Friday, October 8, 2010

Natural Gas: Fundamentally Bearish but Expecting a Seasonal Rally

From guest analyst Papa Roach.....

Here we are, starting October on a good note weather-wise (at least in Houston). You couldn’t ask for a string of beautiful days like we have had. Last month’s price action indeed avoided the seasonal rally that has come to be expected like clockwork. The story has remained a bearish supply side, HBP drilling tale in shale (Hold By Production, a general lease clause).

The Atlantic tropical season is on its downhill slide, and we in fact did see a fairly active season with 14 named systems as of this writing, 7 of which were hurricanes and 5 of those majors. However, the offshore production area was unfazed this year with most activity staying away from the central gulf coast. The precautionary shut-in volumes were negligible. The big story of this summer has been extreme temperatures.

The summer of 2010 will go down in the record books as one of the hottest on record. The graph below depicts the meteorological summer (June-August) and compares quite bullishly to last summer.



The temperature regime created a spot market premium the entire summer that rivaled what you would expect to see in high winter heating demand as gas-fired power generation was humming along to meet the high CDD loads (Cooling Degree Day). These temperatures created a level of demand that masked the high level of US supplies and likely saved a few smaller E&P companies from very tough times.

However, the market’s ability to sustain prices that were high enough to keep a healthy drilling pace will likely be the unraveling for some as prices did not do their job of curtailing supply. Most drilling in shale is indeed for HBP purposes; however, there was still a moderate pace of traditional vertical wells that kept the supply side moving higher throughout the period.

Read the entire article "Natural Gas: Fundamentally Bearish but Expecting a Seasonal Rally"


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Commodity Corner: Crude Oil, Gasoline End the Week Higher

French labor troubles helped November crude oil to settle higher Friday. Crude oil for November delivery settled at $82.66 a barrel, a 99 cent gain from Thursday, as traders considered the increasing fallout from an ongoing strike at the Fos-Lavera oil and gas terminal near Marseille. The third-largest oil port in the world, Fos-Lavera is the key entry point for crude oil destined for half of France's refineries as well as other European refineries. For nearly two weeks, striking workers have prevented oil tankers from entering the port. With refinery utilization already low in a number of European refineries, a prolonged strike at Fos-Lavera could lead to refinery shutdowns.

The Fos-Lavera matter, coupled with a strong euro compared to the dollar, proved to have a greater influence on Friday's oil futures price than unimpressive September jobless figures from the U.S. Labor Department. The federal agency reported Friday that nonfarm payroll employment fell by 95,000 jobs last month and that the unemployment rate remained at 9.6 percent during that period. Oil traded from $80.30 to $83.13, and it ended the week 1.5 percent higher.

Natural gas futures, which plunged by more than six percent Thursday, regained some momentum Friday. November natural gas settled three cents higher to end the day at $3.65 per thousand cubic feet. The front month gas price, which has declined with recent mild weather forecasts, fluctuated between $3.58 and 3.68 Friday. Compared to Monday's $3.73 settlement price, gas is down 2.1 percent for the week. The price of a gallon of gasoline rose by three cents Friday, settling at $2.15. The intraday range for gasoline was $2.09 to $2.16, and the commodity ended the week up 2.9 percent.

Courtesy of Rigzone.Com


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Phil Flynn: Give Me That Old Time Inflation

..... it's good enough for me. The Federal Reserve has changed sides! Can you believe that the Federal Reserve is rooting for inflation! I mean that is like Superman rooting for the communists. The Feds' mission has always been to fight inflation, not create it. Yet that is exactly what they are doing. Of course the truth is, regular readers of my reports have known for years that the Fed joined the inflationary dark side of the force.

The Fed wants commodity prices higher to inspire economic activity as business start to fear that use it or lose it in relation to the spending power of their devalued dollars. The Fed wants inflation and they know how to create it and you cannot get in the Feds way. It is as I wrote the day after Quantitative Easing 1 March, 2009 when I said, "I fought the Fed and the Fed won. I fought the Fed and the Fed won.

Needed money so they printed some, I fought the Fed and the Fed won." I went on to say, “ do not underestimate the way this Fed can change the marketplace. The Fed's timing of this move to quantitative easing still has the market coming to grips with the shorter and longer term effects on the economy and the markets. The one thing that is for sure is that the rules of the game have changed.

And when it comes to a knife fight and Fed power, there are no rules. Someone say one, two, three, gold! In a blink of an eye the Fed, with its unlimited power to print money, can change the dollar value of a commodity or its long term trend in an instant. By creating inflation and money out of thin air they can.......Read the entire article.


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Bloomberg Survey: Crude Oil May Fall Next Week as U.S. Inventories Climb

Crude oil may decline next week as U.S. inventories increase and fuel consumption drops, a Bloomberg News survey showed. Seventeen of 33 analysts, or 52 percent, forecast crude oil will decline through Oct. 15. Twelve respondents, or 36 percent, predicted an increase, and four estimated prices will be little changed. Last week, 42 percent said crude would climb.

U.S. crude oil supplies increased 3.09 million barrels to 360.9 million last week, leaving stockpiles 13 percent higher than the five year average for the period, an Energy Department report on Oct. 6 showed. Fuel consumption dropped 6.4 percent to 18.5 million barrels a day, the biggest weekly decline since Feb. 27, 2004, according to the department.

“Inventories are higher than a year ago, even when adjusting for demand, yet prices are a good $10 higher,” said Tim Evans, an energy analyst with Citi Futures Perspective in New York. “There’s just not the demand to justify the recent rally in prices.”

Oil in New York touched $84.43 a barrel yesterday, the highest level since May 4, before retreating 1.9 percent to settle at $81.67. Crude oil for November delivery has increased 0.1 percent so far this week on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices are up 17 percent from a year ago. The oil survey has correctly predicted the direction of futures 47 percent of the time since its start in April 2004.

Bloomberg’s survey of oil analysts and traders, conducted each Thursday, asks for an assessment of whether crude oil futures are likely to rise, fall or remain neutral in the coming
week. The results were:

                                  RISE         NEUTRAL      FALL
                                    12                  4                 17



Bloomberg reporter Mark Shenk can be contacted at mshenk1@bloomberg.net

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Mike Paulenoff: Chart on Oil

For better or worse, richer or poorer, my big picture pattern work on oil continues to warn me that I should treat the May decline from $87.15 to $64.24 as the first downleg either in a large, incomplete correction, or the first downleg in a bear market for oil. The only way to invalidate those scenarios will occur on a price climb that hurdles $87.15. Barring upside continuation, the bearish scenarios projects to an optimal target of $63-$58. Whether or not today's weakness represents the end of the "recovery rally" or just a pause prior to yet another surge towards the May high is too early to tell. However, as of this moment, the nearby oil price action has the potential to put in a significant downside reversal day, which is a strong signal that a near term trend change has occurred for oil.

Click chart to enlarge.....


Courtesy Tim Knight's Slope of Hope

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Shale Gas Drilling Techniques Revolutionize Oil Shale Drilling

Colorado based BENTEK Energy reports that horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, which has revolutionized U.S. shale gas production and other unconventional plays, is also transforming the domestic crude oil industry. As a result, U.S. oil production is on the rise for the first time in 23 years.

In its new report, The Rush to Unconventional Oil, BENTEK notes that technologies are being used to unlock oil from shales in a number of plays such as the Bakken and Niobrara shales in the Rockies region, the Bone Springs/Wolfberry, Granite Wash and Eagle Ford plays in and around Texas and the liquids rich shales in the southwestern Marcellus.

The most explosive growth is occurring in the Bakken shale in North Dakota, where production has grown 79 percent in the past year, or 114,000 b/d, compared to the five-year average of 144,000 b/d, boosting North Dakota past Louisiana as the nation's fourth largest oil producing state. As a result, the project for Rockies oil production based on the current rig count indicates 19 percent growth next year to 717,000 b/d. The U.S. Geological Survey.....Read the entire article.


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Crude Oil Technical Outlook For Friday Morning Oct. 8th

Crude oil was lower due to profit taking overnight as it consolidates some of the rally off August's low. Stochastics and the RSI are overbought and are turning bearish signaling that a short term top might be in or is near.

Closes below the 20 day moving average crossing at 78.16 would confirm that a short term top has been posted. If November extends the rally off last week's low, the 62% retracement level of May's decline crossing at 84.65 is the next upside target.

First resistance is Wednesday's high crossing at 84.09
Second resistance is the 62% retracement level of May's decline crossing at 84.65

Crude oil pivot point for Friday morning is 82.37

First support is the 10 day moving average crossing at 80.19
Second support is the 20 day moving average crossing at 78.15


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Thursday, October 7, 2010

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Benefit from the knowledge of MarketClub co founder Adam Hewison and our other trading experts, with this FREE series of educational emails and online content.

  


Between these valuable trading tips and daily market commentary from MarketClub's Traders Blog... you will have all the tools you need to achieve your trading goals.







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Commodity Corner: Crude Rally Ends on Dollar Rebound

Crude oil futures plunged $1.56 Thursday as a stronger dollar and higher natural gas inventories caused energy prices to stagnate. Oil prices have recently been supported by the dollar euro connection a weaker dollar means an increase in crude prices. When the dollar weakens, dollar based commodities become cheaper for traders with foreign currencies. Rebounding from an 8 month low, the greenback rose against the euro sending crude prices lower Thursday.

Light, sweet crude settled at $81.67 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange Thursday, after peaking at $84.43 and plummeting to $81.00. According to the Energy Information Administration (EIA) on Wednesday, U.S. crude inventories rose to 360.9 million barrels for the week ended Oct. 1-13 percent higher than the five year average for the period. The EIA also reported a 6.4 percent drop in fuel consumption, the highest decline since Feb. 27, 2004. Analysts deem the oversupply in crude quite bearish.

Henry Hub natural gas for November delivery fell to its lowest since Sept. 2009, settling at $3.62 per thousand cubic feet. The 25 cent drop came on reports of record level storage builds.
Natural gas inventories increased by 85 billion cubic feet to 3.499 trillion cubic feet last week, as reported by the EIA on Thursday. Gas in U.S. storage hit an all time high in November 2009 at 3.837 trillion cubic feet. Natural gas fell to a 52 week low of $3.61 during Thursday's trading session and peaked at $3.89. Front month contract RBOB gasoline also settled four cents lower at $2.12 a gallon Thursday, after trading between $2.105 and $2.20.

Courtesy of  Rigzone.Com

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Sharon Epperson: Where is Crude Oil and Gold Headed on Friday?

CNBC's Sharon Epperson discusses the day's activity in the commodities markets, and looks ahead to where oil and gold are likely headed tomorrow.



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