The U.S. Energy Department's weekly inventory release showed a
smaller-than-expected decrease in natural gas supplies on account
of mild temperatures across most parts of the country. Following
the bearish draw, gas stocks continue to remain bloated,
reflecting low demand amid robust onshore output.
About the Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report
The Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report - brought out by the Energy
Information Administration (EIA) every Thursday since 2002 -
includes updates on natural gas market prices, the latest storage
level estimates, recent weather data and other market activities
or events.
The report provides an overview of the level of reserves and
their movements, thereby helping investors understand the
demand/supply dynamics of natural gas. It is an indicator of
current gas prices and volatility that affect businesses of
natural gas-weighted companies and related support plays.
Analysis of the Data
Stockpiles held in underground storage in the lower 48 states
fell by 118 billion cubic feet (Bcf) for the week ended Feb 01,
2013, lower than the guided range (of 122-126 Bcf drawdown) as
per the analysts surveyed by Platts, the energy information arm
of
McGraw-Hill Companies Inc.
(
MHP
).
The decrease represents the eleventh withdrawal of the 2012-2013
winter heating season after stocks hit an all-time high in early
November last year. Though the draw was lower than the five-year
(2008-2012) average reduction of 165 Bcf for the reported week,
it exceeded last year's withdrawal of 94 Bcf.
Following the past week's reduction, the current storage level -
at 2.684 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) - is down 226 Bcf (7.8%) from
the last year but is still 351 Bcf (15.0%) above the five-year
average.
In fact, natural gas inventories in underground storage have
persistently exceeded the five-year average since late September
2011 and ended the usual summer stock-building season of April
through October at a record 3.923 Tcf (as of October 31, 2012).
A supply glut kept the natural gas prices under pressure during
the couple of years or so, as production from dense rock
formations (shale) - through novel techniques of horizontal
drilling and hydraulic fracturing - remain robust, thereby
overwhelming demand.
However, with the U.S. winter set to be colder than the unusually
warm last one, we might expect some balancing of the commodity's
supply/demand disparity on the back of its more normalized use
for space heating by residential/commercial consumers.
This, in turn, could improve the prices and buoy natural gas
producers, particularly smaller players like
Quicksilver Resources Inc.
(
KWK
),
WPX Energy Inc.
(
WPX
) and
Forest Oil Corp.
(
FST
). With an improvement in the companies' ability to generate
positive earnings surprises, they can then move higher from their
current Zacks Rank #3 (Hold).
FOREST OIL CORP (FST): Free Stock Analysis
Report
QUICKSILVER RES (KWK): Free Stock Analysis
Report
MCGRAW-HILL COS (MHP): Free Stock Analysis
Report
WPX ENERGY INC (WPX): Free Stock Analysis
Report
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