Beiträge von Aladin

    Tschonko


    Alle gleichzeit starten geht natuerlich nicht, ausserdem sind die schon in der Luft.


    Amera habe ich nicht, guter pick Tschonko, ich schau ob ich sie guenstiger kriege als bei den jetzigen Preis. Das selbe gilt fuer RSM.


    Ja die DSM,die haette ich auch nochmals gekauft bei 2 CAD,die siehst aber glaube ich nicht mehr.


    Mit IMA (55) im Gleichstand ,die meisten gehen hier in Deckung, ich ueberlege das erst bei 3 C$. Wollte fast schon aufstocken heute,habe aber dann was anders gekauft.


    DIe Sterling, die macht mir mehr Sorgen, so eine S...... ! (-33%)
    Bei 3.90 USD Schnitt und (100) im Depo macht mich gar nicht froh.
    Wo die noch hingeht weiss keiner,irgendwas stimmt da nicht , keiner weiss was, Tendenz aber runter selbst bei steigenden Silberpreis. :rolleyes:


    Nevada Pacific habe ich schon voll nachgeladen auch so ein Fall.
    (260) unten 30%. :(



    Habe heute 20% von KRY verkauft mit kleinen Gewinn weil ich wo anders die Kohle brauchte. Noch 120 sind da, reicht ja. :D


    Mal schaun, erstmal ist am Montag Ruhetag und ein langes Wochenende steht vor der Tuer.



    Geniesst es !



    Gruss


    XAX

    Einen deal noch :D, SEA.V zwei drittel mit 100% Gewinn verkauft und in EDR.V gesteckt.


    Nova nochmals aufgestockt, glaube damit habe ich nichts verbockt.


    So jetzt reichts nun mal abschalten vom verwalten. :D


    What a week ! :rolleyes:


    Die sollen nun mal alle losfliegen ....hier der neueste Stand der Flotte:


    BTV.AX CRS.AX DOM.AX NMC.AX SGX.AX AVM.L CDN.L CFTN.PK MERG.PK MEMLA.PK OTMN.PK SHSH.PK TBLC.PK RANGY.PK SRLM.PK AGXM.OB ALMI.OB MMGG.OB NJMC.OB USGL.OB MGN MMN.F ABI.V AOT.V APE.V APM.V ARU.V ASM.V AUN.V BCM.V BPM.V BVG.V CAT.V CBE.V CDU.V CGR.V CMA.V DNI.V DYG.V ECU.V EEL.V EDR.V EPL.V EPZ.V ETG.V EXN.V FR.V FVI.V GDX.V GGC.V GNG.V GOR.V GPR.V HLO.V IMR.V IPT.V JIN.V KDX.V KG.V KRE.V LEG.V MAG.V MAI.V MGR.V NGG.V NME.V NPG.V ORM.V PAX.V PDO.V PJO.V PNL.V PXI.V QTA.V RDU.V RFM.V SDR.V SEA.V SML.V SPM.V SVL.V SVM.V TM.V VAL.V VIT.V WKR.V YZC.V AMM.TO BGC.TO CLG.TO CRJ.TO CSG.TO CRU.TO CZN.TO DNT.TO ELD.TO FAN.TO FCO.TO FSR.TO GAM.TO GRZ.TO IAU.TO MFL.TO MMM.TO MR.TO MUN.TO NG.TO ORV.TO RDV.TO RMX.TO SLW.TO SWG.TO TVI.TO TWG.TO WLF.TO XCL.TO AEM AUY AGT BVN CBJ DEZ FCX GBN GG GLG KRY MDG MNG NEM PAL PDG WTZ IVN NTO BGO KGC VGZ HL CDE SIL PAAS SSRI.... a plus 6% in total is the Profit so far. :]

    Ne Edel Man, da lasse ich dich erst ran wie bei USGL, ich kann ja nicht jeder einen facelift geben wie Cabo heute, da freut sich bestimmt Tschonko. ;)


    Wenn RSM faellt dann pick ich die und bring sie wieder zu deinen Kauflevel. :D


    Eine Hand wascht die andere, beide das Gesicht.



    Ciao


    XAX

    MANADO, Indonesia


    -- A fisherman :rolleyes: testified Friday that U.S.-based Newmont Mining Corp. dumped pollutants into an Indonesian bay that caused lumps on his neck and dizziness, but the defense argued that the witness was faking the illness.

    Two other witnesses told the court that locals began suffering "strange diseases" after the arrival of Newmont, but that no formal link to the water pollution had been established.


    The trial that opened nearly two months ago is being closely watched by business leaders, who say a guilty verdict could set back Indonesia's improving foreign investment climate, and environmentalists eager to see if the government will crack down on a multinational company.


    The Denver-based company's Indonesian subsidiary and its American director Richard Ness have been charged with dumping mercury and arsenic-laced pollutants into the Buyat Bay on Sulawesi island, allegedly causing villagers to develop skin diseases and other illnesses.


    Ness faces up to 10 years in prison and the company a $68,000 fine if convicted.


    "I am sure and confident that Buyat Bay is not polluted," he told reporters after the day-long hearing, which was later adjourned until next Friday. "There is still a long way to go."


    Rasit Rahman, a 38-year-old fisherman who lives near the mine, was the prosecution's first witness.


    "I got lumps on my neck and suffered from dizziness," :P $$ he told the court, also claiming that fish stocks had been depleted in the bay since Newmont began operating there in 1996.


    The company stopped mining two years ago after extracting all the gold it could. But it continued processing ore until Aug. 31, 2004, when the mine was permanently shut.


    Under cross examination, the fisherman said he did not go to a local doctor for treatment, but waited until several of the villagers went to the capital, Jakarta, to get a check up in a trip widely covered by the media.


    Several such trips were paid for by environmental groups seeking to bring charges against Newmont.


    Rahman said he paid for the trip himself, bringing jeers from Newmont supporters in the courtroom.


    Newmont's chief lawyer, Luhut Pangarribean, claimed Rahman had signed a statement stating he was never sick, and the attorney showed the court a photograph of Rahman signing the document.


    The statement was taken by a local legal aid institute in the area, but Pangarribean gave no more details.


    "The witness statements have no link to the charges against Newmont," he said.


    Two other witnesses -- Jufria, a 45-year-old mother, and Jane Pangemanan, a doctor -- said local people suffered from several diseases after Newmont began mining in the area, but that no link with water pollution was established.


    Pangemanan told the court that laboratory tests on four villagers who traveled to Jakarta showed their blood contained traces of heavy metals like arsenic and mercury.


    "But there were no conclusions from the tests," added Pangemanan, a lecturer at a local university, who admitted signing a statement on Feb. 3 withdrawing her allegations against Newmont.


    The company has argued that a police investigation was flawed and that there was no evidence of pollution or that villagers became ill. :rolleyes:

    Hi Tschonko


    Gestern wieder WTZ und FSR.TO geholt , heute stimmst mich froh.


    Sterling schlaeft, da hilft auch der Silberpreis nicht richtig mit.


    Nun ein facelift fuer Cabo, denn gebohrt wird immer !!. :D


    Natuerlich eine vergessene ALMI gehoert dazu. :]


    MAI. V aufgestockt ist ja mein Geburtsmonat. :))
    Da erwarte ich gute Ergebnisse diesen Monat.


    Ein Zinkspiel mit zukauf von PAX.V und YZC.V beide verknuepft mit einem Projekt am Howard Pass.
    Mit CZN oben drauf sollte ich genug zink fuer den sink haben. :D


    Dazu einen BCM.V und great panther, weil pink nicht meine Farbe ist.


    Fruchttag ? , Pinnacle PNL.V gehoert dazu.


    Was auch immer, have a nice weekend.


    Mfg


    XAX

    Whither Brett's empire?

    Cairan Ryan

    07 October 2005 07:48

    The late Brett Kebble’s mining empire may end up in the knacker’s yard, according to analysts who have been following it closely.


    “My sense is that JCI and Randgold & Exploration [two Kebble-controlled companies] won’t exist in their present form a year from now,” says Georges Lequime, an analyst with RBC Capital Markets in London.


    Others believe that JCI, a once-proud mining and industrial conglomerate founded by Barney Barnato more than 100 years ago, may not survive much longer, if only because of shareholder pressure to collapse and simplify its corporate structure.


    Kebble resigned from both these companies just weeks before he was murdered last week in Johannesburg. Both companies have been suspended by the JSE for failing to submit financial statements on time, suggesting Kebble had something to hide.


    A team of 20 KPMG auditors are trying to unravel the murky financial dealings orchestrated by Kebble, who claimed his family had more than 50% control of mining investment company JCI, though this is not evident from the share register. :D


    The financial audit, due to be completed by year end, is expected to shed light on what many believe could turn out to be South Africa’s biggest corporate scandal.


    Analysts say they gave up watching Kebble companies — with the exception of Western Areas, which has an independent board — because they could not follow their complex web of dealings. They say the auditors’ report will answer long-
    standing questions over JCI’s solvency, and whether or not it has a future.


    Kebble’s murder leaves a trail of unanswered questions. Moneyweb reported this week that JCI pumped up to R2-billion in cash into a subsidiary called Consolidated Mining Management Services (CMMS), which JCI says functioned as the group’s corporate treasury, :D but may have been a vehicle for sluicing funds out of JCI, beyond the glare of JCI shareholders. Where these funds ended up is not clear. Kebble reportedly bankrolled more than 40 black empowerment transactions, many of which may now be in jeopardy.


    “Because the market gave up watching JCI, Brett was able to get away with what he did,” says Lequime. :D


    Curiously, the share price of Western Areas, in which JCI has a 39,3% interest, picked up immediately after Kebble’s murder. Market talk is that, with Kebble gone, Western Areas could become a takeover target or joint venture partner for the likes of Goldfields, which shares a common boundary with Western Areas.


    Western Areas, specifically its 50% share in the South Deep gold mine, was the principal asset in the Kebble business empire. Goldfields’ share price picked up immediately after Kebble’s resignation from JCI, R&E and Western Areas.


    Ian Liddle, an analyst with Allan Gray, whose clients own about 25% of JCI, says it became increasingly difficult to ascertain the extent and nature of JCI’s assets and liabilities. “We put questions to the previous JCI directors on these matters, but did not receive satisfactory answers,” he says. “The new JCI directors must produce audited financial statements before they can make recommendations for the future of the company.”


    A hard-nosed Investec appears to have demanded Kebble’s resignation from JCI as a condition for pumping R460-million in cash into a special-purpose vehicle. The loan is secured by 15-million Western Areas shares, JCI’s Letseng diamond mine in Lesotho, a share in JSE-listed empowerment group Matodzi and other JCI assets.


    Investec also charged a “raising fee” of at least R50-million. This, says Lequime, limits Investec’s downside and gives it an attractive upside.


    This cash injection will allow JCI to follow its rights in the R640-million rights issue now under way at Western Areas. But there could be trouble ahead for JCI if Western Areas makes further cash calls on shareholders, which seems likely in light of the operational difficulties at its South Deep mine.


    Hugo Nelson, an analyst with Coronation Asset Management, says JCI will probably have to sell assets or raise further debt to hang on to its stake in Western Areas.

    JCI’s R1bn BEE exposure

    Thebe Mabanga | Johannesburg, South Africa

    07 October 2005 07:48

    More than R1-billion in empowerment deals funded by Brett Kebble’s JCI are in the balance as auditors pore over the company’s books to determine what actual value underpins the maze of transactions undertaken while Kebble was at the helm.


    Key investments by JCI in black empowerment companies include Matodzi Resources, Orlyfunt Investments, Inkwenkwezi, Lembede Investments and Masupatsela.


    But some of the beneficiaries stood firm in the face of the company’s possible collapse, maintaining that any agreement they have with the groups will be honoured and that it will be “business as usual”. JCI has a stated empowerment strategy in which it “made significant advances to empowerment entities”.


    This was designed to “create independent capital bases, until such entities can stand alone”.


    Sello Rasethaba brushed aside any suggestion that JCI’s woes would adversely affect either of the associated companies he heads, Orlyfunt and Matodzi Resources. According to Matodzi financial statements, the company’s liabilities exceeded its assets by R263-million. Rasethaba noted this to be “an accounting statement”, otherwise the company would have to be liquidated.


    He is looking forward to a Matodzi annual general meeting in November, in which debt owed to JCI will be converted to equity and will see JCI hold more than 50% in Matodzi. As for Orlyfunt, he noted that 70% of its assets are outside JCI. They include the Mediterranean Shipping Company and advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi. On the 30% assets linked to JCI, he noted “agreements are in place” and he expected these to be honoured.


    Andile Nkuhlu, of Inkwenkwezi and Itsuseng Investments, two JCI empowerment partners, reiterated his stance that he expected agreements to be honoured.


    JCI’s annual report for 2004 records that the company had made R1,05-billion in funding to empowerment entities. It valued its investments in these entities at R1,5-billion, more than 50% of its R2,8-billion in assets.


    Some of its key investments include a stake in the Letseng diamond mine in Lesotho, valued at R348 500 at the time, as well as claims in listed mining companies valued at R1,8-billion.


    JCI spokesperson Brian Gibson told the Mail & Guardian that the new directors and management are currently familiarising themselves with all projects and transactions “including those that could be termed BEE initiatives”.


    He said a decision will be made in due course using “sound business principles and acting in the best interest of the shareholders”. He referred detailed enquiries to the 2004 annual report.


    One company that stands to lose is Randgold & Exploration Company, from which Kebble was ousted in August. According to its Securities Exchange Commission F20 2003 filing in New York, Randgold has a loan owing by JCI, which at the end of 2003 stood at $9-million.


    At the end of 2003, Randgold also entered into a loan agreement with Masupatsela Investment Holdings, another of JCI’s empowerment partner, for $11,91-million.
    Gibson said JCI’s new management had no knowledge of the company.