ETC Natural Gas

Nel senso di rischiare mediamente sul rialzo del dollaro ,,,,,
se vuoi lavorare solo sul cambio c'è questo etf leva3 il codice è questo EUS3 guadagni 3 volte il recupero del dollaro su euro..

se invece vuoi stare sul dollaro prendendo azioni...nn saprei. devi conoscere i titoli, sperare che salga il titolo e che salga il dollaro, se va oppositamente ci perdi 2 volte.
 
Gas futures push above $3/MMBtu
--Gains come with northeast cold snap, cool weather in 11-15 day forecast
--Futures settle 3.4% higher at $3.096/MMBtu
By Jerry A. DiColo Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Natural gas futures jumped more than 3% Wednesday, spurred by a blast of cold weather in the U.S. northeast and forecasts for colder temperatures later this month that will likely raise gas-fired heating demand.
Natural gas for February delivery settled 10.3 cents, or 3.4%, higher at $3.096 a million British thermal units on the New York Mercantile Exchange, bouncing back above the key $3 mark after settling below that level in the last two trading sessions.
Futures posted gains as cold temperatures swept from the Midwest to New York. While forecasts are calling for milder weather over the weekend, Commodity Weather Group said Wednesday that developing weather patterns suggest cold weather will return across the Midwest, East and South, late next week, with low temperatures lingering on the East Coast into the 11-15 day outlook.
"We have some colder weather finally in the key market areas. The combination of sub $3 gas and cold weather spurred some buying," said Stephen Schork, head of trading advisor Schork Group.
Still, traders remain cautious about any increase in gas futures, particularly with U.S. inventories at record levels for this time of year. Weekly data rom the U.S. Energy Department due 10:30 a.m. EST Thursday is expected to show a modest storage draw of 80 billion cubic feet in the week ended Dec. 30.
If the analysts estimate is correct, inventories will total 3.468 trillion cubic feet, about 15% above the five-year average and 11% above last year's level for the same week.
Those high storage levels, coupled with rising production across the U.S. from shale-gas fields, has pushed front-month futures to near the lowest level since September 2009. Earlier this week, prices fell to the lowest level in the month of January since 2002.
Mild temperatures have cut the need for heating in homes and businesses, reducing gas demand, and coupled with low prices have kept winter heating bills lower for many homeowners.
While most analysts expect temperatures to fall into the coldest periods of the year in late January, the warmer-than-normal weather over the past two months makes a deep cold vital for any traders betting on higher prices.
"Unless we get a sustained four-to-six weeks of bitterly cold winter temperatures, starting almost immediately, we are going to be looking at steady stock builds," said Peter Beutel, head of trading advisor Cameron Hanover, in a client note.
 
:nnoo::nnoo:

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