Continued

‘Surprising’ Bounce Leaves Futures Nearly Unchanged

As many traders predicted, the futures market continued lowerThursday morning amid a swirl of bearish fundamental factors, whichwere freshly updated Wednesday evening. But the dip wasshort-lived, and afternoon buying bid the spot January contractback up to test resistance, before settling at $1.84, off 0.7 centsfor the day.

December 11, 1998

December Aftermarket Still Seeking Bottom

The meltdown of the early December aftermarket continued Tuesdayalthough many points made small rallies late in the day from theirbottom levels of the morning. Prices in nearly all production areaswest of Appalachia sank well below $1.50-a level in the “old days”at which many producers used to consider summer shut-ins. ThePG&E citygate was one of the only points still registeringquotes above $2.

December 2, 1998

AES Grabs IL Foothold with $885M CILCORP Buy

International power generation developer AES Corp. continued anaggressive acquisition strategy yesterday with the purchase of all13.6 million shares of Peoria, IL-based CILCORP, parent of CentralIllinois Light Co., for $65 per share, a 22% premium. The value ofthe transaction is about $885 million.

November 24, 1998

Opposing Fundamentals Leave Futures Nearly Unchanged

Trading at Nymex yesterday continued in the choppy, range-boundmanor that has plagued the market for most of November. Againtraders lamented the lack of a clear direction or price trend inthe futures pit. The December contract was held to a tight, 6-centtrading range and settled at $2.394 after never fully recoveringfrom a lower opening.

November 13, 1998

Day Market Edged Higher, Aimed Down in Late Trading

Cash prices continued their upward direction Wednesday, but at aslightly slower pace than the prior two days. A fading winterblast in the Northern Plains, combined with forecasts of moderatingtemperatures and a softening Nymex screen, eased the punch of thestrong cash market in late trading, sources said.

November 12, 1998

Rally in November Aftermarket Slows to a Crawl

The upward track of cash prices continued Wednesday, but at asnail’s pace compared to Tuesday’s skyrocketing pyrotechnics. Mostof the new increases were quite meager, ranging from a penny or soto about a nickel. The first significant winter weather that manyareas have seen so far this season was credited with keeping theNovember price rally going, albeit modestly.

November 5, 1998

Futures Market Slips in Pre-AGA Trading

The futures market continued to move in a choppy,sideways-trading pattern Wednesday, as traders tried to influence amove outside Tuesday’s broad trading range. But the Decembercontract could only muster a 6-cent range yesterday, which producedan inside day on daily charts. Trade selling set in as Decemberreached its $2.435 high and pushed the prompt month down to itseventual $2.395 settlement price.

November 5, 1998

Futures Receive Boost from Rocketing Cash Prices

High volatility continued in the natural gas pit Tuesday whentraders tested both sides of the market during a session that sawlittle in the way of fresh fundamental news. In the end, supportivecash prices-that were up 20 or more cents in mostlocations-provided the incentive for futures to trend higher. TheDecember contract led the way, eeking out a 4.9 cent gain to settleat $2.436 in light to moderate trading activity yesterday.

November 4, 1998

Market Still on Upswing But Slowing Down

The surge that has characterized cash trading activity this weekcontinued Wednesday but at a significantly slower pace, suggestingto some that prices had reached or were nearing peaks. The newupticks left most eastern points in the vicinity of October indexlevels, while markets in the West padded their already considerablestandings above indexes.

October 22, 1998

Short-Covering Spurs Late Rally in Futures

High intra-day volatility continued at Nymex Tuesday whennatural gas futures came under selling pressure early in the dayonly to rebound late in the trading session to nearly unchangedlevels. Weak cash market prices were the talk of the market in themorning and it wasn’t until after pipeline nomination deadlines at12:30 PM eastern that futures were able to begin to recoup losses.The November contract settled for the day at $2.084, down 0.5 centsfor the day.

October 14, 1998