CTP central petroleum limited

advice to ctp board from shareholders, page-8

  1. 354 Posts.
    Hello CTP Share Holders

    Thank you for your thoughts Gaffer. I look forward to the possibility of other shareholders reviewing and responding to my post in the future.

    Monday 26 March is likely to be a big day but perhaps only in respect of our Pedirka asset. We need to instigate a company-wide initiave to increase momentum on all of the company's assets.

    Lets make the next 30 - 60 days the time when managment and share holders began working together irrespective of who is on the board and who the sophisticated shareholders are.

    Last night I said that I would post a copy of whatever I sent to the board of CTP.

    I could only trace John Heugh's e-mail. If any of you can assist me with other relevant e-mails addresses I would appreciate it.

    In the meantime set out below is the text of the e-mail that I sent. Feel free to copy and paste from its text to formulate your own communication to the board.

    Keep Centred

    E-mail Text:


    Dear John

    I would be grateful if you would put this communication before your board, existing or incoming (however it may ultimately be constituted), and, of course, give it your own detailed and considered attention.

    I hold 1,070,000 CTP and have done since Feb 2009. One of the reasons that I have been a dedicated supporter of CTP is that I have lived in the NT since 1950 and I know the place well. I travelled through the Surprise region in 1981, long before there were any roads there and I am confident of its future as a major oil province.

    My journey took place when the Mereenie field was at an early stage of being worked up as a production enterprise. We partly used Magellan’s seismic grid lines as FWD tracks to transit the country. It was an inspiring reconnaissance because we could virtually smell the oil wherever we went over that terrain. We sensed that our journey was taking us through one Australia’s future foundations of wealth and security.

    Magellan had found Mereenie 14 years earlier. For various reasons, mainly remoteness and the oil price, the discovery had been moribund all that time. By 1981 however Commonwealth control of the NT had loosened and local people were beginning to groom up the deal that became the JV between Magellan and SANTOS.

    You know the rest. The Mereenie field started pumping in 1984 and it is still going. The delay to production and sales, including the likely minimum 2 years of prior research, seismic, and general mobilisation before spudding was near enough to 20 years.

    I want to see our company go ahead but I know that will take a long time. Things are done a little faster these days because of a better oil price - but not much faster. We are facing at least a decade before any true substantial progress can be made at our current speed.

    The magnitude of our objectives, our chronic shortages of money, the fact that we do not have our own rig and the reality that the drilling season is very short, means we will not see any dividend earnings for our shares until 2024 at the earliest. Until we approach the status of being a business rather than that of being an idea, CTP’s share price will always lag dramatically behind its asset fundamentals.

    If we were in the coffee lounge business, the franchise for the best beans in the world, staff might including the nation’s best baristas and catering experts and the option to lease a number of good outlet sites, would not feature much in a valuation exercise until we had, at least, served our first cup of coffee. Even at that point our enterprise would not be overly valuable. It would need to mature into a volume business.

    For a number of reasons arising out of these factors, I have come to the conclusion that CTP’s mission is too big. At present we have the sizzle but no sausage. Our share price goes up marginally every 12 months on the excitement of the small amount of exploration that out funds, the terrain and the seasons permit us to achieve but to maintain and grow any value we need to get some sausages to go with that sizzling.

    In the fullness of time, we will get there but I think it is time that all stakeholders began to think more aggressively about how to speed up process. I believe that shareholders should be helping our board to focus its attention on this issue. They can do that by formulating good ideas and submitting them to the board for consideration.

    CTP’s share price would be a lot more buoyant, and future dividend income for shareholders would be a lot closer, if the company could work on more than one project at a time, but CTP has too little money and there is too much to achieve. CTP’s shareholders and its board should think of some ways to get things moving.

    We should all be thinking of constructive recommendations for an effective and timely utilisation of our vast assets. For that purpose, I offer the following suggestion as an example of how we might enhance CTP. It is merely an outline of an idea. I acknowledge that it would need to be refined in a number of ways but, if the principle were to be adopted, the outcome could be practical and beneficial.

    Our Pedirka Basin coal occupies at least 10 million acres. I have very roughly formulated that estimate by assuming a 200 km by 200 km land surface. I am using the unit of acres because it is reasonably common for that unit to be used internationally. A common minimum valuation for prospective exploration land is $10 per acre. It cannot be disputed that the land is prospective as we have already located the coal. Therefore an internal valuation of $100,000,000 can be justified.

    Moreover expenditure on successful exploration and a premium for the existing success can equally justify doubling that figure to $20 per acre (remembering that it is to serve as an internal valuation). Assuming that the quantum of coal in our tenements is 300 billion tonnes (and we all know that to be a gross under estimate), if we project an internal valuation of $200,000,000 all we are doing is attributing to the “in-ground” coal a value of .066c per tonne.

    A new corporate structure should then be established. For this discussion, I will call it Pedirka Coal Ltd (PCL). CTP should then rearrange the ownership of the coal by selling the tenements to PCL in exchange for the allotment of 1,500,000,000 fully paid shares of 13c par value in PCL. Assuming that there would be (by that time) 1,500,000,000 shares then issued in the existing CTP structure, each shareholder in our original company could then be granted a proportional distribution in specie of one PCL share per share held in PCL.

    PCL would then raise funds by loan from or placement to CTP, sufficient to fund the necessary listing expenses and preliminary working capital to list on the ASX and start work. After that, PCL would grow or fail as a participant in the thermal coal sector and provide CTP shareholders, in their new identity of being shareholders in PCL, with the opportunity to realise some value from this previously neglected asset.

    All manner of possibilities then emerge. For example, PCL and WESICORP might amalgamate their coal discoveries under a new entity which might be floated off into to the market generally. There are many possibilities. Whatever might occur, CTP would be free to go its own way to pursue the petroleum, gas and helium projects with greater strength.

    After dealing with that proposal CTP might reasonably consider an independent float for some of its other main elements. For example, Georgina Basin could be separately floated. That would give this element of the CTP assets the exploration funding needed to accelerate progress. Other candidates include the Wiso basin, the unconventional elements of the Amadeus basin, the Helium prospects and the Madigan reefs.

    Each one of these elements could support a listed company. It is likely that with the minimum of inconvenience and expense the current CTP asset base could support a minimum of 7 new listed entities. The burning question would then be: what is the likely typical share price? My guess: not much less in each case than our current CTP price. Comparable entities trade at around 7c if their tenements are prospective. Even if they attracted a derisory 2c each, the net advancement of position for each shareholder would be 200%.

    What is the common theme? CTP has got too much on its plate. It is no use having the biggest acreage in the world if you cannot make effective use of it. It is more practical to break up the empire and monetise its individual elements.

    Remember, an entire block of flats never sells for as much as the sum of the individual unit titles that can be derived from the same building.

    I thank you for your consideration of this communication.

    Kind Regards

    Geoff James

    [email protected]
    Phone 61 8 8941 7575 (home)

    [email protected]
    Phone 61 8 8946 6791 (work)

    PO Box 2025
    PARAP NT 0804
 
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