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Natural Gas Price Rebound

The Bullish Case for Natural Gas

By Keith Kohl
Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

It's been nearly three weeks since I last talked about natural gas.

And lately there really hasn't been much reason to get excited. Prices have been stagnant at best, right? After all, it was just over a year ago when prices were well over $10 per Mcf. A few weeks ago, prices finally rebounded over $4 per Mcf.

As you're probably aware, the move didn't last long.

Today, prices are barely holding above $3/Mcf ($3.16/Mcf the last time I checked). But if there's one thing we've been trying to show Energy and Capital readers, it's that this is a golden opportunity to get back into natural gas.

Believe me, if natural gas under $4 is a steal, I can't express how dirt-cheap it is under $3 per Mcf.

But before I get into my long-term bullish sentiment, let's take a quick look at why prices have declined. To start with, the demand picture has been ugly during this recession.

In their latest Short-Term Energy Outlook, the EIA estimated that natural gas consumption will fall 2.6% this year and remain flat throughout 2010. Of course, the drop is due to the lackluster industrial demand, which makes any future economic recovery even more important to the long-term case.

The supply side of the equation isn't much better right now. The EIA reported that working gas storage increased to 3,152 Bcf. That's 530 Bcf above the five-year average of 2,635 Bcf. The five-year storage is nearly 20% higher than a year ago. Furthermore, our working gas storage is expected to top 3,800 Bcf by the time we reach the end of the injection season in October.

In response to the demand drop and cheap prices, companies have drastically scaled back their drilling activity. According to Baker Hughes, there are approximately 688 rigs drilling for natural gas in the U.S. That's a steep drop of 56% from a year ago.

However, when it comes to natural gas, it's not the short-term that I'm excited about.

The Bullish Case for Natural Gas

Let's take a quick look at where our natural gas comes from. . .

According to the EIA, the United States imported approximately 4 Tcf of natural gas in 2008. As expected, nearly all of our imports (approximately 90%), were shipped from Canadian pipelines.

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I don't expect Canada to keep up those numbers for very long.

You see, aside from aside from a few emerging shale deposits, Canadian production isn't looking too good. Practically all of Canadian natural gas is produced from the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin. Production in the WSCB, however, peaked back in 2001 at approximately 16 Bcf per day.

Canadian drillers have been struggling to keep up ever since. The only way producers could keep up with the decline rates was by increasing their rig activity. With prices this cheap, it's nearly impossible to keep pace. Several weeks ago, my colleague, Chris Nelder, pointed out the 11% year-over-year Canadian production decline.

Last week, First-Energy Capital Corp analyst Martin King reiterated the bad news: "At a projected average of 14.7 Bcf per day in 2009, this would be the lowest average natural gas production rate seen in Western Canada since 1995."

Throw the blame wherever you'd like, dear reader; whether it's the decreased demand, warm weather, or even the storage glut, the short-term price outlook for natural gas isn't pretty. However, the dearth of North American drilling from those factors will help prices recover over the long run. Couple the lack of drilling with a demand recovery, and any glut in supply will quickly dissipate.

Depending on an economic recovery, natural gas prices could easily top $6 per Mcf by the end of 2009. That's certainly not too far of a stretch, considering January 2010 contracts of natural gas are trading around $5.47/Mcf.

I have yet to meet a reader of mine that's bearish on natural gas over the long term. For us, that means that now is the time to get your hands dirty.

Three Ways to Play a Natural Gas Price Rebound

One of the easiest ways to play a rebound in natural gas prices is through the United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE: UNG), which tries to replicate the performance of natural gas by investing in the front-month natural gas NYMEX contract.

With UNG trading at a near 52-week low, any upturn in natural gas prices could give investors a pleasant surprise.

By now, anyone who has put so much as a dime in natural gas has at least heard of the latest shale plays. Take Canada's production woes, mentioned earlier. One of the bright spots on future Canadian gas production is located in the Horn River Basin. The Horn River Shale Formation in British Columbia is one of the more recent shale plays to make headlines — with potentially 250 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in the ground, between 10% and 20% would be recoverable.

However, the producers aren't the ones that have my attention. Rather, it's the infrastructure that I'm focusing in on. In order to get the Horn River gas to market, pipelines are needed to transport the natural gas. Several pipeline projects are in the works, including the Pacific Trail Pipelines Limited Partnership. Once completed, the $1.2-billion pipeline will transport Horn River shale gas to an LNG terminal near Kitimat, B.C.

And then we have the individual U.S. shale players.

Even with the 56% decline in drilling from 2008 levels, many of these companies have managed to see production rise. Of course, when it comes to drilling, it's all about location. Although producing natural gas from these new shale plays isn't without its own difficulties (extracting the shale gas requires drilling deep into the ground and effectively fracturing the shale), the potential for bullish investors is certainly there.

Once prices finally rebound next year, I believe shale gas production will play a huge role in meeting U.S. demand. The question is whether or not you positioned yourself to take advantage of the comeback.

Until next time,

keith kohl

Keith Kohl

Energy and Capital

Editor's Note: Although I don't specifically mention any of these shale companies, I don't want to leave my readers in the dark. I've prepared a new report on one shale play in particular that is breaking the record books. You can find out more about this opportunity here.






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Comments:

Comment by M. Robert Paglee on 2009-08-18
I wondered how the current price of natural gas could have fallen so low, now being just a trifle above $3 per million BTU. So I checked the Weekly Natural Gas Report on the web site of the Energy Info Administration (EIA), and there I found a possible clue.

Gas storage on 8/07/09 was 3,152 BCF, or 27% greater than the 2,560 BCF on 8/07/08. On EAI's graph of stored gas volume vs time, peak capacity is shown as 3,600 BCF, and this was not quite reached during the prior two years. But we are already at 87.5% of that level, and peak storage usually occurs in October/November.

Unlike liquid crude oil that is now being stored in some otherwise idle supertankers while floating at anchor, gas must be pipelined to a storage facility or a burner tip somewhere. If commitments in take-or-pay contracts with the pipelines that operate much of the gas storage facilities will soon fill them up to capacity, what happens to the spot price if some gas has nowhere to go for a month or two? Is the system now choked-up?

Are there enough gas wells now being prudently shut in to await a better price, or is our storage capacity inadequate? What can be done to improve information sharing among North American natural gas producers to avoid the disruption of boom and bust cycles that can take domestic gas prices from $14 to $3 in a little over a year? While $3 gas may now seem to be an economic blessing, will it seem so after existing gas wells are depleted, and the current depression in drilling for new wells causes the next 500% price spike?

When the winter heating season sets in, a more normal flow of gas will begin But with such an abundance of gas already in storage and with some shut-in production likely to be reopened as prices begin to recover, how swift will the recovery be?

Bob Paglee
Comment by Teryl J. Davis on 2009-08-18
All I have to say is - since they leased my land to drill for natural gas, I wish they would hurry up and get here. The closest well to me is approximately 5 miles. They're getting close. I have coffee and homemade cookies waiting for them.
Comment by Ivan Hills on 2009-08-19
Let me comment as a potential customer. I have owned homes in California, England, Colorado and New Jersey -- all heated by natural gas (good for the range, too). Now, in Maine since 2000 the closest we can get is propane delivered by truck. There is no infrastucture for NG in a large part of the NE. NG for I.C. engines is attactive. Again, ifrastructure is lacking here.
Comment by George Regas on 2009-08-19
great articles on nat gas. keep us informed and updated. five star rating all the way. Is it to early to buy ung? eia weakly storage report still increasing. Do we wait until we see some depleation on the weekly Bcf storage numbers before we buy ung.

thanks

GR
Comment by hs on 2009-08-19
after reading the article, I am stil looking for the argument on why there is a bullish case for natural gas. It may very well be true that NG is higher than $ 5.00 by years end but please give the reasons next time. NG is abundant, as stated in the article. Why is there a bullish case. I rate the article as completely misleading and unacceptable.
Comment by Jim on 2009-08-22
With the huge mess surrounding UNG and Mr. Kohls recommendation to invest in Nat Gas thru the use of UNG, it brings into question his judgement. I wonder about the rest of his logic.
Comment by Louie Winthorpe III on 2009-08-29

They're not just getting rich... They're getting even…

Anyone around long enough to remember the 1983 movie “Trading Places” with Eddie Murphy where two callous brothers (the Dukes) corner the frozen orange juice market? In the end, Winthorpe (Dan Aykroyd)and Billie Ray Valentine (Eddie Murphy) gained advanced knowledge that the supply of orange juice was not harmed by a frost- trading on the information they made a fortune in a few minutes, and left the Dukes broke in the process…

I love this quoted sequence…

[Approaching the New York Commodities Exchange]


Louis Winthorpe III: Think big, think positive, never show any sign of weakness. Always go for the throat. Buy low, sell high. Fear? That's the other guy's problem. Nothing you have ever experienced will prepare you for the absolute carnage you are about to witness. Super Bowl, World Series - they don't know what pressure is. In this building, it's either kill or be killed. You make no friends in the pits and you take no prisoners. One minute you're up half a million in soybeans and the next, boom, your kids don't go to college and they've repossessed your Bentley. Are you with me?
Bille Ray Valentine: Yeah, we got to kill the motherfuc... - we got to kill 'em!


This happens every week in the natural gas pit. Volume of the contracts explodes on Thursdays (after the weekly storage numbers come out), dominated by just a few players like the Dukes- only in our world it’s big boys like Goldman Sachs…

U.S. Natural Gas Fund (UNG) is the Winthrope & Billie Ray of the natural gas market (you and I). Only recently have mere mortals been able to enter the world of futures and options- that is without opening margin accounts, and purchasing the perishable contracts- with devestating carnage always just around the corner).

Goldman Sachs, and the other big boys, dislike competition from this new, growing ever larger, competition, so they put out volumes of negative press, and want desperately to kill the fund before it eclipes their God like powers. Along with negative press, they call on their friends at the commodities futures trading commission (CFTC) to help set limits on new players- essentially creating a barrier to entry. This has worked to a point, but, in my opinion, there are way too many smart Winthorpe’s and Billie Ray’s out there to let that happen. As long as there are free markets.

As far as fundamental value: A BTU of oil costs $12.00, a BTU of Natural Gas costs less than $3.00. So, I ask myself, is this glass three quarters empty or one quarter full. Only the Dukes know for sure, but we Billie Ray’s will play the game nevertheless… We'll find a way...