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Thursday, February 2, 2012

[CPSI NewsWire: No Title, Just a Boring NewsWire, It Happens]

CPSI NewsWire brings you market updates on Mongolia, compiled by CPS International, a Mongolian marketing arm of CPS Securities, a Perth, WA based stockbroking and corporate advisory firm, specialising in capital raising for mining and junior stocks.

Wish to subscribe or unsubscribe? Let me know.

See Mongolia related quotes at bottom of newsletter

 

EGI closed +7.9% in NY. Few populist media and politicians are calling for Entrée Gold’s OT JV property to be included in the OT

Entrée Gold Investor Presentation, January 2012

Entrée Gold Inc. (TSX:ETG, AMEX:EGI) --

Link to presentation

 

DRAFT OF CREDIT AGREEMENT (with JICA) BACKED

Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, February 1 /MONTSAME/ At its meeting on Wednesday, the cabinet backed in principle a draft of a credit agreement to be established between the government of Mongolia and the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), dedicated to a program on supporting a social sphere.

Then, the cabinet decided to have a related Standing committee consider this draft.

In frames of the program, 12 policy measures are planned for ensuring the stability of macroeconomics and reformibng the social welfare and educational fields. Some JPY one billion and 550 million, or approximately USD 20 million, will be spent for the program's second phase after a full implementation of certain conditions.

The policy measures have comprised such goals as to protect low-income people, direct the state's health insurance financing to a targeted group, and to develop ger areas.

Link to article

 

Misc

Snow Leopard Trust Featured on BBC World News!

February 1 (Snow Leopard Trust) Based on public vote, the Snow Leopard Trust was selected the winner of the 2011 World Challenge, a competition hosted by BBC World News and Newsweek Magazine! 

Our Snow Leopard Enterprises program works with communities sharing snow leopard habitat to create beautiful handicrafts that we sell on their behalf. This program doubles and sometimes triples each of our 250+ partner communities annual income, and in return, they pledge to protect the snow leopards living nearby. 

We received $20,000 to expand Snow Leopard Enterprises into Kyrgyzstan, and you can help grow this program to protect even more snow leopards! By making a purchase through our online store http://www.snowleopard.org/shop or making a donation to our cause http://www.snowleopard.org/donate, you can help expand this successful program even further!

Link to video

 

Genghis Jon

By helping Mongolians cultivate an understanding of their native insect fauna, scientists hope to protect the country’s unique yet fragile ecosystems.

February 1 (The Scientist) Almost every year for the past decade and a half, a crew of about 20 entomologists, water ecologists, meteorologists, and other specialists converges on the shorelines of Mongolia’s lakes, rivers, and streams, just when swarms of aquatic insects do the same.

For three arduous weeks, teams traverse the sparsely populated countryside by jeep, helicopter, horse, and on foot. They sweep nets, set traps, flip rocks, dig into the soils, and sample water in order to collect as many insects as possible. The specimens are then sent to specialists around the world, who identify them and prepare them for museum collections.

Led by Jon Gelhaus, a curator of entomology at The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University and a specialist in crane flies, the Mongolian Aquatic Insect Survey represents not only the creation of a comprehensive inventory of aquatic insects in Mongolia, but more importantly, an opportunity to train new generations of Mongolians to identify and protect the fauna of their rapidly developing, newly democratic country.

Gelhaus first visited Mongolia in 1996 to assist Academy colleague Clyde Goulden with a comprehensive ecological study of Lake Hövsgöl in the northwest of  the country. For 2 years, Gelhaus sampled populations of crane flies along the lake’s shore and its feeder streams while the other team members studied fish and insect populations, water chemistry, geology, and meteorology.

In the early 1990s, Mongolia had just opened its doors to the West, after ending nearly 70 years of Soviet rule. Not only was the country struggling to make the transition from communism to democracy and capitalism, it was lacking in scientific expertise and infrastructure—so data on its native insect fauna was scant.

“The knowledge that was available had been acquired almost exclusively by foreign scientists,” says John Morse, a Clemson University entomologist who also worked with Goulden at Lake Hövsgöl in the 1990s and continues to co-lead the Mongolian Aquatic Insect Survey. “They just didn’t really have the facility to do much.”

Mongolian entomologists were still using World War II-era Russian microscopes to examine insects, Morse remembers. “They were pushing these microscopes up to a fluorescent tube that ran down the center of the table and directing their mirrors toward those fluorescent tubes to try to get enough light on the specimens.”

In 2002, Gelhaus, Morse, and Barbara Hayford, a researcher at Wayne State College in Nebraska who studies nonbiting midges, obtained a grant from the National Science Foundation to extend the original Lake Hövsgöl project to include the Selenge River basin, the major watershed connecting Lake Hövsgöl to Lake Baikal in Russia. The researchers were able to set up laboratory space at the Institute of Meteorology and Hydrology in Mongolia. “We equipped it and hired young Mongolian people to staff it,” Morse explains. The staff was tasked with identifying and curating the specimens collected by the team and making them accessible to other institutions within Mongolia, an effort that continues today.

“A big part of the focus for everybody involved is training young Mongolians to be aquatic scientists and to be able to understand the insect fauna in their streams,” Gelhaus says.

Starting in 1998, Morse organized courses at various Mongolian institutions to teach aspiring entomologists how to use aquatic insects to monitor water quality in Mongolia. Among his first batch of students was Oyunchuluun “Oyunaa” Yadamsuren, then a sophomore at Mongolia’s State Pedagogical University, who early on expressed an interest in crane flies. Morse connected her with Gelhaus, who hired her to help survey the Selenge basin and arranged for her to spend a month at the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia in 2003. It was the first time Yadamsuren had ever left her country.

In Philadelphia, Gelhaus taught Yadamsuren how to meticulously preserve and identify insects as well as how to develop experimental designs and write scientific papers. “It can be said that Dr. Gelhaus taught me everything, beginning with the ABCs of scientific research,” Yadamsuren says.

Morse and Gelhaus have raised funds to bring other young Mongolian scientists to the United States, many of whom have pursued graduate studies in the United States, Europe, Japan, and other places.

“Now these are young scientists that can really make a difference in Mongolia and are in positions where they are teaching or are in policy situations,” Gelhaus says. Mongolian students and scientists have even recently established a professional society of freshwater entomologists.

Yadamsuren is currently pursuing her PhD in Morse’s Clemson University lab. Like many of her peers, Yadamsuren plans to return to Mongolia and use what she’s learned to preserve her country’s water quality, which has been degraded by overgrazing, deforestation, mining, climate change, and urbanization.

In 2008, Gelhaus and his colleagues won a second NSF grant to explore the aquatic insects of the Altai and Hangai mountain ranges in western Mongolia. To date, Morse, Gelhaus, and Hayford have succeeded in doubling the number of caddisfly, crane fly, and nonbiting midge species known in Mongolia and have discovered dozens of new species. Gelhaus named one of the new crane fly species Gonomyia oyunaae, after Yadamsuren.

“Eventually we want to walk away and be really happy that Mongolians can do this research and that we’ve left them with this area of expertise that they can call their own,” Hayford says.

Link to article

 

Naran envisions bright future as Mongolia comes out of dark times

February 1 (The Chronicle Herald) Naran Munkhbat roamed the seedy bars and hotel lobbies of Hong Kong looking for her peo­ple.

It was 2008, and the universi­ty- educated women’s rights worker dressed like the young Mongolian women selling them­selves to businessmen and for­eign tourists.

“For two months, I was getting nowhere and started to get de­pressed," said Naran, 27, on Thursday.

Like the 60 per cent of her country’s population under 30 years old, Naran was born into uncertainty.

The communist government that had ruled her nomadic peo­ple for 70 years struggled through the 1980s and finally collapsed in 1990. Brutal winters and low livestock prices drove Mongolia’s nomadic herders into the Central Asian country’s two main cities. With little work and little opportunity in a country clawing its ways through the 1990s, thousands of girls fell prey to rose-coloured offers of jobs in neighbouring countries.

“And many of these underaged girls are forced into prostitution," said Naran.

Breakthrough came in the form of an elderly Mongolian woman living illegally in Hong Kong and cooking for some of the girls. Naran helped the lady cook and followed her to the hostels and homes.

“Many of them saw it as la­bour, work," said Naran, who brought the girls condoms and spent hours hearing their stories.

“Each story is different. And in a foreign country, with few to talk to, they abuse alcohol and smoke cigarettes to open up. I was emotional support."

Most of the women saw no opportunities waiting for them in Mongolia, but Naran was able to bring two home.

“One of the girls went to col­lege and took English. She was strong."

Her work with the non-profit Asia Foundation now centres upon making a place for women in the new Mongolia rising from the ashes of communism. While 30 per cent of Mongolians still drive cattle over rolling grass­lands, a mining boom is bringing stable, skilled jobs.

So instead of Hong Kong night­clubs, Naran now spends long evenings sorting through hun­dreds of scholarship applica­tions. During daytime inter­views, she hears the stories of the young women, 120 of whom her organization will offer scholar­ships to university science pro­grams.

Through the Asia Foundation, she also makes presentations to judges and prosecutors on the extent and effects of human trafficking. In the bustling streets of Mongolia’s growing cities, she campaigns for women candidates in the upcoming elections of the young democracy.

“Women had a strong place in traditional Mongolian society, but it was still a very patriarchal culture," said Naran.

“We’re trying to carve a bigger role for women in the new Mon­golia."

While many challenges re­main, she said the future is bright for her country. The World Bank is predicting continued significant growth in the econo­my over the coming years.

It’s a far cry from the breadlines Naran stood in with her grandmother and thousands of others during the early 1990s.

“It’s an exciting time to be a Mongolian, and I’m trying to play my small part to help my country."

Link to article

 

Table: Mongolia Related Stocks (Source: Bloomberg)

 

Name

Symbol

$

Price

Change

+-%

Open

High

Low

Volume

Time

% YTD

% 12 m

Indices

ASX 200

AS51:IND

4,225.67

-37.01

-0.87%

4,259.60

4,264.40

4,225.67

0

1-Feb

 

 

Nikkei 225

NKY:IND

8,809.79

7.28

0.08%

8,789.06

8,830.28

8,780.10

0

1-Feb

 

 

Hang Seng

HSI:IND

20,333.37

-57.12

-0.28%

20,394.67

20,534.22

20,269.51

0

1-Feb

 

 

MSE Top 20

MSETOP:IND

19,946.50

-30.00

-0.15%

19,946.50

19,946.50

19,946.50

0

1-Feb

 

 

FTSE 100

UKX:IND

5,790.72

109.11

1.92%

5,681.61

5,790.72

5,680.67

974,202

1-Feb

 

 

TSX Composite

SPTSX:IND

12,517.66

65.51

0.53%

12,510.67

12,542.34

12,463.76

213,032,706

1-Feb

 

 

S&P 500

SPX:IND

1,324.09

11.68

0.89%

1,312.45

1,330.52

1,312.45

0

1-Feb

ASX

Aspire Mining

AKM:AU

AUD

0.38

0

0.00%

0.38

0.39

0.375

721,388

1-Feb

2.70%

-38.21%

Blina Minerals

BDI:AU

AUD

0.005

0

0.00%

0.005

0.005

0.005

95,998

1-Feb

0.00%

-80.77%

Cougar Energy

CXY:AU

AUD

0.014

0

0.00%

0.014

0.014

0.014

136,000

1-Feb

-12.50%

-36.36%

Draig Resources

DRG:AU

AUD

0.515

0.015

3.00%

0.505

0.515

0.505

432,090

1-Feb

-40.12%

FeOre

FEO:AU

AUD

0.28

0

0.00%

0.28

0.28

0.28

0

31-Jan

0.00%

General Mining

GMM:AU

AUD

0.125

0.032

34.41%

0.091

0.14

0.09

1,470,471

1-Feb

204.88%

-3.85%

Guildford Coal

GUF:AU

AUD

0.8

-0.04

-4.76%

0.84

0.845

0.8

570,177

1-Feb

6.67%

8.11%

Haranga Resources

HAR:AU

AUD

0.34

0.02

6.25%

0.33

0.355

0.33

694,427

1-Feb

19.30%

-45.16%

Modun Resources

MOU:AU

AUD

0.045

0

0.00%

0.044

0.046

0.044

2,260,568

1-Feb

0.00%

221.43%

Mongolian Res Corp

MUB:AU

AUD

0.125

0

0.00%

0.125

0.125

0.125

0

27-Jan

0.00%

-68.75%

Robe Australia

ROB:AU

AUD

0.017

0

0.00%

0.016

0.017

0.016

828,870

1-Feb

21.43%

100.00%

Voyager Resources

VOR:AU

AUD

0.07

0

0.00%

0.069

0.07

0.068

2,067,551

1-Feb

2.94%

-24.20%

Xanadu Mines

XAM:AU

AUD

0.35

-0.005

-1.41%

0.35

0.35

0.35

36,571

1-Feb

1.45%

-44.88%

MSE

A Board

Aduunchuluun 

ADL:MO

MNT

4,999

129

2.65%

4,870

4,999

4,870

483

1-Feb

-16.68%

-75.13%

APU

APU:MO

MNT

3,750

-50

-1.32%

3,800

3,800

3,750

1,170

1-Feb

-10.71%

2.74%

Atar Urguu

ATR:MO

MNT

37,777

0

0.00%

37,700

37,777

37,700

0

24-Jan

30.27%

Baganuur 

BAN:MO

MNT

8,000

-25

-0.31%

8,022

8,100

8,000

468

1-Feb

-38.93%

-61.50%

Mogoin Gol

BDL:MO

MNT

26,000

-2,000

-7.14%

26,050

26,500

25,990

246

1-Feb

-16.13%

3.99%

BDSec 

BDS:MO

MNT

3,200

-100

-3.03%

3,200

3,200

3,200

3

1-Feb

-8.57%

3.23%

Bayangol Hotel

BNG:MO

MNT

35,000

-1,000

-2.78%

35,000

35,000

35,000

82

1-Feb

-2.64%

25.45%

Bayanteeg 

BTG:MO

MNT

36,500

0

0.00%

31,600

36,500

31,600

0

30-Jan

1.39%

115.16%

UB BUK

BUK:MO

MNT

30,000

0

0.00%

29,000

30,000

29,000

0

27-Jan

-7.69%

322.48%

Eermel

EER:MO

MNT

2,800

100

3.70%

2,800

2,800

2,800

294

1-Feb

0.00%

-11.11%

Gobi 

GOV:MO

MNT

5,000

0

0.00%

5,000

5,000

5,000

333

1-Feb

-2.91%

-28.57%

Gutal

GTL:MO

MNT

3,300

0

0.00%

3,850

3,850

3,300

0

27-Jan

80.82%

Hi B Oil

HBO:MO

MNT

180

0

0.00%

179

180

179

0

31-Jan

-5.26%

-5.26%

Khukh Gan

HGN:MO

MNT

181

0

0.00%

182

182

181

0

31-Jan

-9.50%

0.56%

Hermes Centre

HRM:MO

MNT

75

5

7.14%

71

80

70

670,758

1-Feb

33.93%

19.05%

Jenko Tour Bureau

JTB:MO

MNT

92

0

0.00%

94

94

92

10,303

1-Feb

-2.13%

-9.80%

Telecom Mongolia

MCH:MO

MNT

2,501

0

0.00%

2,505

2,505

2,501

270

1-Feb

-7.37%

-37.46%

Mongolia Dev Res

MDR:MO

MNT

950

0

0.00%

950

950

950

299

1-Feb

-5.94%

-44.12%

Moninjbar

MIB:MO

MNT

135

-5

-3.57%

135

135

135

5,000

1-Feb

3.85%

-20.59%

Mongol Nekhmel

MNH:MO

MNT

3,500

-500

-12.50%

3,500

3,500

3,500

18

1-Feb

6.71%

102.90%

Hotel Mongolia

MSH:MO

MNT

815

0

0.00%

815

815

815

0

31-Jan

-9.34%

8.67%

Darkhan Nekhii

NEH:MO

MNT

6,500

200

3.17%

6,400

6,500

6,300

622

1-Feb

4.84%

-24.42%

Nak Tulsh

NKT:MO

MNT

190

0

0.00%

190

190

190

3

1-Feb

8.57%

-40.63%

Olloo

OLL:MO

MNT

170

0

0.00%

171

171

170

0

31-Jan

-28.87%

0.59%

Remikon 

RMC:MO

MNT

166

0

0.00%

166

166

166

1,430

1-Feb

-5.68%

38.33%

Sharyn Gol 

SHG:MO

MNT

10,100

0

0.00%

11,000

11,615

10,100

1,056

1-Feb

-11.01%

-49.50%

Shivee Ovoo

SHV:MO

MNT

14,000

0

0.00%

13,500

14,000

13,500

674

1-Feb

-8.50%

-47.17%

Sor

SOR:MO

MNT

3,500

0

0.00%

3,400

3,500

3,400

0

27-Jan

-8.38%

122.36%

Suu 

SUU:MO

MNT

66,500

0

0.00%

66,000

66,500

66,000

0

25-Jan

2.31%

166.00%

Tav

TAV:MO

MNT

Talkh Chikher

TCK:MO

MNT

10,560

0

0.00%

10,560

10,560

10,560

20

1-Feb

0.57%

57.61%

Tavantolgoi

TTL:MO

MNT

10,850

100

0.93%

10,750

10,850

10,750

522

1-Feb

-1.36%

8.50%

State Dept Store 

UID:MO

MNT

480

45

10.34%

441

480

440

3,447

1-Feb

-17.24%

-18.09%

Ulaanbaatar Hotel

ULN:MO

MNT

50,000

0

0.00%

50,000

50,000

50,000

0

31-Jan

11.11%

56.94%

Mongol Savkhi

UYN:MO

MNT

2,000

0

0.00%

2,000

2,000

2,000

433

1-Feb

-22.69%

215.96%

Zoos Goyol

ZOO:MO

MNT

879

48

5.78%

831

879

830

506

1-Feb

-6.49%

-17.77%

HKEx

Solartech Int’l

1166:HK

HKD

0.181

-0.002

-1.09%

0.184

0.188

0.18

21,471,000

1-Feb

2.26%

-76.79%

Winsway

1733:HK

HKD

1.82

-0.03

-1.62%

1.85

1.87

1.81

6,654,000

1-Feb

-20.52%

-57.69%

SouthGobi Resources

1878:HK

HKD

54.2

-1.3

-2.34%

55

55.05

54.1

20,000

1-Feb

18.99%

-53.28%

China Gold

2099:HK

HKD

24.35

0.15

0.62%

24.35

24.7

23.8

100,600

1-Feb

33.79%

-40.61%

CNNC Int’l

2302:HK

HKD

2.46

0.02

0.82%

2.43

2.47

2.42

1,030,000

1-Feb

21.78%

-65.59%

Real Gold Mining

246:HK

HKD

8.81

0

0.00%

8.81

8.81

8.81

0

1-Feb

0.00%

-25.97%

Mongolia Energy

276:HK

HKD

0.73

0.02

2.82%

0.71

0.76

0.71

30,068,926

1-Feb

4.29%

-67.56%

Zijin Mining

2899:HK

HKD

3.48

0.07

2.05%

3.45

3.5

3.42

30,452,149

1-Feb

19.18%

-13.09%

Mongolia Inv Group

402:HK

HKD

0.053

0.005

10.42%

0.05

0.058

0.05

39,130,000

1-Feb

15.22%

-49.52%

North Asia Resources

61:HK

HKD

0.26

0

0.00%

0.26

0.265

0.26

530,800

1-Feb

17.12%

-80.15%

China Daye Non-Fer.

661:HK

HKD

0.41

0.01

2.50%

0.4

0.41

0.4

3,422,000

1-Feb

-10.87%

-36.92%

Bestway Int’l

718:HK

HKD

0.049

-0.001

-2.00%

0.05

0.052

0.048

540,000

1-Feb

-19.67%

-60.80%

Asia Coal

835:HK

HKD

0.098

0

0.00%

0.098

0.098

0.098

0

1-Feb

-6.67%

-60.80%

Mongolian Mining

975:HK

HKD

6.21

-0.03

-0.48%

6.24

6.29

6.19

3,846,150

1-Feb

6.34%

-41.74%

SGX

LionGold

LIGO:SP

SGD

0.885

0.005

0.57%

0.88

0.89

0.88

6,060,000

1-Feb

1.72%

23.78%

LSE

Central Asia Metals

CAML:LN

GBp

65.25

1.75

2.76%

65.25

65.25

65.25

4,107,100

1-Feb

14.73%

-30.21%

Petro Matad

MATD:LN

GBp

30.25

0

0.00%

30.25

30.5

30.25

158,542

1-Feb

22.22%

-74.79%

Metal-Tech

MTT:LN

GBp

4.25

0

0.00%

4.25

4.25

4.25

0

1-Feb

13.33%

-66.00%

Nova Resources

NOVA:LN

GBp

8.5

-0.25

-2.86%

8.5

8.5

8.5

0

1-Feb

257.90%

325.00%

Origo Partners

OPP:LN

GBp

31.75

0.25

0.79%

31.5

31.75

31.5

131,622

1-Feb

-9.29%

-23.95%

Canada

Aberdeen Int’l

AAB:CN

CAD

0.62

0.03

5.08%

0.6

0.62

0.59

197,804

1-Feb

-4.62%

-11.61%

Altan Rio Minerals

AMO:CN

CAD

0.53

0

0.00%

0.53

0.53

0.53

6,000

1-Feb

Blue Zen Mem. Parks

BZM:CN

CAD

0.05

0

0.00%

0.03

0.1

0.03

0

31-Jan

0.00%

-90.00%

Centerra Gold

CG:CN

CAD

19.08

-0.77

-3.88%

19.85

19.95

18.86

491,908

1-Feb

6.00%

16.77%

China Gold

CGG:CN

CAD

3.19

-0.03

-0.93%

3.19

3.21

3.15

225,795

1-Feb

24.61%

-40.04%

Desert Eagle Res

DER:CN

CAD

0.45

0

0.00%

0.275

0.45

0.275

0

27-Jan

-72.22%

Denison Mines

DML:CN

CAD

1.75

0.03

1.74%

1.76

1.85

1.74

3,196,402

1-Feb

37.80%

-55.47%

East Asia Minerals

EAS:CN

CAD

0.58

0

0.00%

0.58

0.58

0.56

48,595

1-Feb

23.40%

-91.21%

Erdene Resource

ERD:CN

CAD

0.435

-0.005

-1.14%

0.45

0.46

0.43

75,050

1-Feb

16.00%

-72.12%

Entree Gold

ETG:CN

CAD

1.35

0.07

5.47%

1.31

1.35

1.29

41,165

1-Feb

8.87%

-55.00%

Fortress Minerals

FST:CN

CAD

3.76

-0.19

-4.81%

3.85

3.85

3.76

877

1-Feb

-8.29%

-31.64%

Gulfside Minerals

GMG:CN

CAD

0.075

0.005

7.14%

0.075

0.075

0.075

5,000

1-Feb

-11.76%

-11.76%

Global Met Coal Corp

GMZ:CN

CAD

0.13

-0.01

-7.14%

0.13

0.14

0.13

126,000

1-Feb

4.00%

Ivanhoe Energy

IE:CN

CAD

1.03

-0.01

-0.96%

1.05

1.05

1.01

158,941

1-Feb

-8.04%

-70.40%

Ivanhoe Mines

IVN:CN

CAD

16.63

0.46

2.84%

16.32

16.94

16.26

2,134,368

1-Feb

-8.07%

-40.22%

Kincora Copper

KCC:CN

CAD

0.3

0

0.00%

0.3

0.3

0.3

0

30-Jan

-3.23%

42.86%

Khan Resources

KRI:CN

CAD

0.18

-0.005

-2.70%

0.185

0.2

0.18

25,300

1-Feb

-10.00%

-70.49%

Lucky Strike

LKY:CN

CAD

0.285

-0.005

-1.72%

0.29

0.29

0.285

9,900

1-Feb

-19.72%

-62.00%

Meritus Minerals

MER:CN

CAD

0.045

0.005

12.50%

0.045

0.045

0.04

237,500

1-Feb

80.00%

-71.88%

Manas Petroleum

MNP:CN

CAD

0.26

0.02

8.33%

0.24

0.26

0.225

244,500

1-Feb

79.31%

Prophecy Coal

PCY:CN

CAD

0.45

0.02

4.65%

0.43

0.455

0.425

583,005

1-Feb

9.76%

-44.63%

Puget Ventures

PVS:CN

CAD

0.49

0

0.00%

0

17-Sep

SouthGobi Resources

SGQ:CN

CAD

7.07

-0.15

-2.08%

7.23

7.3

7.01

58,962

1-Feb

17.83%

-52.87%

Solomon Resources

SRB:CN

CAD

0.085

0

0.00%

0.085

0.085

0.085

27,000

1-Feb

21.43%

-48.48%

Undur Tolgoi Minerals

UTM:CN

CAD

0.2

-0.02

-9.09%

0.2

0.2

0.2

1,500

1-Feb

0.00%

Mongolia Growth Grp

YAK:CN

CAD

4.22

0.01

0.24%

4.22

4.22

4.19

9,715

1-Feb

8.21%

US

Denison Mines

DNN:US

USD

1.76

0.04

2.33%

1.77

1.85

1.7402

1,090,335

1-Feb

40.80%

-55.78%

Entree Gold

EGI:US

USD

1.37

0.1

7.87%

1.3

1.37

1.29

90,159

1-Feb

14.17%

-54.78%

Ivanhoe Energy

IVAN:US

USD

1.03

0

0.00%

1.05

1.05

1.02

592,427

1-Feb

-8.04%

-70.66%

Ivanhoe Mines

IVN:US

USD

16.58

0.44

2.73%

16.35

16.985

16.29

6,443,547

1-Feb

-6.43%

-40.76%

Manas Petroleum

MNAP:US

USD

0.23

-0.025

-9.80%

0.253

0.26

0.22

731,305

1-Feb

55.93%

-60.28%

Mongolia Growth Grp

MNGGF:US

USD

4.235

0.035

0.83%

4.2415

4.2415

4.235

700

1-Feb

10.14%

Blue Wolf MGL

MNGL:US

USD

9.67

0

0.00%

9.67

9.67

9.67

0

27-Jan

0.52%

Blue Wolf MGL Unit

MNGLU:US

USD

10.31

0

0.00%

10.31

10.31

10.31

0

19-Jan

2.59%

 

 

---

"Mogi" Munkhdul Badral

Senior Client Manager / Executive Director

CPS International LLC

Telephone/Fax: +976-11-321326

Mobile: +976-99996779

Email: mogi@cpsinternational.mn

P Please consider the environment before printing a copy of this email.

 

Suite 1213 · Level 12 · 2 Sukhbaatar Square

Sukhbaatar District 8 · Ulaanbaatar 14200 · Mongolia

 

CPS International is a marketing arm of CPS Securities in Mongolia. CPS Securities is a Perth, Western Australia based AFSLicense Holder. To trade ASX and international stocks, feel free to contact me at mogi@cpsinternational.mn or +976-99996779.

 

Disclosure/Disclaimer

CPS Securities, its directors and employees advise that they may hold securities, may have an interest in and/or earn brokerage and other benefits or advantages, either directly or indirectly from client transactions mentioned in correspondence from CPS International.

CPS International advise this email contains general information only and does not include advice. In preparing this communication, CPS International did not take into account the investment objectives, financial situation and particular needs of any person. As with any speculative mining company there are significant risks.

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