Was just looking at MPO and how it sold its NSW Gloucester PEL 285 for $370m to AGL (MPO only had 30% interest)
PEL 285 had 2P of 180 PJ and 3P of 360 PJ
MEL has 2P of 247 PJ and 3P of 1400 PJ
Based on recent take overs and even MPO's sale I would think MEL stands a fair chance of having an offer made given its current mkt cap is $75m with $15m cash leaving an EV of $60m for those large 2P and 3P reserves
It is at an advantage to its QLD peers - CSG to LNG is not proven and still faces signifcant obstacles. NSW has a pending electricity crisis and CSG use in gas fired power stations is tried and tested...
Investment Perspective: Perseus (PRU) continues to stand out as one of the most significant emerging gold producers due to its resource base (approximately 7 mill oz.) from two projects in West Africa. It is not a company that will suffer from the hiatus in the share price due to lack of news flow in the financing and construction stage of the first project, Ayanfuri. The less advanced Tengela gold project will continue to provide exploration updates from continuous drilling, with an expectation that the million ounces already announced will increase by at least 2-3 times. We expect continual good news flow, a rerating induced by Northern Hemisphere buying and increasing takeover speculation as the numbers firm up. Perseus is trading at a 63% discount to our valuation of $2.25 a share. Perseus is our highest conviction gold share. BUY
First stock to look at is: MEL
ENE - current price ~$2.02
They announced an indicative offer from Archer Capital in the range of $2.4-$2.8.
They also have a separate offer for some specific UK assets. This offer is priced at 10.8x full year EBITDA, and will return $1 per share in net proceeds, although only representing 13% of ENE's global generation capacity.
The UK asset offer on the table put ENE in a reasonable bargaining position with Archer. Applying the same EBITDA multiple gives a enterprise value of $1.3B, less debt of $460m, mean equity value of ~$850m. Current market cap is only $310m.
Note this assumes other company assets are of same quality as the UK ones which may or may not be true, but the margin of safety is there.
See announcement here.
http://www.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20090626/pdf/31j8397fn14fj9.pdf
http://www.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20090622/pdf/31j5dqw9gm6s2k.pdf
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/business/story/0,,25634622-18261,00.html - the latest of several references Bromby has made to HIG in the last few months.HOW long before someone -- Xstrata or the Chinese, most likely -- decides to take out Highlands Pacific (HIG)? By Christmas, the giant Chinese-owned Ramu project in Papua New Guinea will be operational, and HIG has an 8.56 per cent stake in a mine that will be producing 31,500 tonnes of nickel and 3300 tonnes of cobalt a year. It also has 16.9 per cent of the huge Frieda copper-gold deposit in PNG. Xstrata is spending $US36m this year alone on Frieda, a project that is expected to produce 160,000 tonnes of copper and 240,000oz of gold a year. HIG is capitalised at $68.5m and has $28m in the bank.
Santos
A range of parties including Petronas, China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC), Shell, BP, AGL Energy and Apache Corporation could make hostile bids for Santos once restrictions are lifted on September 1, Dow Jones reports. The newswire service quoted analyst Di Brookman of Citigroup saying that although a 15 per cent shareholder cap was lifted by the South Australian government in November last year, companies that have since entered the Santos dataroom undertook that they would not make a hostile bid until the third quarter. Such parties include Malaysia's Petronas, which is Santos's LNG partner. Santos, which has a market cap of $10.84 billion, fell 2.43 per cent in the course of yesterday's trade.
STO
From the Business Spectator
MEL is a long way from any kind of existing or proposed transmission pipeline to any potential LNG terminal (namely Gladstone or Newcastle). Therefore, my belief is that they are not as attractive a TO target as companies in the Bowen, Surat or Gunnedah basins. But I certainly could be wrong.
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NUF...
Potentially the chineses are sniffing around. They had a tilt at them in Nov 2008.
The strategic need probably hasn't change. But the price is halved.
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