Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948
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Eröffnet am: | 29.09.07 14:50 | von: nekro | Anzahl Beiträge: | 25.577 |
Neuester Beitrag: | 07.03.25 08:05 | von: Carlchen03 | Leser gesamt: | 6.340.987 |
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Wollte schon vor einiger Zeit hier schreiben, dass für mich die Geschichte richtig ins Rollen käme, wenn es Bewegung im Board gibt. Was mich aber wundert: Die personelle Änderung in der Führungsmannschaft wird hier kaum thematisiert.. ;-) Eine BoD Änderung dagegen ist für mich eine Schlüsselnews! Lokalpolitik zB dagegen nur Störgeräusche, die ablenken.
Good luck all :)
Ich meinte eher schlagzeilen a la "Police arrests..." als Störgeräusch. Mir ist klar, dass BCL auf einen aufwändigen Abstimmprozess mit verschiedensten Gruppen angewiesen ist. Hätte RIO jedoch nicht die Zuversicht, dass Bewegung in die Geschichte kommt, könnte man sich die Neubesetzung sicher sparen.
http://hotcopper.com.au/...p?fid=1&tid=1804433&msgid=10493812
http://hotcopper.com.au/...p?fid=1&tid=1804434&msgid=10493817
Auch diese Meldung BOUGANVILLLE COPPER LIMITED APPOINTS SENIOR RIO TINTO EXECUTIVE TO THE BOARD findet im RIO Board keine Erwähnung. ;-))))
http://hotcopper.com.au/...p?fid=1&tid=1804437&msgid=10493820
Jeder weiss "Ohne Moos nix los" das ist auch auf Boug nicht anders.
Momentan sind von den verschiedensten Seiten positive Initiativen gestartet worden,der Ball liegt jetzt bei O`Neill und seiner neuen Regierung. An der 100 Mill. Kina Frage wird man als erstes erkennen ob. Boug. auf ihn zählen kann.
Dass eine Provinz,welche die Unabhängigkeit anstrebt dabei nicht auf die uneingeschränkte Unterstützung der Zentralregierung hoffen kann ist wohl jedem klar.
Glücklicherweise geniesst Boug. die Unterstützung Australiens welche auch die nötigen Druckmittel besitzen ihre politischen u. wirtschaftlichen Vorstellungen in PNG durchzusetzen.
natürlich hast du mit dem bod recht, w.w. es soll ja auch ein klares zeichen von bcl sein: " an uns solls nicht liegen, wir sind dabei und startklar"
nach den erfahrungen der letzten 7 jahre ist für mich aber "startklar" 2015, das auch losgelöst von der unabhängigkeit, an die ich vor 2017 nicht glaube.
Interessant in diesem Zusammenhang wäre es auch mal zu erfahren wie du den Kursverlauf der BOC Aktie in Abhängigkeit
von deinem hypothetischen Zeitplan siehst oder auch anders rum gefragt siehst du die ´Rakete´
die langsame stetig kontinuierliche E. oder sogar eine andere Form der Entwicklung ? ;D))))
ich denke, dass ich 2012/2013 diese 60 cent-grenze werde verlassen müssen, da sich konsequent und nachhaltig (wie es jetzt immer so schön heißt) eine neue realistische grenze einpendelt. diese sehe ich bei über 1 AU, in jedem falle bei über 80 cent. bedeutet, dass ich 2013, 2014 usw. wohl "nur" noch zu Kursen von über 80 cent nachkaufen werde können. zu der dann erwarteten dividende - und nur die interssiert mich - von ca. 1 eur, ist das immer noch ein witz. 2050 ist dann verkaufen angesagt, es sei denn, es tut ich was mit den 7 weiteren lizenzen... losgegangen ist das ganze übrigens mit einer 30 cent grenze, wie man noch im w:o board nachlesen kann. die grenze musste halt immer wieder angepast werden. große bocsprünge, die lange anhalten, sehe ich bis zur übertragung der 19 % nicht. die unsicherheit am markt wegen des verhaltens der beteiligten und der unsicherheiten im korrupten volkverhalten wird anhalten - länger als viele denken. und dann knallts... aber richtig...
Allerdings denke ich das die preisliche Entwicklung etwas schneller und heftiger vonstatten gehen wird wenn !Voraussetzung!, offizielle d.h. von der politischen Administration und von unserer Firma, gemachte Statments bzgl. der wiederaufnahme des Minenbetriebes +Vorbereitungen in Richtung `Jobmotor`+ wiederherstellung der Infrastruktur zu einem besserem ranking (Stichwort hochspekulativ) der Aktie führt und somit z.Bsp. Fondsmanagern denen heute noch die Hände gebunden sind, erlaubt in grossem Stiel in dieses lukrative Geschäft mit einzusteigen .
By ISAAC NICHOLAS
PRIME Minister Peter O’Neill last night announced a 33-member Cabinet or National Executive Council with their respective portfolios or ministerial responsibilities.
His Deputy Leo Dion will also be responsible for Inter-Government Relations.
THE Party leader and Kandep MP Don Polye will take charge of Treasury, with Finance now separated. It will be headed by Tari Pori MP James Marape.
Former President of PNG Law Society and Sinasina Yongomugl MP, Kerenga Kua, is Minister for Justice and Attorney General, and his colleague lawyer, Rimbink Pato is Minister for Foreign Affairs and Immigration.
Lae MP and only woman Minister Loujaya Toni has taken charge of Religion, Youth and Community Development.
Prime Minister O’Neill said the Cabinet line-up is balanced, with all the provinces and regions fairly well represented.
He said although most of the Cabinet Ministers are first-timers, they have had both public and private sector experience and he is confident they will perform to expectations.
“Whatever wealth of experience they have from the public and private sector will be put to good use to deliver Government policies and programs,” Mr O’Neill said.The full list of Cabinet Ministers are:
Prime Minister - Peter O’Neill.
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Inter-Government Relations - Leo Dion.
Minister for Treasury - Don Polye.
Minister for Public Enterprise and State Investment - Ben Micah.
Minister for Forest and Climate Change - Patrick Pruaitch.
Minister for Transport - Ano Pala.
Minister for Agriculture and Livestock - Tommy Tomscoll.
Minister for Foreign Affairs and Immigration - Rimbink Pat.o
Minister for Public Service - Sir Puka Temu.
Minister for Religion, Youth and Community Development - Loujaya Toni.
Minister for Environment and Conservation - John Pundari.
Minister for Higher Education, Research, Science and technology - David Arore.
Minister for Justice and Attorney General - Kerenga Kua.
Minister for Defence - Fabian Pok.
Minister for Education - Paru Aihi.
Minister for Finance - James Marape.
Minister for Petroleum and Energy - William Duma.
Minister for Housing and Urban Development - Paul Isikiel.
Minister for Tourism, Arts and Culture - Boka Kondra.
Minister for Trade, Commerce and Industry - Richard Maru.
Minister for Sports and Pacific Games - Justin Tkatchenko.
Minister for Labor and Industrial Relations - Mark Maipakai.
Minister for Health and HIV-AIDS - Michael Malabag.
Minister for Police - Nixon Duban.
Minister for Fisheries and Marine Resources - Mao Zeming.
Minister for Correctional Services - Jim Simatab.
Minister for Communication and Information Technology - Jimmy Miringtoro.
Minister for Mining - Byron Chan.
Minister for Works and Implementation - Francis Awesa.
Minister for Autonomous Regions - Steven Kama.
Minister for Lands and Physical Planning - Benny Allan.
Minister for National Planning - Charles Abel.
Minister for Civil Aviation - Davies Steven.
Die Nachrichtenlage spricht dafür....
Aber ob 80 or 78, was für eine Rolle spielt das schon!?
Und dennoch, antares, du hast Recht: auch ich sähe gerne dauerhaft mind. eine 0,80 in der Zukunft.
Nachdem das BID auf 0,94 AUD angestiegen war (11:47) wurde dann gedeckelt, (Condition Codes XT, also aus dem Ausland) 50K wurden dazu benötigt.
Today: 10-Aug-2012
Time(AEST) Price Volume Value Condition Codes
15:38:57 0.9000 1,000 900
15:38:27 0.8800 2,350 2,068
15:29:58 0.9000 10,000 9,000
15:29:58 0.9100 5,000 4,550
15:21:09 0.9200 888 817
14:07:32 0.9300 1,000 930
14:07:32 0.9300 3,000 2,790
14:07:32 0.9300 5,000 4,650
12:11:41 0.9300 4,000 3,720
12:09:24 0.9300 1,000 930
11:54:14 0.9300 5,000 4,650
11:47:26 0.9350 7,000 6,545
11:47:26 0.9400 5,000 4,700 XT
11:35:15 0.9200 580 534
11:34:15 0.9050 357 323
11:18:58 0.9050 3,000 2,715
11:17:52 0.9050 6,643 6,012
11:17:52 0.9000 2,000 1,800
11:17:52 0.9000 6,357 5,721
11:17:30 0.9000 3,643 3,279
11:17:30 0.8950 8,657 7,748
11:03:31 0.8950 1,343 1,202 XT
11:03:31 0.8900 7,000 6,230
11:03:31 0.8800 3,657 3,218
10:52:52 0.8800 1,345 1,184
10:34:59 0.8500 988 840
10:34:59 0.8500 21,140 17,969
09:59:48 0.8500 197 167
With the 9th parliament elected and a new government in place, Papua New Guineans are hoping their elected leaders can turn their efforts to improving basic services across the country. Almost 7 weeks after polling began, the final seat has been declared in a general election that was riddled with delays, fraud, and voting problems.
But while there’s widespread relief that a legitimate government has been formed, there are warnings that PNG could face more problems if lessons aren’t learnt from the recent political turmoil and if corrupion isn’t addressed.
Johnny Blades reports
The Prime Minister-elect Peter O’Neill has formed a coalition government made up of a vast majority of the 111 MPs.
The inclusion in the coalition of Sir Michael Somare appears to have ended the dispute over who was the legitimate government, which began when Mr O’Neill replaced Sir Michael as Prime Minister last August in a parliamentary move ruled illegal by the Supreme Court.
But youth worker, Henry Atu, says while politicians have been fighting over who is in government, PNG’s long-neglected infrastructure, health, education and law and order services continue to slide.
“The main role of the MPs is to represent the people but now we’re seeing that when they get in there, they’re doing anything under the sun, anything that they want to do. What does that mean? Are they representing the people or not? Are we following the constitution of the country or not? The Somare government and the O’Neill government, they’ve totally done nothing. They’ve done nothing to the development of our country as a whole.”
There is considerable hope for change pinned on the fact that 69 percent of the new parliamentarians are first-time MPs.
Taxi driver Ken Baluba says people who become MPs rarely fulfill that hope.
“Sometimes they stand and they have good intentions, good motives, and they say good things but when they get in to power, it’s a different picture altogether because most of the leaders they just go and think of themselves and of building their own stuff and all that.”
Peter O’Neill has announced his new 33-member cabinet which includes 9 first term MPs. It features one of 3 new women MPs, Loujaya Toni, who picks up the Ministry for Community Development, Religion and Family Affairs.
Mr O’Neill says his cabinet is balanced and will deliver for the country.
However some appointments have raised eyebrows such as National Alliance leader Patrick Pruaitch regaining the Ministry of Forestry portfolio he held in the Somare government. Mr Pruaitch is a leader recently implicated by PNG’s anti-corruption taskforce for various questionable dealings with the logging industry.
A senior researcher in Governance and Institutional Matters at PNG’s National Research Institute, Dr Henry Okole, says until corrupt leaders are properly held accountable, corruption will keep holding PNG back.
“Corruption in PNG is a problem, and it’s systemic and systematic. The challenge really despite the pronouncements made by politicians and party leaders, captured there in their party platforms, the challenge is transferring those commitments from party platforms into sound policies.”
Sound policies may be slowly developing in PNG’s party political system but Dr Kristian Lasslett of the International State Crime Initiative says there are still no clear ideological divisions. He says the political system is dominated by a "mobocracy", an elite network of businessmen and politicians who operate in order to reward each other.
“Governments are often cobbled together through alliances, through mates looking after mates, not through ideaology. But then we are seeing, for example with the O’Neill government, they did introduce policies designed to ameliorate inequality through the provision of free access to public health and also education.”
However questions about the suitability of PNG’s constitution remain, particularly after the political impasse when despite having the mandate of parliament, the O’Neill regime came to power by means deemed unconstitutional.
Professor Andrew Ladley from Victoria University’s School of Government says these questions need to be addressed.
“This is a deep wound in PNG and, in terms of its constitution, it’s a vulnerability that’s still bleeding, in my view, and it does need treatment. The question is not whether your constitution is perfect and everybody follows it but how constitutions adapt and learn from their crises so one of the really big constitutional questions over this term is going to be the attempt to try and get some genuine lessons - not triumphalism by somebody saying, we beat them - but some kind of genuine attempt to get lessons out of this. I imagine it will be a sensitive issue. It might need a commission of inquiry, it might need some kind of process to investigate, to try and say: how did we get into that and how can we can we avoid getting there again.”
Dr Okole says PNG’s constitution has served the country well since independence was gained in 1975 but that it should be reviewed.
“It will be too limited if it’s confined to the separation of the three arms of government. There has to be some wholesome review of the constitution because this is an issue that is structural and is systemic. But I think it’s an opportunity for the people, even to work with the Constitutional Review Commission, to make sure that the input of the people come into play in a bigger process of review.”
In the last 9 years, PNG’s became one of the world’s fastest growing economies as development of the country’s significant mineral, oil, gas, fishery and forestry reserves increased.
But most ordinary Papua New Guineans have seen little of the benefits.
Despite this, Simon Nakaiban of the Central Sepik Rural Development Foundation NGO says many communities have become reliant on handouts.
“The communities looking after themselves, it’s not the common practice in East Sepik because people don’t have the mentality of self-reliance as stipulated in our constitution. So that’s what we’re trying to empower people to make them see, that the money is just another resource to bring tangible development to our communities. But we have the labour, we have the land, we have the knowledge and other resources that we can use to do something to help ourselves instead of waiting for politicians.”
Each year, MPs are given or almost 10 million kina, or 6 million NZ dollars, in development funds for direct use in their electorate.
Betelnut vendor and social commentator, Martyn Namorong, says the money disappears down a black hole.
“Over these past years, the Somare government has just spent 60 billion kina, that’s 6 billion each year from the government budget for the past 10 years, 60 billion down the drain for Papua New Guineans. What did they spend it on? That’s a good question to ask them because I’m not seeing anything on the roads, in the schools, the hospitals. PNG’s national wealth has been squandered.”
He says the system that PNG’s elite inherited from its former colonial power Australia, and uses in conjunction with foreign corporations, is still designed for keeping control of resources to accumulate power and wealth for themselves.
“And that model of development, if you like, has to be deconstructed. Power has to go back to the people so decentralisation is something that is necessary and along with that, control of resources back to the people. That includes direct mineral ownership rights for landowners. All of that has to happen so that you don’t have this elite up in Waigani fighting over power just so they can accumulate wealth for themselves. And what we see essentially as a result of that is regardless of the amount of money coming into the country, it isn’t translated into improvements in social indicators. One can argue that if you give it back to the provinces and districts, then the same things are going to happen. But the difference is that: it’s difficult for someone from Morehead (in Western Province) to come to Waigani and hold people accountable for the lack of infrastructure improvements etc. But if the power is in Daru (Western Province capital) it’s different, the person from Morehead can come straight to the office in Daru and actually hold their leaders much more accountable.”
Calls for an end to corruption are likely to persist in PNG, however Dr Henry Okole says change will only come from the grassroots level. He says PNG’s citizens must become aware of the concept of good governance, and if they can refuse to partake in corrupt activities, they will set a precedent for accountable leadership to eventually follow.
http://hotcopper.com.au/...p?fid=1&tid=1805155&msgid=10498154
http://hotcopper.com.au/...p?fid=1&tid=1805197&msgid=10498450
Bank of America Corp (BAC.N),
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Wenn man diesen Artikel liest u. bedenkt dass man seine Böcke für unter 100€ im Shareregister vor dem "Collapse" in Sicherheit bringen kann............;-))))))