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Market Update

  • AUG 10 MARKET UPDATE
  • COLORADO SALES TAX EXEMPT CHANGES
  • APR 10 MARKET UPDATE
  • FEB 10 MARKET UPDATE
  • JAN 10 MARKET UPDATE
  • DEC 09 MARKET UPDATE
  • ROCKY MOUNTAIN ENERGY CONFERENCE
  • OCT 09 MARKET UPDATE
  • SEPT 09 MARKET UPDATE
  • AUG 09 MARKET UPDATE
  more

SEPT 09 MARKET UPDATE

Posted Mon, 09/21/2009 - 23:10 by karen

STORAGE REPORT
This week’s EIA storage report for the week ending September 4, 2009:
This week’s injection of: 69 Bcf
Leaving this week’s balance at: 3392 Bcf
This week’s balance last year: 2897 Bcf
This week’s balance, 5-yr average: 2889 Bcf

Natural gas storage is 17.4 percent above the 5-year average and 17.1 percent above last year’s level.

THOUGHTS ON THE MARKET

The Sept NYMEX closed at the lowest prompt-month expiry in 7 ½ years. Natural gas made an expected rally last week as many consumers and speculators bought in response to the lowest prompt month price. The Dow also closed the week at 9605, the exact level it was at the close of 9/11/2001. Natural gas wasn’t far from its price 8 years ago of $2.40, which was our low last week. After the 9/11 tragedy, prompt gas dropped to $1.76 and the calendar ’02 strip price was $2.90. When we made the low of $2.40 last week, the calendar ’10 strip was $5.25. Historically, multi-year lows are followed in 6 months with a retest of that low and during the retest the forward strip prices are lower than at the time of the initial low. We may be at a multi-year low. Expect gas prices to make a seasonal run up beginning in October. Reasons will range from the seasonal nuclear plant outages to tropical storms, but with storage already at 3.4 Tcf, the Q4 will be muted and early Q1 may be your best bet to buy longer term gas at lower premiums as we end the winter season with record levels of gas still in storage.

Here is another analyst version of what will happen in the upcoming months. EIA expects that the Henry Hub price of natural gas will average $2.25/MMBtu in Oct. Prices are projected to bottom out in Oct and then rise through Feb 2010 averaging $4.59/MMBtu in Feb, and fall from Mar through Aug 2010.

  • karen's blog

AUG 09 MARKET UPDATE

Posted Sun, 08/16/2009 - 20:14 by karen

STORAGE REPORT
This week’s EIA storage report for the week ending August 7, 2009:
This week’s injection of: 63 Bcf
Leaving this week’s balance at: 3152 Bcf
This week’s balance last year: 2560 Bcf
This week’s balance, 5-yr average: 2635 Bcf

Natural gas storage is 19.6 percent above the 5-year average and 23.1 percent above last year’s level. Storage at the end of the injection season is projected to be at a record high.

THOUGHTS ON THE MARKET

Natural gas futures fell to a four-week low, adding to a glut of the power-plant and industrial fuel. There’s plenty of storage and little demand to force a rally in gas prices. If US storage reaches capacity, it will push gas into the market that would normally be put away for use later in the year, further depressing prices. Since the beginning of the year, the Sept 09 contract has lost almost 59 percent of its value. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) expects the spot price of natural gas at the Henry Hub to stay below $4.00 until late this year.

Looks like the gas price range will be $3.00 to $3.50 for now. Sluggish industrial consumption because of the recession and reduced demand from electricity generators to power air conditioners has kept gas stockpiles at a surplus.

  • karen's blog

NYMEX CONTINUES TO DROP

Posted Tue, 07/14/2009 - 10:31 by karen

The August NYMEX gas futures contract dropped to its lowest front-month close since April 27, loosing 11 cents to settle at $3.263/MMBtu on Monday. With the hot temperatures in Texas, in the South and all those areas, but in the big consuming regions it is not. There is a good chance the market will drop below $3 without any significant demand drivers occurring.

  • karen's blog

JULY 09 MARKET UPDATE

Posted Tue, 07/14/2009 - 10:26 by karen

STORAGE REPORT
This week’s EIA storage report for the week ending July 3, 2009:
This week’s injection of: 75Bcf
Leaving this week’s balance at: 2796 Bcf
This week’s balance last year: 2721 Bcf
This week’s balance, 5-yr average: 2344 Bcf

Natural gas storage is about 19.3 percent above the 5-year average.

THOUGHTS ON THE MARKET

The July 4th price decline remains the most reliable price action in natural gas. The average decline from the June high to the July 4th low has been 19.15% for the 20 year period and 20.22% over the last 5 years. So far, the decline has been 19%, assuming that the July 2nd low marked the end of this pricing event.

Storage continues to refill rapidly. The total US rig count stands at 688 active rigs. While the calendar 2010 strip price looks like attractive insurance at $6/dth, 2011 and 2012 are priced above the mid-point, $6.79 & $7.08, of the trading range that prevailed from 2003 until the economic meltdown began in 2008.

  • karen's blog

ROCKY MOUNTAIN CONSUMER ENERGY CONFERENCE

Posted Sun, 06/21/2009 - 19:59 by karen

Please mark your calendars to attend the 2nd Annual Rocky Mountain Consumer Energy Conference on Oct 23rd at Invesco Field at Mile High. The information presented at this conference will help you budget your energy costs. Additional information about the conference and registration will follow soon.

  • karen's blog

JUNE 09 MARKET UPDATE

Posted Sun, 06/21/2009 - 19:58 by karen

STORAGE REPORT
This week’s EIA storage report for the week ending June 5, 2009:
This week’s injection of: 106Bcf
Leaving this week’s balance at: 2443 Bcf
This week’s balance last year: 1875 Bcf
This week’s balance, 5-yr average: 2005 Bcf

Natural gas storage is about 22 percent above the 5-year average. Storage inventories have increased the past four weeks with triple-digit injections. At the current pace inventories could top out above 4 Tcf by the end of October – a level some analysts think may be too great for the system to handle.

THOUGHTS ON THE MARKET

Despite recent increases in natural gas prices recently, the Henry Hub remains well below last year’s level at this time. Absent hurricane activity and demand below normal this summer would be bearish for natural gas prices in light of market expectations that natural gas inventories are already expected to be very full at the end of the injection season.

Crude oil closed over $70/barrel this week while natural gas was unchanged prior to today. Expect to see volatile gas prices all summer with a significant low by fall. If Goldman Sachs is successful at luring investors back into the gas market, the question is how much premium can come out of the long term strips by fall.

The EIA has increased their 2009 and 2010 energy price projections from last month, but these projections are still well below 2007 and 2008 levels, except for electricity, in which the EIA continues increased forward prices.

CSU forecast team now expects a below-average hurricane season, with 11 names storms, five of which will strengthen into hurricanes, with 2 being major storms of Cat 3 or larger.

  • karen's blog

APR 09 MARKET UPDATE

Posted Wed, 05/13/2009 - 23:01 by karen

STORAGE REPORT
This week’s EIA storage report for the week ending April 17, 2009:
This week’s injection of: 46 Bcf
Leaving this week’s balance at: 1741 Bcf
This week’s balance last year: 1282 Bcf
This week’s balance, 5-yr average: 1419 Bcf

Natural gas storage is about 23 percent above the 5-year average and 36 percent higher than a year ago.

  • karen's blog

MAR 09 MARKET UPDATE

Posted Wed, 05/13/2009 - 23:00 by karen

STORAGE REPORT
This week’s EIA storage report for the week ending March 13, 2009:
This week’s withdrawal of: 30 Bcf
Leaving this week’s balance at: 1651 Bcf
This week’s balance last year: 1325 Bcf
This week’s balance, 5-yr average: 1423 Bcf

THOUGHTS ON THE MARKET

As the summer storage injection season approaches, the gas market is searching for a bottom, with a rebalancing necessary to keep excess supply from exceeding usage storage capacity before next winter. The April NYMEX gas futures contract fell to a 6 ½ year prompt-month low this past week on the realization that the weather isn’t going anywhere bullish.

Since the NYMEX began trading gas, we’ve had 5 shocking price spikes; 1996, 2000, 2002, 2005, and 2008. Each time, gas prices bottomed out 8 to 10 months after the spike. We are currently in the 8th month since the July 08 high. If you draw a trend line of the low prices for gas, connecting all lows since 1992, that trend line would be intersected today at approx $2.40. Although it has been touched in the past, prices have never dipped below it. History is split on whether the low price for the year occurs in the 1st or 3rd quarter. It would seem like it would be 1st quarter this year with the stimulus package dollars in our economy by 3rd quarter.

  • karen's blog

Feb 09 MARKET UPDATE

Posted Tue, 02/17/2009 - 21:24 by karen

STORAGE REPORT
This week’s EIA storage report for the week ending January 30, 2009:
This week’s withdrawal of: 195 Bcf
Leaving this week’s balance at: 2179 Bcf
This week’s balance last year: 2374 Bcf
This week’s balance, 5-yr average: 2162 Bcf

Natural gas storage is about 0.8 percent above the 5-year average and 2.8 percent about last year’s level.

THOUGHTS ON THE MARKET

The gas market is well supplied heading into the last two months of the winter heating season, though a tightening of the supply/demand balance could emerge later on. The gas market is currently characterized by steady production, high natural gas storage inventories, and low prices for competing oil products and reduced industrial demand for natural gas.

March gas dipped to a level approximately equal to the low price of the year for 2003, 2004 and 2006, while the one-year strip price fell to the lowest level since 2004.

Many of you are aware that Xcel Energy has changed their rates effective Jan 1, 2009. If you have any questions, please give Xcel Energy or myself a call.

  • karen's blog

DEC 08 MARKET UPDATE

Posted Wed, 12/17/2008 - 22:49 by karen

STORAGE REPORT
This week’s EIA storage report for the week ending December 5, 2008:
This week’s withdrawal of: 67 Bcf
Leaving this week’s balance at: 3291 Bcf
This week’s balance last year: 3336 Bcf
This week’s balance, 5-yr average: 3181 Bcf

Natural gas storage is about 1.3 percent above the 5-year average.

THOUGHTS ON THE MARKET

Since the current gas market is “well supplied from an historical storage perspective heading into the peak heating months, barring an abnormally cold winter, natural gas prices could continue to see headwinds until at least March of next year. However, anticipating a more bullish rebalancing in the gas market during the latter half of next year as curtailed production begins to boost prices.

The relatively low current futures are the result of several factors. The slowing economy has resulted in a decrease of industrial natural gas consumption, and consumption in this sector likely will remain lower in the upcoming months.

  • karen's blog
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