- Wußte (noch) gar nicht, daß Goldcorp. alles phys. Gold verkauft hat... - spieler, 22.12.2003, 09:41
- hört, hört... - - Elli -, 22.12.2003, 09:46
- Elli,da gebe ich Dir recht, das klingt wirklich nicht gut Emerald,was meinst Du? - spieler, 22.12.2003, 09:49
- Wenn ich mein Depot anschau, scheine ich bereits die besten VK-Zeiten verpaßt... - Amber, 22.12.2003, 10:00
- Elli,da gebe ich Dir recht, das klingt wirklich nicht gut Emerald,was meinst Du? - spieler, 22.12.2003, 09:49
- Und CEO Rob McEwen hat 40& seiner Goldcorp-Aktien verkauft... - Nachfrager, 22.12.2003, 10:09
- Re: Goldcorp-Aktien - ich würde die News mal nicht überbewerten - Toni, 22.12.2003, 10:53
- hört, hört... - - Elli -, 22.12.2003, 09:46
Und CEO Rob McEwen hat 40& seiner Goldcorp-Aktien verkauft...
-->...wg. kurzfristigen Geldbedarf *lol*
Reuters
UPDATE - Goldcorp dives as CEO sells 40 pct of his stock
Wednesday December 17, 1:20 pm ET
(Recasts with analyst comment, share price, background.
Changes dateline, previous Montreal. In U.S. dollars unless
noted.)
VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Dec 17 (Reuters) - Goldcorp
Inc. (NYSE:GG - News; Toronto:G.TO - News) was the worst
performing stock on the
Toronto gold board on Wednesday, sliding 4 percent after news
that the company's chief executive had sold $28.4 million worth
of stock in the Canadian gold producer.
Goldcorp said Rob McEwen, who is also the chairman of the
Toronto-based miner, sold 5.5 million of his Goldcorp shares on
Tuesday in a sale he said was necessary for his personal
financial needs.
The stock sold represents about 39 percent of McEwen's
holding in the mid-sized gold producer. It leaves him holding
about 8.5 million Goldcorp shares -- about 4.5 percent of all
the stock in the company.
Shares listed in Toronto sank as low as C$20.25 but by
early afternoon had recovered slightly to C$20.58 -- a loss of
62 Canadian cents, or 3 percent.
"Some people are probably taking the same view as Rob
McEwen -- that it is a good time to sell," said Patrick
Chidley, an analyst at Barnard Jacobs Mellet in New York.
Goldcorp surprised financial markets last week when it
announced it was selling its gold stash, built up over two
years on the belief that gold is a robust investment and as
good as holding cash.
Although the firm said it was already rebuilding its gold
stock, analysts said the bullion sale might be interpreted,
especially by retail investors, as a signal that Goldcorp
believed gold prices have peaked for now.
($1=$1.33 Canadian)

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