Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948
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According to Deutsche Bank (NYSE:DB), Japan’s copper consumption may drop by as much as 50,000 metric tonnes over three-months, however, this could then be offset by demand of three times this magnitude as reconstruction projects take off, Deutsche Bank added that copper and zinc are most likely to benefit from the reconstruction efforts.
http://copperinvestingnews.com/5600/...lient-to-earthquake-aftermath/
Schon mal jemand versucht sein Stimmrecht anzufordern? Da gibts auch eine Überraschung....
kannst telefonisch höhere VK manuell einstellen lassen.
und auch seltsam, dass der kurs heute nach einstellung von nur 750.000 stck in D stark steigt.
bei der saxo haben wir aus genau o.g. grund von nekro nichts eingestellt, werden das aber manuell in den kommenden tagen per telefon machen.
Er meinte, dass Japans Wiederaufbaubemühungen neue Nachfrage nach Rohstoffen schaffen werden. Man sollte daran denken, dass Japan kein großer Käufer von umfangreichem Baumaterial gewesen ist, weil sie in den letzten zwanzig Jahren keine Bautätigkeit hatten. Nun aber müssen die Japan wieder aufbauen. Deswegen wird die Nachfrage nach Kupfer , Zement, Stahl und vielen anderen Dingen ansteigen. Mögliche Nahrungsmittelknappheit durch Lieferstörungen in der Nahrungsmittelkette käme auch der Landwirtschaft extrem zugute. All dies wird zu einem Abbau von weltweiten Vorräten und Reserven führen, seien es nun Öl oder Reis. Dies wird zu einer außerordentlichen Nachfrage bei Rohstoffen und Rohmaterialien führen und so werden sich spektakuläre Chancen eröffnen.
http://cb.iguana2.com/netwealth2/depth/boc
in dem moment wo ich eine order eingebe / rausnehme erscheinen und verschwinden balken. und zwar sekundengenau...
d.h. jemand ist dort mit einem elektr. programm unterwegs.
das kann nur jemand sein, der über entsprechende technische möglichkeiten verfügt.
zustande kommen kurse, in denen gar kein bid oder ask steht.
in FFM genau so. da steckt der makler sich bei bis/ask 80/85
80,1 oder 84,9 ein...
da hilft nur ein ansturm von käufern damit das denen um die ohren fliegt!!!
as at 10:03:06 AM Thursday, March 17, 2011
BOUGAINVILLE COPPER Trade Summary - Status
Last Change % Volume Trades Open High Low
1.300 0.000 0.00 2,750 1 1.300 1.300 1.300
Last Traded 2,750 @ 1.3 - 10:01:27
BOUGAINVILLE COPPER Market Depth
BOC Buyers
Level Buy Quantity Price
1 1 20,000 1.155
2 2 18,700 1.150
3 1 3,000 1.085
4 1 6,000 1.060
5 1 2,000 1.050
6 1 6,000 1.005
7 1 10,000 1.000
8 1 2,200 0.920
9 1 10,000 0.820
10 1 5,000 0.800
BOC Sellers
Price Quantity Sell Level
1.310 3,157 2 1
1.395 30,000 1 2
1.400 100 1 3
1.540 12,500 1 4
1.550 10,000 1 5
1.580 8,510 1 6
1.600 10,814 1 7
1.620 8,470 1 8
1.630 8,000 2 9
1.680 2,250 1 10
1.685 13,110 1 11
1.700 11,000 2 12
1.720 12,500 1 13
1.730 3,000 1 14
1.800 5,000 1 15
1.820 3,230 1 16
1.830 5,000 1 17
1.840 15,500 2 18
1.870 5,000 1 19
1.890 5,000 1 20
1.900 16,000 3 21
1.910 5,000 1 22
1.920 1,600 1 23
1.930 2,500 1 24
1.950 105,000 3 25
2.000 5,000 1 26
2.050 6,000 1 27
2.080 3,600 1 28
2.200 20,000 1 29
2.970 1,700 1 30
3.450 20,000 1 31
15.990 30,000 1 32
Noch einmal eine Frage an die Eingeweihten.
Seit mindestens einer Stunde wechselt das bid minütlich ohne jeden Umsatz zw. 1,250 und 1,255.
Das kann doch nur durch Computerprogramme verursacht sein. ----
Was wird damit bezweckt?
Es besteht also kein Abgabedruck (Vol. 8530 Stk.)
Soll der Kurs so heruntergezogen werden?
Was sagen die Profis?
Bis 05.00 (MEZ) wurde das Spielchen zw. 1,2100 u. 1,2150 durchgezogen und seit 05.00
zw. 1,2500 u. 1,2550.
For Bougainville the “first time meets” for the Bougainville Revolutionary Army and Me’ekamui hardliners with the National Government team and Mr Semoso who went out of his way to meet these rebels, has enabled the progress of the negotiations for the re-opening of the giant Panguna Mine.
Mr Semoso did a leisure drive out of Arawa town on his electoral visit to Panguna to see if he could have a chat with Mr Pipiro, the man who has been guarding the mine pit and Panguna for the last 10 to 20 years.
Over a buai, the two spoke as if they were never enemies or there was no problem.
Mr Pipiro completely shut himself from the outside, even his own ABG leaders over the outstanding issues surrounding the Panguna mine.
Last Monday, Mr Semoso made his way through and did the dirty work of getting Pipiro out of his hide out.
And 11 hours later Mr Semoso took with him a whole delegation of PNG departmental heads who flew in from Port Moresby to the region for the scoping of projects in preparation for the release of the promised one-off K500 million in five years to Bougainville.
The heads, led by Secretary of Mining Nellie James and Health Secretary Dr Clement Malau had breakfast up at the rebel’s brown coffee shop, all prepared by the families of Mr Pipiro and Philip Takaung, the Me’ekamui Government president.
And on Tuesday, Mr Semoso took another successful trip - to make him the first National MP to have Chris Uma come out, reconcile and straight away begin the mine talks on a personal level.
This in itself is a milestone for Bougainville which now has mining on Bougainville and especially the re-opening of the Panguna mine as a priority.
This was a historical moment for Bougainville, PNG and the international community is watching this issue.
The world can now breathe a sigh of relief because the feared rebel who mans the famous Morgan Junction, the gateway to the Panguna Mine has given the green light for the re-opening of the Panguna Mine.
But the re-opening of the mine will come with strings attached - like every other rebel needs - negotiations for compensation and the K10 billion issue.
Chris Uma, who took over as the commander of the Me’ekamui defence force up until the world renowned hardliner Francis Ona died in 2005, one of the factions that currently holds the key to total peace on Bougainville, for the first time in 10 years sat face to face with a Bougainville leader and a National Government Minister to reconcile, grieve and put forward his demands for the future of Bougainville.
The Mine talks can now begin and Bougainville can expect a progress in the peace process, weapons disposal and economic development at large.
Ich hoffe denen fliegt der gut durchgeplante Zock irgendwann um die Ohren.
Meine Bougis bekommen sie jedenfalls nicht ;-)
PORT MORESBY, Papua New Guinea (March 16, 2011) – Break through? That is what the reaction is in relation to a meeting on Monday this week in Panguna between militant hardliners in Bougainville and a delegation of heads of Government departments from PNG that visited the closed mine at the weekend.
The delegation also met with members of the breakaway self-styled Bougainville Government, Me’ekamui and its militants who say they have kept watch over the closed copper mine in Panguna since operator Bougainville Copper Limited mothballed and eventually closed the mine at the height of the bloody Bougainville crisis in 1989.
The Government delegation led by Bougainville Affairs Minister and Bougainville Regional MP Fidelis Semoso met Me’ekamui rebel hardliner Moses Pipiro and president of the Me’ekamui Government Philip Takaung and chiefs of Panguna.
Pipiro and Takaung, in the meeting apparently gave their blessing for the reopening of the Panguna mine but set some conditions on this happening. They want reconciliation to be carried out among all groups in Panguna, to be involved in mining negotiations and K10 billion in compensation for the Panguna people.
It is encouraging that one more hardline group has given its seal of approval for mining to reopen in Bougainville. The Panguna landowners have given their approval. In a series of meetings last month, the landowners recognised the need for mining to resume in Panguna as it’s the only means forward for Bougainville.
Since autonomy over five years ago, the region has hardly moved forward in development and the rebuilding of infrastructure needed to nurture economic activity that will promote growth and eventually economic independence.
Autonomous Bougainville Government President John Momis has taken a number of overseas trips to woo investors from overseas to Bougainville or at least seek and set up partnerships to bring in much needed money to try and propel the region forward. Two weeks ago he was in Australia on a trip sponsored by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
He held discussions on a number of issues with the Australian Government, especially with the Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd and the Secretary for Pacific Affairs to brief them on the challenges, the financial challenges, the administrative challenges and the challenges of creating a culture of "democratization" in Bougainville and the challenges of empowering the people economically. The trip was for him to garner support and appeal for more Australian help in Bougainville.
He also held talks with BCL. Like the landowners, BCL is agreeable to mining being reopened on Bougainville. BCL which operated and owns the mining license for the closed Panguna Copper is open to discussions on reopening the mine and is open minded about the future.
BCL chairman Peter Taylor says a lot depends on the permit because it was as good as starting again.
He expects there will be a new regime and it will be administered by the Bougainville government rather than the National Government
He expects a feasibility study that is acceptable to lenders, has to be carried out. This usually takes about a year and is a expensive process. New royalty schemes have to be negotiated and while BCL supports reopening of the mine, it is not committed to saying when this will happen with Taylor giving a time frame of three to five years.
But all that aside … it is looking good on the ground … everyone is talking the same language.
Papua New Guinea Post-Courier: www.postcourier.com.pg/
Copyright © 2011 PNG Post-Courier. All Rights Reserved
http://pidp.eastwestcenter.org/pireport/2011/March/03-17-ed1.htm
Donnerstag 17.03.2011, 09:44 Uhr London (BoerseGo.de) - Am Donnerstag legt der drei-Monats-Kontrakt an der LME im frühen Handel um mehr als ein Prozent zu auf 9.324 US-Dollar je Tonne. Doch noch vor kurzer Zeit, notierte das Metall bei 10.000 US-Dollar je Tonne. Das Rekordhoch lag bei 10.190 Dollar, erreicht am 15. Februar. Danach ging es rasant abwärts. Bis zu 1.000 Dollar rutschte der Kontraktpreis ab. Gründe gab es genug: Die Unruhen im Nahen Osten und Nord-Afrika und zuletzt die japanische Katastrophe, deren Ende noch nicht absehbar ist. Hinzu kamen Sorgen wegen China. Hier machten Ängste vor deutlich langsameren Wachstums die Runde, passend dazu brachen die Importe im Februar drastisch ein. Wie also geht es weiter? "Wir rechnen mit neuen Höhen im Verlauf dieses Jahres, aber derzeit gibt es viel zu viel Unsicherheit am Markt," sagte Robin Bhar von Credit Agricole gegenüber Reuters. Die weltweiten Wachstumsperspektiven hätten sich wegen der Ereignisse in Japan und wegen des hohen Ölpreises deutlich abgeschwächt. Vom anfänglichen Optimismus auf dem Kupfermarkt zum Jahresstart ist nicht mehr so viel übrig, heißt es. Im Januar ging der Markt wegen einer Prognose aus Chile von einem Defizit von mehr als 460.000 Tonnen aus. Der Analyst rechnet damit, dass Kupfer noch bis auf 8.000 Dollar je Tonne nachgeben könnte. Denn der Markt brauche für die Defizit-These angesichts steigender Lagerbestände in London erst noch eine Bestätigung, sagt Carl Firman von Virtual Metals gegenüber der Nachrichtenagentur Reuters.
By Major General Jerry Singirok
MBE (Rtd)
It has been fourteen years to this day when under my command as Commander Papua New Guinea Defence Force made a conscious decision, not only to abort the Sandline Contract “Contravene”, but also to expel Sandline mercenaries out of PNG and subsequently ask the then Prime Minister, his deputy and the Minister for Defence to resign.
Historians and many commentators have marked this event as a major crisis in PNG history. However in the main it was a result of series of blunders on the part of the executive arm of the Government and policy advisor who had far ulterior motives other than addressing genuine plea for increased benefits for the landowners and the Bougainville Provincial Government.
The result was a significant shift in the security decision making thus affecting national security within the context of protecting PNG’s national interest, subsequently unleashing the contract by the grieving party which was me as Commander and a handful of military hardliners who supported my opposition and successfully executed Operations “ Rausim Kwik”.
Upon reflection, it is disheartening to say the least that nothing has changed much since March 1997. From influx of illegal immigrants, lack of effective border security, and hegemonic tussles between the economic global giants, PNG continues to be an open and free playing field for investors and opportunists who by cohesion with our decision makers and respective agencies in the name of economic development ignore the plight of landowners and continue to generate uncertainties, frustrations thus creating a certain air of frustration throughout Papua New Guinea today.
Our era (1975-1997) was in the cold war era, where the military had to re-think and re-strategise new roles in Civil Military Affairs whereby the military if it had to justify its existence, must be restructured and re-trained into a military force that should be ready to assist during natural disaster, assist mainly in policing roles and contribution to international peace keeping and law enforcement.
It was therefore incumbent that those in position of command at that time understand the transition of a fighting force to a force for peace-making and the constraints and limitations it had was most daunting task for any military commander. This was the dilemma I had as Commander where the Papua New Guinea Defence Force was not tailored to fight a prolonged civil war against antagonists as it was not prepared, ill-equipped, lacked combat power which drastically affected the morale of the troops and most significantly lacked the political support. I had been a career soldier and attended one of the most prestigious and reputable military colleges where future Generals were bred. I have been privileged to be an exchange officer with the United States Army, British Army and was accorded a two year employment opportunity with the Australian Defence Force as a lecture in Military Arts and Tactics at the Land Warfare Centre. These exposures and professional training I received was an insurance that assisted me to take command of the Defence Force even at a prime age within the bounds of good command, leadership and stewardship based on strict military ethos based on empathy.
I will always mitigate and justify my actions regardless of public opinion and what lawyers and critics say. My professional judgement at the material time was critical where my conscience far outweighed what was deemed as lawful executive order to me were deemed unlawful superior orders because of the serious consequences of a military operations against thousands of innocent civilians.
The consequence of the actual military onslaught according to my professional judgment would result in a carnage that would have been devastating to include serious crimes against humanity and would have drawn global condemnation and possible indictment to the Hague to face War Crimes Tribunal for atrocities against thousands of innocent civilians.
The indictment would have included members of the National Security Council and me as Commander, as we would be deemed to be culpable for conducting surgical military operations. The experiences by Bougainvillians, Panguna landowners, royalty issues, the environmental damages and the lack of negotiation on their behalf by the National Government and the developer, Bougainville Copper Limited were critical issues that were not mitigated well.
The lessons of good governance which lacked wider community and professional consultation are still ambiguous even to this day. Investors with multibillion investments are flocking into PNG to exploit the people and the resources that are now becoming scarce globally regardless of community concerns.
Today foreign and commercial security companies have taken over national security functions it seems, a service reserved for state security forces with little or no government investment has been redirected to revitalise and revamp PNG’s own security forces. As a result of this neglect, the national security agencies have become defunct, disjointed, and operationally ineffective to protect PNG’s interest, sovereignty and security to say the least.
The concerns of lack of comprehension and understanding the issues of protecting national interest and security are appalling. It requires a government that puts the wellbeing of its citizen first before any other agendas. The law and order is escalating, HIV and AIDS is on an endemic rise, use of illegal guns, poverty is widespread, rural infrastructures are deteriorating or have deteriorated and the Government services of basic health and education had not been seen and accorded to many remote parts of PNG. The land border remains porous and the maritime boundaries and air space are not protected. Equally of significant concern is the environmental damages as a result of industrial waste by the multimillion investors are a force of destruction that has and will continue to affect and plague Papua New Guinea.
Really if we continue the trend in the next five years of neglect to our national security then we may as well have an open door policy where exploiters globally can help themselves to our God-given resources forcing the next generation to opt to resort to antagonism as seen globally where established regimes are being literally ousted by the mass.
It is too evident to see the parallels of what is happening in PNG today even after series of government came into power from 1997 onwards, except today there is tactfulness in the way large contracts are handled so as to suppress and distort public opinion. The landowners and the citizens always get the raw end of the deal.
Regrettably the lessons learnt from the engagement of Sandline mercenaries and Bougainville civil war is easily forgotten it seems. While Papua New Guinea continues to go down a path of self destruction based on omissions, self serving and false proclamation of the wealth creation for only a few, the reality is that the next generation of Papua New Guineas may turn out to be a generation of disgruntled, misfits, uneducated, city roamers who may see those in authority as tyrants, self serving and may decide to take up arms to engage in a prolonged armed resurrection against the Government, foreign investors and exploiters.
In any case this security quagmire scenarios anticipated in the coming decade would be very difficult to deal with as lessons in the past have never been learnt. It has always and will be the people’s call first for good governance while upholding our Constitution for the wellbeing of our citizens. It’s time to learn from the lessons learnt from Sandline in 1997 and correct them for the better.
http://www.postcourier.com.pg/20110317/feature.htm
Kupfer - in Shanghai kleine Rally
von Thomas Godt
Mittwoch 16.03.2011, 09:27 Uhr
London (BoerseGo.de) - An der Terminbörse in Shanghai hat der Kupfer-Kontrakt am Mittwoch eine kleine Rally hingelegt. Der meist gehandelte Kontrakt legte rund drei Prozent zu. Marktbeobachter sprechen von technisch getriebenen Käufen. Immerhin wurde damit der größte Tagesgewinn seit mehr als drei Monaten erzielt. Dennoch bleibt die Nukleare-Krise Japans im Bewusstsein der Investoren, heißt es. Die Stimmung an den Märkten habe sich vor allem angesichts stark steigender Aktienkurse in Tokyo verbessert. Davon kann Kupfer auch im frühen Handel an der LME profitieren. Hier wird für den drei-Monats-Kontrakt auf Kupfer 9.294 US-Dollar je Tonne bezahlt, das sind 1,74 Prozent mehr als am Vortag. "Wir haben Schnäppchenkäufe gesehen, als in London der Preis in Richtung der 9.000 Dollar-Marke gerauscht war", sagte ein Analyst von CIFCO Futures gegenüber Reuters. Die 9.000er-Marke erweise sich als starke Unterstützung, heißt es weiter.
Quelle :http://www.godmode-trader.de/nachricht/...-kleine-Rally,a2489875.html
Persönlich bin ich der festen Überzeugung das Kupfer mittelfristig eines der begehrtesten Metalle mit einer hohen Nachfrage sein wird. Daraus folgt für mich das
die äußerst positive Entwicklung des Pangunaprojektes der letzten Wochen, sich weiter fortsetzen und sogar noch verstärken muss. Alles aber auch alles spricht für ein baldiges re-opening.
Wir werden sehen. ;D))