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Cardinal Energy Ltd (Alberta) T.CJ

Alternate Symbol(s):  CRLFF

Cardinal Energy Ltd. is a Canadian oil and natural gas company with operations focused on low decline oil in Western Canada. The Company is engaged in the acquisition, development, optimization and production of crude oil and natural gas in the provinces of Alberta, British Columbia and Saskatchewan. Its operating areas include the Midale, South District, Central District, and North District. Its Midale operating area of over 730 million barrels of original oil in place (OOIP) and its low decline in production of 3,200 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boe/d) (net) is supported by both waterflood and CO2 enhanced oil recovery. Its South District operating area is located east of Calgary in southeastern Alberta and produces medium gravity crude, as well as liquids-rich natural gas. Its Central District operation is located in East Central Alberta, which is focused on producing oil from multiple, large OOIP pools. Its North area includes Grande Prairie, Clearwater and other properties.


TSX:CJ - Post by User

Post by traderlong2on Nov 25, 2020 8:09pm
914 Views
Post# 31975637

energy summary tonight in stockwatch

energy summary tonight in stockwatch

Elsewhere in Alberta, Scott Ratushny's Cardinal Energy Ltd. (CJ) added four cents to 56 cents on 848,100 shares, following a coy announcement about its credit facility. For context, Cardinal has been trying for months to relieve the financial pressure caused by the downturn. It suspended its dividend, gutted its budget, announced salary reductions and other cost cuts, and shut in up to one-quarter of its 20,000-barrel-a-day production (with 10 to 15 per cent remaining shut in as of now). Its bankers rather unhelpfully responded by slashing its credit facility to $225-million from $325-million and placing restrictions on how the facility could be used. For example, Cardinal was informed that it was not allowed to repay debentures using the facility. As things stood on Sept. 30, 2020, Cardinal had $44-million in outstanding debentures (including $16-million maturing this Dec. 31) and $205-million in bank debt. For months, it has been warning of "material uncertainties which may cast significant doubt with respect to the company's ability to continue as a going concern."

Last night, it eased some of the concerns by announcing that it has "agreed to a term sheet, reflecting extensive discussions with certain existing and new lenders, that would provide Cardinal with longer-term certainty around its credit facility." It was being deliberately vague because the agreement is still awaiting formal approvals. The big question is the identity of the new lenders, particularly as Cardinal has made no secret of its desire to take advantage of the government's COVID-19-related liquidity support programs. These programs were announced back in April but have taken several months to deploy. InPlay Oil Corp. (IPO: $0.235) was the first energy company to announce a term sheet for a debt facility with Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC) in August, yet the facility was not actually finalized until November. Fortunately, the pace seems to have picked up a bit lately, with Surge Energy Inc. (SGY: $0.305) announcing a BDC facility (and a separate agreement with Export Development Canada) in early November and then closing it just two weeks later. Whether Cardinal is having similar luck securing federal funds will remain a mystery for a bit longer. The company says it expects to provide an update by Dec. 15.

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