So_Cynical
The Contrarian Averager
- Joined
- 31 August 2007
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So whats going on with GDY. There has been no announcments for quite some time. Have they got the 1mW plant up and running. I am starting to become a little frustrated with not a lot being done on time..not to mention the share price heading down to hopefully some support at about 72cents.
Trav
That should be 1MW not 1mW - the latter wouldn't be enough to run a single mobile phone whereas the former would run close to 1000 houses.So whats going on with GDY. There has been no announcments for quite some time. Have they got the 1mW plant up and running.
Fundamentals (not my strong point):
It has spent the better part of 9 years laying significant groundwork towards a completed project only to be lowered to almost their starting share price. Hiccups happen all the time, work then continues on. Can anyone provide a doomsday event that could trigger a total company meltdown with more than 40% probability? I lay this as my fundamental analysis, as rough and basic as it is.
Technically:
Long term buying pressure since 2008 has run its course to levels seen during 2005 -2006 period, and has neared its all time low of 47c on March 15th when it hit 57c. More recently the support of 63-65c has held true and the share rebounded on both occasions.
My opinion:
Need about another week worth of price data for me to be satisfied, and I am totally prepared to see the price drop to 50c before a significant consolidation pattern emerges between 50 and 60c.
I would imagine there could be a lot of money to be made on this one in the coming year baring that 40% company killer event if anyone can name it.
Upside potential 150%
My Point of view is that GDY simply cannot fail..the technology is proven, so the rest is a given...GDY will eventually be a major Australian producer of renewable energy, perhaps the biggest player in that field.
Single 25MW plant - just running a new transmission line to the outskirts of the existing grid should be sufficient. But for a 500MW plant there would need to be some fairly significant spending on transmission.So a 25 MW plant slated for commission in 4 years. But their plan is to build 10 50MW plants correct?
How does proximity to main electricity consumers affect GDY? They seem to be miles away from the majors.
Ultimately, it will come down to the cost of delivered energy that determines whether GDY and geothermal in general sinks or swims. Don't forget it's not just competition from conventional coal / gas, there's also the likes of LNC with their underground coal gassification technology that are serious contenders for alternative means of supplying baseload generation.
there is no way you should be going anywhere near this stock
-yes; sounds attractive
-yes; big resources, asset has life of 20 years plus
-yes; technology proven
-yes; they will raise about >$500m before they will make a profit, if at all.
There are plenty of other stocks on the market with attractive stories. GRR and BRM are good if you want come capital raising risks. At least they will give you some positive cash flows.
Coal seam gas companies offer enough risk in this underground energy space. What about ESG or AZO?
Not strictly true about government support for renewable energy.Smurf...ultimately it will depend on the level of price support that the state and Fed Govt's provide to the renewable energy sector....renewable energy production IS BEING SUPPORTED FINANCIALLY BY BOTH LEVELS OF GOVT, and will continue to be well into the future, that level of support and the cost of delivery will both be the determining factors.
They have like 90 mill in cash bocky, and i think Origin energy is still giving them money :dunno: then there's all the Govt money (12 mill last time i think) and then there's the Hunter valley speculation upside...imagine how the SP would take off if they had some good drilling results there, so close to Newcastle and the central coast.
Ultimately, LNC is aiming to produce syngas and has two thoughts about what to do with that gas - either turn it into liquid fuel, use it to generate electricity, or both. A third option would be to simply build a pipeline sell the gas to an existing power station or other third party (Torrens Island power station comes immediately to mind).I personally reckon LNC is a dead duck as there's to much potential down side environmental risk...however i must admit i haven't been following there progress lately?
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