Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948
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Solange die Kurse in D nicht um ein paar Ct. höher stehen als in AU kann das Spiel für die Trickys sogar gewinnbringend, fortgesetzt werden.
So haben die in den TOP 135 vertretenen privaten Aktionäre seit August letzten Jahres rd. 6 Mill. Aktien zugekauft.Darunter befinden sich 31 Neueinsteiger mit 50K u. mehr.35 haben aufgestockt,15 haben ihre Position teil- oder ganz verkauft, die übrigen halten unverändert.
Bei einem Umsatz von 10 Mill.im gleichen Zeitraum in AU bedeutet das dass immerhin mehr als jeder 2 gehandelte Share ins BCL Aktionärsregister eingetragen wurde.
Im gleichen Zeitraum gab es unter den 15 Privaten in den TOP 100 nur VK in Höhe von rd. 1.3 Mill. Shares.Von den VK landeten 1051000 bei den National Nominees Ltd.458 bei der ABM Amro.
Die rd.6 Mill. eingetragenen Shares stammen mit -5 858 454 Shares fast ausschliesslich von den Citicorp Nominees
IPM stieg um 740K
By NATTAVUD PIMBA
MINING is one of the most sensitive industries, due to its economic and environmental impacts.
Clearly, it is significant to Australia.
According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), total industry gross value added of the mining industry increased by 21% over the period 2005-06 to 2009-10.
Importantly, the mining industry’s contribution to Australian GDP was 8.4% in 2009-10.
In the period 2006-07 and 2010-11, the value of exports from the mining industry more than doubled.
The growth of Australian mining industry is evident.
We, however, still question the roles of mining multinational corporations (MNCs) from Australia in the host countries,
mostly developing nations.
The dialogue on the relationship between social and economic conditions and international mining activities is ongoing and robust.
Current debate on the contributions of mining MNCs from Australia, in the form of corporate social responsibility (CSR) in the host countries, is one of the most critical issues of government and international business.
Described as an “almost truism”, CSR by most Australian mining MNCs is perceived as a set of taken-for-granted ideas within society or institution but requires further attention among stakeholders in international mining industry.
It might be fair to claim that Australian mining MNCs in developing countries contribute to economic growth and, perhaps, better quality of life.
However, we still wonder if mining MNCs can really do something “better” to improve some chronic socio-economic conditions, such as poverty, equity or health, in the host countries.
Mining MNCs often operate in areas of developing countries which are characterised by limited governmental presence, a high incidence of poverty, a lack of basic social infrastructure, and other social and political problems.
Financial assistance from mining MNCs alone to such countries – some A$2.5 trillion has been provided in the last 50 years -– has often not helped the neediest of citizens.
In fact, it may have worsened their plight by sustaining corrupt or otherwise inefficient governments which contribute to their misery, by leaving nations with mountainous debt.
Clearly, Australian companies have the unmatched power and competence to work with other stakeholders on socio-economic issues in the host countries.
Increasingly world opinion, as well as the inclinations of their own managers and staff, urges Australian mining MNCs to use that power more effectively and fairly.
However, mining MNCs lack a vehicle to make that transition in a sustainable and legitimate way.
From the international perspective, their involvement in development issue is limited due to a lack of clarity regarding their role, and the absence of detailed exploration of the links between socio-economic issues and Australian mining companies. – onlineopinion
http://www.thenational.com.pg/?q=node/45589
ANZAC cooperation: put Bougainville up on the agenda
PETER JENNINGS |The Strategist | Australian Strategic Policy Institute | Extracts
DISMAY ABOUT THE recent lacklustre summit of Australian and New Zealand prime ministers is easily understandable. It produced so little of substance that one was left asking: why bother?
What we got was an agreement to house a largish boat-load of asylum seekers and to fund a war memorial for Wellington, ‘… made of rugged Australian red sandstone’.
On the Australian side of the Tasman, your average daily prime ministerial media event often delivers more than that. It’s thin pickings for a relationship that’s allegedly so close—prime minister Gillard has used the word ‘family’ to describe it no less than 13 times in the last two years….
That might well be an acceptable way to manage the relationship if it were the case that our strategic outlook was mostly positive. But there are sufficient challenges of a type that Australia and New Zealand should jointly think through.
High on my list of ANZAC challenges is the future stability of Bougainville. A conflict on the island in the late 1980s and 1990s lead to the deaths of, by some estimates, 15,000 people. (DFAT’s primer on the peace process acknowledges thousands of deaths without being more precise).
Australia and New Zealand were involved in a costly peace monitoring mission at the end of the 1990s until a largely New Zealand-brokered peace arrangement brought stability to the Province in return for greater political autonomy and the breathing space offered by delaying the final political settlement.
Bougainville now has the opportunity to vote in a referendum on self-determination at some point between 2015 and 2020.
The challenge for Australia and New Zealand is to make sure a move to a referendum happens as peacefully as possible after a process of disarming groups on the island, with all sides prepared to accept its results whatever they may be.
That said, there are those in Port Moresby and those on Bougainville who probably have significantly differing expectations about what the referendum might deliver.
The potential for Bougainville to slide back into instability or serious violence is quite high. Should that happen, only Australia and New Zealand have the interest and capability to respond.
If ever there was a case for a heavy joint pre-investment designed to prevent a conflict, this is it. As our work together on Bougainville in the late 1990s showed, both countries bring particular strengths to bear that the other can’t so easily provide.
Peter Jennings is executive director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
Quelle: http://asopa.typepad.com/asopa_people/2013/02/...h-on-the-agenda.html
"Bougainville now has the opportunity to vote in a referendum on self-determination at some point between 2015 and 2020.
The challenge for Australia and New Zealand is to make sure a move to a referendum happens as peacefully as possible after a process of disarming groups on the island, with all sides prepared to accept its results whatever they may be."
Da bleibt den Aussies u. NZ wohl nichts anderes übrig als "Monitoring the Referendum"
"If ever there was a case for a heavy joint pre-investment designed to prevent a conflict, this is it."
.......the potential for Bougainville to slide back into instability or serious violence is quite high. Should that happen, only Australia and New Zealand have the interest and capability to respond.
.......deutlich. ;d))))
Und dieser windige Schweizer auch, der mit den BCL-Kursen spielt. Je länger alles dauert, desto mehr Euronen macht er.
Letztlich wird seine Strategie aufgehen, weil jeder einzelne hier als Langfristinvestierter eine individuelle Situation hat und man nicht so einfach investiertes BCL-Geld mehrere Jahre irgendwo hinlegen kann, ohne es zwischendurch nicht mal zu brauchen. Und das bedeutet dann "BCL-Aktien verkaufen" zu müssen, zu diesen miesen Kursen. Da kann man nur selber schauen, das man nicht in diese Situation gerät.
Aber was Gutes hat das alles auch. Die Bougainville-Bürger können sich billig an BCL beteiligen.
I am certain that some sort of compromise will come out of this big showdown that should result in at least one mining license for Morumbi.
I also believe that the re-opening of Panguna will be a crucial element of this compromise as the island desperately needs hard cash to fund the many humanitarian projects that are needed to bring back a minimum level of prosperity to the people.
Nobody - especially the ABG - can afford to waste another couple of precious years before things start to move. Only full scale mining will allowe the island to become truly independant if the people were to vote for this in a referendum.
auch etliche Seiten zu BOC
Klar hab ich für euch ne Quelle .Bin ja kein so'n Miesepeter wie die 707ner ;)
DDiscovery turnt ja auch des öfteren im hc rum +stockhouse canada+Insider Infos von oberster boc Regierung .Könnte es sein dass es Nico civelli selbst ist ?
Als Ursprungsland gibt er Luxembourg an ,von wo er auch eine GmbH betreibt
http://www.energreeninvestment.com/html/index.php/en/