There May Be Hope In 2010 For The Natural Gas ETF (UNG)
“For investors hoping that the steep slide in natural gas prices during 2008 would turn itself around in 2009, the year turned out to be another period marked by disappointment. After seeing its value halved from a high of just over $13 per thousand cubic feet (mcf) in the previous year, natural gas continued its downward slide in ’09, touching below the $3/mcf in October, before the onset of colder weather helped it recover to around $5/mcf by year end,” Eugene Bukoveczky Reports From Investopedia.
“For investors who placed their bets on a natural gas commodity exchange-traded fund (ETF), like the U.S. Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG), the pain came in the form of a near 60% loss for the year; a return that earned the ETF the unflattering nickname “the Widow Maker”,” Bukoveczky Reports.
“Natural gas’ failure to launch during 2009 is a classic economics lesson in supply and demand. While the recession took a huge bite out of demand, largely due to a drop in demand by energy-hungry heavy industries like steel, big natural gas producers like XTO Energy (NYSE:XTO), Devon (NYSE:DVN), Anadarko (NYSE:APC) and Chesapeake (NYSE:CHK) opened the taps wide, producing as much as gas as they could, with a lot of it coming from previously uneconomical shale gas plays.These companies’ net result of all this production was a dramatic increase in natural gas storage levels, which are 19% above their five year averages; a level that qualifies as an all time high for the U.S. storage space now expected to be maxed out by year end,” Bukoveczky Reports.
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“With no more storage space left, the major gas producers are now being forced to cut production; a move which may actually be beneficial to the industry as a whole as it will likely help boost prices, thus restoring margins for many producers. Fresh signs that U.S. industrial demand for gas may pick up at a faster rate than expected should also help boost prices. Industrial consumers account for 29% of gas used in the U.S,” Bukoveczky Reports.
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The investment (UNG) seeks to replicate the performance, net of expenses, of natural gas. The trust will invest in futures contracts on natural gas traded on the NYMEX that is the near month contract to expire. It is nondiversified.
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