Accompanies

Northeast Price Drops Lead General Weekend Decline

The usual softness that accompanies a lower-demand weekendperiod arrived on schedule Friday. Price movement ranged from flatat some Rockies points to down as much as a dime in the Gulf Coast.Once more, mild weather along the East Coast caused Northeastcitygates to register the biggest declines of 15 cents or more,with Transco’s Zone 6-NYC pool again topping the list with a fallof about 30 cents. The Zone 6 slide into the mid $2.30s left ittrading little more than 20 cents above the production area’sTransco Station 65.

November 22, 1999

Cash Market Avoids Usual Weekend Weakness-Again

Much like two Fridays earlier, the usual drop in gas demand thataccompanies business slowdowns over a weekend failed to have anegative effect on prices last Friday. Although it later fell morethan a nickel, an initially higher screen helped cash achieve gainsranging up to about a dime at nearly all points. Only San JuanBasin, the Southern California border and PG&E citygateregistered losses, and those were small at 3 cents or less.

September 27, 1999

West Plunges; Heat Supports Prices in East

As many had expected, prospects of severe heat averted much ofthe softness that normally accompanies a Fourth of July weekend,considered the year’s lowest demand period. But that was true onlyin eastern markets Friday. The bottom was dropping out for pricesin the West, particularly at the Southern California border.

July 6, 1999

Weekend Softness Mild Due to Heat Expectations

Cash prices proved remarkably resistant Friday to the softnessthat usually accompanies lowered demand for a weekend period. TheGulf Coast and Northeast citygates were essentially flat, whilemost of the small declines were concentrated in the West andMidcontinent. Sources attributed the relatively firm pricing tomodest support from a slightly higher futures screen, along withtrader anticipation of a return to hotter weather morecharacteristic of June than last week’s below-normal thermometerreadings throughout much of the East.

June 21, 1999

Weekend Load’s Price-Depressing Effect Returns

Unlike a week earlier, the slump in gas demand that almostalways accompanies a weekend had its usual negative effect on cashprices Friday. Declines ranged from only 3-4 cents at Midwest andNortheast citygates to as much as a dime or so at Southwest andRockies points, where most of the maintenance outages at processingplants and compressor stations had ended by Friday. Most otherpoints registered drops of about a nickel.

May 24, 1999

Weekend Prices See Only Mildest of Softening

The typical slump in gas demand that accompanies a weekend wasable to coax a smidgen of softness out of the cash marketFriday-but just barely. Flatness was the word at quite a fewpoints, and decreases at others only rarely exceeded 2-3 cents.Sources continued to remark on how relatively stable the marketfeels even when prices come off a little.

April 26, 1999

Weekend Prices Maintain Bullish Trend

The drop in gas load that usually accompanies a weekendreduction of business activity failed to dampen the cash market’sbullishness Friday. Though a few points (El Paso-Permian andTrunkline-South Texas) eked out only penny upticks and CIG and Wahawere essentially flat, most markets achieved gains of 3-7 cents.Influencing factors were unchanged from earlier in the week,sources said: Western cold, Southern heat, a higher screen andelectric utilities using gas in peaking units while many nuclearand coal plants are down for refueling or other maintenance.

April 12, 1999