look at New York Gate spot price on NG yesterday $10. 50 but corrected today down 2.27 to $8.22 mmbtu. Compared to Henry Hub spot today at $4.18 mmbtu. Who would not love $8.22 at Henry Hub. Prices off of Bloomberg commodities Oil & NG futures quotes
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Count me in as one who would love the $8.22. Is the current spread between the two prices historically valid or has it changed recently? Happy Holidays to all!
they are current prices today 21 Dec 2010 on NG Futures Spot Prices. I guess the pipeline cost to New York is expensive
Adubu, are you mixing prices? The New York CG would be a daily cash price rather than a futures price. For Henry Hub/NYMEX it could be either a daily cash price or the January futures contract. Pipeline transportation cost is not the only factor.
Adubu, so the Henry Hub price you quoted was cash not a futures price.
The monthly baseload cash price is established during Bidweek before the month in question rather than during the first few days of the month.
As you saw the daily price at market areas such as New York or Chicago have little or no bearing on the supply area price since they can be impacted by short term events.
The daily change in a futures price such as the NYMEX January Contract will not have any impact on prices since it is only the final settlement price that is utilized in price setting.
The change in daily cash prices will have a minimal impact since it would be a small percentage of an operator's total gas sales and would be averaged with baseload gas sales pricing (1st of the Month Basis).
Adubu, not trying to be picky but just want people to understand that a $10.50 daily cash price in New York has zero bearing on wellhead prices in Louisiana. I also caution that people be clear in quoting futures prices and cash prices as these are two completely different things and generally unrelated.
Merry Christmas and Feliz Navidad.
John, comparing daily spot cash prices has little value since most natural gas is not sold on a daily basis.
Les is correct - it will result in a small "blip" in your overall net price, if any, depending on how the producer and its marketing affiliate or downstream market pays the producer for deliveries to that point. Usually, it's the owner of the transportation from Point A to Point B (a marketing company) that extracts the upside value in the commodity price during peak season, not the producer who sold to them. Consider that the owner of the transportation contract on the pipeline pays huge "demand fees", which are sunk costs, EVERY DAY to have the right and ability to sell $10+ gas a few days a year (prices have actually been over $20 in the daily market lately). It's really more of a function of "limited pipeline and storage delivery capacity on a daily basis" that dictates the spike in price - basically, an area of the country where demand far exceeds supply access; thus, the gas price is "on the margin"......causing the spot price to be "bid up" to extraordinary levels. Think of a few thousand tailgate partying LSU fans running out of crawfish at Jerry's World at the Cotton Bowl - the guy that has a truckload left can expect to extract a MUCH higher value. The only difference here is that utilities MUST buy the NG for their grandmas and little children to keep from freezing to death! While it might be true that a few drunk Cajuns could wreak considerable havoc in DFW without their crawfish, it's debatable as to whether anyone would die!! LOL!!!
Don't get me wrong - it's good to see some volatility in the market, even if it's only in the daily price and in a small portion of the country! It gives some hope that prices can rebound in the future.
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