The Death of Natural Gas
Yes the story is over!
Or at least until the United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG) hits $47 (200 day moving average)
p.s. the Haynesville 4 are finally breaking down to more attractive prices. But still too early to get in there wholesale because hedge funds have decided the story is over. So it is. Until they change their mind. (I wonder what Benjamin Graham would think of this newfangled "investing" that dominates the markets nowadays)
Of course this has nothing to do with huge pools of capital whose computers move from 1 theme to another like a butterfly resting on top of one flower and then the next (this week's sexy flower? healthcare!).
Nope, it's all FUNDAMENTALS that create these massive 180 degree turns ;) yep.
Remember "the playbook" we've long talked about. It's simply the pattern that has marked itself consistently in these past 4 corrections of 2007 - 2008. At the end of the correction hedgies move from their hideout places to the beaten "worst of breed" down sectors (rotation station) and then will (as a bonus) find a new 'safe' place and create a thesis that they can use as justification. In the past they were using consumer non discretionary (before input costs ramped and that thesis below up), and then technology (before they were not so "immune to slowdown" after all, and that blew up in their face) - now they will create an investing case for healthcare. Because a Democratic Congress and President [2009] is always to the benefit of healthcare companies (cough). But nevertheless, perception is reality. And the healthcare stocks as a group have been beaten to an absolute pulp. As long as enough dollars are chasing a theme, the stocks can react to said flood of dollars.
So if the past is replayed right about the end of July/early August - they'll abandon all these newfound themes [hey financials are not as bad as we thought! or ... why was I not in JCPenney (JCP) all along?] and be right back into the same global growth plays. Just about time Iran saber-rattles or a hurricane forms somewhere far out off the western coast of Africa.
Yep, global growth - it's dead. China "collapsed" (using CNBC parlance) to 10% GDP growth - hide the women and children. So we're supposed to invest in the countries with 0 to -2% GDP (parts of W Europe, Japan, and US) and run away from the 10% growth or 5% (Brazil). Got it. Buy worst of breed or the "new safety valve". ;) (for a week at least)
We'll wait it out. (Have I mentioned this is not a buy and hold market? Every single stock is taken out and shot sooner or later. Bear markets. Fun.)
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This article has 16 comments:
- morgan77
- 89 Comments
Jul 17 02:33 PM- Rocknbob
- 18 Comments
Jul 17 02:51 PM- harveywallbanger
- 11 Comments
Jul 17 02:58 PMFrankly I'm annoyed by any gov't bailout with the notion that our economy is based on free market & should NOT have a fat mother ready to come and get her kid safely off the playground where the bully reigns.
This only prolongs this present disaster, making things worse.
- Whidbey
- 686 Comments
Jul 17 05:02 PM- Dame Daxx
- 30 Comments
Jul 17 05:21 PMThis time it is Oil + Gas falling, while Gold actually is holding up ok.
- thoroughbred
- 54 Comments
Jul 17 05:54 PM- ari5000
- 43 Comments
Jul 17 08:03 PMI agree UNG will probably flatten out --around the 200 day MA is about right. Far too demand over the next 30 years for UNG to ever 'die'. Rest for a quarter no doubt. NG will be back. As for the 'oil is bubble' crowd. About the time they start slapping high fives and saying "I told you so" on CNBC -- buy it all.
- syndicat
- 88 Comments
Jul 17 09:37 PM1) You are right about health care. This is now the place to be.
2) Gold, not oil/coal/gas is the commodity to be in.
- nova
- 54 Comments
My Website
Jul 17 10:01 PMRemember that the Fed and ECB are still printing US$ and euro to save their economies.
The world energy game is just started.
- CPST1
- 50 Comments
Jul 17 11:46 PM- john s. gordon
- 380 Comments
Jul 18 08:33 AM> jack
- oil baron
- 19 Comments
Jul 18 09:47 AMNat gas has been struggling to make the 10:1 ratio and I do believe it is because of the geopolitical premium in oil at this time. Accordingly I do believe the fair market price of oil should be $100-110 putting it right where it should be according to the 1967 CPI index.
Hedge fund activities and speculators have a short term,and as we see currently, an extreme effect on price volatility but over time they have no effect in the market because they never take delivery.
- notsosmart
- 884 Comments
My Website
Jul 18 09:55 AM- Mmarrkk
- 225 Comments
Jul 18 10:23 AMSecond, supply in the US is growing rapidly. Rigs are churning, Billions are being invested on nat gas drilling. Way more than oil drilling. As the economy slows, nat gas demand will slow a bit. But nat gas usage in A/C and heating won't go down. Plus our greenie weenie friends will start to push nat gas over some of the other sources.
LNG imports are way down this year as the price of nat gas in Europe and the Far East are well over $15 and so LNG is being diverted to these markets and away from the US. Last year LNG imports were around 3 BCF/day and now they are down to 1 BCF/day. This will continue as prices in the Far East and Europe don't look to come down anytime soon.
Start nibbling in nat gas stocks and the commodity. We may not be at a bottom but we are getting close. And then there's the probabliilty at some point this summer/fall we will get a Gulf of Mexico hurricane. We are lucky to have missed many of these last year and year before but odds are against us missing again this year. It doesn't take a Katrina to disrupt things.
- wallyjm
- 29 Comments
Jul 18 12:07 PM- billp37
- 73 Comments
My Website
Jul 18 12:54 PMPNM tells customers to prepare for higher winter heating bills
By Winthrop Quigley
Journal Staff Writer
SANTA FE - The state's largest natural gas utility on Tuesday warned customers to prepare for significantly steeper heating bills this winter.
In a briefing for the Public Regulation Commission, PNM gas supply and transmission operations director Tommy Sanders said that natural gas that cost 78 cents a therm a year ago is selling for about $1.30 a therm today. The average residential customer uses about 59 therms a month year-round.
PNM won't be ready to project what this winter's bills will be until August, but they will be "significantly higher," said spokeswoman Susan Sponar.
..."
www.prosefights.org/pn...
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