Kang Ocoy ini maunya bocorrraaan terus he he....Udah dikasih satu, minta dua. 
Dikasih dua,minta lima..Capek deh (smile). kemarin kan sudah saya kasih bocoran 
DoJi Kamis kmarin...Upsss...sorry deh, meleset 10 points he he..BTW, EL ke mana 
ya?

Ok deh buat Kang Ocoy yang top markotop, ntar saya mo gerilya lagi.

Sederhana aja Kang. Ngikut price channelnya Pak DE aja. Kalau berani beli AALI 
n PTB, kenapa ga berani beli BUMI?

Pizzz

kang_ocoy_maen_saham <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:                             
Kalo sodorin Thermal BUMI dapetnya di berapa yeh maunya?? ($135 dr 
 Rio en Xstrata $125 gak mao dy) kalo mo barang BUMI en BUMI bisa 
 supply di $100 en bisa deal beneran., ini sayah mau loh beli saham 
 BUMI di 6000... 
 
 -pak andi, pak FA, biasanya punya info2 terkini masalah Per Batubara-
 an, skrg Salesnya BUMI andai tawarin Kontrak Thermal Grade PowerPlant 
 Jepang di kisaran berapaan yeh?? atas $90 mepet $100 dapet gak yeh??
 
 --- In obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com, Richard Rahardjo 
 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
 >
 > By Mari Iwata 
 > 
 > Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES 
 > 
 > TOKYO (Dow Jones)--Japan's largest thermal coal buyer said Friday 
 it has already lined up around 90% of the coal it will need for the 
 next fiscal year starting April 1. 
 > 
 > Electric Power Development Co. (9513.TO), better known as J-Power, 
 has secured about 90% its annual coal needs - about 20 million metric 
 tons - despite continued tight supply in the Asia Pacific coal 
 market, Executive Vice President Masayoshi Kitamura said. 
 > 
 > Although agreements on volumes have mostly been worked out, prices 
 are still only tentative, pending conclusion of talks between 
 Australian suppliers and some Japanese utilities, which act as a 
 benchmark for Japan's coal purchases. 
 > 
 > "We have diversified sources, buying more from countries like 
 Indonesia, South Africa and Russia," said Kitamura. 
 > 
 > Coal prices have soared in the Asia-Pacific market in the past 
 year, driven by rising demand from India and China, and more recently 
 by a temporary Chinese ban on coal exports. About 10% of the coal 
 used by Japan last year came from China. 
 > 
 > In addition, bad weather and infrastructure bottlenecks have curbed 
 output from Australia, the source of some 60% of Japan's coal 
 imports. 
 > 
 > Although J-Power has kept receiving coal exports from China since 
 its export ban was imposed in February, the company feels China won't 
 maintain previous export levels to Japan in the future, said 
 Kitamura. 
 > 
 > Term supply volumes from China to Japan in the fiscal year ending 
 on March 31 were cut by roughly 40% below the contracted minimum 
 supply obligation of 7.3 million tons, according to Japan Coal 
 Development Co., a coal trade joint venture owned by 10 major 
 Japanese utilities. 
 > 
 > Accordingly, J-Power has been lining up alternative supplies for 
 the next fiscal year, he added. 
 > 
 > The company has a policy of not disclosing details of where it gets 
 its coal from. But Australia is the source for about half, with China 
 and Indonesia minor but important complementary suppliers, according 
 to another company official, who asked not to be named. 
 > 
 > Japan's 10 regional power utilities together burn about 51 million 
 tons of thermal coal a year, about 60% of it coming from Australia, 
 according to data from the Federation of Electric Power Companies 
 Japan. The figure excludes J-Power's purchases. Above or Below $100 
 > 
 > But price talks are still far from being settled, said Kitagawa. 
 > 
 > Chubu Electric Power Co., Japan's third largest power utility by 
 capacity and second-largest thermal coal buyer, is still in 
 negotiations with Australian suppliers on the price it will pay for 
 fiscal 2008 supplies. 
 > 
 > Chubu Electric has been holding out for prices below $100 a ton, 
 Kitagawa noted. 
 > 
 > Since Chubu's term prices are widely used as a benchmark for 
 Japanese utilities, "the other utilities are encouraging Chubu 
 Electric, in the hope it will stand firm in the negotiations." 
 > 
 > With the next fiscal year starting Tuesday, Japanese utilities are 
 having to buy term coal at tentative prices, and Kitamura feels the 
 price talks may take a few months more. 
 > 
 > Chubu Electric has rejected Rio Tinto PLC's offer to supply 
 Australian thermal coal at $135 a ton for the next fiscal year, Dow 
 Jones Newswires reported earlier. 
 > 
 > Chubu Electric has also rejected Xstrata PLC's offer of $125/ton. 
 > 
 > Current term prices between Australian producers and Japanese 
 utilities are around $55 a ton. 
 > 
 > -By Mari Iwata, Dow Jones Newswires; 813-5255-2929; [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 > 
 > -Edited By Simon Hall TALK BACK: We invite readers to send us 
 comments on this or other financial news topics. Please email us at 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] Readers should include their full names, work or 
 home addresses and telephone numbers for verification purposes. We 
 reserve the right to edit and publish your comments along with your 
 name; we reserve the right not to publish reader comments. 
 > 
 > (END) Dow Jones Newswires
 > 
 > March 28, 2008 03:21 ET (07:21 GMT)
 > 
 > Copyright (c) 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.- - 03 21 AM EDT 03-28-
 08 
 > 
 > 
 >        
 > ---------------------------------
 > Looking for last minute shopping deals?  Find them fast with Yahoo! 
 Search.
 >
 
 
     
                                       

 Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger.yahoo.com 

Kirim email ke