ETC Natural Gas (95 lettori)

NEO_99

Forumer storico
May 10 (Bloomberg) -- Natural gas futures rose, snapping a six-day losing streak, as forecasts showed hotter-than-normal weather in the U.S. South, boosting demand for the power-plant fuel for air conditioning.
Gas gained as much as 1.6 percent as forecasters including MDA EarthSat Weather in Gaithersburg, Maryland, said temperatures will be as much as 14 degrees Fahrenheit above normal in the South and Midwest this week. Gas tumbled 12 percent in the previous six days on concern economic growth will slow, crimping fuel use.
“It’s very hot in the southern U.S. so there will be more air-conditioning demand,” said Peter Linder, president of the DeltaOne Energy Fund in Calgary. “The correction was overdone and traders are getting back in.”
Natural gas for June delivery gained 3 cents, or 0.7 percent, to $4.184 per million British thermal units at 1:05 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices are up 0.3 percent from a year ago.
“At $4.20 gas is cheap,” Linder said. “Prices may get back to the $4.40-to-$4.50 range.”
U.S. gas stockpiles rose 72 billion cubic feet in the week ended April 29 to 1.757 trillion cubic feet, 1 percent below the five-year average level, the Energy Department reported last week. Storage levels were down 11 percent from a year earlier.
Houston will have a high of 89 degrees Fahrenheit (32 Celsius) today, 5 degrees above normal, according to AccuWeather Inc. in State College, Pennsylvania. Jacksonville, Florida, will have a high of 87 degrees.
Weather and Prices
“We’ve had six days of declines so any sign of hot weather could raise prices,” said James Williams, an economist at WTRG Economics, an energy research firm in London, Arkansas. “Storage is below the five-year average, which means we may have reached the balance between supply and demand.”
Scheduled gas deliveries to U.S. power plants rose 2.6 percent to 15.1 million dekatherms (14.7 billion cubic feet), according to a sampling of gas pipeline nominations compiled by Bloomberg. Scheduled shipments to Florida for electricity generation rose 4.2 percent to 3.29 million dekatherms.
Power plants use 30 percent of the nation’s gas supplies according to the Energy Department.
U.S. gas production in 2011 will average 63.23 billion cubic feet a day, down from 63.32 billion estimated in April, the Energy Department said in its monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook.
Gas prices at the Henry Hub in Erath, Louisiana, will average $4.24 per million British thermal units, up from $4.10 estimated in April.
Gas production will have month-to-month declines “through the year because of reductions in the number of active natural gas drilling rigs,” the department said in the report.
 

foo fighter

Forumer storico
se ho ben capito foo, la situazione dovrebbe essere piu' o meno questa

1305047367screenshot20110510at7.04.29pm.png


più o meno. 1 e 2 non sono corrette, ma non riesci a includerle perchè il periodo di tempo è troppo corto. Il resto è corretto, ritengo
 

maxgas

SonLoss
bel rialzo in corso, che dovrebbe continuare domani per bastonare poi giovedì per i due gg finali di discesa
ciao foo.
dal post precedente di neo si intuisce che le scorte scarseggiano e il prezzo $4,2 e' piuttosto basso per le condizioni attuali in usa.
non e' da escludere un up dopo in dato scorte che probabilmente riporterebbe il
future oltre $4.4.
chiaramente le mie sono solo supposizioni.
 

foo fighter

Forumer storico
ciao foo.
dal post precedente di neo si intuisce che le scorte scarseggiano e il prezzo $4,2 e' piuttosto basso per le condizioni attuali in usa.
non e' da escludere un up dopo in dato scorte che probabilmente riporterebbe il
future oltre $4.4.
chiaramente le mie sono solo supposizioni.


che saliremo ancora lo penso e agirò di conseguenza. Non credo che l'onda sia finita o se vuoi il mensile presente sia finito. Mi aspetto che faccia una finta prima di salire davvero.
 

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