ETC Natural Gas (41 lettori)

NEO_99

Forumer storico
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kleinklepura

Forumer storico
csa dici tiene o ci sarà ancora dei rintracciamenti?
Se' chiude oltre 4'50 oggi,nessun ritracciamento di rilievo sino in area 4'75-4'80,li mi attendo un nuovo test a 4'50 e poi successiva ripartenza max entro fine anno a 5$il nostro target di breve,finche' in chiusura daily sara' sempre mantenuta area 4'50 ,il target dei 5$ e' raggiungibile per fine anno -meta' Gennaio!
 

acetrato

Forumer attivo
se' chiude oltre 4'50 oggi,nessun ritracciamento di rilievo sino in area 4'75-4'80,li mi attendo un nuovo test a 4'50 e poi successiva ripartenza max entro fine anno a 5$il nostro target di breve,finche' in chiusura daily sara' sempre mantenuta area 4'50 ,il target dei 5$ e' raggiungibile per fine anno -meta' gennaio!
ti ho scritto in pvt
 

NEO_99

Forumer storico
HOUSTON (Dow Jones)--Natural gas futures rose Monday thanks to a cold weather snap that has struck major heat consumption areas.
Natural gas for January delivery climbed 14.2 cents, or 3.27%, to $4.491 a million British thermal units on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
The benchmark contract built on three consecutive days of gains that closed out last week, prompted by an Arctic front that pushed below-freezing temperatures across the Midwest and into the Deep South as well as predictions that even more furnaces could be fired up in the coming days.
"Temperatures could be even colder than anticipated within this potent push of cold, with the strong (below-average temperatures)ending up even more expansive and intense than currently forecast," meteorologists with private forecasters MDA EarthSat Weather wrote in a client note.
Predictions like that have traders and analysts already looking to Dec. 16's Energy Information Administration report on U.S. storage levels, which will likely show the biggest draw so far this year on bloated inventories.
"The report that comes out [a week] after this coming report is the one that is likely to really show a large drawdown," energy advisory firm Cameron Hanover wrote in a client note. "This week's report is still likely to show a reasonable decline, although it might not keep pace with historical declines in storage."
The frigid weather traders faced Monday morning on their way to commodity trading hubs in New York and Chicago may have led to the market "overextending" against unfavorable supply and demand numbers, said Mike Rose, head of trading for Angus Jackson Inc. of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Even after two consecutive weeks of withdrawals from U.S. storage, supplies still sat at 3.814 trillion cubic feet as of Nov. 26--just 29 billion cubic feet off the 3.843-tcf-record set in mid November and 10% higher than the five-year average. Meanwhile, the natural gas rig count continues to rise as producers drill despite low prices, often forced to drill wells in order to preserve leases or are obligated to do so under joint venture pacts.
As such, the weather-related uptick in prices will probably be a temporary one until industrial demand rises from its "anemic" levels," Rose said. A Friday Labor Department report that showed U.S. employers added only 39,000 payroll jobs in November did not signify a pending boost in demand from manufacturers.
"That's the real hurdle for gas," Rose said. "There's really no reason to get excited about gas until we see some data that supports an increase in industrial demand."
 

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