Nel mio caso incide per un 55% ma il problema è che non ho più liquidità per mediare, e vendendone una parte e non potendo stare sempre li davanti rischio di dilapidare anche quel poco che è rimasto.
Cmq. i 18.000 euri di minus ho tempo fino a tutto il 2012 quindi sperem bem.

Mi basterebbe avere lngas a 1-1,10.
ti capisco benissimo... dai ti posto una bella notizia
Natural gas futures rose to the highest level in more than 11 weeks on speculation that lower- than-normal temperatures in the U.S. will boost demand for the heating fuel.
Gas advanced to $4.21 per million British thermal units, the highest level since Aug. 19, as forecasts showed temperatures will be below average across much of the nation from Nov. 14 to Nov. 22, according to the National Weather Service. About 52 percent of U.S. households use natural gas for heating, according to the Energy Department.
“Weather is turning cold, so people start to get a little bit jittery and gas prices go up,” said
Cameron Horwitz, an analyst in Houston at Canaccord Genuity Inc. “Weather is probably the main driver behind the price move recently.”
Natural gas for December delivery rose 5.1 cents, or 1.2 percent, to $4.139 per million Btu at 1:03 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
There will be “widespread” cold weather in the U.S. East and Midwest beginning Nov. 14, according to Commodity Weather Group LLC in Bethesda, Maryland.
Chicago will have a low of 22 degrees Fahrenheit (minus-6 Celsius) on Nov. 19, 10 degrees below normal, according to
AccuWeather Inc. in State College, Pennsylvania. New York will have a low of 37 degrees.
Demand for the heating and power-plant fuel, which peaks during the cold-weather months, drove gas to $6.108 last January.
The number of
U.S. gas drilling rigs fell 12 to 955 in the week ended Nov. 5, the lowest level since the week ended June 18, according to Baker Hughes Inc. The rig count is 30 percent higher than a year ago.
Record High Stockpiles Expected
The Energy Department is expected to report that gas stockpiles increased by 23 billion cubic feet to 3.844 trillion, surpassing the current record of 3.837 trillion set in November 2009, according to the median of nine analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
The department will release the weekly data tomorrow at noon, one day earlier than usual due to the Veterans Day holiday.
“Temperatures are dropping and that gives bulls a little more momentum, but overall there are still some serious fundamental headwinds,” said
Brad Florer, a trader at Kottke Associates Inc., an energy trading firm in Louisville, Kentucky. “Storage continues to make upside difficult.”
Gas production will average 61.49 billion cubic feet a day this year, up from 61.29 billion estimated in October, the Energy Department said in its
monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook today.
Consumption will average 65 billion cubic feet a day, down from 65.16 billion estimated in October.
Benchmark gas at the Henry Hub in Louisiana will average $4.35 per million British thermal units, down from October’s estimate of $4.47, according to the department.
Henry Hub gas prices will be $4.31 per million Btu next year, down 5.9 percent from October’s estimate of $4.58.