Usual

West Sees Most of Weekend’s Price Softness

Prices slumped Friday as the usual weekend lull in gas demandkicked in, and little severe heat was expected outside the southerntier of states. Western markets tended to see more of the largerdecreases, while a few eastern points managed to hang in there atflat leveles.

June 26, 2000

Northeast Jumps, Other Markets Flat Heading into Weekend

In a break from the usual price downturns associated withend-of-the-week gas trading, many markets points posted no gain orsmall increases Friday. Northeast points were the notable exceptionas expected wintery weather for the weekend caused significantprice jumps.

February 14, 2000

Cold Weather Supports Prices in Weekend Market

For the second Friday in a row the cash market largely managedto beat the usual lower-demand weekend jinx on spot prices. Exceptfor a wee bit of softness in the relatively mild-weather markets ofCalifornia, the Pacific Northwest and intra-Alberta, quotes wereflat to 3-4 cents up elsewhere and ranging a little higher thanthat at New England citygates (Algonquin and Tennessee Zone 6).

December 20, 1999

Northeast Price Drops Lead General Weekend Decline

The usual softness that accompanies a lower-demand weekendperiod arrived on schedule Friday. Price movement ranged from flatat some Rockies points to down as much as a dime in the Gulf Coast.Once more, mild weather along the East Coast caused Northeastcitygates to register the biggest declines of 15 cents or more,with Transco’s Zone 6-NYC pool again topping the list with a fallof about 30 cents. The Zone 6 slide into the mid $2.30s left ittrading little more than 20 cents above the production area’sTransco Station 65.

November 22, 1999

Only a Few Points See Usual Weekend Drops

For the second Friday in a row, most points avoided the pricejinx associated with lower weekend demand. Flat to slightly higherwas the general rule, although a few points rose by as much as 8cents. Most of the weaker spots were concentrated in Northeastcitygates and the Rockies, with Iroquois Zone 2 deliveries fallingby almost 15 cents. Prices were down overall, but experiencing alate bounce due to screen strength, a Northeast trader said.

October 4, 1999

Cash Swoons Under Weather, Weekend Lethargy

“The Three Stooges didn’t fall as fast or as hard,” one traderremarked, as the usual weekend demand crunch, a bearish 6- to10-day forecast and Thursday’s futures market plunge were cited asreasons for the nearly universal drops of over a nickel. New YorkCitygate prices were among the hardest hit Friday, as Monday’shighpoint of $2.75 has given way to the mid $2.40s at the week’sclose.

June 14, 1999

Weekend Load’s Price-Depressing Effect Returns

Unlike a week earlier, the slump in gas demand that almostalways accompanies a weekend had its usual negative effect on cashprices Friday. Declines ranged from only 3-4 cents at Midwest andNortheast citygates to as much as a dime or so at Southwest andRockies points, where most of the maintenance outages at processingplants and compressor stations had ended by Friday. Most otherpoints registered drops of about a nickel.

May 24, 1999

Futures Finish Week on Positive Note

It was business as usual last week at the New York MercantileExchange as the market continued its tug of war, pitting storagebears against bottom-seeking bulls. And just as the case has beensince the middle of 1998 when the downtrend began, it was the bearswho were dominant, pulling optimistic buyers dangerously close tothe mud in the middle. But just when even the most time-weatheredbulls were ready let go of the rope, the market managed to fumblehigher in lethargic Friday afternoon trading. The April contractfinished up 1.2 cents for the day at $1.699.

March 22, 1999

PA Tries Again for Gas Deregulation

The usual suspects are at it again, as Pennsylvania Rep. FrankTulli (R-106) and Sen. Frank Piccola (R-15) are re-introducing agas deregulation bill for small commercial and residentialcustomers. Tulli said the bill will be proposed to the legislatureearly this week. The representative hopes to have the legislationpassed through both houses by June 30.

March 15, 1999

Pennsylvania Tries Again for Gas Deregulation

The usual suspects are at it again, as Pennsylvania Rep. Frank Tulli (R-106) and Sen. Frank Piccola (R-15) reintroduced a gas deregulation bill last Thursday. Their previous attempt to deregulate service to small commercial and residential customers failed to pass in Pennsylvania’s legislature last fall. Unlike the last try, however, this legislation is supported by a natural gas gross receipt tax (GRT) cut proposal from Governor Tom Ridge, enabling the bill to jump a large hurdle it was unable to overcome last time around (See NGI, Feb. 1).

March 15, 1999