Start-up costs and rapid Georgia customer acquisitions by itsSouthStar Energy Services partnership with Dynegy and AGLResources, cost Piedmont Natural Gas about $0.06/share during itsthird quarter, which ended July 31, the company reported this week.It experienced a net loss of $8.2 million (-$0.26/share) during thequarter, compared with a net loss of $6.3 million (1$0.20/share)during the same period a year earlier. As of Oct. 1, SouthStar willbe serving more than 450,000 new gas customers in Georgia. Theearnings per share impact of this venture for the first nine monthsof the year was -$0.10/share. Piedmont also noted that weather inits territory was 57% of the thirty-year normal heating degreedays. The company’s margin (revenues less cost of gas) was $44.4million compared with $45.5 million for the comparable year-agoperiod. For the nine-month period, basic earnings per share were$2.17, compared with $2.32 for the year-ago period, and margin was$279.8 million compared with $282.6 million for the prior yearperiod.
Start
Articles from Start
Prices Start Rising Again as New Storms Develop
Dennis and Emily joined Cindy Tuesday as the latest namedtropical storms in the Atlantic, and cash prices responded byresuming a climb that had faltered slightly as the week began.Nearly all eastern gains were at least a nickel or greater, withsome points rising by double digits. Somewhat surprisingly,however, most of the dime-or-greater increases occurred in theWest, led by one of nearly 20 cents at the PG&E citygate. TheCalifornia market in general was boosted as Pacific Gas &Electric threw something of a curveball at traders: instead of thefrequent high-linepack OFOs this summer, the one that takes effecttoday is for low linepack (see Transportation Notes).
Shaky at Start, Futures Rumble Higher Amid Pre-AGA Hype
As cooling temperatures were giving heat ravaged areas from theUpper Midwest to the Southeast much needed relief, the natural gasfutures market was doing its own cooling off early yesterday asprices dipped to the lowest level since July 23. The move lower wasshort-lived and after opening at $2.50 the August contract wasunable to attract follow-though selling, leaving buyers to bid themarket higher throughout the rest of the day. The prompt monthfinished up 3.2 cents at $2.575.
Fourth Time is a Charm for Persistent Bulls
For the fourth straight trading session, natural gas futuresraced off to a fast start Wednesday as locals and speculators triedagain to push the market through key resistance and above therecent trading range. But unlike the failure and subsequent sellingthat plagued the market on the prior three occasions, yesterday’smarket was able to hold on and add to gains late in the day. TheAugust contract finished at $2.253, up 5.5 cents.
Foreign Acquisitions of U.S. Utilities Get FERC Nod
The foreign invasion of the U.S. electric utility market got offto a good start last week when the Federal Energy RegulatoryCommission approved two separate transactions valued atapproximately $10-$11 billion.
After Shaky Start, Futures Able to Bubble Higher
After see-sawing 2 cents on either side of unchanged for much ofthe Nymex trading session yesterday, the futures market rumbledhigher late in the day to finish near its high. The June contractfinished up 2.9 cents at $2.302, which places it squarely in themiddle of its recent $2.205-$2.405 trading range. Estimated volumewas a relatively light 32,280.
June Fizzles After Fast Start
After spiking as much as 7 cents higher in the Wednesday eveningAccess session, the new prompt month was the focus of muchconjecture and speculation. Would June continue higher, followingthe example set by May, or fall from its already lofty perch? Formany, it is still too early to tell, but if yesterday’s priceaction was any indication, June will have a difficult time matchingMay’s 50-cent price increase over the past month. After opening at$2.40, the June contract tumbled throughout the session to close at$2.339, a 0.2-cent decline from Wednesday’s close.
Oil and Gas Prospectors Head for Yukon Territory
Canada’s Yukon Territory aims to start a new Klondike rush -this time for natural gas, and oil too if there is any, in Canada’svast northwestern corner next to Alaska.
O&G Prospectors in Yukon Territory
Canada’s Yukon Territory aims to start a new Klondike rush -this time for natural gas, and oil too if there is any, in Canada’svast northwestern corner next to Alaska.
OK Retail Unbundling Postponed Until Mid-2001
The Oklahoma Corporation Commission (OCC) has delayed the startdate for retail gas unbundling in the state from Oct. 1, 1999 toJune 1, 2001. Retail unbundling affects gas utilities serving morethan 25,000 customers. The commission order delaying unbundlingalso allows groups wanting to propose competitive purchase programsat earlier dates to submit their proposals for commissionconsideration.