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Lehman Raises ’04 Gas Price Estimate 11%

Lehman Brothers on Friday increased its 2004 natural gas price estimate 11% to $5/MMBtu, even though it noted in a report that the recent storage withdrawals have been disappointing.

January 26, 2004

Technicals Dominate As the Market Waits for Winter

Though it opened and closed at almost the same level, the natural gas futures market was anything but a kiddie’s ride Tuesday as waves of buying and selling led prices on a roller coaster of trading activity.

October 15, 2003

Alaska Governor Tells Mackenzie Pipe Interests to Not Interfere

Even though a natural gas pipeline would cut across Canada en route to the Lower 48, Canadian officials should back off while U.S. officials decide whether to offer subsidies on a proposed Alaska pipe, Gov. Frank Murkowski said at a Calgary energy conference last week.

October 6, 2003

Alaska Governor Tells Mackenzie Pipe Interests to Not Interfere

Even though a natural gas pipeline would cut across Canada en route to the Lower 48, Canadian officials should back off while U.S. officials decide whether to offer subsidies on a proposed Alaska pipe, Gov. Frank Murkowski said at a Calgary energy conference this week.

October 1, 2003

FERC’s Proposed Anti-Manipulation Rules Stir Comment

Even though the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has direct authority to impose its proposed “code of conduct” only on pipelines and LDCs and their affiliates by attaching it to blanket sales certificates, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) believes “this is a sufficiently large group of sellers of natural gas to warrant adoption of the rules…since many of the affiliates of interstate pipelines or LDCs are among the largest natural gas marketers in the nation” (RM03-10).

September 1, 2003

After a 20-Cent Drop, Bulls Regroup

After suffering though a week’s worth of daily advances, bears finally got their chance Monday as extremely mild weather forecasts turned last week’s buyers of natural gas futures into sellers. When a quick uptick at the opening bell failed to surpass Friday’s $5.295 high, sell orders flooded into the trading pit. It took just an hour for the September contract to drop 25 cents Monday morning, nullifying about two-thirds of last week’s advance. It closed for the session at $5.083, down 19.7 cents on the day.

August 26, 2003

FERC’s Proposed Anti-Manipulation Rules Stir Comment

Even though the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission only has direct authority to impose its proposed “code of conduct” on pipelines and LDCs and their affiliates by attaching it to blanket sales certificates, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) believes “this is a sufficiently large group of sellers of natural gas to warrant adoption of the rules…since many of the affiliates of interstate pipelines or LDCs are among the largest natural gas marketers in the nation” (RM03-10).

August 21, 2003

Meager Five-Cent Futures Gain Does Little to Dissuade Market Bears

Though a casual look at the 4.7-cent increase and $4.677 close in September futures might suggest the trading action was price-supportive Tuesday, that analysis fails to take into account the myriad of factors that paint a decidedly bearish picture of the trading session. Not only did the natural gas futures market fail to keep pace with crude oil prices Tuesday, but it also lacked any substantial buying boost after probing down to key support at $4.60 on Monday. At 51,457, estimated volume was also weak, evidence that the market is without a clear consensus.

August 6, 2003

Storm Shut-Ins Minimal; Nearly All Points See Gains

Tropical Storm Bill was leaving relatively little shut-in offshore production in its wake Monday afternoon as it moved over the Louisiana coast. Meanwhile, flatness at the Chicago citygate and Dawn were the only significant exceptions in an overall stronger launch of the July aftermarket. Otherwise, points ranged from up about a nickel to nearly 40 cents higher. A majority of the gains were in the range of 10-20 cents.

July 1, 2003

Dynegy Puts Restructuring Before Growth Through 2004

Dynegy Inc. CEO Bruce Williamson told shareholders Thursday that even though the company had a successful first quarter, it has to focus on restructuring before considering any growth opportunities. First, he said, will be refinancing debt due in 2005, which will be completed before anything else is considered.

June 9, 2003
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