Natural gas's abundant supplies and low prices are having a dramatic effect on how we generate electricity. The biggest price drop in over a year,
coupled with the prospect of stringent pollution legislation, has eroded
the market for coal and caused natural gas to move up the energy food
chain. The Department of Energy estimates that gas-fired electricity
will climb nearly 31% in 2010 - up from five years ago, while coal usage
will fall 6.5%. This fundamental shift in energy production can mean
big profits for longer-term investors.
The Big Switch
The lowest natural gas prices in over 11 months, combined with an unfavorable regulatory outlook toward coal, has prompted many utilities to defer new coal projects and construct plants that burn the cleaner choice. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, coal-fired plants are expected to fall to just 10% of total new capacity in the United States by 2013, down from 18% in 2009. Natural
gas, however, is expected to climb to 82% of new capacity in 2013.
Executives at utility Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK)
predict that as long as natural gas prices hover between $4 and $7,
there will be a continued shift toward natural gas-fired plants.
Other power generators are following suit. Xcel Energy (NYSE: XEL) recently announced that it wants to convert a Denver plant to burn natural gas instead of coal. The utility expects to save $225 million
converting to gas rather than installing pollution equipment on the coal
units. Progress Energy (NYSE: PGN) has plans to close four coal-burning plants and replace two of them with natural gas by 2017.
More and more utilities continue to shift away from coal toward natural gas. These new and converted plants will help create a floor for natural gas prices and ultimately benefit natural gas producers in the
long run.
A Gas-Fired Portfolio
Coal is still the leading fuel in power, accounting for about 47% of electricity generation. Investors shouldn't abandon the Market Vectors Coal ETF (NYSE: KOL) just yet. However, over the longer term, this shift toward natural gas could be one of the better investment themes. Investors may want to position themselves
accordingly to profit.
Several of the major integrated oil companies have signaled their natural gas ambitions; for example, Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM) with its recent purchase of XTO Energy. Both the First Trust ISE-Revere Natural Gas (NYSE: FCG) and Energy Select Sector SPDR (NYSE: XLE) count some of the largest oil and gas firms as their holdings. These firms will most likely be the long-term winners as more natural gas is
used to generate electricity.
Inversely, investors may want to stay away from the small fries as new fracking legislation could price many of these smaller firms out of their lucrative shale formations. Investors may want to avoid the Jefferies TR/J CRB Wildcatters E&P (Nasdaq: WCAT), which focuses on small cap natural gas firms.
Finally, betting on natural gas prices via vehicles such as United States Natural Gas (NYSE: UNG) has been mediocre at best. A better way is to invest in natural gas infrastructure via the UBS E-TRACS Alerian Natural Gas MLP Index ETN (NYSE: MLPG). The ETN focuses its attention on storage and pipeline opportunities in the sector.
Bottom Line
With its low prices and pending legislation affecting its major competitor, natural gas is once again seeing its star rise. More and more utilities are beginning the shift away from coal-fired plants to
those that use clean natural gas. As this shift continues, companies
involved in its production will benefit. Long-term investors can profit
from this by placing their bets now while prices are still low.
Tags: coal, energy, gas, natural, production
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AboutAs exciting as this is, we know that we have a responsibility to do this thing correctly. After all, we want the farm to remain a place where the family can gather for another 80 years and beyond. This site was born out of these desires. Before we started this site, googling "shale' brought up little information. Certainly nothing that was useful as we negotiated a lease. Read More |
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