Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Natural Gas: "EIA Data Indicates Monthly Shale Decline Rates Have Risen Recently"

From RBN Energy:
Highlights of the Natural Gas Summary and Outlook for September 19 2014 follow. The full report is available at the link below.
Natural Gas Summary and Outlook
  • Price Action: The October contract fell 2.0 cents (0.5%) to $3.837 on a 20.6 cent range.
  • Price Outlook: True to form, the market was able to forge a new high before ending on a weak note. Prices are within a few ticks of a new low and that is clearly the bias for next week. However, there do not seem to be enough fundamental factors to drive prices far from the recent $3.75/$4.00 range in the next few weeks and there seems to be an increasing likelihood of a rare inside week despite a contracting weekly range. An inside week is not expected this week with a new low so close. The liquidation in the managed money net long position continued with the position breaking the November 2013 level and now just barely above the mid-January 2013 level. Total open interest rose to 3.75 million as of September 16. CME futures aggregated open interest rose to 971,000 as of September 18.
  • Weekly Storage: US working gas storage for the week ending September 12 indicated a build of 90 bcf. Thus total working gas inventories rose to 2,891 bcf. Current inventories fall 408 bcf (12.4%) below last year and 435 bcf (13.1%) behind the 5 year average.
  • Storage Outlook: This week did not establish a new 5 year weekly maximum, although it did exceed the other two injection metrics. The 5 year weekly maximum for the upcoming week is 89 bcf. An injection of 93 bcf is required to equal 117% of the 5 year average and an injection of 90 bcf is needed to exceed the 5 year average by 11 bcf to put inventories on pace to reach 3,500 bcf in early November. Inventories are on pace to reach roughly 3,550 bcf.
  • Supply Trends: Total supply fell 0.5 bcf/d to 71.7 bcf/d. US production, Mexican exports and LNG were unchanged while Canadian imports slipped. The US Baker Hughes rig count was unchanged with oil rising while natural gas slipped. The total US count now stands at 1,931. The Canadian rig count fell 28 to 377. Thus, the total North American rig count fell 28 to 2,308 and now surpasses last year by 159. The higher efficiency US horizontal rig count fell 1 to 1,341 and rises 250 above last year. Technology will have to continue improving to sustain future production growth with national decline rates increasing. EIA data indicates monthly shale decline rates have risen from 2.8% last fall to 3.4% recently. Volumetrically, monthly legacy well production fell 934 mmcf/d last fall with recent volume declining 1,405 mmcf/d.
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