RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:mhpagain you will be taken far more seriously if you STOP using messgage board newbie phrases like "share float" and START using phrases like "total shares outstanding"
share float is an ENTIRELY different concept than shares outstanding. you may wish to visit investopedia and compare the two phrases.
I have to hand it to you for FINALLY realizing that fcf PER SHARE (and not of float) of OUTSTANDING shares, is what is important. It's ironic because 2021 may be the first year POU has ever bothered to produce free cash flow.
as for "pie in the sky" estimates of POU free cash flow per share for next year, I will leave it to you and the other TWO musketeers who inhabit this echo chamber to ruminate over.
meanwhile I will stick to "non fiction"...
Robertboblaw wrote: uncutgems wrote: i don't believe you know what FCF even is...and how it's calculated. has nothing to do with share float...
Did I say share float has anything to do with free cash flow dumb@ss?? Here, I'll explain it to you another way, but simpler since you clearly are new to this investing thing and don't have two marbles to scratch together....POU $400mm free cash flow in 2022 (*projected based on current year fcf thus far: no underwater hedges, 80k boes, 45% oil, $80 oil) against 120mm shares = $3.25 in fcf PER SHARE (since you clearly don't understand this concept) TOU $1.4b projected fcf (I believe i saw a recent analyst protection for Tou in the $1.5b ball park) against 300mm shares = $4.65 fcf per share. Yes, TOU will in all likeliness produce more fcf next year PER SHARE than POU (are you getting this PER SHARE concept yet??) but POU will be right there behind them... Man, ppl like you should stay off the internet altogether seriously. I don't usually engage in this type of stuff, but you're insights into the investing/finance world are laughably bad...ignore list