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Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:49 pm
por Bati
Fotón escribió: A que hora el balance Batiiiiiiiiii!!

no no se

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:48 pm
por Fotón
Bati escribió: Se armaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

A que hora el balance Batiiiiiiiiii!!

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:44 pm
por ElNegro
Fotón escribió: Se arma en MIST :)

:respeto:

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:44 pm
por Bati
Fotón escribió: Se arma en MIST :)

Se armaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:42 pm
por Fotón
Se arma en MIST :)

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:19 pm
por ElNegro
Matu84 escribió: No le sigo la cotizacion pero que te puedo decir, WLL subio un 500 % despues de la BK, mercado irracional??

Es de no creer....
Pura timba :2230:

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:16 pm
por Matu84
ElNegro escribió: Pero sube un 7%

No le sigo la cotizacion pero que te puedo decir, WLL subio un 500 % despues de la BK, mercado irracional??

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:12 pm
por ElNegro
Matu84 escribió: Perforadores al horno, sabes que significa? Menos oferta por lo tanto mayores precios de perforacion, mayores costos para los productores. A los perforadores los vienen secando hace tiempo, y las productoras ponen en sus balances menores costos de perforación porque los vienen desangrando hace tiempo. Los que queden van a ser los ganadores (SB-HAL)

Pero sube un 7%

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:11 pm
por newbie
Bati escribió: A mi la verdad que tampoco. No me gusta estar adentro cuando viene el balance. Es una lotería.

Arranca o no arranca DYNT !?!?!?!

Comparto Bati, jamas me gusta estar adentro de un pelpa cuando viene el balance a menos que le tenga toda la fe.

Ahora con TD cada vez que veo un papel chequeo cuando tiene balance, total con el TOS te lo marca ahi mismo con el ticker del pelpa, un lujo

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:09 pm
por Matu84
PiConsultora escribió: SB es SLB? Supongo así será.

Si si, falto la L

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:08 pm
por PiConsultora
Matu84 escribió: Perforadores al horno, sabes que significa? Menos oferta por lo tanto mayores precios de perforacion, mayores costos para los productores. A los perforadores los vienen secando hace tiempo, y las productoras ponen en sus balances menores costos de perforación porque los vienen desangrando hace tiempo. Los que queden van a ser los ganadores (SB-HAL)

SB es SLB? Supongo así será.

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:04 pm
por Matu84
newbie escribió: Lic. en Relaciones del Trabajo por la UBA y después diplomado en Derecho del Trabajo por la Univ Austral, casi arranco abogacía en derecho pero después vi que la economía era lo mío y ya enfile para estos lares sin ánimos de cambiar mas

A la pregunta de que es un lic en rel. del trab. respondo siempre que es una mezcla de abogado laboralista (pero sin matricula que es lo que vale) con gerente de recursos humanos y sociologo, una quimera :lol:

:respeto: :respeto:

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:02 pm
por Matu84
PiConsultora escribió: https://seekingalpha.com/article/434156 ... uptcy-soon

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Valaris May Need To Consider Bankruptcy Soon
Apr. 30, 2020 1:38 PM ETValaris plc (VAL)RIG, SDRL10 Comments9 Likes
Summary
Valaris reports its first-quarter results, and it's a nightmarish report.
The company records a net loss of $3 billion as it has to scrap modern rigs.
Operating cash flow is -$204 million. Valaris is not a viable enterprise with the current capital structure.
I expect a complete wipeout of the common equity and further scrapping of rigs as Valaris tries to survive as a business.
Valaris (NYSE:VAL) has just reported its first-quarter results and they look very ugly. The company reported revenue of $457 million and net loss of $3 billion (!) which was driven by the decision to scrap modern rigs.

Finally, this day has come: a major driller decided to scrap modern floaters. In the press release, Valaris announced its decision to retire drillships Valaris DS-3 (2010), Valaris DS-5 (2011), Valaris DS-6 (2012) and semi-subs Valaris 8500 (2008), Valaris 8501 (2009) and Valaris 8502 (2010).

I'd note that drillships Valaris DS-4 (2010), Valaris DS-11 (2013) and Valaris DS-17 (2014) remain cold stacked together with semi-subs Valaris 8504 (2011) and Valaris 8506 (2012).

In addition to drillships, Valaris decided to retire jack-ups Valaris JU-71 (1982), Valaris JU-75 (1999), Valaris JU-87 (1982), Valaris JU-100 (1987), Valaris JU-104 (2002), Valaris JU-105 (2002) and Valaris JU-109 (2008).

The decision to scrap modern rigs is a move to adjust the fleet ahead of the upcoming restructuring so that the "new" company does not have to deal with the cost of stacking rigs that have no chance to work again. This is a good move for the industry, and I'd expect similar "adjustments" during the restructuring processes in other industry players.


Valaris finished the first quarter with $185 million of cash on the balance sheet, $225 million of short-term debt maturities, $6.15 billion of long-term debt and $1.3 billion available under the credit facility. The company had to rely on credit facility during the quarter since it had only $97 million of cash at the end of 2019. Operating cash flow performance was horrendous, and Valaris used as much as $204 million of cash in its operations. This is absolutely not sustainable.

The company commented:

"[…] we expect to continue to report losses and negative cash flows throughout the remainder of the year […] We are also evaluating various alternatives to address our capital structure and annual interest costs, including, without limitation, a comprehensive debt restructuring that may require a substantial conversion of our indebtedness into equity".

Valaris is simply too big for the current market environment and it does not have much support from its $1.9 billion backlog. The company is burning through cash at a very fast pace so it should draw the available amount under the credit facility and enter into bankruptcy. "Substantial conversion" of debt into equity will only help if the company wipes out the common equity completely and emerges with zero debt on the balance sheet, fully equitizing the existing indebtedness.

In this scenario, Valaris will have a chance to continue operating as a business. Also, the company will likely need to scrap more rigs that roll off contracts or are without contracts in order to save money as I do not believe that it will find an investor who will be ready to provide additional cash for the business. Thus, it will have to rely on the liquidity it will borrow from the credit facility to support its operations up until the time it becomes a financially viable enterprise again.



Valaris still has about $50 million of market capitalization but its true value is zero. The question is not whether the common equity can receive a token recovery or not. The question is whether the company, which burns through cash at an alarming rate and whose size is inappropriate for the post-coronavirus oil world, can actually survive as a business. In these circumstances, there's certainly no hope left for the common equity.


Valaris' best chance is to file for bankruptcy as soon as possible to stop the bleeding from interest payments and try to right-size the operation for the future. For the industry, Valaris problems are a blessing because the company's attempts to survive as a business will lead to more rig scrapping. Perhaps, we'll see a similar scenario during the upcoming restructuring of Seadrill (SDRL) which also has many rigs to scrap.

Investors should stay away from the stock. Traders may try their luck on big positive days for oil prices, awaiting for a repeat of price action at the beginning of April, but I think that speculative trading will gradually shift to Transocean (RIG) shares since Transocean has no immediate liquidity problems (although I believe that it will also need to restructure its debt).

Perforadores al horno, sabes que significa? Menos oferta por lo tanto mayores precios de perforacion, mayores costos para los productores. A los perforadores los vienen secando hace tiempo, y las productoras ponen en sus balances menores costos de perforación porque los vienen desangrando hace tiempo. Los que queden van a ser los ganadores (SB-HAL)

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:02 pm
por Fotón
Bati escribió: jajaja justo comentaba.... tiene que despegar en algún momento.

El tema es que sin noticias no la vas a ver superar el dolar pero bueno son unas monedas para el que entro
en 0.75 :)

Re: Papeles volátiles (Small caps)

Publicado: Jue Abr 30, 2020 4:01 pm
por newbie
Matu84 escribió: Sos abogado newbie?

Lic. en Relaciones del Trabajo por la UBA y después diplomado en Derecho del Trabajo por la Univ Austral, casi arranco abogacía en derecho pero después vi que la economía era lo mío y ya enfile para estos lares sin ánimos de cambiar mas

A la pregunta de que es un lic en rel. del trab. respondo siempre que es una mezcla de abogado laboralista (pero sin matricula que es lo que vale) con gerente de recursos humanos y sociologo, una quimera :lol: