Natural Gas Jumps on Speculation of Below-Average Storage Gain

Natural Gas Jumps on Speculation of Below-Average Storage Gain

 

 

Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) -- T. Boone Pickens, the billionaire chairman of BP Capital LLC, talks about the outlook for crude oil prices. Pickens also discusses U.S. dependence on overseas oil, and prospects for natural-gas powered vehicles and a U.S. energy bill. He talks with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television's "Surveillance Midday." (Source: Bloomberg)

Natural gas rose the most in four months on speculation that an Energy Department report tomorrow will show that stockpiles gained less than the five-year average, eroding an inventory surplus.

The Energy Department may say that supplies increased 8 billion cubic feet last week, according to the median of 22 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The five-year average gain for the week is 18 billion.

“There’s cold temperatures on the rise, and there’s the possibility that they may report a net storage withdrawal tomorrow,” said Teri Viswanath, director of commodities research at Credit Suisse Securities USA in Houston, who estimated that inventories dropped by 5 billion cubic feet.

Natural gas for December delivery jumped 21.2 cents, or 5.6 percent, to settle at $4.03 per million British thermal units on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the largest one-day increase since July 15, when futures for near-month delivery surged 6.5 percent to $4.586.

Gas has declined 28 percent this year as inventories reached record highs. Stockpiles increased 19 billion cubic feet in the week ended Nov. 5 to 3.84 trillion cubic feet, the Energy Department said last week.

The U.S. is nearing the end of the shoulder before heating demand picks up as temperatures fall. About 52 percent of U.S. households use natural gas for heat.

More Cold in Forecast

Forecasters are calling for below-normal temperatures in the 11- to 15-day outlooks, bolstering demand for the fuel. Below-normal temperatures will span the East Coast from Florida to Maine, Commodity Weather Group forecasters led by Matt Rogers said in a report today.

“If anything, today’s forecast is looking colder over the eastern half of the country than it was yesterday” for Nov. 28 through Dec. 2, the Weather Channel’s WSI Corp. said in a forecast today.

“What you’ve got is a few different things pushing up that price,” said Jason Schenker, president of Prestige Economics LLC, an Austin, Texas-based energy consultant. “It’s weather and this week’s inventory number.”

Cumulative heating degree days increased by seven last week, while injections into storage dropped 22 percent, indicating that storage may have already begun its seasonal period of withdrawals, Viswanath said in a note to clients.

Energy Demand

The heating-degree days value, calculated by subtracting the average daily temperature from a base of 65 degrees, is designed to show energy demand, according to the National Weather Service. The higher the value, the colder the weather, indicating more energy is probably consumed to heat homes and businesses.

Natural gas has closed near or above the 50-day moving average of $3.80 for the past three days, indicating support at that level and attracting traders who are looking for a bargain- price investment, said Michael Rose, director of trading at Angus Jackson Inc. in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

“Natural gas is the only one that did not follow all the rest in the huge bull run in commodities, and people are reaching out and buying stuff they deem is cheap,” Rose said.

Wholesale natural gas at the benchmark Henry Hub in Erath, Louisiana, gained 11.37 cents, or 3.1 percent, to $3.7733 per million Btu on the Intercontinental Exchange.

Gas futures volume in electronic trading on the Nymex was 270,892 as of 2:38 p.m., compared with a three-month average of 266,000. Volume was 227,575 yesterday. Open interest was 781,273 contracts, compared with the three-month average of 809,000. The exchange has a one-business-day delay in reporting open interest and full volume data.

To contact the reporter on this story: Asjylyn Loder in New York at aloder@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Dan Stets at dstets@bloomberg.net.

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Thanks for the post....it's nice to hear some good news.
Boone's right. Rigs are already shutting down. Look at the capital plans for 2011. Less $$ = Less Drilling.
Feast or Famine!
NG will never quit bouncing up and down with the weather until it finds it's meaningful place as a transportation fuel..
So much at the speculation....still at record highs.
PG you hit the nail on the head. The name of the NG game...as it is for any commodity, is demand.

As a liberal Democrat, I was amazed that the 110th congress failed to even bring the NAT GAS Act (HR 1835 and S 1408) for a committee hearing in either the House or the Senate. I had friends of mine living in Nancy Pelosi's 8th Congressional District of California write her for action on the Boren bill (NAT GAS Act) and they never had so much as a response from her office. Could be that is a primary reason she lost her Speakership.

Anyway, with 52 percent of American households heating with NG and 25 percent of our power generation fueled by NG, the transportation sector is where material growth in demand will undoubtedly come from.

My congressman, a Republican, has signed on as a co-sponsor to the NG Act. And with virtually all of the East Texas and Northwest Louisiana House members Republicans, it might be a good time for all GHS people to urge their support on this vital legislation. This is an American issue; good for all Americans without regard to political affiliation. As I view things, NG is the best, cheapest, cleanest and most abundant transportation fuel we have, but far and away its most compelling attribute is it is an American energy source.

If I didn't own a single BTU of NG you can bet your last dollar that I'd buy an American energy source over anything under the market control of OPEC even if the competing fuels were equal which they clearly are not.

We all are indebted to Boone Pickens for his monumental financial and personal effort to lessen our addiction to foreign-controlled crude. I may disagree with Boone's politics, but I am in complete agreement with his stance on the absolute necessity of getting the thugs running OPEC off this nation's neck....and it's costing America over a billion dolllars per day to play their bankrupting game.
Although I agree with what Mr. Pickens in saying here, I wouldn't put too much stock in him...remember John Stossel completely dismantled him on Fox just a few months ago. Proved him wrong on his estimate as to the price of oil and reminded him of a bet of $10,000.00 he had made with him on oil prices....Stossel won the bet.
Pickens is just another billionaire that thinks the government rather than private investors ought to fix the ng price. If what he suggests is so good, why doesn't he put some of his billions into it? Go figure!

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