Trades and observations from a British contrarian stock investor

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Saturday, February 19, 2011

Portfolio review of the week - 19th February 2011

Despite continued violence in Bahrain and an increase in Chinese interest rates to curb inflation, the FTSE 100  ended only marginally down at 6,083, a decline of 4 points giving a 20 point or 0.3% rise over the week.  The Dow Jones Industrial Average  rose 73 points, or 0.6%, to 12,391 its highest close for two and a half years.The Nasdaq rose 2, to 2,834, its highest close since October 31, 2007.

Violence is escalating in Bahrain between Sunni Muslim rulers and its Shiite majority population. Though ICE Brent for April was slightly lower at $102.52, after trading from $100.73 to $103.50. WTI U.S. crude finished at $86, down 0.2%.

Despite a strong oil price this week, the Contrarian Investor UK portfolio has suffered a second week of weakness. Its been a week of selling as I have de-leveraged on Xcite Energy (XEL) and sold my stake in Angel Mining.

Xcite Energy (XEL) - Xcite lost 29p or nearly 8% this week to finish at 353p as rumours continue to grow of a fund raising at around 350p to accompany the CPR (Competent Persons Report) which will move contingent resources to proven reserves and allow field development to begin. Though the CPR is expected to be positive, giving reserves of 225-250 million barrels of oil for the Bentley field, at least £200 million in shares is likely to be placed with institutions. With the price spiking to close to 400p last week on takeover rumours and with the likelihood of share price weakness, I took the opportunity to sell some of the holding to allow funds for acquisitions of other shares in the case of a market fall.

Bowleven (BLVN) - Bowleven dropped yet another 3.2% this week with news from the Sapele 1 side track several weeks away. At 318p, this appears bargain basement given the resources already discovered in Cameroon but sales by the BT Pension fund have helped move down the price. Frustrating given the upside potential in this share and it is now 9p below the last placing in October 2010.

Rockhopper (RKH) - Rockhopper dropped another 5% this week with the impact of the market disappointment from the 14/10-3 North Falklands basin well still being felt. The spudding of 14/10-4 which is much closer to the SeaLion discovery is due any day.  On fundamentals Rockhopper now looks very cheap. Its market capitalisation of £682 million, means that with £200 million in the bank deducted, Sea Lion's 170 million barrels are valued at just over $4 a barrel with no upside whatsoever. 14/10-3 is likely to add 40 million barrels to the discovery alone. Painful to be down on this one, but I believe patience will be rewarded and buyers will return with 7 wells yet to be drilled and a high COS (probability of success) on the new well.

Angel Mining (ANGM) - I lost patience with Angel Mining after we went into the 3rd week of February with no news from their Nalulaq gold mine. In my view no news is bad news, so I sold. Good long term prospects but things are very tight on cash flow and the last thing investors need is a cash call or increase in the SEDA (equity drawdown agreement).

Weatherly International (WTI) - Good to see copper miner Weatherly bounce on Friday to 12.4p (but still 5% down on the week) on news that Blackrock Smaller Companies has built a 7% share. This doesn't surprise since the constantly widening spread seemed to indicate the the market makers were playing some sort of game to accomodate some large block buys. Its good to see Blackrock involved to a greater extent a long with Gartmore as production ramps up in this really exciting Namibian copper company.  I am sure that we won't be seeing 12p for long with Copper at record highs and so much news to come from WTI in the coming months. I put a big slug into my SIPP pension plan earlier in the week because the risk/reward was excellent at less than 12p.

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