7/2020 20:18 | RDSB Berenberg Hold up from 1,440.00 to 1,450.00 Reiterates RDSA Credit Suisse Outperform down from 1,700.00 to 1,600.00 Reiterates | gibbs1 | |
31/7/2020 17:06 | Brent Crude Oil NYMEX 43.14 -0.25% Gasoline NYMEX 1.15 -3.09% Natural Gas NYMEX 1.81 -1.58% WTI 39.84 USD -1.08% FTSE 100 5,897.76 -1.54% Dow Jones 26,179.01 -0.51% CAC 40 4,783.69 -1.43% SBF 120 3,780.88 -1.27% Euro STOXX 50 3,174.32 -0.81% DAX 12,313.36 -0.54% Ftse Mib 19,181.04 -0.25% Eni 7.541 -3.54% Total 31.3 -1.97% Engie 11.29 +4.01% Orange 9.912 -0.44% Bp 275.15 -2.89% Vodafone 115.56 -2.55% Royal Dutch Shell A 1,121.6 -3.21% Royal Dutch Shell B 1,080.8 -2.96% Tullow Oil (TLW) 25.12 : -1.02 (-4.23%) | waldron |
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