Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948
Seite 795 von 980 Neuester Beitrag: 09.11.24 23:27 | ||||
Eröffnet am: | 29.09.07 00:25 | von: nekro | Anzahl Beiträge: | 25.491 |
Neuester Beitrag: | 09.11.24 23:27 | von: Fuchsbau24 | Leser gesamt: | 5.903.125 |
Forum: | Hot-Stocks | Leser heute: | 2.581 | |
Bewertet mit: | ||||
Seite: < 1 | ... | 793 | 794 | | 796 | 797 | ... 980 > |
Aber in den Top-100 werden sicherlich viele von uns sein -
Ob eingetragen oder nicht....
http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/international/...t-on-voting/1439650
Election campaigning ban in south Bougainville won't impact on voting
Updated 22 April 2015, 10:56 AEST
There are claims that the Autonomous Government of Bougainville has been banned from electioneering in the south of the region by the Me'ekamui group that's opposed to the government's existence.
Election campaigning ban in south Bougainville won't impact on voting (Credit: ABC)
The people from the Konnou area have not participated in the past two elections.
Acting Electoral Commissioner for Bougainville, George Manu, says he wants as many people as possible to be able to vote.
Presenter: Richard Ewart
Speaker: George Manu, Acting Electoral Commissioner for Bougainville
Rowan Callick explains what the Mining Act passed by the Autonomous Bougainville Government last week could mean for the Bougainville copper mine.
Tradegate 0,269 € +3,07% 0,261 € VOL 56.600
Minuten vor Handelsbeginn wurden an der ASX (bei einem BID von 40 ct) die gleiche Anzahl im ASK plaziert.
ASX $0.3600 -2.7 % 0.3650 VOL 59,906
http://www.stocknessmonster.com/news-item?S=BOC&E=ASX&N=421592
.......BCL and the PNG IRC have today reached a settlement of all matters relating to those Assessments and the court proceedings, subject to the sanction of the court which is anticipated to occur during April 2015
Ich kann nicht auf diesen Artickel zugreifen, da ich keine subscription habe!
Bitte mal das Wesentliche hier einstellen.
Danke
Rio Tinto’s review of its controlling stake in Bougainville Copper, now in its ninth month, is considering the options not only of a trade sale but also of giving its shares away, possibly to a charitable trust.
A year ago the mining giant gave away its 19.1 per cent shareholding in Northern Dynasty, owner of the Pebble copper-gold project in Alaska, to two Alaskan charitable foundations.
Rio owns 53.38 per cent of the Papua New Guinea mine, closed by conflict in 1989, that still contains copper and gold worth more than $50 billion, as well as possessing a recently reconfirmed exploration licence.
The mine, which would cost an estimated $6.5bn or more to reopen, is also owned 19.06 per cent by the Papua New Guinea national government, and 27.36 per cent by other shareholders through its ASX listing.
In the current commodity environment, even the largest miners are not contemplating starting — or restarting — a massively expensive project at a stroke, preferring instead to work green-fields sites less ambitiously, gradually building up output.
Rio has waited patiently for its social licence to mine to be restored but despite the desire of the Bougainville Autonomous Government, under its president John Momis, to restore mining revenues — with no clear income alternative in sight — landowner issues have not been fully resolved.
And under new mining legislation passed by the Bougainville parliament recently, all resources are owned by traditional landowners, while the national government based in Port Moresby continues to insist that geological resources remain the property of the state.
Apart from Rio, there are few potential alternatives with the capacity to rebuild the mine, except for a handful of other international miners and some large Chinese corporations.
But the window of opportunity for an exit is looking reasonably favourable now, while the prospect for the medium to longer term appears more shaded.
The prospect of a change of leadership on Bougainville, with an election due there at the end of May, injects a note of potential uncertainty.
At the Port Moresby end, Prime Minister Peter O’Neill is leading a government with rare political strength — and has the appetite for the state to run mines. But PNG’s history shows this may not last forever.
Mr Momis has warned Mr O’Neill to reveal any dealings with Rio.
The PNG Prime Minister confirmed that “we have had discussions with other shareholders of on a range of issues including the reopening of the mine and the disposal of shares by existing shareholders including Rio Tinto”. But, he added, “there are no secret deals”.
The Bougainville government’s concern was aroused by information it had received that law firm Norton Rose Fulbright, which works for Rio internationally, had received instructions to handle the sale of Rio’s shares. A Norton Rose spokesman decline to comment.
es interessiert sich niemand wirklich für diese aktie.
und Verkäufer gibts auch kaum noch.
andere werte mit gleicher marktkapitalisierung werden mit einem vielfachen Umsatz gehandelt.
... und was sollen die 450k bei 55 AU Cent (2 Order) seit 2 oder 3 Tagen ???
kommt mir irgendwie alles sonderbar vor ...
BY ROMULUS MASIU
THE 2015 ABG Presidential Election has showed its ugly head with candidates of a constituency in Central Bougainville told by voters to pay K3000 to campaign in their area or leave.
Konampai village assembly in the North Nasioi constituency of Kieta district, Central Bougainville passed this law and termed the fee “entry fee”.
This means that any group or individual that wants to visit any of the four villages to campaigns for any candidate must pay K3000 before they do so.
The mountainous Konampa village assembly has four villages namely Kaino, Bakavori, Kupe and Turampa with 900 plus eligible voters.
“Before your campaign groups enter any of our villages you as candidate have to meet the requirement (cash) of K3000 as entry fee. K3000 must be paid in advance, five days before your campaign date,” chairman Abel Deaung and his executives said after they passed the resolution on April 8.
All chiefs in the four villages have also signed and passed the “entry fee” law and have notified all their communities.
Yesterday, former ABG Mining Minister in the Kabui regime and one of the candidates for North Nasioi seat, Mathias Salas, found it the hard way when he was unceremoniously forced to return to Arawa while on his campaign trail to the mountainous Kupe village.
Mr Salas, who called into the Post-Courier office straight away, said this practice does not support transparency and good governance at all.
“It is getting out of hand calling on authorities and those involved to immediately put a stop to the practice,” he said. “We candidates have our rights to campaign and market ourselves to our voters and such practice is uncalled for.”
“We want transparency and good governance – where is the democracy for elections? People are obstructing our rights to campaign which is a breach to the electoral roll and our constitution rights as far as election is concerned. This is a bad precedence for all other 33 constituencies throughout Bougainville. We shouldn’t be creating such practices. We must stop it.”
Wie schnell solche "Deckelchen" von 1 Million + in 1 Trade weggekauft werden konnte man in diesem Jahr schon am
30.01 (1,458,000 St.)
03.03 (1,800,400 St.)
02.04( 1,554,400 St.)
beobachten.
Erstaunliche ca. 4.8 Mill. Shares in 3 Trades.
Das sind rd. 2/3 des gesamten BOC Vol. 2015 von ca.7.2 Mill. Shares.
https://au.finance.yahoo.com/q/hp?s=BOC.AX
Die Trickys sind also weiterhin aktiv. ;-)))
...die kaufen gleich eine ganze Firma und haben wahrscheinlich ihre ´Miesen´ (ADR Programm) in trockenen Tüchern ;-))
20% lassen sich schon eher verschenken. Wobei mir nothern dynasty
auf den ersten Blick nach wohlbekannten Canada Klitschen aussieht.
Da fällt dann verschenken nicht schwer. BCL ist aber schon ein Anderes
Kaliber
der "Deckel" verschwindet aber immer wieder und erscheint irgendwo wieder
(jetzt halt bei 55 Cent).
Irgendetwas ist also im "Busch" "versteckt".
23.04.2015 | 10:47 Uhr | Nitzsche, Marc, Rohstoff-Trader
Obwohl es sich bei Codelco um einen der größten Kupfer-Produzenten überhaupt handelt, ist der chilenische Staats-Konzern selbst wegen der fehlenden Börsen-Notierung für Anleger nicht sonderlich interessant. Trotzdem lohnt es sich, die Gesellschaft ab und an etwas näher unter die Lupe zu nehmen, da die operative Entwicklung des Giganten zumindest mittelbare Auswirkungen auf die Kurse des roten Metalls hat.
Kein Ausstoß-Plus trotz Milliarden-Investitionen!
Wie der Codelco-CEO Pizarro kürzlich mitteilte, sollen in jedem der fünf Jahre bis 2019 fünf Milliarden Dollar investiert werden. Allerdings werden die Gesamt-Ausgaben von 25 Milliarden Dollar nicht zu einem signifikanten Anstieg des Outputs führen. Denn primär dient dieses Programm dazu, die ausgebeuteten Reserven zu ersetzen und die Produktion auf dem aktuellen Niveau zu halten.
Laut Pizarro soll der Ausstoß des letzten Jahres von 1,672 Millionen Tonnen Kupfer bis 2018 auf unter 1,6 Millionen Tonnen fallen, bevor die Investitionen dafür sorgen, dass die Chilenen 2019 wieder rund 1,7 Millionen Tonnen fördern. Bis dahin hofft man, den Ausbau der weltweit größten Unter-Tage-Mine El Teniente, der 38 Monate hinter dem Plan zurückliegt abschließen zu können.
Kommt die Kupfer-Rally!
Auch wenn die rückläufige Produktion der stark überalterten Minen in den nächsten Jahren das globale Primär-Angebot belasten wird, erscheint eine nachhaltige Kupfer-Rally derzeit wenig wahrscheinlich. Denn andere bedeutende Anbieter kündigten bereits eine zeitnahe Erhöhung ihrer Förderung an. Gleichzeitig dürfte das verhaltene Wachstum in China eine geringere Nachfrage zur Folge haben. Daher sind deutlich höhere Kupfer-Preise nicht zu erwarten!
© Marc Nitzsche
Chefredakteur Rohstoff-Trader
die verkaufen leer und wenn die mine eröffnen soll fliegen halt Granaten. ganz einfaches geschäftsmodell.