Investors wanting to make the most of growing telecoms markets should put Bangladesh, China and India top of their list, according to a survey out today. In a report that echoes Vodafone's recent multi-billion deal to control one of India's largest mobile companies, Russian and British academics said southern and south-east Asia would continue to provide the most lucrative telecoms markets in coming years. Meanwhile, the UK remains a much less attractive prospect given it is already a highly satuarted market, according to the study by professors at the Russian School of Economics, the London Business School and Cambridge University along with Anglo-Russian telecoms investment group Altimo. The report's authors said one of the more surprising findings was the high potential from the United States and Canada, where mobile penetration is still relatively low compared with western Europe. The US was also seen as providing strong potential for margin growth. Russia, Ukraine and Uzbekistan were also in the report's top 10 but not all emerging markets were described as attractive investment spots. Based on low per capita GDP prospects, sub-Saharan Africa "offers a significantly less attractive investment environment," the report said. Back in Asia, however, prospects for telecoms business growth were high thanks to "high projected per capita GDP growth and significant current capital expenditure". Altimo's finance director Teijo Pankko predicted the strong growth seen in Asian telecoms was set to continue over coming years and highlighted Indonesia and Vietnam as particularly interesting markets. He said Russia also continued to provide strong opportunities for investors thanks to high mobile phone usage. "Russian and Slavic countries are as social over the phone as over the table. And there, as soon as people have money they are willing to spend it," he said. Top five countries to invest in: Bangladesh China India Indonesia Russia Bottom five: Estonia Israel Ireland Tanzania Nigeria Document GRULTD0020070413e34d0005m
WSJ.COM What's News - Worldwide News Briefs For April 11 791 words
11 April 2007
12:25 PM
Dow Jones News Service
DJ
English
(c) 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. MCCAIN DEFENDED his stance on the Iraq war and support for Bush's troop increase, calling it the 'right road,' in prepared remarks the presidential hopeful will give. * * * Democrats kept pressure on Gonzales and the White House to turn over hundreds of documents before next week, when the attorney general will testify before a Senate panel. * * * Bush invited Democrats to discuss the standoff over a war-spending bill but made clear he wouldn't change his position opposing troop withdrawals. * * * Wen and Abe signed an environmental accord calling for China and Japan to work on a successor to the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, as the two leaders moved to repair relations during the Chinese premier's visit to Japan. * * * North Korea offered to invite U.N. nuclear inspectors to return within a day of receiving funds that had been frozen in a Macau bank, and a U.S. delegation refused to extend a deadline for shutting down the country's main reactor. * * * The IMF expects global output to expand 4.9% this year and next, even as it says central bankers around will have to make difficult decisions on interest rates in the months ahead. * * * An explosion hit the prime minister's office in the capital of Algeria, ripping through some of its walls. A fire officer said at least 10 people were killed. * * * The Senate took up a bill on lifting Bush stem-cell funding curbs. The president signaled he'd sign a narrowly targeted Republican bill. * * * Attorneys for homeowners suing State Farm over Hurricane Katrina say emails in the case support their argument that the insurer pressured its engineers to alter reports on storm-damaged homes so that policyholders' claims could be denied. * * * Diabetes scientists said 15 Type 1 Brazilians don't need insulin shots after therapy with stem cells from their own blood, JAMA reports. * * * Fred Thompson, the actor-politician who is considering a bid for president, said he was diagnosed with lymphoma more than two years ago but the cancer shouldn't affect his life expectancy. * * * The student-loan scandal took root well before recent conflict-of-interest allegations over gifts from lenders cast a shadow on the business. * * * Labor's 2005 split has failed to halt a membership slide as breakaway unions pledged, and it could muddy 2008's political picture. * * * Russia expressed skepticism about Iran's announcement of an expanded uranium-enrichment program in defiance of U.N. demands. * * * Israeli authorities said they have arrested a ring of Islamic militants who planned to set off a massive car bomb in Tel Aviv over the Passover Jewish holiday. * * * Morocco police broke up a Casablanca suicide-bomb attack. Three men blew themselves up as police closed in. A fourth was shot dead. * * * Ethiopia acknowledged detaining 41 suspected terrorists from 17 countries, some captured in Somalia, and said foreign investigators were given access to them. * * * A federal judge rejected a motion by alleged al Qaeda operative Padilla to dismiss terrorism charges against him over claims he was tortured in U.S. military custody. * * * South Korea and China agreed to step up cooperation to help end North Korea's nuclear-weapons programs, during the first visit by a Chinese prime minister to Seoul in seven years. * * * Nigeria votes Saturday in what may be a watershed for Africa, the country's first civilian-to-civilian change of government. If things go wrong, it could disrupt the country's significant oil production. * * * NASA will try to launch Atlantis on the first space shuttle mission of the year in early June, almost three months later than originally planned, so that technicians can finish repairing its hail-damaged fuel tank, officials said. * * * Warming temperatures could cause food shortages for 130 million people by 2050, with Africa being the most vulnerable, according to a U.N. report. * * * Caterpillars offer a faster, safer medium to culture flu vaccine than chicken eggs, a vaccine company-funded AMA Journal study found. * * * P&G suspended ad support for Don Imus's program amid controversy over racist remarks he made last week. Bigelow Tea and Staples also pulled ads. * * * Greek maritime officials said human error contributed to the sinking of a cruise ship in the Aegean Sea last week that forced its evacuation and left two passengers missing. * * * Georgia health officials said a private vendor has lost a computer disk with personal data of 2.9 million Medicaid and children's health-care recipients. * * * The NFL suspended Tennessee Titans player Adam 'Pacman' Jones for the entire 2007 season for violating the league's personal-conduct policy. (For continuously updated news from the Wall Street Journal, see WSJ.com at http://wsj.com .) [ 04-11-07 1225ET ] Document DJ00000020070411e34b000ar
WSJ.COM What's News - Worldwide News Briefs For Apr. 11 655 words
11 April 2007
09:15 AM
Dow Jones News Service
DJ
English
(c) 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. A HOUSE PANEL SUBPOENAED new documents from Attorney General Gonzales as part of its investigation into the firings of eight federal prosecutors. * * * Bush invited Democrats to discuss the standoff over a war-spending bill but made clear he wouldn't change his position opposing troop withdrawals. * * * Wen and Abe signed an environmental accord calling for China and Japan to work on a successor to the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, as the two leaders moved to repair relations during the Chinese premier's visit to Japan. * * * North Korea offered to invite U.N. nuclear inspectors to return within a day of receiving funds that had been frozen in a Macau bank, and a U.S. delegation refused to extend a deadline for shutting down the country's main reactor. * * * An explosion hit the prime minister's office in the capital of Algeria, ripping through some of its walls. A fire officer said at least 10 people were killed. * * * The Senate took up a bill on lifting Bush stem-cell funding curbs. The president signaled he'd sign a narrowly targeted Republican bill. * * * Diabetes scientists said 15 Type 1 Brazilians don't need insulin shots after therapy with stem cells from their own blood, JAMA reports. * * * The student-loan scandal took root well before recent conflict-of-interest allegations over gifts from lenders cast a shadow on the business. * * * Labor's 2005 split has failed to halt a membership slide as breakaway unions pledged, and it could muddy 2008's political picture. * * * Russia expressed skepticism about Iran's announcement of an expanded uranium-enrichment program in defiance of U.N. demands. * * * Israeli authorities said they have arrested a ring of Islamic militants who planned to set off a massive car bomb in Tel Aviv over the Passover Jewish holiday. * * * Morocco police broke up a Casablanca suicide-bomb attack. Three men blew themselves up as police closed in. A fourth was shot dead. * * * Ethiopia acknowledged detaining 41 suspected terrorists from 17 countries, some captured in Somalia, and said foreign investigators were given access to them. * * * A federal judge rejected a motion by alleged al Qaeda operative Padilla to dismiss terrorism charges against him over claims he was tortured in U.S. military custody. * * * South Korea and China agreed to step up cooperation to help end North Korea's nuclear-weapons programs, during the first visit by a Chinese prime minister to Seoul in seven years. * * * Nigeria votes Saturday in what may be a watershed for Africa, the country's first civilian-to-civilian change of government. If things go wrong, it could disrupt the country's significant oil production. * * * NASA will try to launch Atlantis on the first space shuttle mission of the year in early June, almost three months later than originally planned, so that technicians can finish repairing its hail-damaged fuel tank, officials said. * * * Warming temperatures could cause food shortages for 130 million people by 2050, with Africa being the most vulnerable, according to a U.N. report. * * * Caterpillars offer a faster, safer medium to culture flu vaccine than chicken eggs, a vaccine company-funded AMA Journal study found. * * * P&G suspended ad support for Don Imus's program amid controversy over racist remarks he made last week. Bigelow Tea and Staples also pulled ads. * * * Greek maritime officials said human error contributed to the sinking of a cruise ship in the Aegean Sea last week that forced its evacuation and left two passengers missing. * * * Georgia health officials said a private vendor has lost a computer disk with personal data of 2.9 million Medicaid and children's health-care recipients. * * * The NFL suspended Tennessee Titans player Adam 'Pacman' Jones for the entire 2007 season for violating the league's personal-conduct policy. (For continuously updated news from the Wall Street Journal, see WSJ.com at http://wsj.com .) [ 04-11-07 0915ET ] Document DJ00000020070411e34b0005x
Statoil Annual Report 2006 60,049 words
11 April 2007
Hugin Press Release
HUGNEN
English
(c) 2007 Table of contents Terms and Measurements relating to the Oil and Gas Industry PART I Item 1 Identity of Directors, Senior Management and Advisors Item 2 Offer Statistics and Expected Timetable Item 3 Key Information Selected Financial Data Exchange Rates Dividends Risk Factors Forward-Looking Statements Statements Regarding Competitive Position Item 4 Information on the Company History and Development of the Company Business Overview Organizational Structure Property, Plant and Equipment Item 5 Operating and Financial Review and Prospects Operating Results Liquidity and Capital Resources Trend Information Use and Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures Item 6 Directors, Senior Management and Employees Directors and Senior Management Compensation Board Practices Employees Share Ownership Item 7 Major Shareholders and Related Party Transactions Major Shareholders Related Party Transactions Item 8 Financial Information Consolidated Statements and Other Financial Information Legal Proceedings Dividend Policy Significant Changes Item 9 The Offer and Listing Markets and Market Prices Item 10 Additional Information Memorandum and Articles of Association Material Contracts Exchange Controls and Other Limitations Affecting Shareholders Taxation Report of DeGolyer and MacNaughton Documents on Display Item 11 Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk Item 12 Description of Securities Other Than Equity Securities PART II Item 13 Defaults, Dividend Arrearages and Delinquencies Item 14 Material Modifications to the Rights of Security Holders and Use of Proceeds Item 15 Controls and Procedures Item 16A Audit Committee Financial Expert Item 16B Code of Ethics Item 16C Principal Accountant Fees and Services Item 16D Exemptions from the Listing Standards for Audit Committees Item 16E Purchases of Equity Securities by the Issuer and Affiliated Purchasers PART III Item 17 Financial Statements Item 18 Financial Statements Item 19 Exhibits Appendix A - Report of DeGolyer and MacNaughton Financial Statements Terms and Measurements relating to the Oil and Gas Industry References to: * bbl means barrel * mbbls means thousand barrels * mmbbls means million barrels * boe means barrels-of-oil equivalent * mboe means thousand barrels-of-oil equivalent * mmboe means million barrels-of-oil equivalent * mmcf means million cubic feet * bcf means billion cubic feet * tcf means trillion cubic feet * scm means standard cubic meter * mcm means thousand cubic meters * mmcm means million cubic meters * bcm means billion cubic meters * mmtpa means million tonnes per annum * km means kilometer * ppm means part per million * one billion means one thousand million Equivalent measurements are based upon: * 1 barrel equals 0.134 tonnes of oil (33 degrees API) * 1 barrel equals 42 U.S. gallons * 1 barrel equals 0.159 standard cubic meters * 1 barrel of oil equivalent equals 1 barrel of crude oil * 1 barrel of oil equivalent equals 159 standard cubic meters of natural gas * 1 barrel of oil equivalent equals 5,612 cubic feet of natural gas * 1 barrel of oil equivalent equals 0.122 tonnes of NGLs * 1 billion standard cubic meters of natural gas equals 1 million standard cubic meters of oil equivalent * 1 cubic meter equals 35.3 cubic feet * 1 km equals 0.62 miles * 1 square kilometer equals 0.39 square miles * 1 square kilometer equals 247.105 acres * 1 cubic meter of natural gas equals one standard cubic meter of natural gas * 1,000 standard cubic meters of natural gas equals 6.29 boe * 1 standard cubic foot equals 0.0283 standard cubic meter * 1 standard cubic foot equals 1,000 British thermal units (btu) * 1 tonne of NGLs equals 1.3 standard cubic meters of oil equivalents * 1 degree Celsius equals minus 32 plus five-ninths of the number of degrees Fahrenheit Miscellaneous terms: * Condensates means the heavier natural gas components, such as pentane, hexane, iceptane and so forth, which are liquid under atmospheric pressure - also called natural gasoline or naphtha * Crude oil, or oil, includes condensate and natural gas liquids * LNG, or liquefied natural gas, means lean gas - primarily methane - converted to liquid form through refrigeration to minus 163 degrees Celsius under atmospheric pressures * LPG means liquefied petroleum gas and consists primarily of propane and butane, which turn liquid under a pressure of six to seven atmospheres. LPG is shipped in special vessels * Naphtha is an inflammable oil obtained by the dry distillation of petroleum * Natural gas is petroleum that consists principally of light hydrocarbons. It can be divided into - lean gas, primarily methane but often containing some ethane and smaller quantities of heavier hydrocarbons (also called sales gas) and - wet gas, primarily ethane, propane and butane as well as smaller amounts of heavier hydrocarbons; partially liquid under atmospheric pressure * NGL means natural gas liquids light hydrocarbons consisting mainly of ethane, propane and butane which are liquid under pressure at normal temperature * GTL, or gas to liquids, means the technology used for chemical conversion of natural gas into transportable liquids (diesel and nahptha) and specialty products (base oils) * Petroleum is a collective term for hydrocarbons, whether solid, liquid or gaseous. Hydrocarbons are compounds formed from the
elements hydrogen (H) and carbon (C). The proportion of different
compounds, from methane and ethane up to the heaviest components,
in a petroleum find varies from discovery to discovery. If a
reservoir primarily contains light hydrocarbons, it is described
as a gas field. If heavier hydrocarbons predominate, it is
described as an oil field. An oil field may feature free gas
above the oil and contain a quantity of light hydrocarbons, also
called associated gas.
PART I Item 1 Identity of Directors, Senior Management and Advisors Not applicable. Item 2 Offer Statistics and Expected Timetable Not applicable. Item 3 Key Information Selected Financial Data The following tables set forth selected consolidated financial and statistical data of Statoil. You should read the following data together with Item 5-Operating and Financial Review and Prospects and Item 11-Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk and our consolidated financial statements, including the notes to those financial statements included in this Annual Report on Form 20-F. Solely for the convenience of the reader, the financial data for the twelve months ended December 31, 2006 has been translated into U.S. dollars at the rate of NOK 6.2287 to USD 1.00, the noon buying rate on December 29, 2006. The financial data has been derived from our financial statements, which have been prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States, or U.S. GAAP. (in million, Year ended December 31,
except per 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002
share amounts) NOK USD NOK NOK NOK NOK
Income Statement Revenues: Sales 423,528 67,996 384,653 299,015 244,817 238,845 Equity in net income (loss) of affiliates 410 66 1,090 1,209 616 352
Other income 1,228 197 1,668 1,219 207 1,250
Total revenues 425,166 68,259 387,411 301,443 245,640 240,447
Expenses:
Cost of goods
sold (239,544) (38,458) (230,721) (184,234) (146,832) (145,365)
Selling, general and administrative expenses (6,990) (1,122) (7,189) (5,720) (4,845) (4,646) Depreciation, depletion and amortization (21,767) (3,495) (20,962) (17,318) (16,151) (16,732) Exploration expenses (5,664) (909) (3,253) (1,828) (2,370) (2,410) Total expenses before financial items (308,285) (49,494) (292,368) (236,358) (196,767) (197,382) Income before financial items, other items, income taxes and minority interest 116,881 18,765 95,043 65,085 48,873 43,065 Net financial items 4,814 773 (3,512) 5,755 1,417 8,267 Other items 0 0 0 0 (6,025) 0 Income before income taxes and minority interest 121,695 19,538 91,531 70,840 44,265 51,332 Income taxes (80,360) (12,902) (60,036) (45,419) (27,422) (34,333) Minority interest (720) (116) (765) (505) (289) (153) Net income 40,615 6,521 30,730 24,916 16,554 16,846 Ordinary and diluted earnings per share (1) 18,79 3,02 14.19 11.50 7.64 7.78 Dividend paid per share (2) 9.12 1.71 8.20 5.30 2.95 2.90 (1) The weighted average number of shares outstanding was 2,161,028,202, 2,165,740,054, 2,166,142,636, 2,166,143,693 and 2,165,422,239 in 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003 and 2002, respectively. (2) See Item 8-Financial Information-Dividend Policy and Item 3-Key Information-Dividends below for a description of how dividends are determined and share repurchases. See also Item 16E-Purchases of Equity Securities by the Issuer and Affiliated Purchasers for details on the share repurchases. At December 31,