Showing posts with label nat gas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nat gas. Show all posts

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Natural Gas Moving into a Downtrend

Natural Gas prices have made a decided turn to the downside over the last two weeks as has the short term temperature outlook and the nuclear power outage situation... all now more biased to the bearish side than they were in July. The spot natural gas futures price peaked at about $3.28/mmbtu on July 31 and has been continuing to slide ever since. In the last eight trading sessions the spot natural gas contract has lost $0.507/mmbtu or 15.5% since hitting the high of the uptrend.

Currently the market looks like it is trying to settle into a technical trading range of around $2.70/mmbtu to about $3.17/mmbtu. If the $2.70/mmbtu level is breached the next stopping point could be down to the $2.50/mmbtu level. The Nat Gas market has had a good recovery run rising from around $1.90/mmbtu back during the second week of April to the $3.28/mmbtu high previously highlighted.

The majority of the support for the rally has come from the consistent underperformance of weekly injections throughout the entire injection season so far. In fact weekly injections have averaged around 67% of last year which has resulted in the overhang in inventory continuing to narrow throughout the season. However, even with an underperformance of around 33% so far this season there is still a considerably large amount of gas in inventory versus last year at the moment......Read the entire CME Group article.

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Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Is Natural Gas Hitting Upper Resistance levels

Natural Gas was able to add value again as prices moved back toward the upper resistance level of $3/mmbtu. Weather related demand is continuing to become less of a bullish factor from both the short term temperature forecasts to the tropics. The latest NOAA six to ten day temperature forecast is projecting the smallest area of above normal temperature so far this summer which is certainly not very supportive for Nat Gas prices. The eight to fourteen day forecast is a bit more bullish in that it is projecting a larger area of above normal temperatures. Overall both forecasts will not nearly result in as much Nat Gas related cooling demand as what was experienced during the first half of the summer. The net result net injections will continue to creep higher over the next several weeks.

In addition the tropics are not threatening to Nat Gas production in the Gulf of Mexico as Ernesto is heading into Mexico and the two other tropical weather patterns out in the Atlantic are still low grade tropical weather event and it is much too early to project whether or not they will strengthen into something more impacting. Overall I do see any short term fundamental support for the current level of prices. I would expect that the market will run into difficulty in breaking through the technical resistance level of around $3/mmbtu.

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Today the EIA released their latest STEO report. Following are the main highlights relate to Nat Gas from the report.

EIA expects that natural gas consumption will average 69.8 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) in 2012, an increase of 3.2 Bcf/d (4.8 percent) from 2011. Large gains in electric power use in 2012 will more than offset declines in residential and commercial use. Projected consumption of natural gas in the electric power sector averages 25.4 Bcf/d in 2012, 22 percent higher than in 2011, primarily driven by the improved relative cost advantages of natural gas over coal for power generation in some regions.

Consumption in the electric power sector during 2012 peaks at 31.6 Bcf/d in the third quarter, when electricity demand for air conditioning is highest. As a result of the extreme heat last month, estimated electric power sector natural gas consumption during July 2012 averaged 34.8 Bcf/d, 1.8 Bcf/d higher than projected in last month's Outlook......Read Dominik Chirihella' entire article.

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Saturday, September 5, 2009

Despite sliding prices, the LNG keeps coming


Despite the steady drop in natural gas prices, Gulf Coast liquefied natural gas terminals are expecting a steady stream of shipments in the coming weeks. Cheniere Energy’s Sabine Pass terminal received an LNG shipment at its dock this week and a second tanker is due by the middle of next week. And the Trunkline LNG terminal in Lake Charles, La., could see as many as three new tanker loads of LNG in the coming weeks, according to Waterborne Energy, a Houston-based LNG market tracking firm. “The last place you would expect to see a potential 20 bcf build in LNG imports in today's weak natural gas environment would be the U.S. Gulf,” Waterborne Energy said in a report Thursday.....Read the entire article