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Uitstappen? Is het echt never sell Shell?

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  1. forum rang 4 @monkeytail 1 juni 2021 08:27
    quote:

    Zorgelijk schreef op 1 juni 2021 07:52:

    Nee hoor, vandaag weer 16 euro in de min. Ik zie totaal geen reden voor up.
    Kijk eens naar de technische analyse. Gisteren lag het aandeel op een bodem (en ging er zelfs tijdelijk doorheen) , met een beetje geluk hebben we de dip gehad. In ieder geval vandaag!
  2. JM14 1 juni 2021 08:29
    quote:

    *voetnoot schreef op 1 juni 2021 08:20:

    15,82

    www.tradegate.de/orderbuch.php?isin=G...

    Zegt niets. Volume 6183 aandelen. Woow
    Maar vandaag tikken we de 16 weer aan en erover heen. Kan niet anders gezien de Brent prijs en wanneer de pre-market in de VS opent en helemaal rond 15.30 uur. Succes.
  3. forum rang 5 Betweter 1 juni 2021 08:29
    quote:

    Coupejet schreef op 1 juni 2021 08:10:

    Dit hebben we al tientallen keren gezien. Bij de kleinste stijgen word al weer verkocht met een paar centen winst.
    Dat is gerommel in de marge.
  4. [verwijderd] 1 juni 2021 08:36
    Ik heb gisteravond wat shell omgeruild voor chevron. Sorry hoor. Maar ik denk dat die even wat meer profiteren van de olie de komende weken. As with other oil stocks to watch, Chevron stock is heavily dependent on crude oil prices. Even when Chevron's fundamentals and technicals show strength, if crude oil prices suddenly plunge, CVX stock will too.
  5. ChrisDePekka 1 juni 2021 08:39
    Vandaag kan best wel eens een +5% dagje worden, ik zou er niet van opkijken met de hoge olie en de Amerikanen die de buyknop weer mogen gebruiken.
  6. forum rang 9 Ron-tron system 1 juni 2021 08:43
    quote:

    meneer Euro schreef op 1 juni 2021 08:36:

    Ik heb gisteravond wat shell omgeruild voor chevron. Sorry hoor. Maar ik denk dat die even wat meer profiteren van de olie de komende weken.
    Een mogelijke winner is patterson uti deze gaat altijd hard als de olie stijgt.
    Hoger gokgehalte maar ja met shell zit je ook in een trade aandeel:)
  7. forum rang 10 voda 1 juni 2021 08:44
    Beursgang Raizen nabij - media
    Raizen is joint venture tussen Shell en Cosan.

    (ABM FN-Dow Jones) De Braziliaanse energiereus Raízen is van plan om in de komende dagen een beursnotering aan te vragen. Dit schreef persbureau Reuters op basis van documenten die werden ingediend bij toezichthouders.

    Raízen, dat onder meer ethanol produceert en een netwerk van benzinestations exploiteert, is een joint venture tussen Royal Dutch Shell en Cosan. Raízen liet weten niet langer een outlook af te geven, om de boekhouding in lijn te krijgen met die van auditors en adviseurs in relatie tot de mogelijke beursgang, aldus Reuters.

    Eind april van dit jaar werd al bekend dat Raízen vier zakenbanken in de arm had genomen om circa 13 miljard real, omgerekend ruim 2 miljard euro, op te halen met een beursgang.

    Door: ABM Financial News.

    info@abmfn.nl

    Redactie: +31(0)20 26 28 999
  8. Katsjinggg 1 juni 2021 08:57
    OPEC, Russia seen gaining more power with Shell Dutch ruling
    08:00 (01/06) - Bron: Reuters
    * National oil firms seen expanding market share
    * Oil demand still growing strongly in Asia
    * Large fund manager warns of higher oil prices

    By Dmitry Zhdannikov
    LONDON, June 1 (Reuters) - Climate activists who scored big
    against Western majors last week had some unlikely cheerleaders
    in the oil capitals of Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi and Russia.
    Defeats in the courtroom and boardroom mean Royal Dutch
    Shell , ExxonMobil and Chevron are all
    under pressure to cut carbon emissions faster. That’s good news
    for the likes of Saudi Arabia’s national oil company Saudi
    Aramco , Abu Dhabi National Oil Company and Russia's
    Gazprom and Rosneft .
    It means more business for them and the Saudi-led
    Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).
    "Oil and gas demand is far from peaking and supplies will be
    needed, but international oil companies will not be allowed to
    invest in this environment, meaning national oil companies have
    to step in," said Amrita Sen from Energy Aspects consultancy.

    Climate activists scored a major victory with a Dutch court
    ruling requiring Royal Dutch Shell to drastically cut emissions,
    which in effect means cutting oil and gas output. The company
    will appeal.
    The same day, the top two U.S. oil companies, Exxon Mobil
    Corp and Chevron Corp (CVX.N), both lost battles with
    shareholders who accused them of dragging their feet on climate
    change.
    "It looks like the West will have to rely more on what it
    calls "hostile regimes" for its supply," joked a high-level
    executive from Russia's Gazprom oil and gas group, referring to
    energy companies around the world owned completely or mostly by
    the state.
    Saudi Aramco, Adnoc and Gazprom all declined to comment. Oil
    major Rosneft, in which the Russian state has the biggest stake,
    also declined to comment.
    A senior Saudi Aramco staffer said the court ruling would
    make it easier for OPEC to ramp up production.
    "It is great for Aramco," the staffer said.
    Western oil majors like Shell have dramatically expanded in
    the last 50 years, as the West sought to cut its reliance on
    energy from the volatile Middle East, and from Russia.
    Those same Western energy majors, including BP and Total,
    have set out plans to sharply reduce emissions by 2050. But they
    face growing pressure from investors to do more to meet
    U.N.-backed targets to limit global warming.
    Saudi Aramco, listed on the Saudi bourse but majority state
    owned, is not under the same sort of pressure to cut its carbon
    emissions, although the kingdom's rulers aim to sharply increase
    the country's use of renewables.
    Gazprom expects demand for natural gas to grow in the coming
    decades and for it to play a bigger role in energy consumption
    than renewable sources and hydrogen.
    Western oil majors control around 15% of global output,
    while OPEC and Russia have a share of around 40 percent. That
    share has been relatively stable in the last decades as rising
    demand was met with new producers like smaller private U.S.
    shale firms, which today face similar climate-related pressures.

    PEAK DIVIDENDS
    Since 1990, global oil consumption has grown to 100 million
    barrels per day from 65 million bpd, with Asia providing the
    lion's share of growth.
    Countries such as China and India have made no pledges to
    reduce oil consumption, which on a per capita basis is still a
    fraction of the levels in the West. China will rely heavily on
    gas to cut its huge coal consumption.
    The International Energy Agency, which looks after energy
    policies of the West, issued a stark appeal last month to the
    world to essentially scrap all new oil and gas developments. But
    it gave no clear formula on how to reduce demand.
    Despite pressure from activists, investors and banks to cut
    emissions, Western oil majors are also tasked with maintaining
    high dividends amid heavy debt. Dividends from oil companies
    represent significant contributions to pension funds.
    "It is vital that the global oil industry aligns its
    production to the Paris goals. But that must be done in step
    with policy, changes to the demand side, and the rebuilding of
    the world’s energy system," said Nick Stansbury from Legal &
    General, which manage £1.3 trillion ($1.8 trillion) in assets on
    behalf of savers, retirees and institutions.
    "Forcing one company to do so in the courts may (if it is
    effective at all) only result in higher prices and foregone
    profits," he said. Legal & General, one of the world's largest
    fund managers, holds assets in most oil majors.
    Climate lawsuits have been filed in 52 countries in the past
    two decades, with 90% of those in the United States and European
    Union, risk consultancy Verisk Maplecroft said.
    "In the West, energy investments will peak on fears and
    concerns over regulations and court rulings. Then, we will see
    peak dividends," said the Aramco executive. Aramco pays the
    highest annual dividend of $75 billion.
    Over the past five years, the IEA has been predicting a
    large oil shortage and an oil price spike due to a lack of
    investments following a 2014-2017 oil price crash.
    An oil price rally coupled with the declining strength of
    oil majors would mean a large wealth transfer from the West to
    countries like Russia and Saudi Arabia, until demand starts
    declining not only in the West but in Asia too.
    "The same oil and gas will still be produced. Just with
    lower ESG standards," said an executive from a Middle Eastern
    producer, who previously worked for an oil major, referring to
    environmental, social and governance performance measurements.

    (Additional reporting by Alex Lawler, Ron Bousso, Noah Browning
    in London, writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by William
    Maclean)
    ((Dmitri.Zhdannikov@thomsonreuters.com;))
  9. [verwijderd] 1 juni 2021 09:00
    quote:

    Katsjinggg schreef op 1 juni 2021 08:57:

    OPEC, Russia seen gaining more power with Shell Dutch ruling
    08:00 (01/06) - Bron: Reuters
    * National oil firms seen expanding market share
    * Oil demand still growing strongly in Asia
    * Large fund manager warns of higher oil prices

    By Dmitry Zhdannikov
    LONDON, June 1 (Reuters) - Climate activists who scored big
    against Western majors last week had some unlikely cheerleaders
    in the oil capitals of Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi and Russia.
    Defeats in the courtroom and boardroom mean Royal Dutch
    Shell , ExxonMobil and Chevron are all
    under pressure to cut carbon emissions faster. That’s good news
    for the likes of Saudi Arabia’s national oil company Saudi
    Aramco , Abu Dhabi National Oil Company and Russia's
    Gazprom and Rosneft .
    It means more business for them and the Saudi-led
    Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).
    "Oil and gas demand is far from peaking and supplies will be
    needed, but international oil companies will not be allowed to
    invest in this environment, meaning national oil companies have
    to step in," said Amrita Sen from Energy Aspects consultancy.

    Climate activists scored a major victory with a Dutch court
    ruling requiring Royal Dutch Shell to drastically cut emissions,
    which in effect means cutting oil and gas output. The company
    will appeal.
    The same day, the top two U.S. oil companies, Exxon Mobil
    Corp and Chevron Corp (CVX.N), both lost battles with
    shareholders who accused them of dragging their feet on climate
    change.
    "It looks like the West will have to rely more on what it
    calls "hostile regimes" for its supply," joked a high-level
    executive from Russia's Gazprom oil and gas group, referring to
    energy companies around the world owned completely or mostly by
    the state.
    Saudi Aramco, Adnoc and Gazprom all declined to comment. Oil
    major Rosneft, in which the Russian state has the biggest stake,
    also declined to comment.
    A senior Saudi Aramco staffer said the court ruling would
    make it easier for OPEC to ramp up production.
    "It is great for Aramco," the staffer said.
    Western oil majors like Shell have dramatically expanded in
    the last 50 years, as the West sought to cut its reliance on
    energy from the volatile Middle East, and from Russia.
    Those same Western energy majors, including BP and Total,
    have set out plans to sharply reduce emissions by 2050. But they
    face growing pressure from investors to do more to meet
    U.N.-backed targets to limit global warming.
    Saudi Aramco, listed on the Saudi bourse but majority state
    owned, is not under the same sort of pressure to cut its carbon
    emissions, although the kingdom's rulers aim to sharply increase
    the country's use of renewables.
    Gazprom expects demand for natural gas to grow in the coming
    decades and for it to play a bigger role in energy consumption
    than renewable sources and hydrogen.
    Western oil majors control around 15% of global output,
    while OPEC and Russia have a share of around 40 percent. That
    share has been relatively stable in the last decades as rising
    demand was met with new producers like smaller private U.S.
    shale firms, which today face similar climate-related pressures.

    PEAK DIVIDENDS
    Since 1990, global oil consumption has grown to 100 million
    barrels per day from 65 million bpd, with Asia providing the
    lion's share of growth.
    Countries such as China and India have made no pledges to
    reduce oil consumption, which on a per capita basis is still a
    fraction of the levels in the West. China will rely heavily on
    gas to cut its huge coal consumption.
    The International Energy Agency, which looks after energy
    policies of the West, issued a stark appeal last month to the
    world to essentially scrap all new oil and gas developments. But
    it gave no clear formula on how to reduce demand.
    Despite pressure from activists, investors and banks to cut
    emissions, Western oil majors are also tasked with maintaining
    high dividends amid heavy debt. Dividends from oil companies
    represent significant contributions to pension funds.
    "It is vital that the global oil industry aligns its
    production to the Paris goals. But that must be done in step
    with policy, changes to the demand side, and the rebuilding of
    the world’s energy system," said Nick Stansbury from Legal &
    General, which manage £1.3 trillion ($1.8 trillion) in assets on
    behalf of savers, retirees and institutions.
    "Forcing one company to do so in the courts may (if it is
    effective at all) only result in higher prices and foregone
    profits," he said. Legal & General, one of the world's largest
    fund managers, holds assets in most oil majors.
    Climate lawsuits have been filed in 52 countries in the past
    two decades, with 90% of those in the United States and European
    Union, risk consultancy Verisk Maplecroft said.
    "In the West, energy investments will peak on fears and
    concerns over regulations and court rulings. Then, we will see
    peak dividends," said the Aramco executive. Aramco pays the
    highest annual dividend of $75 billion.
    Over the past five years, the IEA has been predicting a
    large oil shortage and an oil price spike due to a lack of
    investments following a 2014-2017 oil price crash.
    An oil price rally coupled with the declining strength of
    oil majors would mean a large wealth transfer from the West to
    countries like Russia and Saudi Arabia, until demand starts
    declining not only in the West but in Asia too.
    "The same oil and gas will still be produced. Just with
    lower ESG standards," said an executive from a Middle Eastern
    producer, who previously worked for an oil major, referring to
    environmental, social and governance performance measurements.

    (Additional reporting by Alex Lawler, Ron Bousso, Noah Browning
    in London, writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by William
    Maclean)
    ((Dmitri.Zhdannikov@thomsonreuters.com;))
    Graag een samenvatting plus conclusie ...
  10. forum rang 4 Marco1962 1 juni 2021 09:02
    quote:

    Hendrik65 schreef op 1 juni 2021 09:00:

    [...]

    Graag een samenvatting plus conclusie ...
    Simpel Shell naar 14 olieprijs naar 100
  11. GANGISTERM 1 juni 2021 09:03
    echt... dit aandeel hoort nu al rond de 18 a 19 euro te staan.... mensen worden door die nederlandse overheid bang gemaakt en dat hele klimaat gedoe terwijl dat juist de kracht wordt van shell.

    Korte termijn perfect gestationeerd en lange termijn nog beter ten opzichte van de concurrentie....

    waarom zo laag gewaardeerd?
  12. JB81 1 juni 2021 09:03
    Leuk iedereen te zien dromen van +5%....het zal met veel geluk boven de 1% zitten tegen vanavond, als ie na een turbulente dag weer nietterug naar af gaat tegen 17u30...die 16 staat er niet vanavond.
  13. forum rang 5 mathijsjelle 1 juni 2021 09:03
    quote:

    Hendrik65 schreef op 1 juni 2021 09:00:

    [...]

    Graag een samenvatting plus conclusie ...
    Shell en andere grote oilmajors die van of de rechter of activistische aandeelhouders op hun kop hebben gekregen gaan productie naar beneden brengen ivm uitstoot. Deze productie/vraag wordt mooi opgepikt door de Gazproms, Aramco's van deze wereld.

    Vrij kort maar daar komt het op neer.
  14. [verwijderd] 1 juni 2021 09:06
    quote:

    Katsjinggg schreef op 1 juni 2021 08:57:

    Bedankt voor het artikel, bijzonder interessant om te lezen en ontzettend ironisch. Duidelijk dat de klimaatopwarming een GLOBAAL probleem is en een globale aanpak nodig is. Door één bedrijf te veroordelen, maak je het probleem juist erger. Applaus voor milieudefensie....
  15. [verwijderd] 1 juni 2021 09:07
    quote:

    Bill Spackman schreef op 1 juni 2021 09:06:

    [...]

    Bedankt voor het artikel, bijzonder interessant om te lezen en ontzettend ironisch. Duidelijk dat de klimaatopwarming een GLOBAAL probleem is en een globale aanpak nodig is. Door één bedrijf te veroordelen, maak je het probleem juist erger. Applaus voor milieudefensie....
    Precies, in Rusland en het Midden-Oosten lachen ze hun ballen uit hun broek. Wellicht subsidiëren ze die milieu debielen ook nog via een omweg.
  16. [verwijderd] 1 juni 2021 09:07
    quote:

    JB81 schreef op 1 juni 2021 09:03:

    Leuk iedereen te zien dromen van +5%....het zal met veel geluk boven de 1% zitten tegen vanavond, als ie na een turbulente dag weer nietterug naar af gaat tegen 17u30...die 16 staat er niet vanavond.
    2

    JB81, was jij nu degene die gisteren had verkocht om het verlies te beperken? En dan nu niet iedereen die er nog in zit het geluk wensen met de stijging? Erg onsportief van je
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