Overview - May 21, 2001
Somewhat warmer temperatures early in the week, especially in the South, provided a lift to natural gas spot and futures prices. (See Temperature Map) (See Deviation from Normal Temperatures Map) However, a report of another large stock build and a revised forecast for normal to below-normal temperatures over a larger area of the country turned the week's gains into losses. On a week-to-week basis, the spot price of natural gas at the Henry Hub dropped $0.10 to end Friday, May 18 at $4.15 per MMBtu, while the NYMEX price of natural gas for June delivery at the Henry Hub declined $0.013 to $4.291 per MMBtu. At 119 Bcf, net injections to storage for the week ended May 11, 2001, were the highest value for the 8-year period of weekly AGA data.Prices: After the announcement of
yet another robust stock build, some spot prices at major supply hubs dipped
below the $3 mark for the first time since last August. The spot price at Katy,
TX, was down $0.12 from the previous Friday to $4.12 cents per MMBtu; the Henry
Hub, LA, down $0.10 to $4.15; Midcon, OK, down $0.12 to $4.00; and Opal, WY,
down $0.84 to $2.47. Prices at the
Chicago and New York citygates both declined $0.16 to $4.20 and 4.49 per MMBtu,
respectively. After expanding from a
customer-specific operational flow order (OFO) to a system-wide OFO on Thursday
due to an oversupply situation, the PG&E price for large packages dropped
$1.49. By Friday, PG&E customers
were paying $3.96 per MMBtu while SoCal's price was $1.94 lower at $9.98
following the previous week's heat wave.
After
increasing for 2 days, the NYMEX contract price for June delivery fluctuated
widely on Wednesday between $4.285 to $4.700 and ultimately dropped $0.363 per
MMBtu by the end of the day with the announcement of the large additions to
storage. The June contract ended the week at $4.291 per MMBtu, down $0.013 from
the previous Friday. Despite a decline affecting the entire strip of futures
prices into the winter, forward prices still surpassed the 2 to 3 cents per
MMBtu month-to-month increases estimated by industry analysts as needed to
induce more storage injections. The
trajectory of prices through the upcoming heating season culminated in
January's $4.925 per MMBtu settlement on Friday.
Spot Prices ($ per MMBTU)-Selected
Trading Centers |
Mon. 5/14 |
Tues. 5/15 |
Wed. 5/16 |
Thur. 5/17 |
Fri.
5/18 |
Henry Hub |
4.28 |
4.46 |
4.47 |
4.18 |
4.15 |
New York citygates |
4.64 |
4.86 |
4.84 |
4.57 |
4.49 |
Chicago citygates |
4.36 |
4.55 |
4.56 |
4.25 |
4.20 |
Southern CA (SOCAL) |
11.26 |
10.71 |
10.58 |
9.96 |
9.98 |
Futures (Daily
Settlement, $MMBTU) |
|
|
|
|
|
Near-Month (June) |
4.394 |
4.653 |
4.29 |
4.248 |
4.291 |
July |
4.465 |
4.722 |
4.377 |
4.327 |
4.368 |
Source: Financial Time
Energy, Gas Daily |
Storage: For the
third week in a row, net storage injections exceeded 100 Bcf, as an estimated
119 Bcf was added during the week ended Friday, May 11, according to the
American Gas Association (AGA). Weekly storage injection activity continues to
set records in the context of the 8-year period of AGA data and stocks are now
above minimum observed levels for 1995-2000 (See
Storage Figure). The national total, which exceeded the 6-year
average by 85 percent, set a record high for the third consecutive week.
Regional records were also set as net injections in the East and Producing
regions were nearly double, and more than double, respectively, their 6-year
(1995-2000) averages for this week. Estimated cumulative net additions to
working gas inventories from the beginning of the refill season (April 1)
through May 11 were a record 448 Bcf compared with the 6-year average of 195 Bcf to
this point in the refill season. The
next largest stock build to this point occurred in 1998, when cumulative
injections through May 11 were an estimated 380 Bcf. The robust refill rate since April 1 has significantly reduced
the deficit of current working gas inventories from the EIA-estimated 6-year
average, which just 6 weeks ago stood at 35 percent or more for each of the
regions.
All Volumes
in BCF |
Current
Stocks (Fri, 5/11) |
Estimated
6-Year (1995-2000) Average |
Percent
Difference from 6 Year Average |
Net Change
from Last Week |
One-Week
Prior Stocks (Fri,5/4) |
|
East Region |
629 |
690 |
-8.9% |
75 |
554 |
|
West Region |
185 |
221 |
-16.2% |
13 |
172 |
|
Producing Region |
368 |
428 |
-14.0% |
31 |
337 |
|
Total Lower 48 |
1,182 |
1,339 |
-11.7% |
119 |
1,063 |
|
Note: net change data are estimates published by
AGA on Wednesday of each week. All stock-level
Figures are EIA estimates based on EIA monthly survey data and weekly AGA
net-change estimates. Column sums may
differ from Totals because of independent rounding. |
||||||
Other Market Trends: The U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics Consumer Price Indexes for April, released last week, showed the
average U.S. residential price for natural gas was 2.1 percent lower than in March
as natural gas demand followed a seasonal trend downward, but remained 44.5
percent higher than a year ago.
Regional prices varied somewhat with Dallas, Chicago, and San Francisco
benefiting from a month-to-month decline of over 10 percent. Atlanta and Los Angeles were down by 3 to 4
percent while Boston was unchanged from March.
Summary: For the third consecutive
week, net injections to storage have exceeded 100 Bcf as suppliers took
advantage of low prices and low current demand to refill inventories. The lower prices are being passed through to
consumers, but the average residential price remains over 40 percent higher
than a year ago.