Garpal Gumnut
Ross Island Hotel
- Joined
- 2 January 2006
- Posts
- 13,698
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I understand your points, good ones, I might say.there is a narrative to reduce/stop investment capital in fossil fuel projects ( especially in the US ) , now apart from that , we are coming into a period where cashed up investors ( that aren't pension-funds ) are going to demand higher returns , and ALSO WPL be will be operating in locales they haven't previously explored ( business-wise ) , so i am guessing there will be costs/expenses they won't have foreseen ( especially with broke governments trying to raise revenue )
now yes i agree where possible you should always borrow in YOUR native currency ( FX changes can be a killer ) but Australia isn't an unlimited piggy-bank and WPL will suddenly almost double in size , WPL might easily need to borrow more than what is available in Australia
i deliberately avoided the petrodollar adventure , because to quote a friend on a different event that happened to the US , ' that has been coming for a long while ' meaning if you bully and blackmail often enough , somebody will say and MEAN .. NO more ( or in this case NYET ) , interestingly it is the Saudis that have made this effective ( both in the rise and fall of the Petro-dollar )I understand your points, good ones, I might say.
I was referring mainly to the Petrodollar $USD being assaulted by other currencies as a de facto external safe reserve currency.
I believe the $AUD though never ever rising to that of the percentage of the external reserves of the $USD, will bite in to the US share which will be subject to attack ( for want of a better word ) by the yuan and rubel.
So being listed externally for WPL will be a good thing. It will be backed by a currency rising in percentage terms held by foreign banks.
Now whether the future works out as simply as that is quite another matter.
gg
WPL will be a top ten global independent producer.
Oddly, will be pursuing secondary listings on the NYSE and LSE when other Aussie companies, like BHP and WBC, are trimming that fat.
Of course all is moot without shareholder approval.
sorry Germany is tone-deaf ( or suicidal ) , Russia will be fine whatever happens ( compared to everybody else )Woodside Petroleum has followed up its application to list its shares in London with a similar application for a New York listing as it prepares for its merger with BHP’s petroleum business, a combination now worth about $63 billion as their share prices have surged.
The listing of American Depositary Shares on the New York Stock Exchange is expected to become effective once the merger completes, which is targeted for June 1, assuming a positive vote by Woodside shareholders on May 19...
The secondary listings of shares in London and New York are part of Woodside’s strategy to hold on to the raft of new shareholders that will result from the scrip-based merger deal, in which almost 914.8 million new Woodside shares will be distributed to BHP shareholders as payment for the petroleum business.
... I'll keep my WPL shares. For a while, because this oil price shock has a way to go. Either 7 million Russian barrels gets taken out (Germany, are you listening)?) or the war continues.
Petroleum merger on track to be finalised on 01/06/2022 - new code WDS commences trading on the ASX 02/06/2022.Woodside Petroleum has followed up its application to list its shares in London with a similar application for a New York listing as it prepares for its merger with BHP’s petroleum business, a combination now worth about $63 billion as their share prices have surged.
The listing of American Depositary Shares on the New York Stock Exchange is expected to become effective once the merger completes, which is targeted for June 1, assuming a positive vote by Woodside shareholders on May 19...
The secondary listings of shares in London and New York are part of Woodside’s strategy to hold on to the raft of new shareholders that will result from the scrip-based merger deal, in which almost 914.8 million new Woodside shares will be distributed to BHP shareholders as payment for the petroleum business.
... I'll keep my WPL shares. For a while, because this oil price shock has a way to go. Either 7 million Russian barrels gets taken out (Germany, are you listening)?) or the war continues.
and BHP gone "ex-dividend today" on merger of petroleum asset's with WDS taking effect 01/06/2022On May 25th, 2022, Woodside Petroleum Ltd (WPL) changed its name and ASX code to Woodside Energy Group Ltd (WDS).
was thinking BHP would drop a little more todayand BHP gone "ex-dividend today" on merger of petroleum asset's with WDS taking effect 01/06/2022
was thinking BHP would drop a little more today
ALSO there is a theory that SOME fund managers will be obliged to sell the new WDS entitlement so June might be a little tense for WDS holders
well they rebranded so i am guessing playing it by ear , they have either got to remove SOME management or increase managementWhat sort of dividends can we expect from the combined unit? Do they have a policy of a certain % of profits, or playing it by ear? They are going to make a motza this year.
well they rebranded so i am guessing playing it by ear , they have either got to remove SOME management or increase management
that alone should be a big distraction
What sort of dividends can we expect from the combined unit? Do they have a policy of a certain % of profits, or playing it by ear? They are going to make a motza this year.
well they rebranded so i am guessing playing it by ear , they have either got to remove SOME management or increase management
and the possibility to have planned this, leading up to the merger?? As you said "guessing"that alone should be a big distraction
- Dwight D. EisenhowerIn preparing for battle I have always found that plans are useless but planning is indispensable.
and now that's not hanging over the market ! No more discounted stock around to confuse things. Onward and upward.There was always going to be a bunch of BHP investors that couldn’t take Woodside shares as compensation for the miner’s petroleum business, meaning selling for months or weeks post the deal’s completion.
Instead, BHP hired JP Morgan to rustle the sellers together and put together a block trade. JP Morgan launched it as early as it could: after market on Wednesday. The equities desk was auctioning 38 million shares, and settled to sell them for $29.15 each or a 3.4 per cent discount to the last close.
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