Even taking these factors into account, however, I believe that we will see a price recovery. If the low pressure wave in the
First, it is important to recognize that because the readings for the government storage survey take place at 9 AM on Friday, the last week was far more affected by consumption on July 4 then July 11. And July 4 is a national holiday in which many businesses are closed and consumption of natural gas tends to be far lower than on a normal weekday.
Some may be comparing the build for last week, which was the 28th week of the year, with the typical build for the 28th week of the year. But July 4 generally falls in the 27th week of the year, so this comparison is erroneous. Compared with the typical 27th week, the last week was not a particularly large build at all, being just 6 billion cubic feet above the 5-year average of 98 billion. And the week-to-week change is an inherently noisy statistic, so one week’s figure should not drive big price changes.
Between May 29 and July 3 of this year gas storage went from being 66 billion cubic feet below the 5-year-average storage to 120 billion cubic feet below the 5‑year average, despite the spot price of natural gas being above $12 per million BTU for the entire period. The weather was a little warmer than usual, but taking the nation as a whole, it was not tremendously warmer. And gas at above $12 per million BTU creates a far more powerful incentive to avoid gas usage than does the current price of $10.54.
Let us imagine that I had a knob that I could turn to change the spot price of gas, and I was trying to handle that knob so that this country would end up with at least 3.2 trillion cubic feet of gas at the autumn peak, an amount generally considered adequate to get through the winter. After viewing last week’s storage figures, I would have nudged the knob a little in the “lower-price” direction and then continued to watch to see what effect the change would have and what sort of weather we would have. But the market has swung the knob a huge amount and I just do not think that it was justified. Moreover, there are long term reasons to be bullish on gas.
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This article has 21 comments:
Ventimiglia
Petrohawk has a horizontal well producing 16.8 million cubic feet per day. From Chesapeake's recent conference call on July 2nd, their 8 horizontal wells in the Haynesville are producing 5 - 15 mmcfe per day. Louisiana pipeline infrastructure is better than the other shale plays and our NG gets to market fast. It will be interesting to see what production in the Haynesville does to inventory levels.
NG can only become a substitute for oil if we decide to burn it in our vehicle fleet. And, despite Mr. Pickens best efforts, we show no signs of moving in that direction so far. Indeed, it makes such inestimable sense, barring some long term worldwide oil catastrophe, it's unlikely we ever will.
Upsomgrubb
Interesting piece on the OIL VIX vs. nat gas today. Very timely piece if you get a chance to read it
www.greenfaucet.com/en...
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Avellini