Following a three-day, 25-cent price spike, the natural gasmarket cooled its heels Thursday as traders took profits amidtechnically overbought conditions and ahead of the weekend. After alate morning push failed to surpass Wednesday’s $2.78 high, sellerscame out of the woodwork to deliver the March contract a dime lowerto $2.659.
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Technical Sell-Off Takes a Dime Out of Futures
Following a three-day, 30-cent price rally, the natural gasmarket cooled its heels yesterday as traders took profits amidtechnically oversold conditions and ahead of fresh storage data.That sell-off sent the January contract tumbling 9.9 cents lowerthroughout the session yesterday. By virtue of trading above, thenbelow Tuesday’s range it completed an outside-down day on the dailycharts to settle at $2.486.
Futures Slip Lower Amid Enormous Price Range
Following a spectacular, 24-cent price spike Thursday, thenatural gas futures market cooled its heels Friday as traders tookprofits rather than spend the weekend long. That allowed theOctober contract to sift a nickel lower to $2.801 in an active114,602-volume session.
$2.70 September Futures? Not So Fast
Following aggressive buying and double-digit increases achievedin Wednesday’s Access trading session, the futures market cooledoff yesterday as physical traders eschewed the opportunity to belong gas at the $2.70 level for the month of August. Once themarket was unable to get past the $2.72 high from Access sellerscame out of the woodwork and demoted the September contract to$2.569, down 3.7 cent for the session.
Chevron and Texaco? Maybe, Maybe Not
Merger rumors that tweaked the stock prices of Chevron andTexaco have cooled somewhat. While the industry awaits word of adeal (or no deal), observers might consider the words of managementand economics professor Lester Thurow.
Chevron and Texaco? Maybe, Maybe Not
Merger rumors that tweaked the stock prices of Chevron andTexaco have cooled somewhat. While the industry awaits word of adeal (or no deal), observers might consider the words of managementand economics professor Lester Thurow.
Warm Weather Cooled Some LDC 1Q Earnings
Atlanta Gas Light was one of the biggest losers among a group of37 LDCs reporting first quarter earnings. AGL’s net income was offa whopping 46% from the first quarter of 1998. PaineWebber notedthe significant drop was due mainly to a change in rate design thattook effect in July 1998 when the company unbundled.