Natural Gas Price Plunge Shows Obama Lies About Oil Prices

April 12, 2012 05:55


Natural gas prices have plunged to a ten year low because of  excess SUPPLY. This shows that oil prices could be substantially reduced if Obama unleashed America’s oil drilling industry. Jobs, tax revenues and the economy would all benefit.

 

From EconMatters:

 

The ink on our last article is barely dry when its dire prediction actually came true 48 hours later–natural gas price dropping below $2, a level not seen in over a decade.  Henry Hub natural gas front month futures declined to $1.982 per 1,000 cubic feet (mcf) on Wed. April 11, its lowest level since January 28, 2002, when the price hit $1.91.  Meanwhile, WTI crude oil rose by $1.68 to finish at $102.70 per barrel; Brent rude increased by 30 cents to finish at $120.18.

The confluence of these price movements also brought the ratio between WTI and Henry Hub to a historical record high of 52:1 (see chart below)  while the ratio of Brent to Henry Hub is a jaw-dropping 60:1 !  (And we thought the 25:1 ratio reached back in August 2009, also a historical high at the time, was parabolic.)

 

 

Crude oil and natural gas are both energy commodities and should logically have a high degree of correlation.  Theoretically, based on an energy equivalent basis, crude oil and natural gas prices should have a 6 to 1 ratio.   However, due to various market characteristics, the price of oil typically had traded 8-12x that of natural gas in the past 25 years or so (see chart above).  That historical pattern has started to deteriorate since 2009 primarily due to the combination of rising domestic production from unconventional shale gas depressing price levels, while geopolitical events in the MENA region (Middle East & North Africa) adding fear premium to the global crude oil prices.

Natural gas lacks the global market structure like crude oil, and tends to be regionally based thus less impacted by external sources. Oil, on the other hand, is a commodity with global demand drivers; and along with gold, trades as an inflation hedge against a weakening US Dollar.

In most of Europe and Asia, the price of natural gas/LNG is typically linked to crude oil under multiyear contracts.  So while the spike in Brent helped to boost natural gas markers elsewhere, with practically zero LNG export capacity in the U.S., not even Fed’s two rounds of quantitative easing could lift the languishing Henry Hub.

The chart below illustrates just how disconnected U.S. natural gas price is vs. price levels in Asia, Europe and  Brent crude oil.

 

 

LNG (liquefied natural gas) is a relatively new technology that some believe has the potential to transform natural gas into a true global commodity.  Unfortunately, as discussed before:

Realistically, U.S. gas cargos may have a hard time competing with other exporters such as Russia, Qatar and the up-and-comer—Australia–in the Asian and European markets due to logistic disadvantage.

For U.S. LNG exports to make economic sense, domestic gas price would need to stay low, with high enough international LNG prices, and if the LNG prices are still tied to crude oil (which could change depending on market development), then crude oil prices would have to remain elevated.

While low prices are killing some of the natural gas producers, consumers will get a break from lower electricity costs.  Meanwhile, U.S. natural gas trading at an 87% discount to Brent crude oil price is something even the oil industry appreciates.  Valero (VLO), the world’s largest independent refiner, said in a presentation this January that its refinery operations use up to 600,000 mmBtus/day of natural gas at full utilization.  Betting on “low U.S. natural Gas prices for many years to come”, Valero has several hydrogen and hydrocraker projects scheduled to complete by the end of 2012 to take full advantage of the low natural gas prices.

With the prospect of domestic natural gas prices remaining low and disconnected from global oil and gas prices for foreseeable future, U.S-based manufacturers of plastics, fertilizers and other products that use natural gas as a feedstock such as Dow Chemicals (DOW), Westlake Chemical Corp. (WLK), Potash (POT) and CF Industries (CF) are set to benefit from cheap U.S. natural gas as opposed to European and Asian competitors who do not.

 

From Prof. Mark J. Perry at Carpe Diem:

North Dakota Sets New Records in February for Both Crude Oil Production and Oil Employment

 

The “Economic Miracle State” of North Dakota pumped another record amount of oil during the month of February at a daily rate of 558,255 barrels, which was an increase of 2.24% and 12,000 barrels per day compared to January, and was 60% above the output level from a year earlier (see top chart above). The new record-setting production in recent months has moved the Peace Garden state ahead of California to become the nation’s No. 3 oil-producing state, behind only Texas and Alaska. If North Dakota continues to increase monthly output at the current rate, it could soon surpass Alaska to become the No. 2 oil-producing state.

As a result of the ongoing oil boom in the Bakken area, North Dakota continues to lead the nation with the lowest state unemployment rate at 3.1% for February, more than five percent below the national average of 8.2% for February. There were 13 North Dakota counties with jobless rates at or below 3% for February, and Williams County, which is at the center of the Bakken oil boom, boasts the lowest county jobless rate in the country at just 0.9%.  The exponential growth in North Dakota oil production has fueled exponential growth in the state’s “Natural Resources and Mining” employment, which has tripled in less than three years, and surpassed 20,000 for the first time in February.

Bottom Line: The ongoing record-setting oil production in North Dakota continues to make it the most economically successful state in the country, with record levels of employment and income growth, a labor shortage, increasing tax revenues, the lowest foreclosure rate in the country, a strong real estate market, and jobless rates in many counties of the Bakken region below 3%. [emphasis added]

 

Dr. Mark J. Perry is a professor of economics and finance in the School of Management at the Flint campus of the University of Michigan. Perry holds two graduate degrees in economics (M.A. and Ph.D.) from George Mason University near Washington, D.C. In addition, he holds an MBA degree in finance from the Curtis L. Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota.

 



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