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Surge Energy Inc (Alberta) T.SGY

Alternate Symbol(s):  ZPTAF | T.SGY.DB.B

Surge Energy Inc. is a Canada-based oil focused exploration and production (E&P) company. The Company's business consists of the exploration, development and production of oil and gas from properties in Western Canada. It holds focused and operated light and medium gravity crude oil properties in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, characterized by large oil in place crude oil reservoirs with low recovery factors. It offers exposure to two of the five conventional oil growth plays in Canada: the Sparky and SE Saskatchewan. It holds a dominant land position and is drilling a mix of horizontal multi-frac and horizontal multi-lateral wells in the Sparky area. Sparky is a large, well established oil producing fairway in Western Canada. SE Saskatchewan is a focused operated asset base with light oil operating netbacks. SE Saskatchewan operates low-cost wells with short payouts and offers potential for continued area consolidation.


TSX:SGY - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by Soulinvestoron Sep 01, 2015 9:13am
209 Views
Post# 24067733

Why the Shorts are Going to Have a Field Day Today

Why the Shorts are Going to Have a Field Day Today
Oil falls 3 percent on weak China factory data
1 hour ago - Reuters
Oil falls more than 4 percent on weak Chinese data

By Christopher Johnson

LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices fell sharply on Tuesday after official data showed China's manufacturing sector, one of the main engines powering the world's biggest energy consumer, contracted at its fastest pace in three years.

China's official Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) dropped to 49.7 in August from 50.0 in July, reinforcing concerns over the world's second-largest economy.

The figures helped spur a retreat in oil prices after three days of hefty gains. Investors took profits after Brent and U.S. crude both soared more than 8 percent on Monday, traders said.

"It was primarily the China fear factor," Carsten Fritsch at Commerzbank in Frankfurt told the Reuters Global Oil Forum.

Benchmark Brent crude <LCOc1> dropped $2.45 to a low of $51.70 a barrel. It was trading around $51.90 by 1252 GMT. On Monday, Brent climbed $4.10, or 8.2 percent, extending a rally from a 6-1/2-year low at just above $42 on Aug. 26.

U.S. crude <CLc1> was down $1.75 at $47.45 a barrel. On Monday it settled up $3.98, or 8.8 percent.

Oil prices rallied from their lowest levels since the global financial crisis in what traders said was a bout of short-covering after more than three months of falls.

Figures from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) on Monday showed U.S. oil output peaked at just above 9.6 million barrels per day (bpd) in April before falling by more than 300,000 bpd over the following two months.

 

But the global market is still heavily oversupplied.

Oil producers in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries are pumping over 2 million bpd more than required, forecasters say, filling oil stockpiles worldwide.

A Reuters poll on Tuesday forecast Brent would average $62.30 a barrel in 2016, down $6.70 from projections a month earlier. <ReutersLink ID='O/POLL' />

Bank of America Merrill Lynch said it was lowering its 2016 and 2017 crude oil projections because balances looked soft and oil production costs were falling:

"Growth concerns around China, coupled with the expectation of increased Iranian output in 2016, have temporarily driven oil prices even lower than we anticipated," Merrill Lynch said.

Global demand is also faltering in some regions.

Monthly surveys show manufacturing struggling across Asia: an 11th successive contraction in Indonesia, a sixth contraction in South Korea and the weakest reading in nearly three years in Taiwan. Activity in India also slowed from July.

Investors awaited U.S. data, including oil stocks, manufacturing and vehicle sales, due later on Tuesday. <ReutersLink ID='EIA/S' />

 

(Additional reporting by Keith Wallis in Singapore; Editing by Dale Hudson and Jason Neely)

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