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Gold/Mining/Energy : KERM'S KORNER -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (12835)10/15/1998 12:41:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
OIL AND NATURAL GAS PRICING SCENE - PART 3 THURSDAY 10/15/98

World oil down in directionless post-API/pre-DOE Trade
-- Thu, 15 Oct 1998 06:28 EST

IPE Trade has hit a between-calm this morning, with underlying bearishness pervading but not much action in either Brent or gas oil so far.

Tuesday's mixed American Petroleum Institute (API) weekly stock report has left the market wondering where to go today. Players are therefore mostly waiting for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) data later today.

"Well, (the API report) it's negative for crude and good for unleaded, which explains the present lull," said one IPE floor trader. The market is basically looking for DOE data, due out at 2 p.m. local time (8 a.m. CDT) to give some direction, he said.

Overall, however, sentiment remains depressed, he noted. "The feeling is bearish, but (the market is) reluctant to sell," he said.

Leslie Nicholas, analyst at GNI Research, agreed "people are a bit puzzled" on the API numbers and are waiting to see what the DOE data brings.

There is a "balancing out" between the gasoline and crude numbers as far as London trade is concerned, but New York can still benefit from the gasoline draw, said Nicholas.

For London, however, a malaise is still in the air, he conceded, as overall "there is still too much crude supply."

The API reported a crude build of 8.22 million barrels in the latest week, above most market expectations for a 5 to 6 million barrel rise at most. But gasoline fell by a much-larger-than-expected 7 million barrels, (in contrast to expectations for 0.5 to 2.3 million barrels). Distillates, too, saw a drop--1.7 million barrels (though within expectations).

The real surprise was a fall of 0.5% to 87.5% in refinery runs, which were expected to rise after the outages due to Hurricane Georges. Refinery operations had already dropped a massive 7.5% the previous week.

GNI Research today noted that gasoline data could not have been more supportive, as the surplus compared with a year ago fell from 10 million to less than one million barrels. Implied demand remained strong at 8.92 million barrels.

In distillates too, according to GNI Research, year-on- year surplus fell by more than 3.5 million barrels to 13 million barrels.

With no other news moving markets, both front-month Brent and gas oil are just off Tuesday's closes this morning. November Brent expires later today.

On intraday technicals, December Brent looks a little better supported, according to GNI. But on two-week indicators, there is still potential for a move towards the contract low of $12.59 in the coming days.

November gas oil, meanwhile, is seeing support at $116, $114 and $112.50, according to Nicholas. Resistance is at $119 and $117.50.

NYMEX energy futures called mixed: weak technical

-- Thu, 15 Oct 1998 09:25 EST

--Crude oil is called to open 5 to 10 cents lower
--Heating oil futures called steady to 15 points higher
--Unleaded gas futures called steady to 35 points higher

Crude oil and product futures are seen opening with mixed trends this morning following the release of weekly American Petroleum Institute (API) inventory report Wednesday night.

Traders agreed that the key will be if the crude oil futures can hold support in the $13.87 to $13.98 area in early trading this morning.

The API report was deemed a mixed bag. An unexpectedly large draw on gasoline stocks and distillate stocks was deemed supportive but offset by a very large build in crude oil stocks.

The U.S. Department of Energy's weekly inventory report this morning confirmed the big 6.8 million barrel build in crude oil inventories and was deemed a negative factor by some looking for a smaller build to offset the divergences seen in last week's data. Gasoline stocks were down a large 7.6 million barrels in the DOE data and should be supportive. The distillate stocks fell almost 3.0 million barrels and should be supportive.

One broker noted that the rise in crude oil stocks could have a longer term negative factor on the markets. "Crude oil is just another form of petroleum products," he noted. His biggest concern is that the current spread between WTI crude and Brent oil is wide enough that producers in Europe will have to make a decision where they want to sell. That could lead to larger imports in the regions east of the Rockies.

He also said that the overall stocks of distillates still remain abundant and should support further spread trading of long gasoline and short heating oil.

The API reported crude oil stocks were up 8.22 million barrels to 327.4 million barrels. This marks only the second time in the last nine weeks that crude oil stocks have risen in the weekly industry report, but it was above most market expectations for a 3- to 7-million-barrel rise in stocks. Total stockpile of crude oil compared to year-ago levels

ALASKA/YUKON ENERGY WEATHER SUMMARY & 1-10 DAY TREND

Strategic Weather Services
ALASKA/YUKON TERRITORY

SUMMARY: Several troughs of low pressure spread cloudy skies with periods of snow over areas of the north slope, interior AK, and parts of south central. Southeast AK had cloudy skies with rain and fog. Large low center south of Cold Bay produced cloudy skies and light rain to much of southwest AK and Aleutians. Afternoon highs reached the 20s and 30s over northern and interior. Aleutians, southwest and south central were in the 30s and 40s. Southeast had highs in the 40s and 50s. Overnight lows fell to 0F in north while teens reported in central interior areas. To the south and west, lows were in the 20s and 30s.

FORECAST: Several lows with associated troughs will continue to affect the state through next 48 hours. The strongest low will track across northern Gulf of AK bringing very windy conditions and rain in southern 1/3 of state. Intermittent snow showers will persist across central and northern areas of the state. Some clearing will take place in western AK by early weekend. Temperatures will remain cool with 20s and 30s north, 30s and 40s central areas and 40s and low 50s southern areas. Lows in the teens to 20s north and 30s and 40s south.

1 TO 5 DAY TREND: Temperatures below normal; precipitation near normal.

6 TO 10 DAY TREND: Temperatures normal; precipitation near normal.

PREOPENING COMMENTS

Gasoline stocks fell by a much larger-than-expected 7.023 million barrels this past week. Most were looking for a 1-million-barrel draw on gasoline inventories this past week. The big drop in stocks pushed the overall surplus of gasoline compared to a year ago to only 992,000 barrels, down from a surplus of more than 17.8 million barrels three weeks ago. Total gasoline stocks on hand now total just under just under 199 million barrels.

Distillate stocks also fell by a larger-than-expected 1.7 million barrels to 149.5 million barrels. Stronger demand, rising to 3.561 million barrels per day, was positive. But lower refinery output was offset by higher imports this past week. Overall stocks of distillates are now some 13.0 million barrels larger than a year ago, but still down sharply from the 24.0 million barrels of surplus stocks versus year-ago levels in the middle of August.

The key question is whether the peak in distillate inventories has been reached, traders agreed. If stocks have peaked seasonally, that is not necessarily bullish but it is less bearish, one trader reported.

Technically, November crude oil will find support today at $13.98, $13.78 and $13.00, with resistance seen at $14.34, $14.58, $14.95 and $15.11. November heating oil support is seen at 38.10, 37.40 and 36.00, with resistance at 38.75, 39.30 and 41.00 cents.

November unleaded gasoline support is at 43.00, 42.60 and 41.65, with resistance seen at 44.35, 45.30, 47.40, 47.80 and 49.00.

In NYMEX ACCESS trading, November crude oil futures traded in a range of $14.12 to $13.95 and were last down 6 cents at $13.99.

November heating oil was up 9 points at 38.25 in a range of 38.75 to 38.20.

November unleaded gasoline was up 39 points at 43.91 on ACCESS after trading in a 44.35 to 43.70 range.

Overseas this morning, November Brent oil futures are down 3 cents at $12.66 and November gas oil futures are down 50 cents at $116.00.

NYMEX gas futures called to open slightly
-- Thu, 15 Oct 1998 09:49 EST

The natural gas futures called to open 3 cents to 4 cents higher this morning. In over-the-counter trading this morning, November natural gas futures are bid at $2.065 and offered at $2.080 compared to a 4.3-cent lower close at $2.041 on Wednesday.

Natural gas futures finished pit trading on the defensive Wednesday but held key support. Prices rebounded in ACCESS dealings following the release of the American Gas Association (AGA) weekly inventory report.

The AGA reported gas stocks rose 41 bcf, pushing total stocks to 2,952 bcf. The 4-year average of injections was 52 bcf and this week's injections were generally below the average trade estimate for a build of 50 to 65 bcf.

Bulls are focused on the fact that the surplus compared to a year ago has been trimmed over the last seven weeks from 487 bcf to 232 bcf this week. In addition, total stocks are below the record levels recorded four years ago this week at 3,021 bcf.

But bears noted that total gas in storage still remains above the 4-year average for this week of 2,804.

The AGA report is expected to give the market an upside bias today after prices for a second day found solid support at the $2.030 level basis November futures, one floor broker commented this morning. But he said the market should meet continued strong resistance today at $2.100 to $2.120. He does not expect a run at gap resistance left on the daily November chart at $2.160 to $2.180 today but said that could be an upside target for Friday as shorts will likely move to cover if prices can sustain today's early gains through the closing bell.

Another broker said the November contract will need to close above $2.180 by Monday or face the potential for another run at key gap support at $1.950 in November. He said the lack of any major cold weather in the National Weather Service's 6- to 10-day outlook last night should limit upside movement in the near term.

Technical support for November natural gas futures is seen at $2030, $2.000, $1.950 and $1.915 with resistance seen at $2.100, $2.18, $2.220 and $2.270.

In overnight trading on ACCESS in natural gas futures, the November contract traded in a range of $2.090 to $2.040 and was last up 3.4 cents at $2.075.




To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (12835)10/15/1998 3:46:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15196
 
RESERVE REPORT / Niko Resources Ltd. Doubles Reserves

NIKO RESOURCES LTD. DOUBLES RESERVES

Date:
10/15/98 11:17:04 AM
Dateline:
CALGARY, AB
Stock Symbol: NKO

Niko Resources Ltd. (ASE - NKO) announced today that, effective
October 1, 1998, an independent engineering report gives a net
asset value of $ 21.01 per share. This is based on proven
reserves, and 50% of probable reserves, discounted at 10%, pre-
tax, using constant prices based on existing contracts. The
Company's net proven and probable reserves, on a gas equivalent
basis, have increased by over 100% to 550 BCF, of which 36% are
proven. Future cash flow and earnings projections will have an
accordingly upward movement.

The drilling programs over the next six months are expected to
add significant proven reserves.





To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (12835)10/16/1998 10:05:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
OIL AND NATURAL GAS PRICING SCENE - PART 1 FRIDAY 10/15/98

World oil prices sag under U.S. stocks build

World oil prices lost further ground on Thursday, pressured by U.S. inventory data showing producers' efforts to boost prices by trimming output had so far failed.

International marker Brent crude fell deeper below the key $13 a barrel level to close at $12.58, down 11 cents from Wednesday's close and 45 cents off Tuesday's $13.03.

The drop was largely due to a report by the American Petroleum Institute (API) late on Wednesday showing U.S. crude inventories ballooned by 8.22 million barrels last week.

Crude inventories in the giant U.S. market, which traders monitor closely as a yardstick for global supply, had been run down heavily in the week before due to disruptions from Hurricane Georges in the Caribbean, but were still riding about 22.71 million barrels higher than year-ago levels.

"Its been difficult for this market to find its legs, and the situation in the U.S. hasn't helped," a trader on floor of London's International Petroleum Exchange said on Thursday.

Oil prices now wallow about $8 below year-ago levels, having thus far failed to react to a seven-month initiative by members of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other major producers to adapt to a sputtering world economy and dwindling oil demand growth by trimming exports.

The now chronic price weakness, which has cut deep into the revenues of major oil exporters and been blamed by economists as the undercurrent behind a building wave of global deflation, has put further pressure on producers to cut back supplies.

Traders are looking to a conference between key suppliers and consumers in Cape Town at the end of October as the possible venue for an extension to production cuts, which already amount to a collective three million barrels per day (bpd).

OPEC member Kuwait said on Tuesday it would push for the producer club to increase its oil output cuts beyond the present 2.6 million bpd.

And Algerian Energy Minister Youssef Yousfi said in Brussels this week his country would be willing to cooperate with further cuts if such action was deemed necessary, adding that he wanted to see oil prices restored to the 1997 level of $18-$20 a barrel.

Key OPEC producers Saudi Arabia and Venezuela have said they do not see the need for further reductions.

An Iranian official told Reuters on Wednesday Tehran would also prefer to defer any decision on further cuts until it became clear how much support the market would draw from winter demand.

The official suggested it could be too early to form an accurate assessment of the strength of winter demand by OPEC's next ministerial conference on November 25.

NYMEX crude, heat oil end flat, mogas up on APIs

November crude oil futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) ended unchanged on Thursday, after dipping below $14 a barrel, pressured by a big jump in U.S. crude inventories, traders said.

"The front-month crude found support after it hit $13.88 and it tried to move to the upside, but failed because the general outlook remains bearish," said a NYMEX trader.

In the morning, traders said the stockbuild reported by the American Petroleum Institute had been anticipated on Wednesday, causing November crude to drop 18 cents to $14.05 a barrel.

On Thursday, it settled at the same price, $14.05, after trading sideways for most of the day as the market deemed the rise of 8.2 million barrels in crude inventory for the week ending Oct. 9 as just slightly bearish.

In London, November Brent crude fell deeper below the key $13-a barrel level to close at $12.58, down 11 cents from Wednesday's close. The contract, which expired Thursday, dropped largely due to the API stockbuild on U.S. crude, brokers said.

Traders said that after the effects of powerful hurricanes that caused production shut-ins and import delays due to stalled tanker offloadings, the U.S. crude inventory situation was set to return to its previous high levels.

"The storm premium was temporary," said a floor trader.

U.S. crude inventories now stand at 327.4 million barrels, up nearly 23 million barrels from a year ago.

Gasoline exhibited some strength in the morning trade, supported by an unexpected big API stockdraw of 7.0 million barrels. That reduced gasoline inventories to 199 million barrels, whittling down the year on-year surplus to just 992,000 barrels, from 9.75 million barrels the week before.

Gasoline's "implied demand," which factors in imports, output and inventory changes, was at a high 8.9 million barrels per day, rising from the previous week's 8.6 million bpd.

Front-month gasoline traded as high as 44.40 cents a gallon before settling at 43.91 cents, up 0.39 cent from the previous close.

November heating oil posted modest gains during the day and then eased to end flat at 38.16 cents a gallon. It had traded as high as 38.60 cents. The API said there was a stockdraw of 1.7 million barrels, reducing inventories nationwide to 149.5 million barrels from 151.1 million barrels, near its 11-year high, in the previous week.

A Washington-based trader said that last week's drop in distillate supplies involved mostly its low-sulphur component while heating oil stores were unchanged.

In other news, officials at Chevron Corp.'s Nigerian oil-producing unit said on Thursday a plan to restore about 106,000 bpd of output shut in by protesting youths had been put on hold.

The youths' protests over the past week have hit hard Royal Dutch/Shell and Italy's Agip, both of which have been forced to declare force majeure from their terminals.

U.S. cash crudes collapse on glut worries

U.S. cash crude differentials crumbled Thursday in a heavy sell-off following a round of bearish stock figures from the American Petroleum Institute (API).

Sharp losses were recorded across the board in the first hours of trade, and while the market rebounded slightly by the afternoon, both sour and sweet crudes still closed the day 10 to 20 cents a barrel lower.

One cash crude trader attributed the losses to a "tremendous amount of posturing" early in the day as the bears took advantage of the stock figures to push the market lower.

Nonetheless, it was the second straight day in which U.S. crudes have been pushed down, partially by worries that a stream of crude imports could be heading toward the U.S. Gulf Coast over the coming weeks.

The additional foreign supply would place an even greater burden on a market already struggling with the combined effects of huge stocks and slack demand from the refining sector, traders warned.

In API figures released after the close of trade Wednesday, crude stocks were put at 327 million barrels following a build of 8.2 million barrels last week. While nearly half of that rise came on the West Coast, stocks nationwide are still more than 22 million barrels above year ago levels.

The futures market held up better than the cash crude market Thursday, with the November contract settling at $14.05 a barrel, exactly where it left off on Wednesday.

That left WTI/Cushing, the cash crude benchmark, camped at between $14.10 and $14.15 a barrel.

Nonetheless, cash crude grades were mostly weaker with the sharp drop in differentials. Light Louisiana Sweet/St. James changed hands at 50 cents below WTI/Cushing after finishing Wednesday at between 40 and 37 cents below the benchmark. Its sister grade, Heavy Louisiana Sweet/Empire, slipped from a discount of 90 cents to $1.05 below WTI/Cushing before coming back to close at about minus $1.00 a barrel.

The hardest hit was West Texas Sour/Midland, which at one point traded more than 20 cents down at $1.72 a barrel. It also staged a slight rally later in the day and finished at -1.60/-1.55 a barrel. was even harder hit, tumbling 20 cents a barrel lower to trade at minus $1.70 and $1.72 a barrel, traders said.

In other trade, Eugene Island changed hands at $1.10 below the benchmark and West Texas Intermediate/Midland was said to have been done at minus 32 cents a barrel.

U.S. West Coast ANS stable in light trading

U.S. West Coast Alaska North Slope (ANS) crude prices were steady on Thursday with no deals reported in California, traders said.

The notional value of ANS is West Texas Intermediate/Cushing minus $1.25 on the bid and minus $1.04 on the offer.

While no fresh ANS trades were reported, there was talk that several sellers have emerged and the market could feel additional downward pressure in the days ahead.

But no takers were stepping up on Thursday. The last deal for ANS was Friday, when a cargo was sold at $1.025 under November WTI.

In the futures market, the New York Mercantile Exchange November contract settled unchanged at $14.05 per barrel.

Colombia's Oriente is be offered into Los Angeles at WTI/Cushing minus $2.10 and into San Francisco at WTI/Cushing minus $1.90.

Figures released by the American Petroleum Institute (API) Wednesday evening showed a 8.2 million barrel build in nationwide crude stocks last week, leaving inventories at 327 million barrels.

On the West Coast, crude inventories jumped by 3.7 million barrels last week to 56.4 million barrels, the API reported.

North Sea December Brent firms in late U.S. trade

November North Sea Brent prices climbed higher in late U.S. trading, though most of the attention focused on December deals, traders said Thursday.

One full cargo of November Brent traded in the aftermarket at $12.66 a barrel, after Brent expired on the International Petroleum Exchange (IPE) in London at $12.58 earlier Thursday.

Meanwhile, December Brent was assessed at $13.05 in the aftermarket, three cents higher than it finished on the IPE. Traders said a full cargo traded at $13.05, while a 200-lot partial and a 100-lot partial also traded at that level.

In addition, the Brent November-December spread traded at minus 37 cents and minus 36 cents.

U.S. foreign crude - Cusiana may weaken by 30 cents

Traders on Thursday said they were awaiting word from Colombia's national oil company Ecopetrol on bids received by Wednesday for a 550,000-barrel cargo of Cusiana crude. It is expected to lift from Colombia in the Nov. 25-29 window, traders said.

Some seller-friendly traders say that the cargo will fetch as much as West Texas Intermediate/Cushing minus $1.25 per barrel. But others say the boat may be awarded at closer to WTI/Cushing minus $1.40 or even as low as WTI/Cushing minus $1.50 per barrel.

If the cargo it sold at WTI/Cushing minus $1.50, it would mean a weakening of 30 cents from the last time Cuzy deals were reported.

An ultra-large crude carrier filled with North Sea Brent and two one million barrel boats was sold by Koch to Ultramar Diamond Shamrock. The company has announced it will enter a joint venture with Phillips 66 and its downstream operations in North America will be run by an entity called Diamond 66.

But a large portion of the North Sea Brent also went into the Seaway Pipeline, traders said.

The unrest in Nigeria continued on Thursday. About a fourth of the nation's usual daily oil output of two million barrels per day (bpd) has been shut-in. Officials at Chevron Corp. <CHV.N> on Thursday said that 106,000 bpd of its onshore production in Nigeria remained shut in.

Traders in the U.S. said they didn't think that the Chevron shut-in will have as dramatic an impact on the foreign crude cash market as the shut-in of Royal Dutch Shell's <RD.AS> <SHEL.L> Forcados terminal. Loadings of Forcados have been delayed by at least 10 days.

Traders said the notional value of Forcados will decrease as sellers find it more difficult to buy buyers who are willing to risk the chance that the shipments will arrive as scheduled.

Bonny Light from Nigeria was done on Thursday at both even to Dated Brent as well as 10 cents under Dated Brent.

"There is still plenty of Bonny Light out there," said one trader. "There are still come October barrels that need to find buyers. I think that this will push down the value by 10 to 15 cents.

Qui Iboe crude was said to be talked at about the same level as Bonny Light, from even to Dated Brent to 10 cents below it.

Champion crude from Brunei was done on Thursday at Dated Brent minus $1.20 per barrel.

Oriente crude was notionally talked about WTI/Cushing minus $4.30.

U.S. spot products-Stocks spur GC, shrugged by NYH

U.S. Gulf Coast and Midwest gasoline and low sulphur diesel held onto their firmer differentials late Thursday after being spurred higher by bullish stock data, traders said.

The unexpected seven million plus draw in gasoline stocks also kicked Gulf Coast activity back to life with both products trading heavily despite most traders from across the hubs attending an industry outing in Texas.

The New York Harbor market however completely shrugged off any impact with differentials unchanged.

Outright prices were firmer as the oil futures basis rose on the data.

November gasoline settled at 43.91 cents per gallon, 0.39 cent firmer from its close on Wednesday before the American Petroleum Institute (API) released its weekly stock data.

The API reported a unexpected hefty draw in stocks for the week ending Oct. 9, of over seven million barrels to around 120 million barrels, bringing inventories down to just around 1.0 million higher year-on-year.

The data for distillates was less bullish with the prompt month NYMEX heating oil contract settling unchanged at 38.16 cents per gallon.

The API reported stocks down 3.2 million barrels to around 150 million, bringing supplies to just 13 million above 1997 levels, a minor improvement from September when stocks were at an 11-year record high of 153 million but still considered very substantial.

November crude also settled unchanged at $14.05 per barrel after the API reported an expected 8.2 million barrel build to 327 million.

GULF COAST

Prompt conventional gasoline slipped from its early day highs but ended the day around half a cent firmer amid the bullish API reports while low sulphur diesel edged up around 0.40 cent.

Both gasoline and low sulphur diesel were the only stocks on refining row to fall below last year's levels in the latest API report -- respectively down four million barrels to two million and 42,000 barrels to 69,000 year-on-year.

Regular conventional M3 gasoline was last pegged at a2.50/2.30 cents discount, from earlier trades at 2.20 cents under the screen.

Low sulphur diesel was last pegged at a 1.90/2.10 cents premium from Wednesday's 1.60 cents over the print.

Heating oil was actively bid at 1.50 cents under the print but faced no offers with levels holding unchanged.

A-grade regular reformulated gasoline which schedules late Thursday was talked at a 0.35/0.75 cent regrade to the M3, while the V-grade premium conventional was only offered at a 3.85 cent regrade.

Jet fuel grades which also schedule on the prompt front 30 cycle was pegged at a 3.15/3.35 cents premium after trading at a 3.35 cents premium on the 54-grade. The anys were at 3.00 cents.

NEW YORK HARBOR

Differentials held or added slightly to early-week gains in thin trade, players said.

"The Harbor's thinly traded sometimes, this is one of those days," one trader said about the general lack of buying which came after Wednesday's fairly bullish API numbers, that showed Padd 1 gasoline stocks slip by more than 900,000 barrels.

Traders said the Conoco outing in the Gulf Coast also took many players out of the market.

Prompt heating oil was steady at 1.50/1.25 cents under the screen for prompt and 1.25/1.00 cents under for any month.

Low sulphur diesel held 0.25 point gains at 2.75 to 3.00 cents over the screen.

Prompt M4 Harbor gasoline was steady, pegged at 1.50/1.25 cent under the November screen, amid thin trade, players said.

Jet fuel 54-grade was steady at 5.25/5.50 cents. Jet-kerosine 55-grade was pegged at 5.75/6.00 cents over, traders said.

Meanwhile A4 regular reformulated rose about 0.20 cent to 0.40/0.50 cent over on poor refining economics for the product.

On the premium grades, conventional V4 was pegged at 2.75/2.95 cents premium and D4 RFG was pegged at 4.75/5.00 cents premium.

MIDCONTINENT

Bullish stock data also boosted gasoline and low sulphur diesel differentials in the Midwest although trade in Chicago was thin, traders said.

Gasoline stocks in Padd 2 fell two million barrels below last years levels to 50 million, while distillates stocks were 190,000 barrels lower at 31 million barrels.

Group Three's regular gasoline traded actively between 1.50 cent and 1.60 cent under the rpint, a shade firmer. Premium grades were pegged at a 6.25/6.50 regrade.

Prompt Chicago regular gasoline was pegged a quarter to half a cent firmer at a 2.75/2.50 cent discount to the screen and premium-grade was similarly firmer at a 3.50 cents regrade.

Low sulphur diesel in the Group traded up to a 3.50 cents premium but edged back to 3.30 registering a 0.30 cent gain. Chicago was assessed around half a penny firmer at 2.40/2.70 cents premium.

US Crude Outlook - Oversupply turns market bearish

The U.S. crude oil market will feel the pressure of several ships of foreign oil heading to the U.S., particularly since U.S. demand for crude is not very strong, traders and analysts said on Wednesday, after the release of the latest U.S. inventory data.

"I think we are heading down. There is a significant upswing in (crude) imports," Ritterbusch said, pointing to a fleet of ships carrying Brent towards the U.S. market.

One U.S. trader is said to be bringing four Ultra Large Crude Carriers (ULCCs) of the light sweet European crude towards the Gulf Coast, while other traders are also said to be showing November Brent in the U.S. Gulf at discounts around 75 cents under December West Texas Intermediate. Each ULCC carries more than 300,000 tons, or more than two million barrels of crude.

While imports are said to be streaming in, few companies are keen to build stocks any higher given the relatively narrow "roll" between November and December prices of U.S. benchmark WTI.

"The roll is coming off at the moment, but you're not going to see anyone rushing to build stocks with this contango," said one Gulf Coast crude trader. November crude is now trading between 20-18 cents a barrel lower than December crude, not enough incentive to store barrels.

News of production disruptions in Nigeria is not proving especially supportive of crude markets, traders said, noting that there were still ample early November barrels and still some October barrels of West African crudes as yet unsold. A series of community disturbances in Nigeria have stopped one fifth of the country's production, but traders said they were still monitoring the situation.

The latest U.S. inventory figures released earlier this week are not much help either, and traders dismissed the odd figures, saying they reflected short-term disruptions caused by hurricane Georges. While the American Petroleum Institute (API) figures showed a sharp drawdown of 3.8 million barrels, the U.S. Department of Energy report showed a build of 2.7 million barrels in U.S. stocks of crude oil.

"The statistics were neutral to bearish," said Nizam Sharief of Hornsby & Co., adding that the the disparity in the weekly reports reflected the disruptions caused by hurricane Georges, the fourth storm to pound the Gulf of Mexico in as many weeks.

"In the very near term, we are going to drop below $15," Sharief predicted. The front-month November contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange settled 44 cents lower at $15.06 on Wednesday, and touched a low of $15.02 in intraday trading.

Analysts pointed bearishly to the relatively high product inventories, especially in distillate stocks, which include stocks of heating oil. While U.S. stocks of gasoline are 9.75 million barrels higher than last year's levels, those of distillates are 16.86 million barrels higher than last year.

On the demand side, the picture is also bearish in the short-term, since Sun's cuts of 177,000 barrel per day (bpd) at its two-refinery complex in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania are expected to continue until the end of the month. Similarly, Tosco's 110,000 bpd refinery in Bayway, New Jersey is not expected back up until the second half of October.

Also, the crude unit at British Petroleum's 250,000 bpd Belle Chase refinery in Louisiana still hasn't been brought back on stream after a fire broke out in the unit last week. The crude unit is expected to remain shut for another week or so, according to a company statement.

Expectations are that Chevron's Pascagoula refinery in Mississippi will be shut even longer after it suffered flooding when Hurricane Georges pounded the area late last month.

U.S. Product Outlook-firm on extended outages

Extensive unplanned refinery shutdowns due to Hurricane Georges last week boosted U.S. Gulf Coast gasoline prices, and the rally is expected to continue as two major plants were affected, traders said on Monday. "Looking at the fundamentals as far as refining is concerned, the shutdowns will put more buyers in the market than anticipated,"a Gulf Coast trader said.

The hurricane which hit the Gulf Coast a week ago took down at least seven refineries in Louisiana and Mississippi. Five of them escaped any damage but the precautionary shutdowns took out around a week's worth of 928,000 barrel-per-day of production, traders said.

But what sent buyers into the market and prices soaring in "refining row", was the longer lasting mayhem the hurricane brought at Chevron Corp's <CHV.N> and BP's <BP.L> plant.

Hit by floods, Chevron's 295,000 bpd refinery at Pascagoula, Miss. had some five feet of silt and would take at least a month to begin its start up process, traders said.

More pessimistic sources said the plant will be shut until the end of the year but the company declined to comment on the duration of the shutdown.

Although largely unscathed by the hurricane, a fire broke out at BP's 250,000 bpd Alliance refinery at Belle Chasse, LA. during its start up process on Wednesday. It restarted its 100,000 bpd catalytic cracker and 37,800 bpd reformer and other secondary units on Sunday but its crude unit will remain shut for another seven to ten days.

"Chevron is quite a large producer on the Gulf Coast and I think it will keep the market supported," a trader said. "Gasoline will and can climb even higher...I wouldn't be surprised if the conventional gasoline will go into a premium...it is near enough."

Gasoline outright prices on the Gulf Coast rose nearly 3.00 cents per gallon last week to around 45.00 cents. Its differential to the NYMEX rose from a 3.75 cent discount to the NYMEX before the hurricane hit, to 0.25 cent premium on Monday.

With the cut in output, traders expected another drawdown in gasoline stocks which fell 1.8 million barrels to 21 million in the week ending Sept. 25 according to the American Petroleum Institute (API).

Both BP and Chevron were amongst the aggressive buyers seeking mainly the gasoline, jet fuel and low sulphur diesel.

But high stocks of heating oil capped any rallies in both the Gulf and the northeast, and prices in both hubs slipped by around 1.5 cents per gallon to around 40 cents per gallon.

The API reported weekly stocks grew 2.5 million barrels to 15.3 million, around 16.7 million higher than last year's build.

While an influx of Russian gas oil was also putting a lid on New York Harbor heating oil prices, gasoline arbitrage cargoes were also going to depress Harbor prices.

"Give it five to six days...then prices will be slaughtered," a trader said on the expected arrival of cargoes.

But other traders were more skeptical.

"There is a lot of talk of incoming cargoes but until I see them will I believe it. You won't be seeing these sort of premiums if the market wasn't tight," a trader said.

Harbor outright gasoline prices have actually fallen a quarter cent to around 45.60 cents per gallon, but reformulated grades differentials have risen by nearly 1.75 cents, climbing into a premium of around 1.25 cent to the NYMEX on Monday.

Conventional differentials on Monday also flipped to 0.25 cent over the NYMEX from a discount as low as 0.50 cent.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (12835)10/16/1998 11:34:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 15196
 
OIL AND NATURAL GAS PRICING SCENE - PART 2 FRIDAY 10/15/98

NYMEX Hub natural gas ends up on technical rebound

NYMEX Hub natural gas futures mostly ended higher Thursday in a moderate session, boosted by some technical buying and short covering despite reports of a softer physical market, industry sources said.

November climbed 5.4 cents to close at $2.095 per million British thermal units after trading today between $2.04 and $2.12. December settled 3.9 cents higher at $2.347. Most other deferreds ended flat to up 2.9 cents.

''I think we saw a lot of short covering when November couldn't break support. The shorts were disappointed by the AGAs, and there may be some (colder) weather showing up,'' said one Texas-based trader, noting some 10-day forecasts were expecting a cold front from Canada to push into the U.S.

With injections slowing as caverns fill, most agreed the key to market direction was weather.

''If we don't get some cold soon, then November could get beat up before it goes off the board (on Oct 28). If we do get some load, I think Nov will settle in the $2.10-2.20 area,'' the Texas trader said.

AGA data released Wednesday showed an unexpectedly-low weekly injection of 41 bcf. The number was well below Reuterpoll estimates in the 55-65 bcf range and trimmed the year-on-year surplus to 232 bcf, or 8.5 percent. To get stocks to 3.1 trillion cubic feet by October 31, weekly injections of about 49 bcf are needed.

WSC expects normal temperatures in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic to warm to as much as 10 degrees F above normal Sunday and Monday, dimming hopes for some overnight load. The Southeast will climb to four to eight degrees above normal by early next week, while Florida will average one to four degrees above normal for the period.

Slightly above normal readings in the Midwest will dip to below normal Saturday, then climb to two to four degrees above by Monday. The mercury in Texas mostly will range from normal to slightly above, while the Southwest will average one to 10 degrees below normal into early next week.

Chart traders said shorts started to cover today when an early November move down stalled at $2.04, just above support in the $2.03 area. Further support was pegged at $2.015 and then in the mid $1.90s, a measurement from Monday's gap. Interim resistance was seen at the $2.16-2.18 gap, then at $2.25 and then in the $2.40 area.

In the cash Thursday, Gulf Coast quotes on average slipped four cents to the low-$1.70s. Midwest pipes were down a nickel or more to the low-$1.70s. In the West, El Paso Permian slipped several cents to the $1.75-1.80 level.

Gas at the Chicago city gate was more than five cents lower in the mid-to-high $1.80s, while quotes in New York were off seven cents to the low-$1.90s.

The NYMEX 12-month Henry Hub strip gained 1.7 cents to $2.234. NYMEX said an estimated 62,079 Hub contracts traded today, up from Wednesday's revised tally of 53,623.

U.S. spot natural gas prices soften on weak demand

U.S. spot natural gas prices fell Thursday as shoulder month weather stifled demand across most of the nation, industry sources said.

''I think they're looking toward the weekend. The weather is pretty moderate everywhere. There are not too many places to hide it (natural gas supply) anymore,'' one Midwest trader said.

Swing gas prices at Henry Hub were off an average of four cents to the mid-$1.70s, sources said, as temperature highs in Texas were expected to fall into the low-80s Friday and through the weekend.

In the Midcontinent, prices similarly slipped six cents to the low-$1.70s, while Chicago city-gate was pegged mostly at $1.87-1.89.

In west Texas, El Paso Permian gas traded at $1.73-1.83, while Waha values were also quoted about three cents lower at $1.75-1.83.

The San Juan and Southern California markets also softened slightly, with deals reported done at $1.72-1.78 and $2.24-2.27, respectively.

Supporting prices in the west, sources said, was the upcoming outage on the San Juan lateral, which is scheduled to begin Oct 26 and last five days, according to Transwestern.

The volume affected by the outage is expected to be about 625 million cubic feet per day (mmcfd) out of a total of 800 mmcfd. The San Juan lateral runs from Ignacio, Co., to Blanco, N.M.

Transwestern also reported it is allocating at three points on its system west of Thoreau because nominations exceed capacity, affecting about 60 mmcfd.

Those points affected are Southern California Gas at Needles, Mojave Pipeline at Topock (Southern California border) and Pacific Gas & Electric at Topock.

Also, El Paso said its Eunice turbine will still be unavailable through Oct 15, which is reducing capacity into the South Mainline by 50 mmcfd.

On the East Coast, New York city gate prices were quoted at $1.91-1.95, while Appalachian quotes were heard mostly at $1.86-1.87.

U.S. spot natural gas prices - October 15th

OCTOBER ($/mmBtu).....................10/15..........10/14
U.S. GULF OFFSHORE...............1.65/1.70....1.69/1.74
TEXAS COAST............................1.70/1.75....1.73/1.78
WESTERN TEXAS.......................1.76/1.81....1.79/1.84
LOUISIANA COAST...................1.69/1.74....1.74/1.79
NORTHERN LOUISIANA...........1.71/1.76....1.76/1.81
OKLAHOMA...............................1.69/1.74....1.75/1.80
APPALACHIAN...........................1.83/1.88....1.97/2.02
SO. CALIFORNIA BORDER.......2.22/2.27....2.23/2.28
HENRY HUB................................1.74/1.76....1.78/1.81
WAHA HUB.................................1.77/1.82....1.81/1.86

Canadian spot natural gas prices firm on sparse supply

Canadian spot natural gas prices edged higher Thursday due to absence of some supply in the Alberta market as a result of ongoing plant outages, industry sources said.

Day prices at Alberta's AECO storage hub were quoted early at C$2.69 per gigajoule (GJ), but a tolerance level change to 0/+20 on NOVA spurred heavy packing on the system and thereby put downward pressure on prices. Late morning deals at AECO were reported done in the mid-C$2.60s.

Business through the end of the month at AECO was reported done at C$2.55 per GJ.

Linepack on NOVA's system stood at 12.25 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) as of Wednesday evening, below the pipeline's target of 12.75 bcfd.

Prices at Westcoast Energy's Station 2 compressor also treaded higher, with deals reported done at C$2.68-2.74.

At the Sumas/Huntingdon export point, prices climbed about one cent to US$1.89-1.93 per million British thermal units (mmBtu).

Export prices at Niagara were talked at US$1.95-1.97 per mmBtu, down about three cents on the day.

NYMEX Hub natural gas called steady to lower, cash softens

NYMEX Hub natural gas futures were expected to open steady to lower Friday amid talk of softer cash prices ahead of the weekend, industry sources said.

November over-the-counter trade ranged from $2.085 to $2.09 per mmBtu this morning after settling Thursday at $2.095 and easing to a low of $2.085 on ACCESS.

''We expect another test toward the lows. It's another weak day for cash, but futures may ignore that,'' one Midwest trader said.

Early Henry Hub cash prices were quoted at $1.65-1.67, compared with about $1.74-1.76 on Thursday.

Technically, support in November was seen at $2.03, and then at $2.015 and the mid-$1.90s. Interim resistance was seen at the $2.16-2.18 gap, and then at $2.25 and the $2.40 area.

Forecasts for next week called for mostly above-normal temperatures across the U.S., though seasonal weather is forecast for south Texas and temperatures are expected to drop to below-normal levels in the Chicago area by Tuesday.

London Brent futures called to pen
-- Fri, 16 Oct 1998 04:58 EST

London-Oct. 16-FWN--Energy traders here look for November Brent crude oil futures to open unchanged from Thursday's close.

In London Thursday, November Brent closed down 11 cents at $13.00, after trading between $13.20 and $12.94.

Pre-Opening NYMEX energy futures called higher as short covering expected
-- Fri, 16 Oct 1998 10:01 EST

--Crude oil is called to open 15 to 20 cents higher
--Heating oil futures are called up 20 to 45 points
--Unleaded gas futures are called steady to 25 points higher

Crude oil and product futures are called to open with a firmer tone this morning following the solid bounce off some key support levels in New York Thursday and further gains posted overseas today.

The markets continue to be dominated by the technical trade. Market news remains relatively sparse or at least not changing overall supply and demand fundamental outlooks, traders agreed. But the big picture may have improved some by the surprise move by the U.S. Federal Reserve to cut short-term interest rates on Thursday.

While the cynics remain convinced that the Federal Reserve move suggests there are more problems going on in the hedge fund community and the economies here and abroad than have been reported, others see the move as nothing more than a clear signal from the Fed to restore confidence and head off a more protracted credit crunch.

"It can't hurt," commented one broker on the Federal Reserve move Thursday.

He said the resulting weakness in the dollar should be a plus for helping to revive some emerging markets from their severe tailspin of the past year. The key still remains improving money flow into some of these once high- flying economies to improve consumption and capital spending trends. He noted that while financial asset prices have declined sharply in most nations, the real impact of those declines has only just begun to be felt in the rest of the economy in the last several months.

The broker said the impact on energy prices is more psychological than immediately an economic boost. But he said the weakness in the dollar could help to stimulate demand for energy products and more importantly stave off any further devaluation of key overseas currencies.

Traders were encouraged by the bounce away from key underlying support at $13.87 to $13.95 in November crude oil futures on Thursday and follow-through strength overnight on ACCESS trading. One broker noted that November futures closed above a short-term downtrend line on the hourly charts at $14.03 Thursday, settling at $14.05.

He noted that the open interest in crude oil futures has been on a recent upswing during this week's decline in prices, setting up a potential for a short-covering rally. The high volume trade Thursday in crude oil on a day when prices tested support and rallied was another signal of underlying strength.

Technically, November crude oil will find support today at $13.88, $13.78 and $13.28 with resistance seen at $14.34, $14.58, $14.95 and $15.11.

November heating oil support is seen at 37.80, 37.40 and 36 cents with resistance at 38.75, 39.37 and 41 cents.

November unleaded gasoline support is at 43.15, 42.60 and 41.65 cents with resistance seen at 44.40, 45.30, 47.40, 47.80 and 49 cents.

In NYMEX ACCESS trading, November crude oil futures traded in a range of $14.20 to $13.99 and was last up 14 cents at $14.19. November heating oil was last up 39 points at 38.55 cents in a range of 38.55 to 38.20 cents.

November unleaded gasoline was up 14 points at 44.05 cents on ACCESS
after trading in a 44.05 to 43.80-cent range.

Overseas this morning, December Brent crude oil futures are up 24 cents at $13.24, and December gas oil futures are up $2 at $121.

North America Texas (ERCOT) energy summary & 1-10 day trend
-- Fri, 16 Oct 1998 10:06 EST
Omaha, Neb.-Oct. 16-FWN--Strategic Weather Services

SUMMARY: Seasonal to above seasonal temperatures covered the state as dry conditions persisted for all but TX Panhandle. Highs were in the low-to-mid 80s, with mid and upper 80s in west and northwest TX. Lows were in the upper 50s to mid 60s.

FORECAST: Leading trough and then frontal boundary will spark showers and thunderstorms across TX today and tomorrow. Temperatures above seasonal will persist in TX today before cooling to near seasonal tomorrow, with frontal passage. Highs today will range from low to upper 80s and tomorrow cool to upper 70s and low 80s. Overnight lows in the upper 50s to mid 60s.

1 TO 5 DAY TREND: Temperatures near normal; precipitation near normal.

6 TO 10 DAY TREND: Temperatures near normal; precipitation below
normal.

Today in the energy markets - Friday Oct 16

BAGHDAD - Turkish State Minister Mehmet Batalli, officials from the energy, transport and housing ministries and businessmen arrive to discuss oil and gas joint projects with their Iraqi counterparts. Batalli is to meet Iraq's Oil Minister Amir Muhammed Rasheed and several other ministers and discuss projects, one including possible future Iraqi pipeline gas sales to Turkey (To October 18).

HOUSTON - Oilfield breakfast forum with speeches by executives from Mobil Oil, Schlumberger Oilfield Services and ENSCO International. Doubletree Post Oak Hotel.

BUDVA, Montenegro - International seminar on natural gas and production technology (Fourth day).

CAPE TOWN - Fifth annual indaba (summit) Africa Upstream, international exploration and production business strategy and oil and gas opportunities (Final day).