Spoils

Commercial Selling Spoils Day for Overheated Bulls

Buoyed by triple-digit heat, record-setting power loads, and $7.50 physical prices in the Northeast United States, natural gas futures were fast out of the chute Monday as traders set their sights on a small but unfilled gap left on the daily chart since July 8. Riding that buying wave, the prompt month made an attempt, but ultimately failed, to fill in the $3.08-125 gap completely. Sellers were quick to punish this technical weakness in the noon hour, and market-on-close selling added the final touches Monday afternoon. By its 2:30 p.m. expiry, the August contract had sunk back to $2.976, up 4 cents for the session, but more than 13 cents off its high for the day.

July 30, 2002

Late Sell-Off Spoils Bulls’ Day

“Close, but no cigar,” was one trader’s apt description of theprice action yesterday in the natural gas pit at the New YorkMercantile Exchange. A session that saw the prompt month unable tobreak stubborn resistance near $2.40. After an early dip, the Julycontract spent much of the session near its $2.39 high beforeplummeting lower at the close. July finished at $2.343, down 1.5cents.

June 2, 1999