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Overview: Monday, December 10, 2001 Price surges on Monday and
Friday of last week overshadowed 3 straight days of decreases midweek, as
nearly every major market location showed Friday-to-Friday gains. At the Henry Hub, the spot price gained 36
cents from the previous Friday to end the week at $2.11 per million Btu
(MMBtu). On the futures market, in its
first full week of trading as the near-month contract, the price of the NYMEX
contract for January delivery at the Henry Hub declined $0.133 per MMBtu to
settle on Friday at $2.568. The
unseasonably warm temperatures that have blanketed nearly the entire country
east of the Rocky Mountains continued, with specific-day high-temperature
records being set at numerous locations in the Northeast, Midwest, and
Midcontinent (Temperature
Map)(Temperature
Deviation Map). On Thursday, the spot price
of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil fell nearly $1.00 per barrel, as the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) announced that it would
delay an expected oil-production cut that it hopes will shore up sagging world
crude oil prices. For the week
(Friday-to-Friday), the WTI spot price fell $0.43 per barrel to $19.08, or
$3.29 per MMBtu. Prices: Spot prices rebounded last week on the strength of
strong increases on Monday and Friday.
Monday’s price surge was the larger of the two, with increases in
average spot prices ranging from 15 to over 80 cents per MMBtu at virtually
every price point tracked by Natural Gas Intelligence. Increases were greatest in the Rockies in
anticipation of Tuesday’s maintenance outage affecting supply into the Opal
(WY) hub. At the Henry Hub, the average spot price climbed 35 cents per MMBtu
to $2.10. With the lack of
weather-related swing demand, some market observers attributed the increases to
various participants coming out of bid week and into the new month with short
supply portfolios that needed to be covered.
Indeed, November’s spring-like temperatures experienced by most of the
nation persisted through the first week of December. The resulting weak demand reasserted itself in markets on Tuesday
through Thursday, sending cash prices steadily downward and more than offsetting
Monday’s gains at some locations.
However, National Weather Service forecasts for cooler, near-normal
temperatures over the weekend for the Northeast and Midwest reversed the
downward trend, sending prices up in a 20-40 cent range at most locations. California was the major exception, where
somewhat warmer temperatures and a PG&E high inventory operational flow
order (OFO) for the weekend had prices declining by a few cents to over a dime. By Friday, prices in most markets had
climbed back above $2 per MMBtu. For
the week, the spot prices for gas for delivery to New York and Chicago
citygates were $2.53 and $2.15, up $0.46 and $0.29 per MMBtu,
respectively. The PG&E citygate
price had dropped 2 cents to $2.42, while the average price for gas at the
Southern California border rose 17 cents to $2.36. Trading was also characterized by somewhat reduced within-day
volatility compared with the previous two weeks. At the Henry Hub, the spread between the low and high values for
daily spot prices ranged from $0.10 to $0.21 per MMBtu. Last week this spread ranged from $0.13 to
$0.40, and the week before, from $0.27 to $0.38. Prices on the NYMEX futures market also were
affected early in the week by the continuing warm weather. The futures contract
settlement prices for January through March began the week with 3 consecutive
days of declines in the range of about 4 to 8 cents per MMBtu. Out-month contracts followed suit for the
most part, with somewhat smaller declines.
However, on Thursday, settlement prices got a slight boost, with
increases of about a nickel for contracts over the ensuing 12 months. From
Friday-to-Friday, the near-month contract declined $0.133 per MMBtu to end the
week at $2.568. On its first day of
trading as the near-month contract, the January contract fell $0.171 to $2.561
per MMBtu. In 6 days of trading since then, its cumulative price change has
been almost nil–as of Friday, its settlement price was a scant $0.007 higher
than its first settlement price as the near-month contract.
Storage: Net withdrawals from storage totaled 16 Bcf for the week
ended November 30 according to the American Gas Association (AGA). This snapped an unprecedented run of more
than 3 weeks in a row of net storage additions this heating season. Net withdrawals in the West were 19 Bcf
compared with the 6-year average for the week of 5 Bcf. This unusually high drawdown equals a
reduction of nearly 4 percent of the region’s total working gas in storage and
is attributable to the colder than normal temperatures that prevailed in the
region during most of the week. Working
gas inventories in the East were unchanged, while the Producing region recorded
net injections of 3 Bcf. At 3,140 Bcf,
working gas in storage is nearly 14 percent greater than the 6-year average and
nearly as large as the 6-year high of 3,155 Bcf for the report week.
Until the final week of November, overall storage
stocks increased each week this heating season. This pattern contrasts greatly
with storage activity typical for this time of year, and especially with the
high drawdowns during November 2000.
The atypical storage activity in November 2001 was largely the result of
warmer than normal temperatures across the United States, which contrasts
sharply with last year when colder than normal temperatures drove large withdrawals
from storage. In November 2001, heating
degree-days were almost 25 percent below normal in the United States, while
heating degree-days were 16 percent above normal in November 2000. The difference in monthly storage activity
between 2000 and 2001 reflects this large differential in heating
degree-days. In November 2000,
withdrawals from storage totaled 256 Bcf, 47 percent larger than the 6-year
average, while in November 2001, the net change in storage was a net addition
of 32 Bcf. During the past 6 years, net withdrawals from
storage averaged roughly 123 Bcf in November in the East; this year net
additions to storage in the East were roughly 4 Bcf. This difference was even stronger in the Producing region. In
contrast with the 6-year average net withdrawal of 40 Bcf during
November, the Producing region, which did not record a net withdrawal in the
AGA reports during November 2001, injected 39 Bcf into storage. Net withdrawals in the West region were
slightly higher than the 6-year average: 11 Bcf in 2001 compared with 10
Bcf. However, extraordinarily large net
withdrawals in the final week of the month accounted for all of the net weekly
withdrawals from storage. Up until the
final week of November, the West did not record a week with a net withdrawal
from storage, injecting 8 Bcf into storage. Other Market
Trends: In its latest Short-Term
Energy Outlook, released on Thursday, December 6, the Energy
Information Administration (EIA) projects that natural gas wellhead prices will
average $1.96 per thousand cubic feet
(or about $1.91 per MMBtu, using an average heat content of 1,027 Btu
per cubic foot of dry natural gas) in 2002.
Price weakness is attributed to warm weather, the continued weakness in
U.S. industrial production, and the atypical build in natural gas storage
levels in November. Barring some very
cold weather in the near term, EIA projects that natural gas demand for the
fourth quarter of 2001 and first quarter of 2002 will decline by 5.0 percent
compared with growth of 6.7 percent last winter. Moreover, EIA concludes that, “…under base case (normal weather)
assumptions, spot wellhead prices, which averaged $6.49 per thousand cubic feet
last winter, are expected to be two-thirds lower this winter at about $2.15 per
thousand cubic feet.” Summary: Spot
gas trading began and ended the week with price surges that were only partially
offset by midweek declines, as intra-day price volatility moderated. Futures prices trended down for a second
consecutive week, but with significantly smaller cumulative declines. NWS near-term weather forecasts call for a
continuation of the warmer-than-normal weather pattern in the eastern
two-thirds of the nation at least through the middle of December. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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