The Daily Commodities » Natural Gas http://www.thedailycommodities.com Tue, 31 Jan 2012 04:32:05 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.3 More Good News From the Commodity Complex http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2011/03/more-good-news-from-the-commodity-complex/ http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2011/03/more-good-news-from-the-commodity-complex/#comments Wed, 16 Mar 2011 21:07:39 +0000 DailyWealth.com http://www.thedailycommodities.com/?p=2837 Yesterday, we showed why it’s not all bad news for DailyWealth readers: We’re “forever” owners of gold for insurance against times like these. And as gold’s long-term chart shows, the incredible uptrend is still intact.

Today, we feature more “not bad” news: The “contrarian’s commodity,” natural gas, is holding steady in the face of a huge commodity correction. A major fuel for power plants, and the heating and cooling of homes, natural gas is so hated and beaten-down that gas bears can’t knock the price down much past $4 per thousand cubic feet (mcf). Here’s why…
We know from an industry contact that domestic gas production costs are running around $3.50-$4 per mcf. Companies can’t make money producing gas when prices are that low. The taps shut down.
This fundamental aspect of the gas market shows up in a bit of “common sense technical analysis.” You’ll note from the three-year chart below that natural gas simply refuses to fall below the $3.50-$3.75 level… even in the face of this week’s awesome selling pressure in the commodity complex.

Despite massive commodity liquidation, natural gas holds steady

Source: http://www.dailywealth.com/1666/On-the-Ground-in-Japan

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Oil/NatGas Ratio http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2011/02/oilnatgas-ratio/ http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2011/02/oilnatgas-ratio/#comments Thu, 24 Feb 2011 20:32:13 +0000 Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT http://www.thedailycommodities.com/?p=2745

From DailyWealth…

Natural gas is back to its record “boiling point” of cheapness.

Last week, we checked in with the “oil to gas ratio” for a read on how cheap natural gas is getting… and we noted the clean fuel was near an extreme reading against its energy cousin, crude oil. This extreme reading is almost always followed by sharp rallies in natural gas.
Over the weekend, the revolution in the Middle East/North Africa (MENA) got a little hotter… which caused oil to surge higher… which took the oil-to-gas ratio even higher… to a multiyear extreme reading of 24. This ratio is now like a whistling teapot on a hot burner.
While this extreme reading will likely lead to a pop higher for natural gas, the big message to take from here is that natural gas has a bright “consumption future” coming from Asia and the United States… which is why seasoned investors are taking stakes in this fuel while nobody wants it.

Natural gas is back to its multiyear

Source

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Marshall Auerback: Decoding Energy Investment http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2011/01/marshall-auerback-decoding-energy-investment/ http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2011/01/marshall-auerback-decoding-energy-investment/#comments Fri, 28 Jan 2011 22:49:08 +0000 The Energy Report http://www.thedailycommodities.com/?p=2556
Source: Brian Sylvester of The Energy Report 01/27/2011
Pinetree Capital’s Marshall Auerback sees a number of supply/demand imbalances in the energy space, particularly in uranium. “We like uranium because it’s both a supply and demand story,” he says, believing the price could “easily double” over the next few years. But yellowcake won’t be alone in its ascent up the energy hierarchy. As developing nations begin to realize a standard of living more akin to the West, opportunities could arise in other areas across the energy spectrum. In this Energy Report exclusive, Marshall decodes the energy enigma, making a strong case for U308, oil and gas E&Ps and even natural gas.

The Energy Report: Shares in Pinetree Capital have had a good run in the last six months, going from about $1 per share in July 2010 to about $3.38 now. What’s largely responsible for that remarkable run?

Marshall Auerback: A number of things. I think Pinetree has been an undervalued stock for a long time based on its net asset value. But we had very adverse financial conditions in 2008, particularly adverse for small-cap companies, which comprise most of our portfolio. Even though we started to see an improvement in the credit markets in 2009, they really didn’t start to loosen up until last year for the smaller companies. Your risk in holding these small caps is not so much market risk as liquidity risk. A number of these companies had cash on their balance sheets but they were clearly capital-constrained because they were dependent on ongoing capital injections to develop these assets.

In 2010, the capital markets began to re-engage and that made it easier for some of these companies to access funding. In turn, they were able to develop their assets, which helped improve their share prices. But it took a while. The markets were basically trendless until about September of last year, then all of a sudden you have this big move in the commodity space. Clearly, that’s Pinetree’s sweet spot.

TER: Your stated objective is to “invest ahead of the crowd by anticipating emerging trends and macro changes in consumption and translate that knowledge to successful investments in small- and micro-cap companies.” What macro changes are taking place in the energy market, and more specifically in the uranium market?

MA: People have discussed peak oil for a long time. It’s been controversial. Some people say you can always find oil at a given price. We don’t disagree with that but the main thesis behind peak oil is that mother nature has only given us so much oil. The low-hanging fruit has largely been picked. It’s getting increasingly difficult to extract oil from conventional sources. If you look at each successive economic crisis and the price of oil during each one, we have continued to bottom at increasingly higher prices. Even in the worst conditions we had in 2008 and 2009, the oil price bottomed at about $36 a barrel and it didn’t stay there for long. It was driven by a collapse in demand.

The other problem in energy, in all commodities really, was a complete collapse in trade financing. So, we had both a financing shock and a demand shock, which caused this collapse in commodities. But as trade financing began to normalize and these emerging economies began to normalize, there was a big increase in demand. Along with that you’ve got very significant shortages in supply. The BP Plc. (NYSE:BP; LSE:BP) oil-spill disaster that occurred in the Gulf of Mexico is a symptom of the supply problem. We wouldn’t be drilling for oil three miles below the surface of the ocean if it were easier to get oil from more conventional sources. To me that’s symptomatic of a fact that you have to look for the oil in increasingly expensive places, which means increasingly expensive oil.

TER: How is expensive oil influencing the uranium market?

MA: Clearly, as the oil price has continued to appreciate people have started to look at alternative fuels. For a while the sexy ones were wind and solar, but there’s very low power densities in those types of energy generation. Wind is intermittent. Obviously, solar is not a great resource to use in cold-climate countries like Canada or Russia. Natural gas is an important transitional fuel, but there’s also uranium.

To me, a seminal moment in the uranium market occurred about five years ago when James Lovelock, a leading environmentalist who used to be the head of Greenpeace, said that uranium has to be a major part of our response to global warming. Before that, uranium was seen as part of the problem, not part of the solution. Clearly, the nuclear waste issue hasn’t gone away but we treat the stuff a lot more effectively than we used to. The waste problem relative to the millions of tons of coil that get belched out into the atmosphere is fairly minimal.

I think the reason we like uranium is because it’s both a supply and demand story. On the demand side, a number of nuclear reactors are under construction. Haywood Securities Analyst Geordie Mark says there’s been a 61% increase in the last couple of years. There’s also been a 54% increase in the number of reactors planned and a 45% increase in those proposed. These new plants alone will eat up 32,900 tons of nuclear fuel annually—that’s almost half the demand from this year’s 443 commercial reactors. We’ve got a very good story there, and then you have the supply side. The current price is around $68 and that’s still too low to support a lot of new investment. You need much higher prices to invest in large-scale, development-stage projects.

As it is now, the uranium industry is having a hard time boosting production. There have been shortfalls from large mines, such as Energy Resources of Australia Ltd.’s (ASX:ERA) Ranger Mine and BHP Billiton Ltd.’s (NYSE:BHP; OTCPK:BHPLF) Olympic Dam Mine in Australia. Of course, Cameco Corp. (TSX:CCO; NYSE:CCJ) had water problems related to reaching production at its proposed Cigar Lake uranium mine. Those are other problems.

TER: Do you think we will see another surge in uranium prices like that in 2005?

MA: Generally, I find that these moves in the commodity cycle take two phases. The first is the “fantasy” phase where you get recognition that a real supply/demand deficiency is developing. A lot of speculative moves are made and the stocks start to go up, but then they crash because it hasn’t yet been validated by actions in the real world. But this speculation moved ahead of reality. Typically, what happens is that you get a wash out, and then 18 months to two years later people come back and say, “This thing is for real.” We saw that happen in gold. There was a big move in gold in 2003 and 2004, but the gold price didn’t move up a huge amount. So, the market went dead for a couple of years. I think uranium would’ve had some interest in 2009, but obviously everything was superseded by the Lehman Brothers meltdown and the financial crash. So, it’s taken a bit longer, but I think the supply/demand outlook I’ve sketched here is still very much in existence. Now we’re starting to see an increasing amount of pricing pressure developing on uranium, which I think will help reignite interest in the sector.

TER: What’s your forecast for the price of uranium?

MA: The price could easily double over the next three or four years, and it could even go much higher. A number of these projects in places like Kazakhstan and Namibia don’t even begin to make money until the price gets closer to $80 or $90 per pound.

A lot of the demand will be driven by the pace at which these nuclear reactors are built. The problem here is that we’ve often got political delays. I don’t think nuclear construction in the U.S. will come for another four or five years because with natural gas prices being as low as they are there’s no urgency to move into nuclear. However, in other countries where natural gas prices are much higher, I think we’ll likely see accelerated development. Certainly, in countries like South Africa, we’re already seeing brownouts. China is definitely going to move ahead very rapidly, as is India—that’s going to be the big source of demand. It’s just a matter of how quickly these countries start to build reactors. It may be a case where, occasionally, perception races a bit ahead of reality; but the underlying reality is that uranium has the soundest supply/demand features of almost any commodity out there right now.

TER: As of Sept. 30, 2010, Pinetree had 55 separate investments in uranium plays. That accounted for 18% of your asset mix. With this expected price appreciation, do you want to keep your uranium exposure at around 20% or are you going to increase that?

MA: I think it really depends on the opportunities; we’re focused on a number of ventures. Again, you have to weigh the existing investments against the increased political risks as you move into some of these funkier countries in central Asia. You’ve always got to measure it against that. I think 20% is a fairly substantial bet, and I suspect that’s even higher now due to share price appreciation. But if it’s become a hot sector, we may start to look in an area that’s become less loved.

TER: You mentioned “funkier countries” in central Asia. Do you mean Kazakhstan?

MA: I have a view that it’s always tough investing in any country that ends with “stan.” Basically, I’m saying you have to be much more aware of that risk. Increasingly, we’re seeing examples of resource nationalism. And that’s not just in the emerging world, it’s in places like Canada. There were very significant resource-nationalism reasons for the Canadian government’s disapproval of BHP’s acquisition of PotashCorp (NYSE:POT; TSX:POT). I happen to think that was the right decision because I believe it’s much more valuable as a standalone asset. Increasing resource nationalism means you’ve got to be careful. You don’t want to develop something, and then find out the local government is taking 50% or more of it. I think that we have to make political risk assessments as part of our investment judgments going forward.

TER: What are some of your biggest success stories when it comes to picking uranium stocks?

MA: Mega Uranium Ltd. (TSX:MGA) is a classic example. It started to appreciate at $0.10 and got to $9 at its peak. That’s probably one of the best examples. A couple of other examples would be Rockgate Capital Corp. (TSX:RGT), which has gone from under $1 to $2.70 recently. It’s a uranium explorer and developer in West Africa.

Rockgate’s main project is the 100%-owned Falea Uranium/Silver deposit located in southwest Mali. It was initially discovered in the late 1970s by Cogema, now AREVA (PAR:CEI). Rockgate has expanded Falea substantially with 45,000 meters of diamond drilling now completed in more than 175 holes. This work identified a new zone of uranium and high-grade silver; and on May 15, 2009, Rockgate released the first independent NI 43-101 resource calculation for the Falea project reporting a total uncapped resource of 20,252,000 pounds of uranium and 31,600,000 ounces of silver.

Another company is U3O8 Corp. (TSX.V:UWE), which has gone from a $0.35 to a $1.03 stock. It acquired some projects in South America Mega Uranium last year. In Colombia, it acquired Berlin Project—a 38 Mlb. historic uranium resource at 0.13% U3O8—a high-value, multi-element opportunity with the presence of uranium, phosphate, vanadium, molybdenum, yttrium, rhenium and silver grades.

In Argentina, U308 Corp. has sizeable land holdings near the country’s largest known uranium deposits. The surficial uranium target at the company’s Laguna Salada Project there appears amenable to low-cost mining, and it’s working to complete an NI 43-101 uranium resource estimate on that project.

Additionally, U308 Corp. holds prospective lands in Guyana—in the Roraima Basin, which is similar to Canada’s Athabasca Basin in size, composition and basement characteristics. Its Kurupung Batholith Project has an NI 43-101 resource of 5.8 Mlb. at an average grade of 0.10% U3O8 (Indicated) and 1.3 Mlb. at an average grade of 0.09% U3O8 (Inferred). A pipeline of uranium-bearing structures will help grow the current resource at Kurupung, which is geologically similar to sizeable albitite-hosted deposits around the world.

Khan Resources Inc. (TSX:KRI) and Summit Resources Ltd. (ASX:SMM) would represent a few of our other big successes.

TER: What are some other promising uranium juniors Pinetree has in its stable?

MA: We like Mawson Resources Ltd. (TSX:MAW; OTCPK:MWSNF; Fkft:MRY), which has metal and energy interests in Finland, Peru and Sweden. The stock recently went from $0.75 to $1.99. And not long ago, the company increased its landholding at the Rompas Gold Uranium Project in Finland by 40%. Mawson has a strong cash position and a very prospective deposit. Highlights from recent channel samples included 0.95m at 1,424 g/t Au and 1.3% U308 and 2.05m at 191.3 g/t Au and 0.44% U308.

We also like Energy Fuels, Inc. (TSX:EFR), which is consolidating uranium mining in western Colorado’s Uravan Mineral Belt and eastern Utah, U.S.

TER: Let’s move on to oil. Global oil consumption has rebounded from the early 2009 lows and now exceeds pre-financial crisis levels. The usage gap between developed markets and their emerging-market counterparts has shrunk from 12 million barrels per day (Mbpd) three years ago to just 4 Mbpd. The International Energy Agency (IEA) forecasts global energy demand will rise to 82.2 Mbpd in 2011 up from 86.9 Mbpd this year—that’s almost 500 billion barrels annually. Where’s that oil going to come from?

MA: It’s a good question. Ultimately, I think that’s what keeps the bid on the price. You have these situations wherein you’ve got massive increases in demand and you just don’t have the available supply, so you’re going to see much higher prices. Milton Friedman once said the best cure for higher prices is higher prices because that’s how you solve the problem. I think we’ll see increasing price pressures. The possibility of a conflict developing or resource wars is rising. I think countries that are in the sweet spot are countries like Canada, which has very substantial energy reserves.

TER: Since it peaked in the 1970s, conventional oil production in Canada and the United States has been declining. Recently, the application of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing to tight oil basins—or, as one oil pundit put it, “a replay of the shale gas movie with different actors”—is bringing a growing amount of light oil to market. Perhaps the best example is the North Dakota Bakken where oil production went from virtually zero a few years ago to about 250,000 bpd now. Are these new dense rock plays putting an end to the notion of peak oil, or is it too soon to declare that?

MA: It’s too soon to declare that. First of all, two things are going on there. We need these kinds of projects just to sustain the levels of demand going forward, but I don’t think they are a panacea to the problem of peak oil. It’s more accurate to look at them as the response to substantially higher oil prices from conventional sources. And some of the supply gains from the non-conventional sources are temporary. In the case of these Barnett shale-type developments, for example, you get very significant early production gains but the asset gets exhausted much more rapidly because the technology accelerates depletion rates. Working these tight basins may provide a short-term fix but it doesn’t actually solve the problem of peak oil. In fact, I would say it validates the whole thesis. If there was an easier way to find oil, no one would have considered it worthwhile to look at these areas.

TER: What are some of your noteworthy oil holdings?

MA: Brownstone Energy Inc.’s (TSX.V:BWN) stock has gone from a low of $0.27 to a high of $1.16; it’s currently trading around $0.75. The company’s main focus remains on its Colombian and offshore Israel projects.

In Colombia, the Canaguay # 1 well on the Canaguaro Block in the Llanos Basin produced oil at rates in excess of 3,900 bpd. BWN has 25% working interest and long-term production tests are expected to take place in February.

The offshore Israel project is a joint venture with Adira Energy Ltd. (TSX.V:ADL; OTCBB:ADENF). The Noble Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NBL)/Delek Drilling LP (TASX:DEDR.L) Tamar discoveries are within 60 km. of Brownstone’s Gabriella and Yitzhak Blocks. Completion of Adira’s 3D high-resolution seismic programs are expected in January 2011; so far, the results look very promising.

Donnybrook Energy Inc. (TSX:DEI) is an emerging Canadian oil and natural gas explorer and producer we like. It’s focused on Montney, Bluesky Wilrich and Fahler formations in the Deep Basin, West Central Alberta. The company now owns working interests in 46 gross sections (30 net sections) of Montney petroleum and natural gas rights in its core area of the Alberta Deep Basin.

Primary Petroleum (TSX.V:PIE) has focused a majority of its resources in the acquisition of prospective oil and gas acreage in Montana. It is engaged in exploration and development activities in Montana and Alberta and owns a significant land position in the Alberta Basin Bakken Fairway in Western Montana and in the NW area of the Williston Basin in Eastern Montana. The company holds 100% interest in all of its landholdings in Montana and has been increasing those landholdings.

Centric Energy Corp. (TSX.V:CTE) is another one we like. It is an oil and gas explorer with interests in Kenya and Mali, with a particularly promising land position in Kenya. The Kenyan government recently approved the Block 10BA farmout to Tullow Oil plc (LSE:TLW). The Block is in the northwestern part of Kenya, located in the eastern part of the Tertiary-age East African Rift system and is considered analogous to the Albertine rift in Uganda, where an estimated 1 billion barrels of reserves have been proved to date and contains another 1.5 billion barrels of prospective resources. The Lake Albert Blocks are operated by Tullow Oil, and 35 out of 36 of the exploration wells drilled have been successful.

TER: Most people are staying away from gas plays right now. Are you saying that Pinetree is heading in that direction?

MA: There’s a very strong secular case to be made for natural gas in the sense that it’s a “green” fuel and will be instrumental in helping governments achieve their objectives to reduce carbon emissions. That said, a lot of the so-called gas plays are actually existing byproducts of oil extraction, so there is less price sensitivity to natural gas prices per se. And the new technologies in place have substantially increased extraction techniques, whilst reducing cost. So our focus can’t be on companies on the basis of higher prices, but rather on good, low-cost producers with ample reserves. Those companies can make money at these depressed prices, which are likely to stay low for the foreseeable future.

TER: Do you have some closing remarks on the energy sector on a macro level?

MA: I think what Pinetree Chairman and CEO Sheldon Inwentash says is correct. At the end of the day, you’re dealing with a structural phenomenon where you’ve got 2.5 billion people in India and China and other emerging areas of the world who are rapidly trying to get wealthy like we did using the same sort of growth model. But because these people are at an earlier stage of economic development, the intensity of their commodity usage is much higher. With that in mind, we tend to believe that there’s a structural bull market in any number of commodity classes. Pinetree has effectively constructed a business plan on that thesis. Now, are we likely to see significant corrections in the future? Of course. These things don’t go up in a straight line. You could have vicious 30%–40% falls. We have to learn to live with that volatility. We employ responsible risk-management techniques and do a lot of due diligence and technical work to get the high-quality assets and get them early.

TER: Thank you for talking with us today, Marshall.

As Pinetree Capital’s corporate spokesperson, Marshall Auerback is a member of Pinetree’s board of directors and has some 28 years of global experience in financial markets worldwide. He plays a key role in the formulation and articulation of Pinetree’s investment strategy. Currently, Marshall is a senior fellow at the Roosevelt Institute, a research associate for the Levy Institute and a fellow for the Economists for Peace and Security. He previously served as an advisor to a number of fund-management organizations, such as PIMCO, the world’s largest bond fund management group, RAB Capital and David W. Tice & Associates. He graduated magna cum laude from Queen’s University in 1981 and received a law degree from Corpus Christi College at Oxford University in 1983.

Want to read more exclusive Energy Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Expert Insights page.

DISCLOSURE:
1) Brian Sylvester of The Energy Report conducted this interview. He personally and/or his family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Energy Report: Mega Uranium, Mawson Resources, Energy Fuels and Primary Petroleum.
3) Marshall Auerback: I personally and/or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally and/or my family am paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. See Pinetree Capital’s disclosure policy.

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Big Action in the Contrarian’s Commodity http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2011/01/big-action-in-the-contrarians-commodity/ http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2011/01/big-action-in-the-contrarians-commodity/#comments Sun, 23 Jan 2011 01:05:22 +0000 DailyWealth.com http://www.thedailycommodities.com/?p=2503

Investing in the “contrarian’s commodity” is getting a little better these days…
For the past 18 months, we’ve recommended taking a position in crude oil’s clean cousin, natural gas. Natural gas is used to make fertilizers and plastics, to heat and cool homes, and to fire electrical power plants. New drilling technologies have brought on huge new supplies of the stuff… which produced a 66% decline in price from 2008 to 2009. This fall has made natural gas one of the few hated assets left in the world.
Over the past few years, “natty” has formed a hard price floor in the $3.50 to $4.00 area. This is the price level where producers start cutting production. (It’s also a price where our preferred natural gas vehicles can pay distributions of 5%-7%.)
As our chart of the week displays, natural gas is getting a little less hated these days. After sinking below $4 in October, the fuel has rallied hard… and just broke out to a five-month high.

Natural gas hits a five-month high

Source: DailyWealth

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No Coal in the Commodity Stocking http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/12/no-coal-in-the-commodity-stocking/ http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/12/no-coal-in-the-commodity-stocking/#comments Thu, 23 Dec 2010 08:20:54 +0000 Matthew Bradbard http://www.thedailycommodities.com/?p=2344 Commodities appear to ending 2010 on a high note with several commodities reaching multi year and multi decade highs as we speak. Only a 40 cent advance in February Crude futures today but we should see the highest settlement in two weeks. On follow thru into tomorrow forget the correction and we should move north from here. We will be absent for the next four trading days so we wish not to have exposure with clients unless they are carrying a profit or are hedgers but as long as the 20 day MA supports at $87.75 onwards and upwards. Aggressive traders can use today’s inside day in natural gas to scale into longs but be quick to exit the trade at a loss if we make a new contract low; that level is $3.89 in February. Traders in March ES put options are now playing defense as we will be looking to cut losses on a retracement.

The US dollar advanced for the fifth consecutive session today but we think there is more room to run. Continue to fade rallies in the Euro, Swissie and Pound. Our downside targets are as follows: 129.00, 1.0100, and 1.5250 respectively.

Live cattle is back above the 20 day MA; our suggestion is gain bullish exposure in either February or April contracts looking for new contract highs and potential record highs into next year. Silver and gold have yet to correct but we have yet to rule out this possibility. As we said yesterday on a settlement below the 50 day MA in gold and 20 day MA in silver expect sellers to be in the driver’s seat. Until then we’re cautiously optimistic. Copper is at a fresh two year high and though we’re not suggesting shorts we do not think this appreciation is sustainable without a healthy correction. That likely means 40-50 cents but the question is from what level…$4.30 or $4.50? We still want to see a correction in Agriculture, namely corn and soybeans before re-establishing bullish plays for clients. In reality we probably will hold off until early 11′ but we do want some type of long exposure before the January USDA report. Another limit move higher in cotton today. Some of our more aggressive clients own March put options and premiums were crushed today. Being we think we could get a violent move lower we will stay the course for now. DO NOT trade futures in cotton right now and options traders take your size down as we’re in uncharted waters. We missed a long entry in coffee with clients and remain onlookers from the sidelines. We will be looking to buy a set back of 15 cents if we are given that opportunity for clients. If you trailed your stops in lumber futures you should have been stopped on your longs at a profit today.

Risk Disclosure: The risk of loss in trading commodity futures and options can be substantial. Past performance is no guarantee of future trading results.

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How to Get In Early On America’s Next Great Commodity Boom http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/11/how-to-get-in-early-on-americas-next-great-commodity-boom/ http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/11/how-to-get-in-early-on-americas-next-great-commodity-boom/#comments Sun, 14 Nov 2010 07:48:26 +0000 DailyWealth.com http://www.thedailycommodities.com/?p=2262 By Chris Mayer, editor, Capital & Crisis
Saturday, November 13, 2010

If you’re interested in safely making money in commodities over the coming decade, I have two important numbers for you…
The first is the price of natural gas in the U.S. – which is less than $4 per million British thermal units (mBtu).
The second is the price of natural gas in Asia, where people will pay $10 per mBtu for natural gas they import from overseas.
This is a disparity someone can make a lot of money on. The only reason it exists at all is because the natural gas market is still mainly a local market. It is not as easy to ship natural gas into a country as it is to ship oil. You have to supercool it so it liquefies. Then you can put it on a tanker and ship it to a terminal where your buyer can regasify it. This is the LNG trade.
There are problems. U.S. energy companies, before the shale gas boom changed everything, thought the U.S. would need to import natural gas. So the U.S. has about 10 LNG import terminals and two more in the works. Now, with a natural gas glut in the U.S., these terminals are pretty much useless.
Owners of these terminals want to refit the terminals to turn them into export terminals, where the gas is liquefied and shipped out. They are now petitioning the U.S. government for export licenses.
As the Financial Times reported, “The U.S. could soon be competing with Russia and the Middle East to supply the world with natural gas, a shift in production that would reshape energy markets over the next decade.” Even if the U.S. exported just 10% of its natural gas, it would become the largest exporter of LNG in the world. Few countries can match the U.S. in natural gas resources or low costs.
So where will the natural gas go? This is an interesting question, because it yields some surprising answers.
I attended the ASPO conference last month in Washington, D.C. (ASPO stands for the Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas.) One of the more fascinating presentations was by Jonathan Callahan, founder of Mazama Science.
He looked at natural gas through the lens of the import/export markets. This is a good thing to do for any commodity because it can tip you off to what’s happening in that market. When China went from being one of the biggest exporters of soybeans to the biggest importer, the effect on agricultural markets was huge.
Anytime a big exporter becomes a big importer, you can bet it spells opportunity for that commodity. China, for instance, remains a big importer of oil and iron ore, which has been good for investors in those commodities. China will very soon become a big importer of coking coal – which is used to make steel. So will India and Brazil. This is good to know if you’re an investor, as it will drive demand for coking coal.
So Callahan looked at natural gas through the same kind of lens. He created these charts that capture the trends. For the U.K., it looks like this:
You can see the U.K. was an importer of natural gas through the 1980s and 1990s. Then there was the North Sea boost, matched by a step up in consumption. Finally, as the North Sea supplies dwindle, the U.K. has gone deep in the red as an importer. This chart exhibits a pattern we see time and time again. Consumption is sticky and stubborn. It doesn’t go down much.
Using this same analysis, Callahan looks at all the big producers and consumers of natural gas. The big buyers here are Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. All of the gas they import comes from LNG tankers.
But what about, say, China? Here is another one of Callahan’s charts. Note it is just starting to turn negative – which means China is just becoming a net buyer of natural gas. Per-capita consumption, Callahan points out, is only a fraction of China’s neighbors’. He predicts – and I agree – it will soon be a huge importer of natural gas.
Combine China with Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea and Callahan concludes, “Clearly, East Asian demand for LNG will not be letting up anytime soon.”
Callahan’s data suggest this trend is present all around the world… from the Middle East to South America to Europe.
The impact on the global market seems clear. “If shale gas doesn’t turn out to be as prolific as hoped,” Callahan wraps up, “we can expect to see increasingly expensive natural gas in the next decade. Forewarned is forearmed.” (I encourage you to check out his website – mazamascience.com, where you can see his presentations and read his blog.)
So put together Callahan’s data on exports and imports with the glut in the U.S. and the lack of export terminals. I think it’s pretty clear we’ll see more export terminals in the U.S. It’s too big of an opportunity to ignore. The U.S. could become the leading exporter of natural gas in the next decade.
It’s also pretty clear that worldwide, we’ll see the LNG trade grow significantly to make up the shortfalls that are emerging in South America, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East.
It’s a great time to buy infrastructure firms that build these plants. It’s also a great time to look at companies with lots of North American natural gas reserves. With natural gas in the dumps right now, these assets are cheap… but they won’t stay that way for long.
Regards,

Chris Mayer

Editor’s note: Chris Mayer is the editor of Capital & Crisis, a monthly advisory we consider required reading at DailyWealth. With Chris’ research, you can always count on contrarian investment ideas you won’t read about anywhere else. Click here to learn more about Capital & Crisis.
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Big Oil Bets On Natural Gas http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/11/big-oil-bets-on-natural-gas/ http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/11/big-oil-bets-on-natural-gas/#comments Wed, 10 Nov 2010 02:49:42 +0000 Daily Reckoning.com http://www.thedailycommodities.com/?p=2214 By Chris Mayer

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11/08/10 Gaithersburg, Maryland – Royal Dutch Shell said that by 2012 it expects more than half of its output will be natural gas – not oil. That is as if Starbucks said it expects to sell more tea than coffee.

Yet this prediction is not unusual for Big Oil these days. In fact, most of the big boys are making big bets on natural gas.

Exxon Mobil completed eight projects last year. Seven of them were for natural gas projects – not oil. Of the three scheduled this year, two of them are gas. ConocoPhillips paid $5 billion for Origen, an Australian gas company.

Meanwhile, Chevron hammers away at its mammoth liquefied natural gas plant off the coast of Australia, at a total cost of more than $40 billion. (Liquefied natural gas, or LNG, is easier to transport.) Most of the oil giants are also slamming billion-dollar fistfuls on the table to pick up shale gas acreage in places such as the Marcellus in Appalachia.

This shift creates new opportunities for investors. But before we get to those, let’s try to understand what’s happening.

There are several things at work here. One is that new oil deposits, like pitchers who can hit, are becoming harder to find. They are also costlier. The Kashagan oil field, which was supposed to be a great find in the Caspian Sea, is seven years behind schedule and billions of dollars over budget. Another factor at work is that 90% of the world’s oil reserves are in the hands of national oil companies. They are off-limits for the likes of Exxon and others.

By contrast, natural gas deposits are more plentiful. They are also getting cheaper to develop. The cost to build an offshore LNG terminal is about half of what it was only two years ago. The big LNG plants can be just as expensive as anything in the oil world, but – unlike oil – these projects don’t usually go forward unless there are long-term contracts in hand to support them. Some of these contracts go for 20-year terms. This makes the business more appealing to the majors, who don’t have to sweat the huge ups and downs they endure in the oil markets.

With contracts in hand, the gas business is just one of putting together an Erector Set. As The Economist notes, “The gas business is really an infrastructure business: drill wells, build gas plants, install pipelines and accrue profits.”

But there is more. The world’s use of natural gas is growing faster than its use of oil. The IEA’s guess is that oil consumption grows half a percent a year. Natural gas consumption, by contrast, should rise more than 50% in the next 20 years. Total, the big French oil company, is even more bullish. It estimates that China will use much more natural gas than is commonly assumed. Only a lack of infrastructure keeps China’s appetite for natural gas under wraps. But China is in the process of building that infrastructure today. It is only a matter of time before the nat gas markets feel its impact.

Finally, natural gas is cleaner burning. There is a lot of talk of carbon taxes of one kind or another, not only in the US, but abroad. I believe it is a matter of when, not if, governments punish dirtier fuels. Natural gas will benefit.

However, I don’t expect the price of natural gas to rise in a big way anytime soon. There is simply too much of it. Natural gas producers are all expanding production. Most are spending more to expand production than their cash flow supports. This is happening even though most look like they don’t make any money at $4 nat gas. (A recent survey put the industry average at $5.74.) This doesn’t bode well for the price of natural gas in the short term. As beaten up as it is, it could stay here for a while, or even go lower.

One of my favorite plays in the natural gas sector remains Contango Oil & Gas (AMEX:MCF). This is because it is a low-cost producer with no debt, so it can still create shareholder value in a low-price environment. Contango’s all-in costs are under $2 for nat gas.

Longer term, the current low nat gas price is not sustainable, as most of the industry seems to lose money at these prices. As old contracts (made when natural gas prices were higher) roll off, these producers will start to shut down production.

At a recent conference, Ken Peak – CEO of Contango and the largest stockholder, with 19% of the shares – shared the following chart, which makes the point. It shows the cost curve for the lower 48 states in the US. This chart shows that these producers need $7 gas to make money. “If this is right,” Peak said, “I believe we will make a lot of money.”

Low Natural Gas Prices

He says this because logic dictates that we should expect the price of nat gas to gravitate toward the cost of the marginal producers. And since Contango’s costs are under $2, it stands to make a lot of money when gas turns around. I know it’s been almost two years and no dice on Contango’s stock price, but I’m content to wait it out (and buy more).

Even at today’s depressed gas prices, Contango’s SEC PV-10 value – think of it as a rough net asset value – is over a billion dollars. With 15.7 million shares out, Contango is worth at least $63 per share. And that’s why it is still a buy.

But let’s get back to natural gas in broad terms. Even though pricing looks unexciting in the near term, demand looks healthy long term. The world will burn more natural gas in cars and buses of the future than it does today. It will burn more natural gas to heat and cool homes than it does today. It will rely more on natural gas to provide electricity.

Long-term investors should treat these things as inevitable. Big Oil certainly is.

Regards,

Chris Mayer
for The Daily Reckoning

Big Oil Bets On Natural Gas originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.

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How to Build Your 1,000% Portfolio Today http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/11/how-to-build-your-1000-portfolio-today/ http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/11/how-to-build-your-1000-portfolio-today/#comments Thu, 04 Nov 2010 18:51:58 +0000 DailyWealth.com http://www.thedailycommodities.com/?p=2155 By Matt Badiali, editor, S&A Resource Report

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Last month, I showed you it’s possible to make 1,000% as a “hoarder.”
As shareholders of Seabridge Gold learned recently, this strategy – of buying hated, cheap resource assets in anticipation of higher prices – can result in astounding, ten-bagger gains.
We need to know all about “hoarding” right now because a similar situation may be setting up in the natural gas business. Natural gas prices – and natural gas stock prices – are in the basement right now. New drilling technologies have brought on a ton of new supply… but emerging demand for power generation and transportation could double gas prices in the coming years.
That’s why it’s time to start learning how to hoard “PUDs.”
PUD stands for “Proven Undeveloped Reserves.” These are undeveloped gas wells with zero exploration risk. Firms aren’t extracting the gas, because prices are so low. Typically, PUDs are located in the middle of proven fields just waiting to be drilled.
Right now, the stock market is offering incredibly cheap PUDs.
The price of natural gas is so low, investors aren’t willing to pay much at all for future production of PUDs. Companies only receive stock market value for their current productions and cash flows… So promising properties are selling for peanuts. There’s zero investor interest in the stuff. Everybody thinks natural gas is dead.
We have a “Steve Sjuggerud” situation developing here. These assets are hated… they’re cheap… But we don’t yet have an uptrend in natural gas and natural gas stocks. It’s early in this game – but not too early to start doing our homework. So let’s check out some ideas on locating cheap PUDs…
Below is a table of natural gas producers that trade on the stock market. I figured out the price of each company’s PUDs per share, in thousand cubic feet (MCF) equivalent increments. We want to buy massive amounts of PUDs as cheaply as possible.
Company
PUD per Share
Price per MCF
Galleon Energy
8 MCF
$ 0.50
ATP Oil and Gas
14 MCF
$ 1.01
Penn Virginia
11 MCF
$ 1.36
Petroleum Development Corp
22 MCF
$ 1.48
Goodrich Petroleum
7 MCF
$ 1.85
Berry Petroleum
15 MCF
$ 2.36
Sandridge Energy
2 MCF
$ 2.44
Chesapeake Energy
9 MCF
$ 2.39
EQT Corporation
15 MCF
$ 2.44
Energy XXI Bermuda
9 MCF
$ 2.44
This is a broad-brush approach, based on the price of the natural gas in the ground. (We didn’t factor in debts, for example.) It gets us a rough idea of where to find values in gas.
That’s the first step in putting together a portfolio that could return you 1,000% as natural gas prices emerge from this downturn.
I’m convinced natural gas will be a huge bull market in a few years. In a future essay, I’ll dig deeper into some of these companies… I’ll identify the best operators in the best regions of North America. I’ll also show you how electrical and transportation demand could send their shares up hundreds – maybe thousands – of percent in the coming years. Stay tuned…
Good investing,

Matt Badiali

P.S. I just finished putting together a great report about how to earn income from some of these companies. I detailed the keys to picking the right companies… and I named my two favorite PUD owners in the emerging Eagle Ford shale play. If you want to learn more about it, go here.

Further Reading:

For a story of how asset hoarding can lead to outrageous 1,000% gains, don’t miss Matt’s first “PUD” essay here: An Unusual Kind of Commodity Stock That Can Return 1,000%.
DailyWealth Classic: If you’re new to DailyWealth – or you’re looking for a refresher course on Sjug’s investment style – check out the first “cheap, hated, uptrend” essay we ever published here. (The investment Steve mentioned has nearly tripled since then.)
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Why Producers Aren’t Hedging Natural Gas http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/10/why-producers-aren%e2%80%99t-hedging-natural-gas/ http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/10/why-producers-aren%e2%80%99t-hedging-natural-gas/#comments Sun, 31 Oct 2010 21:37:15 +0000 Keith Schaefer http://www.thedailycommodities.com/?p=2072 Taking Their Chances in the Spot Market… Later

Natural gas prices in Canada are so low that end users are now trying to seduce producers to hedge, so they can lock in longer term low prices.  But few producers are keen to lock in long term losses.

RBC, Canada’s largest brokerage firm, suggested in a weekly comment that producers still have many reasons to hedge at $3.27 a gigajoule (GJ) now, and $4.11/GJ in April 2011.  For context, the full-cycle cost for new gas in North America is $5.60/mmcf and in Canada is $6.85/mmcf, according to independent analysts Ziff Energy.  So producers would be selling at a significant loss.

But some quick calls to the energy desks of the major Canadian firms showed that few producers are biting, and even one of my contacts at RBC said these “hedging strategies are geared more towards the end-user market; the end users are trying to lock in really good prices. But nobody’s hedging.”

RBC lists several potential reasons for hedging, which often mirror the Ziff Energy white paper from June 2010 on the state of Canadian natural gas (a GREAT read – not too technical –www.ziffenergy.com/download/papers/cdn_gas_crossroads.pdf.)

1.     Strengthening Canadian Dollar

2.     US Production Growth

3.     Reduced Canadian Imports

4.     Heightened Pipeline Delivery Competition in the US

5.     Abundance of Canadian Storage

6.     Material Expansion of Canadian Shale Gas Production

7.     Growth in Marcellus Shale Gas Production – Production has increased by over 1 bcf/d since January 2010

That’s a big list! And it’s not good news for producers or their investors – especially the junior ones who either have high gas weightings or are close to their debt limit.

But despite producers losing money on every mmcf out of the ground, some may be inclined to hedge, says Ralph Glass of AJM Consultants.

“The bigger producers are still drilling and they can afford to (hedge); it’s part of their long term plan and their economics of scale allow it.  The only advantage I can see is that if you’re making positive cash flow at $3.50/mmcf, this gives you stability to hang in for one more year.  But it’s not an investment strategy.”

He added even small producers may consider it: “A small producer that has limited cash flow cannot afford to pay for capacity costs without actually producing the volumes.”  This means they may have “take or pay” like provisions, where the producer must pay the pipeline companies their transportation tolls even if they don’t produce the gas.

For producers, it comes down to the same issue it always does – are prices going lower or higher?  By not hedging, major producers are saying that despite all the gloomy market data, they see prices stable or higher.

Long term dated future gas prices are now below $5/mmcf for a full two years out now.  With such a low, and flat futures pricing curve, producers are saying they would rather take their chances in the spot market then, rather than lock in losses now.

P.S. One of the most-asked questions I get from my readers is, “When should I invest in natural gas?”  Follow the link to read my response.

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Are Natural Gas Prices about to Explode? http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/10/are-natural-gas-prices-about-to-explode/ http://www.thedailycommodities.com/2010/10/are-natural-gas-prices-about-to-explode/#comments Mon, 25 Oct 2010 20:18:58 +0000 Administrator http://www.thedailycommodities.com/?p=1982 Learn Mining News Writes:

Natural gas has not experienced much action in terms of price, when compared to almost all other commodities. The amount of natural gas is known to be limited but the development of horizontal drilling technology has increased the potential for increased supply. However, some experts claim that supply is much lower than what we commonly hear.

According to one petroleum industry analyst who has an excellent track record of making big calls, this is exactly what is happening. Henry Groppe is 80-something years old but still has his head in the game. He says that shale wells are rapidly depleting and there is a major gas shortage. Mr. Groppe claims that the American people will soon realize this situation.

Read More Here

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