Woodwork

Sub-$4.00 Futures Brings Bulls Out of Woodwork

Dropping beneath $4.00 for the first time since early August, natural gas futures continued on the slippery slope downward Friday as traders pressured the market lower for the third straight day. With Friday’s 8.1-cent decline and $3.973 close, the June contract has tumbled 96.7 cents since becoming spot contract at Nymex a month ago. June expires at 3:10 p.m. (EDT) today.

May 29, 2001

Technical Rebound Brings Bulls out of Woodwork

After failing for the third day in a row to sustain a move beneath $4.20, natural gas futures rallied yesterday as traders began to cover shorts initiated during the recent price erosion. At the closing bell, the June contract was 14.6 cents higher at $4.348.

May 11, 2001

Double-Digit Decline Brings Bears Out of Woodwork

Following on the heels of Thursday’s losses, natural gas futuresgapped lower on the open Friday as traders took profits on theirlong positions in sympathy with similar selling in the crude oilpit. October crude finished down 5% on the day at $33.63 per bblwhile October natural gas slipped 2.4% to close at $4.880. OPEC wasscheduled to meet over the weekend in Vienna to discuss possibleproduction increases (check back with http://intelligencepress.comfor breaking news later Monday morning).

September 11, 2000

Traders See Bears Coming Out of the Woodwork

It looks like bears are roaming the market woods for the holidayseason, said a producer noting new softness in both futures andcash prices Friday. No nay-sayers to her assessment could be foundas sources agreed that weather and storage fundamentals continue tolook weak for the foreseeable future, barring a surprise blizzardor two. A marketer said he “wouldn’t be surprised if we end up withDecember indexes looking a lot like November’s.”

November 23, 1998