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WHERE'S THE GAS?
by Elliott H.
Gue
Editor, The Energy
Letter
January 11, 2007
Natural gas prices have
been on a roll in the past few weeks, with the 12-month New York
Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) strip rising to about $8.50 per million
British thermal units (MMBtu) this morning, up more than $1 dollar off
recent lows.
As I discussed in a
post on At
These Levels yesterday, the NYMEX strip is the most relevant measure
of natural gas prices in the US. On NYMEX, gas futures contracts trade
with expirations every month. Prices vary wildly from month to month
because of seasonality, expectations of future supply shortages or
gluts, and the cost of gas storage, among other factors.
For example, the
February 2008 contract currently trades around $8.225 per MMBtu against
$9.205 per MMBtu for the February 2009 contract. At any rate, the strip
smooths out these variations by averaging the next 12 contracts.
Here’s a chart of the gas strip going back to early 2002.

Source: Bloomberg
The pattern is clear on
this weekly chart. Natural gas prices trended gradually higher from late
2002 through late 2005 then slumped sharply, reaching a low in the fall
of 2006. Since that time, gas prices have stagnated in a narrow band
between $7 to $9 per MMBtu.
Despite this most recent
uptick, gas prices are still depressed and still trade in the same range
as they have since early 2006.
This contrasts sharply
with the relentless rise in crude oil prices over the same time period
to recent record highs. In fact, the relative valuation of natural gas
is about as cheap as it’s been at any time since 2001-02. To evaluate
this, check out the chart of the natural gas/oil ratio.

Source: Bloomberg
I calculated this ratio
by dividing the natural gas strip price by the price of West Texas
Intermediate crude oil. The lower this line, the cheaper natural gas is
relative to crude oil. And, as this chart makes abundantly clear, gas is
as cheap relative to crude as it’s been in more than a decade.
But just because gas is
cheap doesn’t necessarily mean a turn is imminent. Eventually, I
expect the gas/oil relationship to revert to a more average level, but
that reversion could still be some months in the future.
Observant readers will
also note that the gas/oil ratio could return to more “average”
levels if crude prices fall and natural gas prices hold firm. As I
explained in the Nov. 30, 2007, issue, Oil’s
Going to $70, I expect a short-term pullback in crude prices. Longer
term, however, crude oil is well-supported fundamentally by strong
demand growth and shaky supplies; the gas/oil ratio reversion will
correct mainly through a rise in natural gas prices above the
one-and-a-half-year trading range.
The primary factor
holding back natural gas prices is, of course, gas inventories. Gas
storage statistics are released weekly by the US Dept of Energy’s
statistical arm, the Energy Information Administration (EIA). Bloated
inventories of gas in storage have capped every rally since early 2006.
Check out the chart below for a closer look.

Source: Bloomberg
To make a long story
short, natural gas storage levels spent most of 2007 near the high end
of this range or actually setting new highs. That glut kept prices
depressed.
But note the action at
the very right-hand margin of the chart. For the past few weeks,
drawdowns of gas in storage have been running at higher-than-average
levels. Therefore, natural gas inventories have been falling quickly
toward more average levels.
For the US as a whole,
gas inventories are now less than 5 percent above average. In the
eastern US, the most important consumer, inventories are actually only
0.5 percent above the five-year average. That’s only 7 billion cubic
feet out of more than 1.5 trillion in storage for that region alone.
This normalization is
responsible, in large part, for the recent rally in gas prices. The main
driver has been the weather; a cold snap toward the end of December and
into the first few days of January has prompted the faster-than-normal
drawdowns. Note that the data released today is for the week ended Jan.
4. It doesn’t include this week’s spring-like temperatures.
Pundits have tried to
call the turn in gas prices on several occasions over the past two
years; at best, they’ve caught a short, sharp rally. After all, the
natural gas futures market isn’t known as “the widow-maker” for
nothing. And this week’s mini-spring in the Northeast may scuttle the
normalization pattern noted above.
However, natural gas
storage will be one of the most important energy-related metrics to
watch in the next few weeks. If those inventories continue to fall and
sink under the average, this will be an important fundamental shift.
It also would raise the
point that there’s something else at work in this market that goes
beyond the temperature in New York, Boston and Chicago. Perhaps we’re
seeing the first signs that falling Canadian drilling activity, US
production cutbacks and falling liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports are
having an impact on US supplies.
The jury is still out
on gas prices and, for now, I expect gas prices to remain range-bound in
the same $7-to-$9 region. But that doesn’t mean you can’t make money
playing gas right now. To play the trend, I’d focus on two key groups:
companies with exposure to the build-out of LNG infrastructure and
exploration and production (E&P) firms with the scope to grow
production in the coming years.
For a closer look at
LNG, check out TEL, Sept. 14, 2007, Liquid
Energy.
When it comes to gas
E&P companies, it may surprise many readers to find out that, even
with natural gas prices range-bound and gas inventories still excessive,
many gas-heavy E&Ps are trading near all-time highs. One of the key
differentiators is the ability to grow production. Check out the chart
below.

Source: Bloomberg
To make this chart, I
simply took a list of about 35 independent E&P firms with exposure
to natural gas. I then calculated their total production growth over the
past five years in terms of annualized growth in barrels of oil
equivalent production.
I then sorted this list
from the fastest growers to the slowest. The index labeled "E&P
Best" is an index of the raw price performance of the three E&P
firms with the strongest production growth over the past five years. The
index labeled "E&P Worst" is, as you may have already
guessed, an index of the three worst performers on a production-growth
basis.
The conclusion is
obvious: Over the past five years, the companies managing the fastest
production growth have outperformed the slowest growers by a margin of
2-to-1. Therefore, if you can ascertain which E&P firms are best
positioned for growth, you’ll ascertain the likely outperformers.
Of course, I calculated
this index with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight. However, that doesn’t
mean that we can’t evaluate a firm’s ability to grow production. An
understanding of the areas where an E&P firm operates, their
drilling plans and, of course, the type of reserve they’re exploiting
offer a lot of clues about production growth potential.
The reason I recommend
focusing on select E&Ps and LNG plays is that they’ve been
performing well despite range-bound gas prices. Some of my favorite
natural gas-focused E&Ps are up 30 to 50 percent just since last
summer.
Therefore, if this
really is the beginning of the long-awaited turn in gas, I expect these
firms to see a pop. But if it isn’t, you can still see some pretty
impressive gains.

© 2007 Elliott H. Gue
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