ETC Natural Gas

grazie,occhio che sta gia' risalendo:D
solo oltre 4,45'70 si realizzerebbe un tentativo di ripresa delle quotazioni,al momento resta al palo con chiusura verso i minimi giornalieri che in genere possono precludere nuovi test a ribasso ,importante la tenuta per i long di area 4,31 (i vecchi 4,21) senza considerare il roll...........:up:
 
Ciao Cort,che delusione ti facevo piu' tipo da "Colpo Grosso "anni 80' ...................
ragazzi vi sto leggendo volentieri nelle pause del film.. siete dei mattacchioni ehehehe Baccco tabacco e Venere.. ciao Klein.. il Monta mi piace perchè vive in un mondo tutto suo, pur capendo quello degli altri..:)
 
ragazzi vi sto leggendo volentieri nelle pause del film.. siete dei mattacchioni ehehehe Baccco tabacco e Venere.. ciao Klein.. il Monta mi piace perchè vive in un mondo tutto suo, pur capendo quello degli altri..:)
l'attore non si discute...............peccato non si dedichi di piu' al teatro ....................:up:
 
Per me oggi non e' cambiato nulla ,il long appare ancora in buona salute,lo short prova a rientrare in gioco ma e' troppo presto per sentenziare,il livello chiave e' 4,31 (ex 4,21),qualora tale livello fosse rotto a ribasso, otterremo un segnale chiaro e concreto.
 
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The price of a barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude, the benchmark U.S. oil, fell below $104 today after Libyan rebels recaptured some key oil ports and promised to resume exports, according to the Associated Press.
Prices are still 22 percent above what they were in mid-February, when fighting in Libya squeezed off shipments that had supplied nearly 2 percent of the world’s oil.
 
The natural-gas rally took a turn downward, as a late-day wave of selling yanked futures from two-month highs.
Prices climbed as high as $4.48 a million British thermal units on Monday, the highest intraday price since February, before dropping almost 3% within minutes of the close of floor trading.
Market participants said a reading of market volatility signaled a possible reversal in prices, spurring the selloff.
Natural gas for April delivery settled 2.9 cents lower, or 0.7%, at $4.374 a million British thermal units on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Analysts have been skeptical of the 18% surge in natural-gas futures since early March. Ahead of summer, gas is entering its spring "shoulder season." During this period, prices historically have been volatile as the market moves out of winter mode, when volumes in storage decline, to summer, when they typically rise. Traders try to time bets to coincide with the shift, although they often are thwarted by unpredictable weather.
An early spring cold blast has brought unusually chilly weather to some major gas-heating markets in the northern U.S., and meteorologists with private forecaster MDA EarthSat see the cold continuing through Friday.
Futures were higher early Monday as forecasters predicted that the chill felt across much of the northern tier of the U.S. would extend into April, lifting gas demand.
Futures then came under pressure as prices climbed above the upper Bollinger Band, which signals a reversal, said Hamza Khan, an analyst with energy-advisory firm Schork Group. Some traders use Bollinger bands, a reading of market volatility and moving averages, to gauge when rallies are running out of steam.
"Any time we get too far above there, [the market] pulls back," Mr. Khan said, noting that the upper band Monday stood at $4.43.
This month, traders seemed to have largely written off the season's remaining heating needs, with many content to bet that gas prices would remain below $4. But that view was upended by forecasts for the current cold snap and worries about tightening global supplies of power-plant fuels in the wake of the Japanese crisis.
The past year's rallies in natural gas have been short-lived. Speculative investors hold twice as many bets that prices will fall than bets that they will rise, according to the latest data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, as North American production continues at a near-record pace.
Natural-gas prices have been depressed by the onslaught of supply coming from shale-rock formations. The number of rigs drilling for natural gas in the U.S. last week rose for the first time in four weeks, energy-service company Baker Hughes Inc. said Friday. There were 880 rigs drilling for natural gas last week, up by five from the previous week and still at a level many analysts expect to lead to further production growth.
Monday's swings between gains and losses also came as market participants closed out positions ahead of Tuesday's expiration of the April contract, traders said.
 

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