Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Daewoo signs deal to develop Israel's Tamar gas field

Daewoo International
 South Korea's Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering Co Ltd said on Tuesday that it has agreed to develop Israel's Tamar natural gas field with Noble Energy Inc, Delek Group Ltd and Isramco Inc, and was eyeing vessel orders for the project.

Under the deal, Daewoo will soon conduct an LNG-FPSO feasibility study, aiming to sign a final agreement by the end of next year, a statement from the shipbuilder said, without specifying the size of its stake in the development deal or the value.

The statement said it aimed to produce liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the field, which has estimated reserves of 240 billion cubic meters of natural gas, from the end of 2016 if all the processes for the final deal remained on track.

The volume was equivalent to five times South Korea's annual consumption, Daewoo added.

"(Daewoo) hopes to win multiple orders for LNG floating production and storage and offloading (FPSO) vessels," the Daewoo statement said, adding that the field's owners were considering gas production in the largest offshore find of 2009 through FPSO vessels, not onshore plants, for geopolitical reasons.

The Tamar field is located in a sea area about 80 kilometres west of the port of Haifa, according to the Daewoo statement.

Isramco said last week that it had made a preliminary deal with Daewoo to build and operate a floating LNG facility for exports to South Korea and elsewhere, adding that the companies would hold talks to secure a contract for 15-20 years at a price likely to be between $7 and $9 per MMBTU.

South Korea, the world's second-largest LNG importer after Japan, imported nearly 30 million tonnes of LNG in the first ten months of this year.

European shares gain strenght

European shares rose on Tuesday, bouncing from a steep sell-off in the previous session and after Wall Street finished off its lows, though gains were set to be capped by worries over high euro zone and U.S. debt levels.

At 0936 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares was up 0.4 percent at 923.33 points, after falling 3.3 percent in the previous session to its lowest close in nearly seven weeks, on worries about high debt levels on both sides of the Atlantic and with Moody's warning on France.

Stocks rose almost across the board, with those that suffered most in the previous session bouncing more. The STOXX Europe 600 Banking Index rose 0.6 percent. France's BNP Paribas rose 1.2 percent.

But the banking sector has lost more than 38 percent in 2011, with many banks having to take severe writedowns on exposure to euro zone sovereign debt.

"This (the overall market) does not look like any weakness that one could buy into with a high degree of confidence," Jeremy Batstone-Carr, strategist at Charles Stanley, said.

"Uncertainty over the positioning of the rating agencies is almost certainly going to mean that any bounce in the market is likely to be limited."

Borrowing costs in the euro zone periphery remained major focus in the market. Spanish six-month bill average yields rose to 5.227 percent in an auction, compared with 3.302 percent at the previous sale.

HIGH PROFILE

U.S. lawmakers abandoned their high-profile effort to rein in the country's ballooning debt on Monday in a sign that Washington likely will not be able to resolve a dispute over taxes and spending until 2013.

The debt issues will continue to drive market sentiment, said strategists, and equities were unlikely to see much of a rally in the short term.

"You always get some kind of bounce after a fall-off, but the debt, the uncertainty hasn't really changed," said Andy Lynch, fund manager at Schroders, which manages 197 billion pounds ($311 billion).

"Absent some deus ex machina, time is the biggest healer. We need to see debt being paid down, so banks have capacity to fund economic growth. But that's a six-month story, rather than a six-day story.

"We favour companies with decent balance sheets and good cash flow."

Goldman Sachs cut its three-month target for the STOXX Europe 600 to 195 points, 13 percent below Monday's close of 224.76, citing worries about the failure of euro zone policymakers to come up with comprehensive measures to avoid contagion in the sovereign debt crisis.

"The lack of initiative means weak fundamentals are likely to be a key driver," Goldman strategists said in a note.

Batstone-Carr said there was support for equities from valuation measures such dividend yield.

Equity valuations on Thomson Reuters Datastream showed the STOXX Europe 600 carrying a one-year forward price-to-earnings of 9.4 against a 10-year average of more than 13.

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