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OCI - 2021

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Kan iemand hier op het forum nog terug vinden van een melding maanden terug een call optie dec.23 handeling van 1000 of meer stuks en in mijn vage herinnering leek het toen een vreemde transactie met toen een koers ook net boven de 23,inmiddels weten we beter en de verkopende partij (schrijver) nog veel beter want de opgebrachte premie,heeft deze partij verdiend bij expiratie vrijdag bij een koers gelijk blijvend op 23,mocht dit zo uitkomen dan weten wij zeker dat dit aandeel in de al maanden durende dunne handel door partijen gestuurd wordt.
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Ruval
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quote:

jessebrown schreef op 15 december 2021 14:25:

Al gevonden op 29juli zijn er 1134 stuks call dec.23 verhandeld.
En betekent dit nog iets voor de koers bij/na expiratie?
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quote:

Ruval schreef op 15 december 2021 14:26:

[...]
En betekent dit nog iets voor de koers bij/na expiratie?
Voor de optie handel vanaf jan.22 zijn er in ieder geval niet van deze grote transacties geweest,wel de afgelopen 6 mnd grote volumes,ik durf het niet te zeggen,maar hoop dat na deze expiratie vrijdag de koersdruk verdwenen is.
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De tekorten in Urea en andere Fertilizers brengt Australie in beweging.

Australia’s Strike gets govt support for urea project
Published date: 15 December 2021

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Australian independent Strike Energy has received support from the Australian federal government and the Western Australia (WA) state government for its proposed A$2.5bn ($1.78bn) 1.4mn t/yr Haber urea project in the mid-west of WA.

The support comes given current concerns of about global shortages of urea and its derivatives such as diesel exhaust fluids (DEF), also known as AdBlue.

Canberra awarded a A$2mn grant to Strike through its supply chain resilience initiative programme and has been elevated in the WA government project planning process, Strike said. The grant to Strike follows the Australian government forming a taskforce to address a potential shortage of AdBlue, which includes procuring urea.

There is a global shortage of urea from the northern hemisphere energy crisis, Strike Energy said. The energy shortfall has resulted in significant quantities of urea manufacturing capacity being shut in, as gas feedstock have been diverted from industry to primary use of power and heating, the Perth-based firm said.

Major urea exporting nations such as Russia, Egypt and China have placed restrictions on urea exports and amplified the current supply shortage, it said. This has translated into international urea pricing surpassing all-time record highs with fob Middle East prices exceeding $1,000/t in the spot market, Strike said.

Australia is on course to have zero domestic urea production capacity by December 2022, with Incitec Pivot closing its Gibson Island production facility.

In addition to urea in short supply for agricultural purposes, a secondary impact is the availability of AdBlue, a fluid used to reduce nitrous oxide in modern diesel and freight engines, Strike said.

AdBlue availability is forecast to start impacting international and Australian supply chains within the January-March 2022 quarter, unless additional capacity is either built or supplies of urea rise, it said.

Strike plans to send 22pc of its urea production into the WA domestic market and 50pc to the rest of Australia and to export the remaining 29pc to international markets.

The Haber urea plant will use gas from the Greater Erregulla gas field plan whereby under phase one of the joint venture will bring 80 TJ/d (2.14mn m³/d) of gas from the West Erregulla field in the onshore Perth basin to market in 2022, via a gas plant to be built, owned and operated by Australian Gas Infrastructure Group, which is owned by Hong Kong-based conglomerate CK.
eduardo3105
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quote:

jessebrown schreef op 15 december 2021 14:18:

Kan iemand hier op het forum nog terug vinden van een melding maanden terug een call optie dec.23 handeling van 1000 of meer stuks en in mijn vage herinnering leek het toen een vreemde transactie met toen een koers ook net boven de 23,inmiddels weten we beter en de verkopende partij (schrijver) nog veel beter want de opgebrachte premie,heeft deze partij verdiend bij expiratie vrijdag bij een koers gelijk blijvend op 23,mocht dit zo uitkomen dan weten wij zeker dat dit aandeel in de al maanden durende dunne handel door partijen gestuurd wordt.
Dat de handel in Oci altijd al gestuurd wordt is al lang duidelijk. Dat is gewoon bij elk aandeel waar de free float zo miniem is. Het is voor ons altijd maar afwachten waar de belangen liggen. Waren die 1000+ opties geschreven of gewoon gekocht. Denk net als jij dat het geschreven opties zijn geweest maar alleen de market maker weet dat en kan daarin meegaan.
marcobol
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100% geschreven, heb zelf lang in die serie gezeten. Elke dag de oi bij gehouden. Schrijver kan op deze koers met een gerust hart onderliggende stukken dumpen om de premie uit de opties te laten lopen.
BultiesBrothers
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quote:

eduardo3105 schreef op 15 december 2021 14:59:

[...]
Dat de handel in Oci altijd al gestuurd wordt is al lang duidelijk. Dat is gewoon bij elk aandeel waar de free float zo miniem is. Het is voor ons altijd maar afwachten waar de belangen liggen. Waren die 1000+ opties geschreven of gewoon gekocht. Denk net als jij dat het geschreven opties zijn geweest maar alleen de market maker weet dat en kan daarin meegaan.
Dan maar klachten indienen bij de AFM.
Maarja. in hoeverre dat zin heeft
Kruimeldief
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quote:

BultiesBrothers schreef op 15 december 2021 15:37:

[...]

Dan maar klachten indienen bij de AFM.
Maarja. in hoeverre dat zin heeft
Lijkt mij net als de AFM een papieren tijger, maar als je de forum-site van PostNL bekijkt…. Er schijnt toch een melding van koersmanipulatie te liggen die wel degelijk wordt opgepakt.
BultiesBrothers
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Echt verbazingwekkend dat OCI gewoon 24% achterloopt op de koers van CF sinds september.
Just lucky
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quote:

BultiesBrothers schreef op 15 december 2021 16:35:

Echt verbazingwekkend dat OCI gewoon 24% achterloopt op de koers van CF sinds september.
En het wordt waarschijnlijk ook niets meer, bij Q4 gaan we zeggen "Q1 wordt top". Het is gewoon bagger, totaal geen interesse, de koers beweegt met orders van 2 aandelen. Grote partijen zullen vanwege de incourantie niet instappen. Yara mooi groen en CF straks ook.
Just lucky
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Korte termijn technisch commentaar
Oci is onder de laatste bodem gezakt, waardoor een technische verzwakking is opgetreden. Oci kan nu verder wegzakken. De zwakke trend biedt neerwaarts ruimte richting steun 20,42 (bodem van 9 september). Weerstand voor Oci ligt op 26,18 (top van 5 oktober).
BultiesBrothers
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quote:

Just lucky schreef op 15 december 2021 17:18:

Korte termijn technisch commentaar
Oci is onder de laatste bodem gezakt, waardoor een technische verzwakking is opgetreden. Oci kan nu verder wegzakken. De zwakke trend biedt neerwaarts ruimte richting steun 20,42 (bodem van 9 september). Weerstand voor Oci ligt op 26,18 (top van 5 oktober).
Weerstand ligt op 26.58 op 18 november. Inmiddels 13% gecorrigeerd.
BultiesBrothers
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Ja hoor. VS staat weer in het groen. Wanneer zijn we een keer verlost van die algoritmes... t is om te janken dit.
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Ik kan mij toch niet voorstellen dat het bestuur maar meer nog de Fam.Sawiris als lammetjes zich naar de slachtbank laten brengen,door het constant slopen van de koers,terwijl het bedrijf al het goede doet
wat nodig is,of we vergissen ons zo dat dit het spel van uitroken is ,en dan ineens Hassan Sawiris een buy-out aankondigt van 20% boven de koers van de afgelopen 6mnd.
BultiesBrothers
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DTN Retail Fertilizer Trends
Nitrogen Fertilizer Prices Continue to Push Higher
12/15/2021 | 8:39 AM CST
Russ Quinn
By , DTN Staff Reporter
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The average retail price of UAN28 was up 20% from a month prior. The nitrogen fertilizer's average price was at $577 per ton the first full week of December 2021, which continues to be an all-time high in the DTN data set. (DTN chart)
OMAHA (DTN) -- Average retail prices for most fertilizers continued to climb the first full week of December 2021, with nitrogen fertilizers again leading the way, according to sellers surveyed by DTN.

Five of the eight major fertilizers recorded a sizable move higher from last month. DTN designates a substantial move as anything 5% or more.

Leading the way higher was UAN28, which was up 20% from a month prior. The nitrogen fertilizer's average price was at $577 per ton, which continues to be an all-time high in the DTN data set.

Anhydrous was 18% more expensive compared to last month. The average price was at $1,372/ton, which is also an all-time high.

UAN32 was 8% higher looking back to last month. The liquid nitrogen fertilizer had an average price of $661/ton, also an all-time high.

Urea was 7% more expensive compared to last month. The nitrogen fertilizer had an average price of $887/ton, an all-time high.

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10-34-0 was 5% more expensive looking back to last month. The starter fertilizer had an average price of $756/ton.

Three fertilizers had just a slight price increase compared to the prior month. DAP had an average price of $840/ton, MAP $919/ton and potash $778/ton.

On a price per pound of nitrogen basis, the average urea price was at $0.96/lb.N, anhydrous $0.84/lb.N, UAN28 $1.03/lb.N and UAN32 $1.03/lb.N.

According to a news release from the American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) this week, farmers are struggling with skyrocketing fertilizer prices ().

AFBF economists found several elements are contributing to record-high prices. These factors include increased prices for raw nutrients, increased global fertilizer demand, increased energy costs, distribution and supply chain disruptions, and trade duties.

Ammonia has increased over 210%, liquid nitrogen over 159% and urea 155%, compared to September 2020 prices, according to AFBF. In addition, MAP has increased 125%, DAP is up over 100% and potash has risen above 134%.

"Rising fertilizer prices are a great concern for farmers across the country," AFBF President Zippy Duvall said. "We urge the Biden administration to look for ways to bring fertilizer prices down, which include resolving supply chain disruptions and removing import duties, so farmers can continue growing the food, fuel and fiber America relies on."

Retail fertilizer prices compared to a year ago show all fertilizers have increased significantly, with prices for several fertilizers increasing well over 100%.

10-34-0 is now 63% more expensive, MAP is 80% higher, DAP is 84% more expensive, potash is 124% higher, urea is 146% more expensive, UAN32 is 162% higher, UAN28 175% is more expensive and anhydrous is 220% higher compared to last year.

DTN surveys more than 300 retailers, gathering roughly 1,700 fertilizer price bids, to compile the DTN Fertilizer Index each week. In addition to national averages, MyDTN subscribers can access the full DTN Fertilizer Index, which includes state averages, here: .

Dow Jones reported that high fertilizer prices will likely limit farmers' profitability in the 2022 growing season. You can read it here: .

DRY
Date Range DAP MAP POTASH UREA
Dec 7-11 2020 456 510 348 361
Jan 4-8 2021 482 543 369 368
Feb 1-5 2021 554 601 389 429
Mar 1-5 2021 609 673 416 474
Mar 29-Apr 2 2021 618 697 429 502
Apr 26-30 2021 629 703 433 513
May 24-28 2021 652 709 443 523
Jun 21-25 2021 670 720 469 541
Jul 19-23 2021 695 750 543 553
Aug 16-20 2021 695 755 564 556
Sep 13-17 2021 702 776 598 572
Oct 11-15 2021 798 860 710 719
Nov 8-12 2021 821 906 762 832
Dec 6-10 2021 840 919 778 887
LIQUID
Date Range 10-34-0 ANHYD UAN28 UAN32
Dec 7-11 2020 464 429 210 252
Jan 4-8 2021 464 470 209 251
Feb 1-5 2021 502 507 239 272
Mar 1-5 2021 560 560 254 304
Mar 29-Apr 2 2021 599 685 340 377
Apr 26-30 2021 613 710 350 391
May 24-28 2021 619 719 361 407
Jun 21-25 2021 625 724 366 420
Jul 19-23 2021 632 736 365 419
Aug 16-20 2021 631 743 369 420
Sep 13-17 2021 632 762 381 428
Oct 11-15 2021 654 873 442 488
Nov 8-12 2021 719 1162 566 614
Dec 6-10 2021 756 1372 577 661
BultiesBrothers
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Kub's Den
High Fertilizer Prices: The History and Future
12/15/2021 | 5:00 AM CST
Elaine Kub
By , Contributing Analyst
Prices for dry urea fertilizer are 143% above year-ago levels, but only 13% above the previous all-time high from 2012. (Chart by Elaine Kub)
"Peruvian guano has become so desirable an article to the agricultural interest of the United States that it is the duty of the Government to employ all the means properly in its power for the purpose of causing that article to be imported into the country at a reasonable price. Nothing will be omitted on my part to accomplishing this desirable end." -- President Millard Fillmore in his Dec. 2, 1850, State of the Union Address, promising to bring down the market price of bird poop.

In fact, President Fillmore devoted 100 words of his 1850 State of the Union address to the topic of bird droppings, over 1% of the entire speech, alongside talk of international canals and railroads that would advance global commerce. The topic of manure -- any type of manure -- was a very big deal in those days, and these days, too. Farmers today can sympathize with that high-consequences attention to the topic of fertilizer and devote at least that much scrutiny to record-high prices today.

Back in 1850, there was no such thing as synthetic nitrogen fertilizer, and if anyone ever wanted to get better than 20 bushels per acre of corn, farmers had to use whatever natural fertilizer they could find -- farm animal manure, sure, but also kitchen waste, sawdust, dead animals, sludge from wetlands; you name it. In the "Guano Age," a powerful global industry had sprung up to mine giant mountains of desirable bird poop off the coasts of Peruvian islands (and elsewhere), yet there still wasn't enough supply to meet demand. Seabird guano reportedly hit a high of $76 per pound in 1850, or a quarter of the price of gold. ()

That's so expensive, it's beyond comparing to today's common agricultural fertilizers. Assume you can get 70 pounds of nitrogen per ton of seabird guano (3.5% nitrogen), similar to some poultry litter available today, and it shows anyone actually buying guano at $76 per pound was paying over $2,000 per pound of nitrogen. There's no way this could have been a widespread market price paid by the average American farmer, but nevertheless, today's anhydrous ammonia at $1,314 per ton (or $0.80 per pound of nitrogen) doesn't seem so bad!

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To be sure, the prices for nitrogen-based fertilizers are as high as they've ever been. The DTN Fertilizer Index, a weekly survey of over 300 retailer prices, showed dry urea averaging $873 per ton in the first week of December 2021. With 920 pounds of nitrogen provided to a crop from each ton of urea, that's $0.95 per pound of nitrogen. With liquid UAN-32 fertilizer priced at $661 per ton and 640 pounds of nitrogen available from each ton, that's $1.03 per pound of nitrogen -- now the highest price for nitrogen since the Guano Age.

In year-over-year terms, dry urea prices are 143% higher than in early December 2020, but looking at a longer timescale, today's urea prices are only 13% above their peak from the 2012 planting season. You can watch fertilizer prices rise week by week, like anhydrous, which has been rising by an average of 6% per week since October, in the DTN Retail Fertilizer Trends series by DTN Staff Reporter Russ Quinn:

Nevertheless, it's no wonder that many grain producers are looking for alternatives to high-priced synthetic fertilizers. Although I don't have access to a nice, long-term data series of manure prices from cattle feed yards, for instance, let's assume the value of cattle manure today is at about $70 per ton. If it makes 5 pounds of nitrogen available per ton of manure, that's equivalent to paying $0.18 per pound of nitrogen (and getting all the other minerals and benefits of organic matter for free). This would be by far the cheapest source of nitrogen, if it's available to you and logistically feasible to apply. But just like the guano of the 1850s, there's only so much to go around.

Interestingly, phosphate-based fertilizers remain cheaper now than they were during the commodity boom of 2008 (an N-P-K mix of 10-34-0 in November of 2008 was priced at $1,250 per ton but is now only $756). Altogether then, fertilizer prices shouldn't seem quite as panic-inducing, as a one-year anhydrous chart (up 208% year over year) might strike us at first glance. It's not some new, overwhelming, unmeetable demand for the stuff that's causing the rally -- rather, it's the global shortage of nitrogen itself that is the driving force behind rising fertilizer prices.

Ever since German chemist Fritz Haber and metallurgist Carl Bosch figured out the famed Haber-Bosch process (1909) to artificially fix atmospheric nitrogen into the usable nitrogen of ammonia under high temperatures and pressures, the world's supply of nitrogen has more or less depended on the world's supply of natural gas. In commercial fertilizer production, natural gas is used not only as the source for raw hydrogen in the chemical reaction, but also to provide the necessary heat. Today, U.S. natural gas prices have come down from their September peak, but in Europe there is still massive uncertainty about receiving natural gas supplies from Russia amid current geopolitical tensions and some fertilizer plants remain shut down until natural gas prices moderate. For at least the next several months, the global outlook for fertilizer availability will remain as tense as the Russia-Ukraine border.

Just as a new technology (synthetic fertilizer production through the Haber-Bosch process) ultimately relieved the shortage of guano in the 20th century and made a golden age of agriculture and human prosperity possible, is there perhaps a new technology on the horizon that will alter our dependence on natural gas to feed the world? Researchers at Australia's Monash University have recently announced a breakthrough new method to produce "green" ammonia with a different catalyst than the Haber-Bosch process, at room temperature, at efficiency rates that may someday be commercially viable. ()

In the meantime, until there's abundant commercially produced green ammonia, if you're unable to source the usual synthetic fertilizers necessary for spring planting at your local retailers, perhaps you'd like to consider something more old school, like this Mexican bat guano you can buy on the internet for $7.50 for a 1.25-lb bucket from a natural gardening outlet. ()

That's probably equivalent to $6.67 per pound of nitrogen, so maybe it's better to stick with anhydrous. Anyway, even the bat guano is out of stock these days!
Just lucky
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Na een mooie rit staat CF bijna ATH (even los van dat overname sprongetje). Ook Yara staat bijna ATH. En Oci, die zakt door alle bodems door gebrek aan kopers.
BultiesBrothers
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quote:

Just lucky schreef op 15 december 2021 20:34:

Na een mooie rit staat CF bijna ATH (even los van dat overname sprongetje). Ook Yara staat bijna ATH. En Oci, die zakt door alle bodems door gebrek aan kopers.
CF gaat als een tierelier. Wat een momentum heeft dit aandeel de laatste week.
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Vertraagd 10 feb 2025 13:12
Koers 10,975
Verschil +0,100 (+0,92%)
Hoog 10,975
Laag 10,845
Volume 43.279
Volume gemiddeld 636.542
Volume gisteren 312.251