RE:RE:RE:Oversold (globe and mail)Lol
yes, via DRIP
I freely admit it’s not a lot of money, but these guys seemingly think there’s something criminal about ANY divvy being paid until the bank is paid off. If a M&A opportunity falls in their lap that they can’t pass up, I’m sure they’ll work out a way to do it. Until then they seem to be doing fine with their internal E&P program.
Fantome wrote: Sadie222 wrote: What do you say when you have nothing to say? Something like that. The NCIB is modest, and voluntary. They can still pay down debt as needed, but they can also give some support to the SP (and the balance sheet) by buying back shares occasionally. That’s dividend money kept in the bank and a reduced share count to share the NAV.
BudFox198777777 wrote: The Calgary-based company announced production of 103,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, meeting the consensus estimate on the Street (103,800 boe/d). Cash flow of $1.42 fell short of the consensus projection ($1.52).
AltaCorp analyst Patrick O’Rourke said: “Overall, we view the event as neutral, given modest underperformance of street expectations for production and cash flow (most of which was explainable due to unplanned French refinery downtime) resulted in no change to FY19 guidance. Entry into Ukraine fits well with existing CEE assets, and requires minimal capital commitment/risk. The NCIB announcement will satisfy some investors that continue to advocate for the strategy, but in our view debt repayment which allows the company financial flexibility to pursue accretive activities in the future remains the preferred deployment for FCF.”
sadie.P and in the 2Q report the difference between dividends declared and net dividends was over 8 million...so while they did announce a buyback authorization..they are still issuing new shares every month