
YPFD YPF S.A.
Re: YPFD Repsol YPF

Re: YPFD Repsol YPF
jesus330 escribió:Lo acabo de escuchar a Slim hijo por radio 10 hablando con Oro, que no descartan analizar el ingreso a YPF ya que ellos estan en empresas que fabrican plataformas petroleras
Radio 10 es de Cristobal Lopez ....
Re: YPFD Repsol YPF
jesus330 escribió:Lo acabo de escuchar a Slim hijo por radio 10 hablando con Oro, que no descartan analizar el ingreso a YPF ya que ellos estan en empresas que fabrican plataformas petroleras
Cuando el gobierno me dice que Clarin Miente le creo. Ojo con Radio 10 y estas notas que parecen estar todas armadas. Yo buscaria informacion en otro lado.
Saludos
Re: YPFD Repsol YPF
Pre-Market : 2.555 

Re: YPFD Repsol YPF


Re: YPFD Repsol YPF
Carlos Slim, the world’s richest person, prefers placing his bets on infrastructure, a philosophy that colors his investments from Argentine oil producer YPF SA to phone carrier Telekom Austria AG (TKA), his eldest son said.
“We try to put it in a very simple way: We are committed to develop physical structure, physical capital, human capital,” Carlos Slim Domit, the 45-year-old co-chairman of America Movil SAB (AMXL), said in an interview in Los Cabos, Mexico. “It’s about development and continuous efficiency.”
Play Video
June 19 (Bloomberg) -- Carlos Slim Domit, the eldest son of the world’s richest person and chairman of the billionaire’s holding company Grupo Carso SAB, talks about his family's business strategy. Carlos Slim prefers placing his bets on infrastructure, a philosophy that colors his investments from Argentine oil producer YPF SA to phone carrier Telekom Austria AG, Slim Domit said. He spoke yesterday in Los Cabos, Mexico, with Bloomberg's Crayton Harrison. (Source: Bloomberg)
The Slims’ strategy has led them on a wild ride in the past month, with an unrequited overture to the former Dutch phone monopoly, a deal to invest in Austria’s communications market, and a YPF SA (YPFD) stake that fell into their laps, according to Slim Domit. While the family is confident about its investments in Europe, it’s still determining what to do with YPF, he said.
Shareholders in Slim’s companies have endured their own roller coaster. Slim’s foray into Europe has sent shares of his wireless carrier, America Movil, plummeting. YPF, meanwhile, has soared since Slim disclosed an investment, even though he’s stated he never planned to buy the oil producer’s shares.
The elder Slim’s fortune has climbed 11 percent to $68.1 billion this year, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. About 60 percent of that comes from a controlling stake in America Movil, the largest phone carrier in the Western Hemisphere by subscribers. The rest is from a collection of mining, banking, retail, construction and other assets.
Last week in a regulatory filing, YPF disclosed that Slim’s bank and a separate investment vehicle control 32.9 million of the Buenos Aires-based company’s Class D shares, or an 8.4 percent stake worth $375 million. The billionaire’s bank Grupo Financiero Inbursa SAB was among financial groups that received YPF shares as collateral after a default, Slim Domit said. The default was by the Petersen Group, run by Argentina’s Eskenazi family, according to the filing.
’Not Planned’
“It was something that came up, not planned,” Slim Domit said. “It’s a thing that happened, so we’re evaluating.” YPF closed yesterday at 75.50 Argentine pesos, up 14 percent since June 13, the day before Slim disclosed his stake.
Slim, 72, has been dabbling in oil investments for years, including stakes in oil services company Bronco Drilling Co. in 2008 and Allis-Chalmers Energy Inc. in 2007. Both companies were later acquired.
The billionaire’s holding company Grupo Carso SAB, of which Slim Domit is chairman, has an oil services unit which counts Petroleos Mexicanos as its client. The unit, which had sales of 3.1 billion Mexican pesos ($223 million) last year, announced it won a $205 million contract last week to provide three offshore platforms for Pemex, as the Mexican state-owned producer is known.
“Our activity has been more related to building oil platforms, building big-scale infrastructure projects,” Slim Domit said. “Usually this company has been very strong and very good for doing capital goods. We’re more in the building than in other things.”
Building Networks
America Movil is also an investor in infrastructure, spending more than $9 billion this year, with a similar amount budgeted for the next two years, to improve its network across Latin America. Now it aims to meld its strategy with its two European investment targets.
The carrier announced a $3.4 billion bid last month to increase its stake in The Hague, Netherlands-based Royal KPN NV (KPN) to as much as 28 percent. The wireless carrier had 8.5 percent of KPN as of yesterday.
America Movil agreed last week to buy a 21 percent stake in Telekom Austria AG from investor Ronny Pecik. Slim’s wireless company purchased 5 percent of the shares and will acquire 16 percent later this year after regulatory approval.
While Austria’s government, Telekom Austria’s largest shareholder, endorsed Slim’s investment, KPN’s management has said Slim’s offer is too low. The KPN offer concludes June 27.
“These are companies with very strong potential to develop and grow, and we can put together good synergies,” Slim Domit said. “To try to buy the company and get responsibility for operations is not our goal. It’s more in supporting the companies to grow.”
America Movil closed yesterday at 17.16 pesos, down 8 percent since the company announced its KPN investment on May 7.
To contact the reporter on this story: Crayton Harrison in Mexico City at tharrison5@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Turner at nturner7@bloomberg.net
“We try to put it in a very simple way: We are committed to develop physical structure, physical capital, human capital,” Carlos Slim Domit, the 45-year-old co-chairman of America Movil SAB (AMXL), said in an interview in Los Cabos, Mexico. “It’s about development and continuous efficiency.”
Play Video
June 19 (Bloomberg) -- Carlos Slim Domit, the eldest son of the world’s richest person and chairman of the billionaire’s holding company Grupo Carso SAB, talks about his family's business strategy. Carlos Slim prefers placing his bets on infrastructure, a philosophy that colors his investments from Argentine oil producer YPF SA to phone carrier Telekom Austria AG, Slim Domit said. He spoke yesterday in Los Cabos, Mexico, with Bloomberg's Crayton Harrison. (Source: Bloomberg)
The Slims’ strategy has led them on a wild ride in the past month, with an unrequited overture to the former Dutch phone monopoly, a deal to invest in Austria’s communications market, and a YPF SA (YPFD) stake that fell into their laps, according to Slim Domit. While the family is confident about its investments in Europe, it’s still determining what to do with YPF, he said.
Shareholders in Slim’s companies have endured their own roller coaster. Slim’s foray into Europe has sent shares of his wireless carrier, America Movil, plummeting. YPF, meanwhile, has soared since Slim disclosed an investment, even though he’s stated he never planned to buy the oil producer’s shares.
The elder Slim’s fortune has climbed 11 percent to $68.1 billion this year, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. About 60 percent of that comes from a controlling stake in America Movil, the largest phone carrier in the Western Hemisphere by subscribers. The rest is from a collection of mining, banking, retail, construction and other assets.
Last week in a regulatory filing, YPF disclosed that Slim’s bank and a separate investment vehicle control 32.9 million of the Buenos Aires-based company’s Class D shares, or an 8.4 percent stake worth $375 million. The billionaire’s bank Grupo Financiero Inbursa SAB was among financial groups that received YPF shares as collateral after a default, Slim Domit said. The default was by the Petersen Group, run by Argentina’s Eskenazi family, according to the filing.
’Not Planned’
“It was something that came up, not planned,” Slim Domit said. “It’s a thing that happened, so we’re evaluating.” YPF closed yesterday at 75.50 Argentine pesos, up 14 percent since June 13, the day before Slim disclosed his stake.
Slim, 72, has been dabbling in oil investments for years, including stakes in oil services company Bronco Drilling Co. in 2008 and Allis-Chalmers Energy Inc. in 2007. Both companies were later acquired.
The billionaire’s holding company Grupo Carso SAB, of which Slim Domit is chairman, has an oil services unit which counts Petroleos Mexicanos as its client. The unit, which had sales of 3.1 billion Mexican pesos ($223 million) last year, announced it won a $205 million contract last week to provide three offshore platforms for Pemex, as the Mexican state-owned producer is known.
“Our activity has been more related to building oil platforms, building big-scale infrastructure projects,” Slim Domit said. “Usually this company has been very strong and very good for doing capital goods. We’re more in the building than in other things.”
Building Networks
America Movil is also an investor in infrastructure, spending more than $9 billion this year, with a similar amount budgeted for the next two years, to improve its network across Latin America. Now it aims to meld its strategy with its two European investment targets.
The carrier announced a $3.4 billion bid last month to increase its stake in The Hague, Netherlands-based Royal KPN NV (KPN) to as much as 28 percent. The wireless carrier had 8.5 percent of KPN as of yesterday.
America Movil agreed last week to buy a 21 percent stake in Telekom Austria AG from investor Ronny Pecik. Slim’s wireless company purchased 5 percent of the shares and will acquire 16 percent later this year after regulatory approval.
While Austria’s government, Telekom Austria’s largest shareholder, endorsed Slim’s investment, KPN’s management has said Slim’s offer is too low. The KPN offer concludes June 27.
“These are companies with very strong potential to develop and grow, and we can put together good synergies,” Slim Domit said. “To try to buy the company and get responsibility for operations is not our goal. It’s more in supporting the companies to grow.”
America Movil closed yesterday at 17.16 pesos, down 8 percent since the company announced its KPN investment on May 7.
To contact the reporter on this story: Crayton Harrison in Mexico City at tharrison5@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Turner at nturner7@bloomberg.net
Re: YPFD Repsol YPF
Argentina’s YPF Offers To Buy Back Dollar Debt At Full Price
By Camila Russo - Jun 18, 2012 4:49 PM GMT-0300
YPF SA (YPFD), the Argentine oil producer that was seized by the government in April, is offering to buy back dollar-denominated bonds after the takeover triggered a change-of-control clause in the securities.
Investors have until July 6 to exercise the put option on the debt due 2028 and will be paid at 100 cents on the dollar on July 20, according to a notice sent to holders dated June 1.
The price on the securities has risen 2.5 cents this month to 97 cents on June 15, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. Trace data show no trades today. YPF shares rose 1.3 percent today to 75.50 pesos at 4:43 p.m. in Buenos Aires.
A clause in the bonds’ prospectus says a put option may be exercised if the Argentine government takes control of 49 percent or more of the company’s outstanding stock. President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner nationalized 51 percent of the company in April.
To contact the reporter on this story: Camila Russo in Buenos Aires at crusso15@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: David Papadopoulos at papadopoulos@bloomberg.net
By Camila Russo - Jun 18, 2012 4:49 PM GMT-0300
YPF SA (YPFD), the Argentine oil producer that was seized by the government in April, is offering to buy back dollar-denominated bonds after the takeover triggered a change-of-control clause in the securities.
Investors have until July 6 to exercise the put option on the debt due 2028 and will be paid at 100 cents on the dollar on July 20, according to a notice sent to holders dated June 1.
The price on the securities has risen 2.5 cents this month to 97 cents on June 15, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. Trace data show no trades today. YPF shares rose 1.3 percent today to 75.50 pesos at 4:43 p.m. in Buenos Aires.
A clause in the bonds’ prospectus says a put option may be exercised if the Argentine government takes control of 49 percent or more of the company’s outstanding stock. President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner nationalized 51 percent of the company in April.
To contact the reporter on this story: Camila Russo in Buenos Aires at crusso15@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: David Papadopoulos at papadopoulos@bloomberg.net
Re: YPFD Repsol YPF
profeta escribió:Chicos el mismo dia que salio de Slim le pegue la noticia de la politica online donde decia que era verso!!!
Espero no hayan perdido plata!!!

Re: YPFD Repsol YPF
jesus330 escribió:CIRUZZO, Pareces nuevo en ésto, eso de subir mucho y luego bajar es común, pero es un indice que si pudo llegar a eso lo volvera a hacer, ya está cerca con el aumento de hoy.Además aprece que se enojan cuando alguna acción sube y no compraron que debe ser tu caso.

Re: YPFD Repsol YPF
El hijo de Slim: "no fue una compra estratégica"
“No fue una compra, sino ejercer las garantías que estaban en poder de los bancos” ante la falta de pago de un préstamo que había obtenido el Grupo Petersen, de la familia Eskenazi, para entrar en YPF, aclaró.
http://www.cronista.com/economiapolitic ... -0115.html
Era eso o nada.
“No fue una compra, sino ejercer las garantías que estaban en poder de los bancos” ante la falta de pago de un préstamo que había obtenido el Grupo Petersen, de la familia Eskenazi, para entrar en YPF, aclaró.
http://www.cronista.com/economiapolitic ... -0115.html
Era eso o nada.
Re: YPFD Repsol YPF
Esta cosstando superar los $ 78,000
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Re: YPFD Repsol YPF
jesus330 escribió:CIRUZZO, Pareces nuevo en ésto, eso de subir mucho y luego bajar es común, pero es un indice que si pudo llegar a eso lo volvera a hacer, ya está cerca con el aumento de hoy.Además aprece que se enojan cuando alguna acción sube y no compraron que debe ser tu caso.
Te equivocas en las dos cosas que marcas.
Enojarme xq sube y no la tengo? estas en pe**..nunca me voy a enojar por algo así olvidate.
La otra cuestión de que subir mucho es común (20% en un día

Son opiniones..yo avisé según lo que veía y si alguno me leyo y le fue útil me alegro.
Re: YPFD Repsol YPF
guillermo escribió:ciruzzo nuevo?

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