Etf natural gas (2 lettori)

cort

Forumer storico
Bravo tu si che l'hai comprato bene io meno, ma non importa ...aspettero' la sua migliore performance...hai un target per lui?

;) grazie Cort
io sono sempre abituato ad uscire abbastanza presto dappertutto..
dovebbe seguire l'oro quando sale.. e probabilmente viceversa come
interessa a noi.. le oscillazioni sono però maggiori per il silver..
personalmente lo reputo quindi un prodotto non tra i più tanquilli, e se
si svalutassero le monete nel prosieguo, potrebbero avere ancora margine di salita sia l'oro che l'argento..quindi in questo caso se consolido il gain
iniziato oggi potrei pensare di uscire..
 

NEO_99

Forumer storico
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK) will sell some of its Barnett shale natural gas production to Barclays PLC (BCS, BARC.LN) for $1.15 billion, as the exploration company looks to lighten its debt load and the bank bets that prices are due to take off.
Under the deal, Barclays will receive 390 billion cubic feet of proved reserves, and can then sell the gas produced in the east Texas fields in the market. The reserves are projected to produce 280 million cubic feet a day in 2011.
Chesapeake's arrangement with Barclays is the gas company's eighth such agreement since the end of 2007, and involves the lowest price paid per thousand cubic feet as natural gas prices have slid near one-year lows, according to analysts with Ticonderoga Securities LLC. The deals amount to about one trillion cubic feet of gas sold for a total of about $4.7 billion.
Chesapeake is attempting to reduce its debt in order to secure an investment-grade credit rating, while continuing to grow, Aubrey McClendon, chief executive of Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake, said in a conference call in August. The company sold about $12 billion of its assets during the second half of 2008 after a debt-fueled growth spurt was halted by the credit crunch and slumping natural-gas prices. That has prompted oil-and-gas firms to slash projected capital spending and result in companies such as Chesapeake selling assets to boost liquidity.
The deal fits with Chesapeake's strategy of continuing to finance growth amid depressed gas prices, said Daniel Pratt, an analyst with Ticonderoga. Chesapeake "is outspending their cash flow this year, and they're still actively exploring. They're going through an acquisition mode here."
For Barclays, the purchase amounts to a bet that gas prices will remain steady or rise, allowing the bank to sell the gas at a profit. Barclays stands to benefit should gas demand recover or if drillers reduce their activity because of low prices. Other large banks, including UBS AG (UBS) and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) have made similar acquisitions of oil and gas assets as they have expanded their commodities trading operations. Many banks are active in both the physical and futures markets.
Barclays is paying about $2.95 per thousand cubic feet, about 20% below the current futures market price, but above the average price paid this year to acquire similar assets, analysts at Ticonderoga wrote. The deal carries less risk for Barclays than would the purchase of land or drilling rights, as Chesapeake under the agreement is still responsible for drilling operations.
Gas prices have been pressured this year as strong production from shale-gas formations such as the Barnett and tepid demand led to high inventories. However, Barclays analysts have forecast that gas for delivery at the Henry Hub in Louisiana in 2011 will average $4.10 a million British thermal units. Natural gas for November delivery recently traded at $3.70 a million British thermal units on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the lowest price for this time of year since 2002.
Chesapeake shares were down 2.8% at $22.16 recently
 

dremond

Forumer attivo
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK) will sell some of its Barnett shale natural gas production to Barclays PLC (BCS, BARC.LN) for $1.15 billion, as the exploration company looks to lighten its debt load and the bank bets that prices are due to take off.
Under the deal, Barclays will receive 390 billion cubic feet of proved reserves, and can then sell the gas produced in the east Texas fields in the market. The reserves are projected to produce 280 million cubic feet a day in 2011.
Chesapeake's arrangement with Barclays is the gas company's eighth such agreement since the end of 2007, and involves the lowest price paid per thousand cubic feet as natural gas prices have slid near one-year lows, according to analysts with Ticonderoga Securities LLC. The deals amount to about one trillion cubic feet of gas sold for a total of about $4.7 billion.
Chesapeake is attempting to reduce its debt in order to secure an investment-grade credit rating, while continuing to grow, Aubrey McClendon, chief executive of Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake, said in a conference call in August. The company sold about $12 billion of its assets during the second half of 2008 after a debt-fueled growth spurt was halted by the credit crunch and slumping natural-gas prices. That has prompted oil-and-gas firms to slash projected capital spending and result in companies such as Chesapeake selling assets to boost liquidity.
The deal fits with Chesapeake's strategy of continuing to finance growth amid depressed gas prices, said Daniel Pratt, an analyst with Ticonderoga. Chesapeake "is outspending their cash flow this year, and they're still actively exploring. They're going through an acquisition mode here."
For Barclays, the purchase amounts to a bet that gas prices will remain steady or rise, allowing the bank to sell the gas at a profit. Barclays stands to benefit should gas demand recover or if drillers reduce their activity because of low prices. Other large banks, including UBS AG (UBS) and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) have made similar acquisitions of oil and gas assets as they have expanded their commodities trading operations. Many banks are active in both the physical and futures markets.
Barclays is paying about $2.95 per thousand cubic feet, about 20% below the current futures market price, but above the average price paid this year to acquire similar assets, analysts at Ticonderoga wrote. The deal carries less risk for Barclays than would the purchase of land or drilling rights, as Chesapeake under the agreement is still responsible for drilling operations.
Gas prices have been pressured this year as strong production from shale-gas formations such as the Barnett and tepid demand led to high inventories. However, Barclays analysts have forecast that gas for delivery at the Henry Hub in Louisiana in 2011 will average $4.10 a million British thermal units. Natural gas for November delivery recently traded at $3.70 a million British thermal units on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the lowest price for this time of year since 2002.
Chesapeake shares were down 2.8% at $22.16 recently

tutto sto papiro cosa sta ad indicare Neo99?:D
 

kleinklepura

Forumer storico
Forza ragazzi che il DOMANI non e' sempre uguale .................secondo me stiamo scrivendo una pagina che alla fine si tramutera' in una bella storia,ah dimenticavo quella rimpatriata da drem la faremo e non manchero' ,il mio contributo alla serata ?Un mazzo di carte Francesi ed un 'involucro d'immancabili fishes e parfume de femmes..................
 

adg

Forumer attivo
Forza ragazzi che il DOMANI non e' sempre uguale .................secondo me stiamo scrivendo una pagina che alla fine si tramutera' in una bella storia,ah dimenticavo quella rimpatriata da drem la faremo e non manchero' ,il mio contributo alla serata ?Un mazzo di carte Francesi ed un 'involucro d'immancabili fishes e parfume de femmes..................
Io mi accontento dell'ultima parola
 

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