YPFD YPF S.A.
Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
Me parece que buscara la resistencia en 13,5 hoy.
Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
Algún entendido que analice los volumenes.
Gracias!
Gracias!
Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
Ojo si pasa los 13,00 - 13,10
Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
Se sigue hundiendo!
El viernes el intradiario mostraba claramente un "posible" soporte.
Esta volatilidad es por incertidumbre?
El viernes el intradiario mostraba claramente un "posible" soporte.
Esta volatilidad es por incertidumbre?
Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
borges escribió:que absurda forma de empezar la mañana, ofertando mas caro de lo que el vendedor pide ....
Pampa arrancó igual...
Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
que absurda forma de empezar la mañana, ofertando mas caro de lo que el vendedor pide ....
Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
adr en baja. Será que va a buscar los 12.5 nuevamente? De ir ahí, sería la tercera vez que explora ese valor, desde el AT nos da alguna información eso?
Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
YPF intentará cerrar el acuerdo con Chevron
Galuccio se reúne en Buenos Aires esta semana con Alí Moshiri para acordar inversiones; el límite es julio.Si hay acuerdo un importante empuje
Galuccio se reúne en Buenos Aires esta semana con Alí Moshiri para acordar inversiones; el límite es julio.Si hay acuerdo un importante empuje

Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
Si el FT dice esto, yo voy jugado y pido caja:
High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our Ts&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Email ftsales.support@ft.com to buy additional rights. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/3153596a-bb09 ... z2TB4Jy58A
May 12, 2013 10:27 pm
Legal sanctions force Chevron into Argentina rethink
By Jude Webber in Buenos Aires
Chevron has been forced to retool a partnership to develop massive shale oil reserves in Argentina because of legal sanctions in Ecuador.
Chevron’s plans to develop the giant Vaca Muerta shale formation with Argentine energy group YPF had been thrown into question by a legal judgment freezing Chevron’s Argentine assets. But Miguel Galuccio, chief executive of YPF, has told the Financial Times the two companies are close to agreement on a new plan to get around the asset freeze.
More
ON THIS TOPIC
YPF signs preliminary Dow Argentina deal
High oil prices bolsters YPF profit
YPF signs $1.5bn shale field deal
YPF and Chevron agree $1bn drilling deal
IN OIL & GAS
Nick Butler Galileo and fracking
Hess to split top jobs
LNG deal opens door for Texas imports to UK
Eni sells 12% stake in Snam for €1.5bn
“We are working on a different acquisition structure,” Mr Galuccio said in his first interview on the progress of the joint-venture. He also said Chevron’s investment could be $1.5bn, bigger than the $1bn so far pencilled in, although details of the deal have not yet been finalised.
“The deal will be around $1bn to $1.5bn,” Mr Galucio said, with some $600m to be disbursed this year. Mr Galucio said he expected a final deal to be, “completed in the next couple of months.”
A successful deal would be a boost to Chevron in Latin America, where it has been hit with a $19bn environmental damages bill in Ecuador, and to Argentina’s hopes of developing its shale resources. The Vaca Muerta is universally regarded as an enviable asset, but its development has been far from smooth.
Argentina renationalised YPF last year, ousting the Spanish group Repsol as majority shareholder, and Repsol has since bought lawsuits against the government, YPF and Chevron. Stubbornly high inflation, import restrictions, and foreign exchange controls that make it difficult for companies to get money out of the country have also restrained a hoped-for flood of shale investment.
The Chevron-YPF deal, which YPF had expected to wrap up by now, had to be rethought after Chevron’s Argentine assets were frozen under a legal action stemming from the environmental case against Chevron in Ecuador.
Ali Moshiri, Chevron’s president for Latin America and Africa, told the Financial Times in emailed comments “good progress” had been made in talks with YPF. “The [Ecuador] plaintiffs’ lawyers have no legal right to embargo subsidiary assets in Argentina and should not be allowed to disrupt Argentina’s pursuit of its important energy resources,” he asserted.
Despite the delays to the Chevron deal, Mr Galuccio says YPF has already begun the ramp-up of its pilot shale oil project in the western province of Neuquén.
“We are already drilling in factory mode. In January 2012, we had four unconventional rigs active; at the end of May, we will have 14 and we are planning to reach 19 by the end of the year,” Mr Galuccio said.
As a result, Vaca Muerta production has nearly doubled to an average of 7,000 barrels per day from 4,000 at the start of this year, of which the majority is shale oil. Mr Galuccio says factory mode – systematic drilling by teams of rigs – has slashed well costs by 20 per cent.
He says YPF has so far drilled 50 Vaca Muerta development and 8 exploration wells. “The programme is 100 per cent launched . . . For YPF, the shale boom has already begun. The question is how soon other companies will follow suit.”
YPF, which has been aggressively selling debt in Argentina and has raised $380m in dollars and 3.35bn pesos ($640m) this year alone, is expecting to sign a shale gas deal with Dow Chemical, the US group, in parallel with the Chevron deal. But other companies in the sector largely remain in wait-and-see mode.
Mr Moshiri said the company is “firmly committed . . . to helping Argentina achieve its goal of returning to energy self-sufficiency” and helping it become an exporter again via Vaca Muerta.
High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our Ts&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Email ftsales.support@ft.com to buy additional rights. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/3153596a-bb09 ... z2TB4Jy58A
May 12, 2013 10:27 pm
Legal sanctions force Chevron into Argentina rethink
By Jude Webber in Buenos Aires
Chevron has been forced to retool a partnership to develop massive shale oil reserves in Argentina because of legal sanctions in Ecuador.
Chevron’s plans to develop the giant Vaca Muerta shale formation with Argentine energy group YPF had been thrown into question by a legal judgment freezing Chevron’s Argentine assets. But Miguel Galuccio, chief executive of YPF, has told the Financial Times the two companies are close to agreement on a new plan to get around the asset freeze.
More
ON THIS TOPIC
YPF signs preliminary Dow Argentina deal
High oil prices bolsters YPF profit
YPF signs $1.5bn shale field deal
YPF and Chevron agree $1bn drilling deal
IN OIL & GAS
Nick Butler Galileo and fracking
Hess to split top jobs
LNG deal opens door for Texas imports to UK
Eni sells 12% stake in Snam for €1.5bn
“We are working on a different acquisition structure,” Mr Galuccio said in his first interview on the progress of the joint-venture. He also said Chevron’s investment could be $1.5bn, bigger than the $1bn so far pencilled in, although details of the deal have not yet been finalised.
“The deal will be around $1bn to $1.5bn,” Mr Galucio said, with some $600m to be disbursed this year. Mr Galucio said he expected a final deal to be, “completed in the next couple of months.”
A successful deal would be a boost to Chevron in Latin America, where it has been hit with a $19bn environmental damages bill in Ecuador, and to Argentina’s hopes of developing its shale resources. The Vaca Muerta is universally regarded as an enviable asset, but its development has been far from smooth.
Argentina renationalised YPF last year, ousting the Spanish group Repsol as majority shareholder, and Repsol has since bought lawsuits against the government, YPF and Chevron. Stubbornly high inflation, import restrictions, and foreign exchange controls that make it difficult for companies to get money out of the country have also restrained a hoped-for flood of shale investment.
The Chevron-YPF deal, which YPF had expected to wrap up by now, had to be rethought after Chevron’s Argentine assets were frozen under a legal action stemming from the environmental case against Chevron in Ecuador.
Ali Moshiri, Chevron’s president for Latin America and Africa, told the Financial Times in emailed comments “good progress” had been made in talks with YPF. “The [Ecuador] plaintiffs’ lawyers have no legal right to embargo subsidiary assets in Argentina and should not be allowed to disrupt Argentina’s pursuit of its important energy resources,” he asserted.
Despite the delays to the Chevron deal, Mr Galuccio says YPF has already begun the ramp-up of its pilot shale oil project in the western province of Neuquén.
“We are already drilling in factory mode. In January 2012, we had four unconventional rigs active; at the end of May, we will have 14 and we are planning to reach 19 by the end of the year,” Mr Galuccio said.
As a result, Vaca Muerta production has nearly doubled to an average of 7,000 barrels per day from 4,000 at the start of this year, of which the majority is shale oil. Mr Galuccio says factory mode – systematic drilling by teams of rigs – has slashed well costs by 20 per cent.
He says YPF has so far drilled 50 Vaca Muerta development and 8 exploration wells. “The programme is 100 per cent launched . . . For YPF, the shale boom has already begun. The question is how soon other companies will follow suit.”
YPF, which has been aggressively selling debt in Argentina and has raised $380m in dollars and 3.35bn pesos ($640m) this year alone, is expecting to sign a shale gas deal with Dow Chemical, the US group, in parallel with the Chevron deal. But other companies in the sector largely remain in wait-and-see mode.
Mr Moshiri said the company is “firmly committed . . . to helping Argentina achieve its goal of returning to energy self-sufficiency” and helping it become an exporter again via Vaca Muerta.
Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
conelmate escribió:Soy nuevo en el foro, y me ha servido de mucho los comentarios.
Quisiera saber si es conveniente comprar ahora, ya que el MACD y la media 21/42 dan compra.
Depende si jugás a medio o largo plazo. Esta semana Galuccio buscará cerrar acuerdo con Chevron.
http://www.iprofesional.com/notas/16058 ... on-Chevron
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Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
Entrevistado por El Cronista, el economista Eduardo Levy Yeyati
http://www.cronista.com/finanzasmercado ... -0016.html
http://www.cronista.com/finanzasmercado ... -0016.html
Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
Sí, digamos que el Jueves me comí una bajada de 4% en general y estoy reticente a entrar. De todos modos es mejor tener la plata en acciones y no parada. Supongo que esperaré a ver que pasa hoy y en tal caso entrar mañana. Gracias
Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
conelmate escribió:Soy nuevo en el foro, y me ha servido de mucho los comentarios.
Quisiera saber si es conveniente comprar ahora, ya que el MACD y la media 21/42 dan compra.
La pregunta es si siendo nuevo seras capaz de fijarte un stop loss y respetarlo en caso de que los precios no vayan a donde vos crees. Y si estas preguntando en un foro si comprar o no comprar yo creo que no lo harás. Mejor espera la confirmación de una salida y deja la ganga para otros. Mi humilde recomendación.

Re: YPFD YPF S.A.
Soy nuevo en el foro, y me ha servido de mucho los comentarios.
Quisiera saber si es conveniente comprar ahora, ya que el MACD y la media 21/42 dan compra.
Quisiera saber si es conveniente comprar ahora, ya que el MACD y la media 21/42 dan compra.
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