Warren Resources Inc. (WRES)
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WRES Forum Topics
Recent WRES Articles
- Oil Consumption: How Does Today Compare to 1980?
- Warren Resources: Untapped Reserves in a Soaring Industry
- New Frontier Energy to Benefit From Rapid Development in the Atlantic Rim
- Earnings Schedule and Estimates for Tuesday, Feb. 28
- Free cash flow for 2005
- Some are more leveraged to Oil than others
-
Stocks Covered by The Energy Stock Blog
on Oct 09, 2004| by
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Stocks Covered by The Energy Stock Blog [view article]
ABP synbol has been changed to AXAS. I tried changing the symbol, but it doesn't recognize the new symbol. I enjoy reading Alpha Stock Alerts. Thank you. ReplyOil Consumption: How Does Today Compare to 1980? [view article]
It has come to: "any stock serving a commodity need, regardless of it's internals, hasbecome attached to the price of the underlying traded commodity."
Well, that statement will definitely cause a ton of "so whats", "they always have", "tell
us something we don't know", and a chorus of some vile insults.
As great a company is (RIG etc.) it will fall like a rock these days when that underlying
commodity gets traded to what is perceived as a trend. "Hey !!! They are buying/selling
crude down there as if this were Monopoly.......The stockholder then thinks of nothing
redeeming on his favorite sector and unloads his position.
That is not even ground and unless I get some confirmation on direction I have to
view the stock with jaundiced eyes.......and that is not how I view stocks for any
holding term.
Thanks
On Jun 02 11:12 AM Right in San Francisco wrote:
> au contraire. For short term investors, the question may be whether
> the current price reflects the current information. For longer term
> investors, the question is "do the underlying factors and trends
> suggest that the current situation will continue." The key equation
> for me is the inexorable, broad-based growth relative to the constraints
> in supply. Any time I can get more data on this, it is helpful.
>
> RightinSanFrancisco.co... Reply
Oil Consumption: How Does Today Compare to 1980? [view article]
PDE, RIG and DO are still undervalued. And right now they are a buy.RIG:
TTM P/E of 9.82
PEG of .3
TTM EPS is 15.14
Growth (via Yahoo) is 31.48% a year for the next 5 years.
Yes, RIG is waaaay undervalued.
I don't know about the others.
I do know that "The Real Expert" is really angry! Grrrr. And he had to post twice to make his point. I read his other posts as well. Maybe he needs a hug. :-) Reply
Oil Consumption: How Does Today Compare to 1980? [view article]
Hmmmm ... Let's see.... CWEI ... "still remarkably inexpensive", where at $94.79 today, it's only a mere triple from $30 in December (just 6 months!)??? I wonder at what point it becomes "expensive"?Looks more than a little too hyperbolic for my money. I'd run for the exit on this one if I had any money in it. Reply
Oil Consumption: How Does Today Compare to 1980? [view article]
Clayton Williams (CWEI) is still remarkably inexpensive. Thanks for the info! ReplyOil Consumption: How Does Today Compare to 1980? [view article]
Not late to the game on at least one of the picks above. Clayton Williams (CWEI) looks remarkably inexpensive.Reply
speculator
Oil Consumption: How Does Today Compare to 1980? [view article]
oil is going up. I write about it today @ theinvestingspeculator... ReplySan
Francisco
Oil Consumption: How Does Today Compare to 1980? [view article]
au contraire. For short term investors, the question may be whether the current price reflects the current information. For longer term investors, the question is "do the underlying factors and trends suggest that the current situation will continue." The key equation for me is the inexorable, broad-based growth relative to the constraints in supply. Any time I can get more data on this, it is helpful.RightinSanFrancisco.co... Reply
Oil Consumption: How Does Today Compare to 1980? [view article]
Not very helpful. I think most of us know that India and China are using more oil. The real question is have stock prices gotten to far in front of demand and why or why not? My opinion, it is smelling and acting like a bubble so stay away. ReplyExpert
Oil Consumption: How Does Today Compare to 1980? [view article]
No one wants to buy your crappy research. If Wall Street reserach stinks (and it does) then yours stinks by a factor of 10,000 more. You guys are really clowns and you need to realize that and stop trying to make people think you are not. ReplyExpert
Oil Consumption: How Does Today Compare to 1980? [view article]
A little late in these picks aren't you? It doesn't take a genius atthis point to push the oil stocks. Wow you guys are pinheads. In fact, this might be a good sign to start bailing on oil stocks - when the idiots start pushing them it's usually a good contrarian indicator. ReplyEditors
General Discussion on WRES
Is this a buy or a sell? ReplyNew Frontier Energy to Benefit From Rapid Development in the Atlantic Rim [view article]
you should also disclose that the company is a client of yours! Reply