It's looks like we may break the 4.00 mark for NG soon. 3.97 at the tome of this posting. When is the last time NG hit this mark?

Views: 1336

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

NG futures are forming a cup and handle bottom pattern....If it breaks above $4 and continues on, it appears that $6.00 per MCF is the ultimate target.....The chart looks very constructive.

$4 is approaching the price at which utilities will find it economical to switch back to coal from NG for base load. The current low demand/cost for thermal coal would encourage a move back to coal.

Some of the earlier switching from coal to NG will be permanent - but, not all.

As much as I would like to see $6/mcf NG, in the short term it is likely a struggle.

Also, an unknown quantity of NG is being held back by Operators due to their throttling back of production, higher prices will reduce the amount held back.

We are approaching the Spring shoulder season, a time of reduced NG consumption, not exactly bullish for NG.

As prices rise, more rigs will return, as the economics improve enough to encourage drilling.

The "technicals" may appear positive; but the fundamentals look bearish.

 

All IMHO,

                JS

This from bloomberg

Energy & Oil Prices

Crude Oil & Natural Gas

Commodity Units Price Change % Change Contract Time(ET)
Crude Oil (WTI) USD/bbl. 96.19 -0.15 -0.16% May 13 18:03:19
Crude Oil (Brent) USD/bbl. 109.36 +1.19 +1.10% May 13 18:00:00
TOCOM Crude Oil JPY/kl 61,880.00 +840.00 +1.38% Aug 13 14:59:30
NYMEX Natural Gas USD/MMBtu 4.00 +0.01 +0.30% Apr 13 18:03:16

All fundamentals are known by the market participants....Technicals drive short term markets....I see we're slightly above $4 now on the futures.....

Utica Shale,

Nymex prices are Henry Hub futures (as in Henry, Louisiana) for the front month; currently April, about to roll over to May.

What a landowner receives in royalties is largely dependent upon what pipeline the Natural Gas goes into. if you are unfortunate and are in Western PA and your gas goes into the Transco Zone 4 pipeline, you tend to realize an exceptionally low price.

No easy/definite answer to your question,

Nymex futures prices can be deceiving; to predict royalties, you need to know what pipeline your gas goes into ... and to which Hub or Gate that pipeline leads.

 

As an aside, we are heading into the Spring Shoulder Season, a period of time when heating tends to go down, and cooling (AC) has yet to start. How prices behave this Spring Shoulder Season will be most interesting.

 

All IMHO,

                  JS

 

 

NG burns cleaner than coal, regulations going to price coal out of being a source of energy, short term fluctuation in price of NG do not matter in the long run 

 

RSS

© 2024   Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher).   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service