Soared

Raymond James: Gas and Oil Prices Re-linked

As natural gas prices soared last winter, significant switching from natural gas to residual fuel and heating oil made the “linkage” between the commodities all too clear, according to Raymond James & Associates’ John Gerdes in an energy brief released Monday. Although natural gas is considered the fuel of choice to supply the nation’s growing power needs, the last five months of 2000 showed that price can change everything.

May 1, 2001

Storage and Weather: Squarely in Bulls’ Favor Monday

As temperatures soared to the 90 degree mark across much of the Southeast U.S. and ahead of another potentially bullish storage report to be released Wednesday, natural gas traders pressed prices higher Monday, setting the stage for a possible retest of recent highs. After gapping higher on the open, the May contract shuffled mostly sideways yesterday as traders debated whether the American Gas Association would announce another withdrawal or the first injection of the season. The prompt month finished 8.9 cents higher at $5.477, its highest close since the last week of March.

April 10, 2001

Northern CA Sole Exception to Soaring Weekend Prices

Prices soared everywhere Friday except in Northern California asmore bullish weather forecasts and current conditions, along with asecond straight day of rising futures, propped up what had been arecently sagging cash market. Nearly all gains were within therange of 50-90 cents.

February 5, 2001

Keyspan Fires On All Cylinders In 2000

Keyspan Corp. announced last week that its consolidated earnings for the year 2000 before restructuring charges soared above 1999 levels.

January 29, 2001

Storage Data Adds Volatility, 26 Cents to June Futures

Looking like the readout on an EKG machine gone mad, natural gasfutures soared, dipped then rallied again yesterday as tradersdealt with a bevy of somewhat contradictory but certainly confusingpieces of fundamental news. With Wednesday’s 25.9-cent advance and$4.073 settle, the June contract climbed into the rarified air of$4.05-plus prices, which have been achieved only in seven othertrading sessions during the 10-year history of natural gas futures.

May 25, 2000

Duke to Bring in 3 Australian LNG Cargoes

Last year, Duke Energy’s LNG imports soared 337% to 30.6 Bcf.But 1998 is expected to be even better because the recent economiccrisis in Asia has stifled demand while LNG shipping and productioncosts have been declining. Duke Energy LNG Sales announcedyesterday it purchased three more spot cargoes of liquefied naturalgas (8.9 TBtu) from the North West Shelf LNG Project in Australia.The company has arranged to sell the LNG in U.S. markets in June,August and November. It will be imported at Duke’s Trunkline LNGreceiving terminal located in Lake Charles, LA. The shipments willcome from North West Shelf’s liquefaction facilities located atWithnell Bay in the port of Dampier in Australia.

April 23, 1998

May Futures Prices Catapult Higher, Break $2.50

The May Nymex contract soared to unprecedented heights onTuesday, thanks to an 11.3 cent surge that left the contract at$2.522. May posted a high of $2.53, which is a source said is thetop of a long term technical trading formation. The fact that Maysettled so close to that high price is a bullish sign, he said, andfor that reason, he believes May has a good shot at moving to itsnext resistance level of $2.58 when trading resumes today.

April 1, 1998
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