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A Bullish Case For Investing In Natural Gas ETFs (NYSE:UNG)

I’ve made the most money in my investment career doing one simple thing: Buying what’s cheap and hated. The cheaper, and the more hated, the better the returns.
 
The problem today is, nothing is cheap anymore, and nothing is out of favor. Heck, many things – from stocks around the world to commodities like oil – have doubled since last March. But wait! There is one asset out there that is incredibly hated… 
It is so hated… there’s never been a moment in history where the bets against this asset have been as lopsided as they are right now.
 
And it is so cheap… you have to go back many years to find a time when the price of this asset was this cheap.
 
The great part is, looking ahead, this investment actually has nearly unlimited demand. It is an incredibly useful asset.
 
And unlike many investments, this asset can’t go to zero… It has a built-in price “floor.” When it gets cheap, people stop using other assets and switch to this one.
 
The asset I’m talking about is natural gas…
 
While the price of oil (and everything else) has soared, the price of natural gas has fallen more than 70%… It peaked in the summer of 2008, over $13, and it now stands around $4. Why is it so cheap and hated now?
 
In short, a new technology changed the game entirely…
 
Just a few years ago, the outlook for U.S. natural gas production was bleak. Supplies were dwindling. And with limited supply, prices were rising.
 
Then, new technologies (including horizontal drilling) came along, allowing us to extract gas we couldn’t really get to before. And just like that, the potential supply of natural gas in the U.S. is all-of-a-sudden enormous.
 
It’s Economics 101. When the supply outpaces demand, prices fall. It is obvious – so obvious, in fact, the crowd is in on the trade…
 
Just as investors now believe stocks are a “sure thing” to go higher – AFTER they’ve doubled, investors now believe natural gas is a sure thing to go down – AFTER it’s fallen over 70%.
 
Specifically, right now, there are more bets against natural gas by large speculators than there have ever been in history.
 
The old rule about the large speculators goes something like this… They’re “wrong at extremes, and right in between.” Right now, we’re at the greatest extreme, ever. Chances are, they’re wrong.
 
The thing is, all these bets against natural gas have to be reversed… That means we must see billions of dollars worth of “buy” orders in natural gas futures, because that’s the way these traders close out their trades. So the price of natural gas could rise dramatically – and possibly soar – just in the normal course of all these large speculators entering billions of dollars worth of “buy” orders to close out their bets against natural gas.
 
I love it.
 
Now think about this… Natural gas has a permanent price “floor.” When it gets particularly cheap, energy companies want to substitute natural gas for what they’re using – whether it’s oil of some kind, or coal, or whatever. According to my geologist-friend Matt Badiali, we’re just below that price floor. Power plants are already switching over to natural gas.
 
 
Our energy use in America changes at a very slow pace. But the trend for “dirty” coal is inexorably down, and the trend for natural gas is the opposite. The new technologies for finding and getting to natural gas in America virtually ensure its future use.
 
Energy-stock analyst Kurt Wulff said it best in one of his reports at www.mcdep.com: “While the natural gas market may have too much supply and too little demand in the short term, there is practically unlimited demand to replace coal in the long term.”
 
The price of natural gas has fallen and investors are fearful. Meanwhile, it’s close to multiyear lows in price. So it’s CHEAP and HATED.
 
The world’s best investor, Warren Buffett, says, “Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful.” Investors are greedy for every investment these days… except natural gas.
 
It’s time to be like Warren Buffett… It’s time to step in when others are fearful.
 
Sell some of the stuff in your portfolio that’s doubled. Take that money and get yourself some exposure to natural gas.
 
Good investing,
 
  
P.S. I want to invest in natural gas. But I don’t want to speculate on the price of natural gas. So for my True Wealth readers, I found a low-risk business, off Wall Street’s radar. We can earn safe, 9% dividends now… with the potential for much bigger dividends if the price of natural gas does go up. To learn more about True Wealth, and how to get access to my latest issue on natural gas, click here.
 

  

ETFs offer an easy way to play Natural Gas and there are many options available besides the most popular US Natural Gas ETF (NYSE: UNG).  We have listed some options for investors to look at and compare to one another below.  Note that we have listed some industry related ETFs as well as direct Natural Gas exposure plays excluding any leveraged ETFs.     

United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE: UNG)     

The United States Natural Gas Fund, LP (“UNG”) is a new way for investors and hedgers to manage their exposure to energy. The United States Natural Gas Fund LP (NYSE: UNG) is an exchange traded security that is designed to track in percentage terms the movements of natural gas prices. UNG issues units that may be purchased and sold on the NYSE Arca. The investment objective of UNG is for the changes in percentage terms of the units’ net asset value to reflect the changes in percentage terms of the price of natural gas delivered at the Henry Hub, Louisiana, as measured by the changes in the price of the futures contract on natural gas traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange that is the near month contract to expire, except when the near month contract is within two weeks of expiration, in which case it will be measured by the futures contract that is the next month contract to expire, less UNG’s expenses.     

United States 12 Month Natural Gas (NYSE: UNL)     

The investment seeks to reflect the changes, net of expenses, of the spot price of natural gas delivered at the Henry Hub, Louisiana, as measured by the changes in the average of the prices of 12 futures contracts on natural gas traded on the NYMEX. The fund will consist of the near month contact to expire and the contracts for the following eleven months, for a total of 12 consecutive months contracts, except when the near month contract is within two weeks of expiration, in which case it will be measured by the futures contract that is the next month contract to expire and the contracts for the following eleven consecutive months.     

iPath DJ-UBS Natural Gas TR Sub-Idx ETN (NYSE: GAZ)     

The investment seeks results that correspond generally to the price and yield performance, before fees and expenses, of the Dow Jones-UBS Natural Gas Total Return Sub-Index. The note is designed to reflect the performance of natural gas. The index is composed of the Henry Hub Natural Gas futures contract traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange.     

First Trust ISE-Revere Natural Gas Idx (NYSE: FCG)     

The investment seeks to replicate, net of expenses, the ISE-REVERE Natural Gas index. The fund invests at least 90% of assets in common stocks that comprise the index. The index is an equal-weighted index that consists of exchange-listed companies that derive a substantial portion of their revenue from the exploration and production of natural gas. The fund is nondiversified.     

iShares Dow Jones US Oil Equipment Index (NYSE: IEZ)     

The investment seeks results that correspond generally to the price and yield performance of the Dow Jones U.S. Select Oil Equipment & Services index. The fund generally invests at least 90% of assets in securities of the Underlying index and depositary receipts representing securities of the Underlying index. It may invest the remainder of assets in securities not included in the Underlying index but which BGFA believes will help the fund track Underlying index, and in futures contracts, options on futures contracts, options and swaps as well as cash and cash equivalents, including shares of money market funds advised by BGFA. It is nondiversified.     

Jefferies | TR/J CRB Wildcatters Exploration & Production Equity ETF (NYSE: WCAT)     

The investment seeks investment results that replicate as closely as possible, before fees and expenses, the price and yield performance of the Thomson Reuters/Jefferies CRB Wildcatters Energy E&P Equity index. The fund normally invests at least 80% of total assets in the equity securities that comprise the underlying index and depositary receipts based on the securities in index. The index is designed to track the overall performance of a universe of listed U.S. and Canadian small and mid-capitalization companies engaged in the exploration and production of oil and natural gas. The fund is nondiversified.  

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UNG, UNL


 

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