Jadan neki BID jutros.
Valjda je po onoj : Tko je jamio (po dobroj cijeni), jamio je – pa sad malo pričekati… [wink]
Thursday, July 31, 2008 08:07:00 AM
Hungarian fuels group MOL will buy 12 new petrol stations in Austria, the company’s communications director confirmed the information of daily Wiener Zeitung to local newswire MTI.
Szabolcs Ferencz, head of MOL’s corporate communication, on Wednesday confirmed the Austrian daily’s information that the Hungarian group would acquire 12 filling stations from Doppler. The deal is being examined by the Austrian competition watchdog, and if approval is granted, the transaction could be completed before the end of the year.
The parties have not disclosed the purchase price. Of the 12 filling stations, three are located in Vienna, five around the Austrian capital city, two in Graz and two nearby Graz.
The news is no surprise, since MOL had already announced that it aimed to hold a 70-strong petrol station network in Austria by the end of 2008 and expand it to 100 units in the longer term.
Tko kaže da MOL nema para?
ja kupio jos 10kom..iz za’ebancije nek’ se nadje [cool]
Pajdo na starom polozaju, 2920kn 5000kom
Wednesday, 30, July 2008 05:10:00 PM
Hungarian oil and gas group MOL has also set eyes on the pipeline linking the world’s sixth-largest oil field Tengiz with the Black Sea, as Oman is selling its 7% interest in the Caspian Pipeline Consortium. Local news portal origo.hu has said on Wednesday that besides Russia and Kazakhstan, which have a pre-emptive right for the stake, MOL’s name also came up as a potential buyer.
The Hungarian press has not really picked up the almost month-long debate between Russia and Kazakhstan on the 1,510-km-long strategically important crude pipeline that connects the oil fields in Western Kazakhstan with the new Marine Terminal near the Russian city of Novorossiysk on the Black Sea.
The pipeline’s capacity currently stands at around 30 million metric tonnes of oil per annum and is expected to be doubled by 2012.
Russia, which has a 24% stake in the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC), announced about two weeks ago that it considered making an offer to Oman should the Middle Eastern state decide to sell its 7% stake in CPC. Kazakhstan owns 19% in CPC and the rest belongs to private shareholders.
Friendly ties between MOL and Oman
MOL may have strong cards in its hands, as it is on “friendly" terms with Oman, which has recently offered a helping hand to the Hungarian group in MOL’s battle to fend off unwanted takeover attempts launched by Austrian OMV in mid-2007.
In March this year, MOL signed a strategic co-operation agreement with Oman Oil Company S.A.O.C. (OOC), under the scope of which it sold 8,774,040 “A" series of its share, equivalent to 8% of its registered, at a price of USD 145.429 per share to OOC.
The other helping company was Czech utility CEZ that purchased a 7% stake from MOL, which is limited by regulations regarding the number of treasury shares it is allowed to hold.
MOL also has a 100%-owned subsidiary in Oman, Hawasina LLC Oman Branch.
There are other interests as well
The situation is made even more complicated by the presence of private companies in CPC. Two, partly British-owned companies, namely Royal Dutch Shell and BP, are also indirectly interested in the Caspian pipeline. British-Russian relations have been rather tense for some years now and have turned even nastier recently.
Russian authorities and the Russian partners of the British company have turned tough on BP recently. The TNK-BP venture, split between BP and AAR, a group of Russian billionaires, is the third-largest Russian oil producer. BP’s partners want to cut investment to distribute more money for shareholders, but the London-based oil giant says that would lead to a reduction in output. TNK-BP Chief Executive Robert Dudley fled the country last Thursday after Russian prosecutors called him in for questioning, a request that was dropped after his departure. Dudley’s work visa was due to expire on Monday. Shell was squeezed out of other Russian projects earlier.
The main private owner of CPC is US oil major Chevron with a 15% stake. The pipeline important for Chevron, as it is a 50% partner in the Tengiz field, in which ExxonMobil’s share is 25%.
Nemaju jadni novaca za INA-u! [lol]
Nešto nam INA pada. Zašto? Jeli možda netko zna što ja ne?
Pogledaj promet. Pusti cijenu. Pada jer kukavelj prodaje. Treba kredite vraćat, ne zanima njega ni MOL ni ništa…
Dosta su se raskrebečili – te rafinerija u Italiji , te pumpe u Austriji , te INA , te kaspijski naftovod…..a trezorske dionice pospremaju u (sultanat) Oman i Češku…..
Više liči na paniku nego na strategiju.
Ipak , neka ponude više od 4.000 i oprostit’ ćemo im to glavinjanje.Ionako će ih netko brzo preuzeti.
Na inače likvidnim dionicama promet nikakav.Cijela burza čeka što će reći MOL…
Za sat vremena samo šest dionica ima promet veći od 100.000 kuna …..