Chute

Fast Out of Chute Last Week, Bulls Stumble Ahead of Weekend

Despite the gains in the nearby crude oil pit and ahead of the coldest air expected thus far this season, natural gas futures tumbled lower Friday as weak longs headed for the exits ahead of the weekend and the December expiry Tuesday.

November 25, 2002

December Contract, Cold Air Put Bulls in Buying Mood

The December natural gas futures contract was fast out of the chute on its first day as prompt month Wednesday, gapping higher at the opening bell and quickly etching a new high for the week at $4.44. However, scale-up commercial selling was seen throughout the surge and was effective at limiting the market’s upside. December shuffled quietly lower in the afternoon, closing with a 12.8-cent gain for the session at $4.389. Trading was relatively light, with only 69,400 contracts changing hands.

October 31, 2002

Early Jump Fails to Hold as August Slips 2 Cents

For the third session in a row Wednesday, natural gas futures were fast out of the chute as traders pressured the market to a higher opening trade. However, in contrast to Tuesday when prices held strong throughout the session, Wednesday was another down-day on the charts as non-commercial sellers re-entered the fray. The August contract finished at $2.841, down 2.2 cents on the day, and in the lower half of its 16.5-cent trading range.

July 18, 2002

Early Jump Fails to Hold as August Slips 2 Cents

For the third session in a row Wednesday, natural gas futures were fast out of the chute as traders pressured the market to a higher opening trade. However, in contrast to Tuesday when prices held strong throughout the session, Wednesday was another down-day on the charts as non-commercial sellers re-entered the fray. The August contract finished at $2.841, down 2.2 cents on the day, and in the lower half of its 16.5-cent trading range.

July 18, 2002

Storage Bulls Fast Out of Chute

After stabilizing within a tight, 10-cent trading range for thepast week, natural gas futures finally broke to the upsideWednesday amid a post AGA buying surge. May received the largestboost of any month, rallying 7.2 cents to post its first $3.00-plus settlement at $3.021. According to the American GasAssociation 2 Bcf was injected into underground storage facilitieslast week, bringing the total to 1,033, or 31% full. “Its alwaysdifficult to predict the way the market will react to the firstinjection of the season,” a Chicago trader said. “Expectationscalled for net change of plus or minus 10 Bcf and that’s what wegot. If you ask me, I am a little surprised by the market’sreaction,” he said.

April 13, 2000

Bears Win Small Victory, Hold Bulls at $2.58

Following two days of nearly unchecked buying last week, bullswere quick out of the chute again yesterday as they bid the Augustcontract higher in early trading. However, the same profit takingwhich capped gains Friday thwarted the buying again yesterday whenprices could not break above the $2.58 level. The August contractspent the rest of the session chopping sideways before eventuallyfinishing up 1.4 cents to $2.542.

July 27, 1999

Small Gain Puts Bulls Back at Helm

Feeding off strength from Tuesday’s Access session gains, theMay contract was fast out of the chute Wednesday, quickly notchinga $2.08 shortly before noon. But for the fourth time in the lastfive trading days, resistance at the $2.07-09 level held andprofit-taking in the form of selling became the theme of theafternoon. The May contract finished at $2.024, just 1.1 cents morethan Tuesday’s close.

April 8, 1999

Early Strength Gives Way to Late Erosion

Cash prices came out of the chute fast Monday morning as coldertemperatures, strong NYMEX prices and a bit of hype tricked mostmarkets into early gains. “A buyer blinked early this morning andsellers took control,” a Tulsa marketer said. The early strengthpushed prices to 5-8 cents above index levels in some cases.However, after the market caught its breath, sellers came out ofthe woodwork to send prices lower and late trades were back nearindex levels. Western prices followed the East’s early lead butresisted the major downturn.

March 3, 1998