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


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (13430)11/12/1998 9:16:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
EYE ON THE MARKETS / Part 1

Toronto stocks close quiet day slightly

TORONTO, Nov 11 - Toronto stocks closed an aimless Remembrance Day session slightly firmer but off session highs on Wednesday.

Canada's Remembrance Day, a day to honor those who fought in the two World Wars, is a holiday for banks and debt markets but stocks still trade. Dealers said trading volumes should pick up once banks reopen for business on Thursday.

"On balance, the banks were up today and that's why Toronto was up," said Irwin Michael, a portfolio manager at ABC Funds.

"It was a very lackluster day -- not terribly exciting."

He said the limited action was stock-specific and the market showed little clear direction.

The Toronto Stock Exchange TSE 300 Composite Index opened the day up one percent then gave up some gains, closing 21.08 points, or 0.34 percent, higher on the day at 6279.35.

Volume was a subdued 88.4 million shares worth C$1.3 billion.

Advancing shares outpaced declines 480 to 431, with 293 issues holding their ground.

Gains were led by bank stocks and real estate shares, offset by weakness in the communications and media group. The financial services group climbed 102.49 points, or 1.39 percent, to 7490.45 while real estate gained 24.38, or 1.06 percent, to 2318.92.

Traders said the market should largely trend sideways until the November 17 meeting of the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee from which many hope a U.S. interest rate cut will emerge.

Michael said he is unfazed by the doubts many traders have expressed about the likelihood of a rate reduction.

"So what? Either they do or they don't. The fact is, we know short rates are going to continue to come down so they can get the economy going. So if they don't lower rates this time, they'll do it the following time," he said.

Michael added that there is a lot of debate over whether the market still has more room on the upside or whether it has reached a short-term top.

Volumes should pick up, swollen by tax-loss selling, toward the end of this month and the beginning of December. Then the holiday season should sap the market's energy.

Active issues included ATS Automation Tooling which dropped to a low of C$15.75 before recovering slightly to close down C$1.60 at C$16.40 in turnover of 1.77 million shares.

One trader cited a downgrade by brokerage Nesbitt Burns Inc. but Nesbitt would not confirm its rating of the stock had been changed.

"The numbers were in line but I think some people were looking for some higher ones," said the trader, who declined to be identified.

Banks revive, TSE 300 gains 21
The Canadian Press

TORONTO (CP) -- While blue-chip industrials continued to slide on Wall Street, stocks on Canada's premier stock market recovered a bit of strength Wednesday.

The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index rose 21.01 points to 6,279.28, ending two days of losses including an 83-point drop Tuesday.

Financial services, which had led the losers earlier in the week, propelled Wednesday's turnaround, with the TSE bank index up 1.39 per cent.

Remembrance Day volume was moderate.

Meanwhile, Wall Street was down on continued profit-taking.

The Dow Jones industrial average closed off 40.16 at 8,823.82 after shedding an early 72-point gain.

But while investors have begun to secure some of the huge gains from the past month, the selling has barely put a dent in the market's rebound.

The Dow surrendered about 110 points on Monday and Tuesday after rising 610 points during the prior eight sessions and more than 1,500 since the market turned higher on Oct. 8.

The TSE 300 has also been on uptrend. Since dipping as low as 5,481.84 on Oct. 9,the composite index has crawled back about 800 points.

Analysts say investors are worried about the outlook for corporate profits heading into next year, wary of what lies ahead for the economy and nervous about interest rates.

Markets are looking for positive news to give them a reason to continue to rally, Jim Mountain, director of equity trading at ScotiaMcLeod, said Wednesday.

"It's unclear, I think, to most observers at this stage where the leadership will come from, if this rally is going to keep going," he said.

"With the (U.S. Federal Reserve) meeting next week, and continuing uncertaint about the macroeconomic outlook for '99 and the uncertainty that has for earnings, our guess at this stage is the market will, at best, consolidate and go sideways for a while."

Nervousness about interest rates, about earnings at Canada's big banks and about the prospects for bank mergers had been dragging down the financial services index.

The falling prices may have tempted investors Wednesday to buy back into institutions such as Bank of Nova Scotia, which rose $1.05 on the session to close at $30.90 while Bank of Montreal gained 90 cents to $58.15.

Royal Bank was up 60 cents at $67.20, TD gained 25 cents to $44.00 and CIBC was up 10 cents to $30.00

Mountain isn't sure the worst is over for the banks.

"It's a function of concerns about the merger outlook combined with uncertainty about bank earnings into '99," he said.

"In terms of their fundamental business, if the economy is slowing down, bank earnings next year would be under pressure."

The real estate and construction index gained 1.06 per cent, as eight of the 14 TSE index groups were up.

Oxford Properties rose 60 cents to $17.60, while Intrawest rose 10 cents to $25.40.

Donohue gained 15 cents to $31.25 as the paper and forest products index moved up 0.92 per cent, while Domtar had a five-cent gain to $8.85.

Communications issues sank 1.46 per cent, weighed down by Thomson Corp., which fell $1.95 to $34.15 following a disappointing earnings report Tuesday. Torstar B lost 15 cents to $18.50.

Gold and silver was down 0.67 per cent as Barrick Gold fell 60 cents to $32.40 and Franco-Nevada Mining slipped 25 cents to $30.20.

The metals and mining index dropped 0.36 per cent, as Alcan Aluminium Ltd. lost 35 cents to $43.00 and Inco lost 20 cents to $18.10.

Advances outnumbered declines 480 to 431 with 293 unchaged in trading of 88.4 million shares worth $1.3 billion.

The TSE 100 rose 1.37 points to 383.25.

Slocan Forest Products gained $0.85 to $3.70. ATS Automation lost $1.60 to $16.40, Air Canada $0.15 to $6.15.

Poco Pete slipped $0.05 to $14.35, Canadian Natural Resources $0.25 to $27.35. Renaissance Energy $0.15 to $20.65, Beau Canada Exploration $0.09 to $2.53.

Kinross Gold rose $0.06 to $4.32, Euro-Nevada Mining $0.35 to $24.60. Aur Resources Inc. fell $0.20 to $3.25.

Stock markets look to create e-exchange

ASE proposal: Aim is to create deep capital pool for junior companies

The Financial Post

The Alberta Stock Exchange has initiated discussions with several other Canadian exchanges with a view to creating a national electronic stock market for junior companies.

President Tom Cumming said the ASE has held informal talks with a number of potential backers for the project.

The Calgary-based exchange plans to spend the next few months talking to its members, other exchanges, listed companies, and others, about whether there's support for a national market that could replace existing junior exchanges such as the ASE, the Vancouver Stock Exchange, or the Winnipeg Stock Exchange.

The new exchange would act as an incubator and feeder system for senior exchanges in Toronto and Montreal.

Marie Giguere, executive vice-president of the Montreal exchange, said the notion of having a junior exchange, with entry access throughout the country, but one trading engine, makes sense.

The ASE has been so successful at spawning new companies, particularly through its junior capital pool program, it would be eager to "franchise" its structure to other areas of the country so they too can help emerging companies grow, Mr. Cumming said.

"We are seeing [on the ASE] an increasing number of companies from the East, particularly technology companies from Ontario, that don't meet listing requirements of the TSE," Mr. Cumming said.

"They really don't have at their formative stages an opportunity to get into the public market process."

Eastern Canadian companies are particularly interested in the JCP program, he said.

The program is designed to help small companies get quick access to capital markets by rolling themselves into publicly listed pools of capital.

Under the program, a group of individuals sets up a pool of capital that becomes listed on the exchange, then hunts for a business within 18 months.

The pools can raise up to $500,000, including initial seed capital and proceeds from a public offering.

The ASE initiative comes amid calls in Vancouver for a radical restructuring of the VSE, including a possible merger with the ASE, and a tough market for emerging companies wanting to go public.

High technology companies, for one, are focusing on making themselves attractive as takeover targets as IPO prospects appear unlikely until the new millennium.

In contrast, Alberta investors seem to have insatiable appetite for JCPs, with some local dealers running long waiting lists of would-be shareholders.

They are lured by the potential for doubling or tripling their money between the time they make their initial investment and when the company is listed for trading, said a Calgary broker familiar with JCPs.

"They are high risk money. The only thing you have got to hang your hat on is the trust of the broker, and the experience of the officers of the company," the broker said.

Mr. Cumming envisions a national market supported by a national electronic system with regional operations and officials on the ground to conduct proper due diligence.

The ASE, which was much smaller than the VSE ten years ago, has grown to become of roughly equal size.

The junior capital pool program has created 1,000 companies since its inception 12 years ago. Of these, 51% had industrial businesses, 25% operated in the oil and gas industry and 19% in mining.

A large number of them have graduated to senior exchanges like the TSE. Recent graduates include Axia Multimedia Corp., Best Pacific Resources, Canadian Crude Separators, Nevada Bob's Canada Inc., Ryop Properties Corp., Western Star Exploration Ltd.

Vancouver's equivalent of the JCP program, called the Venture Capital pool, was launched in August, coincidentally the month when the VSE's mining index sank to its lowest point for the year. Only a handful of VCPs have been done or are in progress.

"I don't think there is room for Alberta and Vancouver to be competing for the same companies," said Christopher Bunka, the editor of Bunka's Outsider's Overture, a Vancouver newsletter that follows junior issues.

Bunka shares the view of a number of smaller Vancouver brokerage houses that there should be some rationalization among junior exchanges. He notes that many junior companies which formerly listed on Canadian exchanges, especially on Vancouver, have moved to over-the-counter markets in the U.S. that are offering less cumbersome regulations and higher trading volumes.

He describes the VSE's new VCP initiative as a failure, primarily because speculative investors have not responded.

The VSE has been left at the gate on junior capital pools because of its late entry into the field. Former President Donald Hudson was strongly opposed, fearing that the pools would only breed more problems for an exchange already beset with promotional troubles. The current VSE president, Michael Johnson, engineered the policy change, in part to respond to the VSE's shrinking number of listings.

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Sector Information - TSE 300
canoe.ca

Chart - TSE 300
canoe.quote.com

Oil & Gas Charts - TSE 300

Oil & Gas Composite
chart.canada-stockwatch.com

Integrated Oil's
chart.canada-stockwatch.com

Oil & Gas Producers
chart.canada-stockwatch.com

Oil & Gas Srvices
chart.canada-stockwatch.com

Most Actives - All Canadian Exchanges
canoe.ca
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To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (13430)11/12/1998 9:37:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
EYE ON THE MARKETS / Part 2

----------------------------------------------------------------------

U.S. Markets
moneycentral.msn.com

----------------------------------------------------------------------

THIS MORNING

Thursday's Asian markets lower


(AP) -Most Asian stock markets fell Thursday, as traders sold shares following strong recent rallies on the region's top three exchanges - Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore. Fears of renewed political violence in Indonesia sent shares tumbling 1.3 percent in Jakarta.

Tokyo share prices dropped amid pessimism over the Japanese ruling Liberal Democratic Party's proposed economic stimulus package, while the U.S. dollar rose against the yen on speculation the United States was planning to attack Iraq.

The benchmark Nikkei Average shed 352.96 points, or 2.45 percent, closing at 14,075.06.

In late afternoon, the dollar bought 123.22 yen, up 2.10 yen from late Wednesday in Tokyo and also above its New York level of 121.72 yen fromlate Wednesday.

Investors were also waiting for a possible government announcement on Monday concerning new measures to stimulate the nation's economy, but they were not overly optimistic, traders said.

"There is a feeling of slight disappointment," said Masaaki Higashida of Nomura Securities in Tokyo.

Meanwhile, traders rushed to buy dollars following a CBS News report quoting White House sources as saying that an air assault on Iraq could come soon in the latest dispute over weapons inspections.

In Jakarta, fears of renewed violence over the special four-day parliamentary session sent the benchmark JSX Composite Index tumbling. Despite the rupiah's stability, continued student protests rattled investor confidence.

The JSX Index closed down 5.031 points at 357.976 points.

All roads to parliament - where the assembly is set to draw up rules for general elections in 1999 - were closed, and some 30,000 police and soldiers were on duty.

ELSEWHERE:

HONG KONG: Share prices closed lower as investors cashed in on previous rallies and saw their spirits dampened by Tokyo's plunge. The Hang Seng Index ended down 189.14 points, or 1.9 percent, to close at 9,948.18.

SINGAPORE: Shares closed sharply lower, dipping below the 1,200 level as investors sold following the market's recent rally. The STI index closed down 39.63 points, or 3.2 percent, at 1,197.19.

SYDNEY: Prices ended lower as shares gave up gains from the morning. The All Ordinaries index closed down 12.4 points, or 0.45 percent, at 2,708.3.

WELLINGTON: Prices finished higher, buoyed by overseas buying in blue-chip Telecom Corp. of New Zealand Ltd. The NZSE-40 capital index closed up 28.15 points, or 1.4 percent, at 2,014.71.

MANILA: Shares rallied, holding onto gains even though prices fell near the close. The PSE index finished up 25.92 points, or 1.5 percent, to 1,734.15.

BANGKOK: Prices closed down 6.5 percent on selling of shares that had jumped last week. The SET index plunged 23.20 points to 333.06.

SEOUL: Prices ended higher on a rebound over the market's two consecutive days of losses. The KOSPI index gained 2.82, or 0.70 percent, to end at 403.52.

KUALA LUMPUR: Prices fell with investors cashing in on strong performances from earlier in the week. The Composite Index fell 15.35 points, or 3.2 percent, to finish at 460.77.

TAIPEI: Taiwan markets were closed for a national holiday.

11/12 06:46 Europe - Dollar, oil gain as Iraq tension escalates

LONDON, Nov 12 - The growing threat of military strikes against Iraq boosted the safe-haven dollar and oil prices in European trading on Thursday.

Bonds, another traditional bolt hole for investors in times of crisis, were also stronger, but traders said they were benefitting more from weakness in stocks than Baghdad's faceoff with U.N. weapons inspectors.

European stocks were dragged down by losses on Wall Street and the Tokyo bourse, though shares in oil companies bucked the trend as crude prices climbed.

MARKET PRICES AT 1121 GMT
BRENT $12.40 +0.29
FTSE 5433.1 -43.70
CAC 3,551.38 +6.64
X-DAX 4645.5 -59.82

The dollar strengthened more than one percent against the yen, buoyed by safe-haven buying on worries about a possible U.S. military strike on Iraq.

"The tensions in the Gulf have had a knee-jerk impact on the dollar because of the risk factor but this is a short-term move and what is probably more important is that yen weakness in a general sense has resumed," said Jonathan Griggs, head of foreign exchange research at ING Barings in London.

Iraq's refusal to cooperate with United Nations arms inspections even as U.S. forces converge on the Gulf has helped to enhance the safe-haven status of the dollar and the Swiss franc.

The dollar rose as high as 1.6877 marks and 123.82 yen from 1.6782/85 and 121.71/81 late on Wednesday in Europe.

The Iraq tension also boosted Brent crude futures, with the December contract rising 35 cents to $12.46. Buying before the expiry of the contract on Friday was another factor.

Iraq's state oil company said it would have to stop crude oil exports under the U.N. oil-for-food programme if independent monitors were withdrawn as a result of the U.S. military buildup.

The crisis failed to fuel much safe-haven demand for bonds, however. Prices were slightly firmer, but traders said that was more because of weakness in stocks than events in the Gulf.

German shares were among the biggest fallers in Europe, with the Xetra Dax index dropping 1.1 percent following losses in the United States and Asia.

The London bourse fell 1.0 percent, while Paris dropped 0.15 percent as it reopened following Wednesday's Armistice Day holiday.

"There is a feeling the bounce has gone as far as it can and people have little enthusiasm," said a dealer in Paris.

The declines reflected disappointment with Wall Street, where the Dow Jones industrial average ended 0.5 percent lower after an early rally quickly fizzled out amid uncertainty ahead of next week's rate-setting Federal Reserve committee meeting.

Tokyo dealt a further blow to hopes of a second day of gains in Europe, the Nikkei average finishing 2.5 percent lower on disappointment over a government plan to stimulate Japan's weak economy.

Financial shares were among the biggest decliners, with investors still nervous about banks' problems from the emerging markets crisis.

"Everyone talks about an impact from the Asian crisis," said Veronique Alessi, a senior dealer at Generale Bank in Brussels. "It's better to take some profits now because you don't know what will happen."

Lloyds TSB <LLOY.L> in London fell 1.6 percent, Dutch ING <ING.AS> dropped 2.6 percent while Spain's Banco Central Hispano <BCH.MC> lost 3.2 percent.

But oil companies gained on the rise in crude prices. In France, Elf <ELFP.PA> rose 4.2 percent and Total <TOTF.PA> gained 3.1 percent. Royal Dutch/Shell <SHEL.L><RD.AS> rose 2.0 percent in London and 0.9 percent in Amsterdam.

11/12 06:22 -Chart expert sees bitter year for stocks

LONDON, Nov 12 - World stock markets have been recovering for more than a month now but they face fresh gloom next year, an authority on technical analysis said.

U.S.-based John Murphy spoke on the state of world markets in a telephone interview with Reuters this week ahead of the launch this month of a new edition of his book "Technical Analysis of the Futures Market", regarded as an industry bible.

He said a retest of the 7500 area beckoned for the Dow Jones Industrial Average in the first half of next year. That level is important because it is close to where the market started to bottom out in September. It is also more than 1,300 points below the Dow's 8824 close on Wednesday.

"Some of the long-term momentum indicators that I use going back 20, 25 years are the worst we've seen in that entire time period," Murphy said.

"If 7500 breaks then 6000, 5500, you pick a number. Everyone in the world will turn bearish at that point." Murphy's book is only 12 years old but many in the financial industry think it's been around for a lot longer. The 56-year-old author said people generally think before they meet him that he will be far older -- and some thought he was dead. Ironically, for a man whose reputation is based on his lucid explanation of chart watching, Murphy said much of his market forecasting was also based on fundamental factors.

Having analysed market behavior for 30 years, he argues economic factors, inter-market relationships and global linkages should also be woven into chart analysis.

"In a way we almost begin to sound like economists."

In that vein, he suggested major government debt would perform well, with the U.S. 30-year long bond plumbing yields as low as four percent. They currently yield 5.25 percent.

"In (times of) deflation the inter-market rules change and it's normally very bullish for bonds and very negative for stocks," said Murphy.

In the currency market, where the dollar has been strengthening once again against the yen, Murphy said another Japanese currency collapse was unlikely.

"This yen rally that we had from August has probably run its course -- it's over for now," he said. "But on a longer term basis it's beginning to look more and more to me as if the yen may be bottoming."

The dollar reached near eight-year highs above 147 yen in August before plummeting to below 112 yen last month. Since then it has been rebounding, to above 123 yen on Thursday.

For anyone thinking about pulling money out of the United States in favour of Japan, the currency outlook supports that strategy, he said.

Murphy said stocks may continue gaining in the short term but he felt it was a good time to start selling.

The Dow peaked at 9367.84 in July before a global financial crisis engulfed it along with stock markets around the world.

Murphy said evidence that the broad market had topped could be seen in the way smaller capitalisation shares had led the way lower. From here he expected blue chip losses to be most acute.

Investors should prefer defensive issues such as utilities, tobacco and food stocks. Semi-conductors would also outperform, he said. "I even think gold stocks might be an interesting area to look at. Historically there has been an inverse relationship between gold stocks and stock markets," he said.

Murphy, an analyst for a financial television channel for much of the 1990s, is now president of Murphymorris.com, which offers technical analysis services on the Internet.

The second edition of his book has a chapter on inter-market analysis. It also has a new section on Japanese candlestick charts, a popular method for predicting tops and bottoms.

11/12 06:29 S&P Index seen gaining over next year-strategist

HONG KONG, Nov 12 - The U.S. economy's fundamental strength and its resilience to world market volatility should see Wall Street's S&P 500 Index gain at least seven percent over the next year, a top global stock strategist said on Thursday.

Comparing the U.S. economy to a supertanker resilient to bad global economic weather, Goldman Sachs stock market strategist Abby Joseph Cohen said she expected the index to rise to between 1,200 and 1,250 over the next 12 months.

It closed 7.29 points lower at 1,120 on Wednesday.

"The supertanker is not the most attractive looking ship and it's not the fastest ship. But it is among the most seaworthy and the most reliable, even in very bad global weather," Cohen told a business audience in Hong Kong.

Cohen said she preferred to describe herself as one of the biggest bulls on the U.S. economy, rather than one of the biggest bulls on the U.S. stock market.

Sound economic fundamentals have driven the U.S. stock market higher, she said, and will continue to do so even though recent market volatility has been far worse than expected.

After rising steadily for the past two years, the S&P 500 slid to 957 on August 31 from 1,092 on August 25 and a mid-July peak of 1,187.

Over recent months, the S&P 500 has tended to rise in an unsteady fashion, with periods of ascent interrupted by bouts of volatility, Cohen said.

Key features of the U.S. economy support the forecast, Cohen said.

The first is that while the United States remains a huge exporting nation, U.S. exports are of high value and competitive.

Exports also account for only 13 percent of U.S. annual output -- far less than other Group of Seven nations -- and this helps to protect the U.S. economy from global economic disruptions, Cohen said.

The domestic economy, meanwhile, is both solid and stable due to a resilient financial system founded upon strong accounting standards and tough banking regulation.

"By and large we think credit quality has gone up not down over the past couple of years," she said.

U.S. returns on equity were substantially higher than Europe and Japan, Cohen said.

"When we apply this valuation method to the U.S. equity market, we conclude that U.S. stocks are undervalued, not overvalued," Cohen said.

She disputed claims that a price-to-earnings (PE) multiple of 20 times the next 12 months earnings suggested the S&P index was overvalued against a long-term average of 14 times, arguing that in times of low inflation the S&P's PE ratio had risen past 20.

Cohen rejected suggestions that rising wage inflation was a major problem.

Manufacturing wages have remained flat over the past few years, she said, and while wages have risen sharply in the service sector, unit labour costs have remained relatively flat as productivity gained along with compensation increases.

11/11 16:32 RESEARCH ALERT - Burlington Resources estimates trimmed

NEW YORK, Nov 11 - Burlington Resources Inc.'s <BR.N> indication it is trimming 1999 capital spending led Lehman Brothers analyst John Selser to trim his estimates of the company's 1998 and 1999 earnings, he said Wednesday. Continuing to rate the stock as a buy, he reduced his earnings per share estimates to $0.57 from $0.66 for this year and to $1.06 from $1.37 for next year. His preliminary estimate for 2000 is $1.87.

Citing the company's indication 1999 capital spending could be 25 percent lower than originally estimated during an analyst/investor meeting Tuesday in Houston, Selser said he projects production about 10 percent lower than previously.

"News of the capital cut resulted in BR closing down 10 percent on the day," he said of the company's price drop Tuesday to 38 from 41-1/4 Monday. Wednesday the stock slipped another point to 37.

The capital cut is a function of continued lower commodity prices and a focus by the company on fewer but higher return domestic and international projects, Selser wrote. The company still maintains its five-year target to double reserves with growth getting back on track as early as late 1999.

11/11 11:47 RESEARCH ALERT-Hanifen starts Helmerich & Payne

CHICAGO, Nov 11 - Hanifen Imhoff Inc. said Wednesday it initiated coverage of Helmerich & Payne Inc. <HP.N> with an attractive rating and a 12-month share price target of $30.

-- Hanifen says in a report that Helmerich has the most capable equipment and the strongest balance sheet among land drillers and the stock offers a play on improving natural gas market fundamentals.

-- Also says Helmerich is an attractive acquisition target because of the large number of valuable assets it holds.

-- Says Helmerich shares offer "meaningful" long term upside potential to investors seeking exposure to the domestic natural gas market and the Latin American land drilling markets.

-- Estimates 1999 earnings per share of $1.05 and $1.53 per share for 2000.

-- The stock was ahead 1/4 at 22 on the New York Stock Exchange in late morning trade.





To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (13430)11/12/1998 9:49:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
DAILY REVIEW OF NATURAL GAS & CRUDE OIL PRICING - ALONG WITH RELATED NEWS / Part 1

NATURAL GAS

Index To Articles
11/12 02:35 WSC-Canadian Energy Weather
11/11 16:50 NYMEX natural gas ends down, ACCESS edges up after AGAs
11/11 17:00 Cold weather supports U.S. spot natural gas prices
11/11 17:02 Canada natural gas firms in west in slow holiday trade

11/12 02:35 WSC-Canadian Energy Weather

As of 07:35 GMT, 12 NOV 1998

SUMMARY- Temperautres 6-10F (3-5C) above normal.

IMPACT- Though the next few days will be cooler, there is no sign of major cold which would make for high heating demand. Demand will likely be near normal.

FORECAST-

48 HOUR...Temperatures near to slightly above normal today, near to slightly below normal Friday.

3 TO 5 DAY...Temperatures near to slightly below normal Saturday, near to slightly above normal Sunday and Monday.

6 TO 10 DAY...Temperatures near to above normal.

11/11 16:50 NYMEX natural gas ends down, ACCESS edges up after AGAs

NEW YORK, Nov 11 - NYMEX Hub natural gas futures, hit by technical selling and profit taking, ended lower Wednesday in sluggish trade, then moved up slightly on ACCESS after a supportive weekly inventory report, industry sources said.

In the day session, December slipped 4.6 cents to close at $2.432 per million British thermal units after trading between $2.39 and $2.51. January also settled 4.6 cents lower at $2.557. Other deferreds ended down one-half to 3.4 cents.

On ACCESS, December climbed to $2.459 shortly after the weekly AGA storage report, then backed off to $2.43.

"I'm a little amazed at the (AGA) number. I thought we'd see a plus (build), but we still couldn't hold the gain (on ACCESS)," said a Midwest trader, adding he expected still-high storage and seasonal weather to pressure prices near-term.

AGA said Wednesday U.S. gas stocks fell last week by 24 bcf, well below Reuter poll estimates for a five to 10 bcf draw. Overall stocks slipped to 256 bcf, or nine percent, above a year ago.

Eastern inventories fell 28 bcf but were still two percent above last year. Consuming region west storage, which climbed six bcf for the week, was up 19 percent from 1997 levels. Stocks in the producing region lost two bcf and stood 20 percent over year-ago.

While the market seemed to be running out of steam in the face of forecasts for more seasonal Midwest weather this week, few expected futures to collapse, with winter still ahead and cash now 10 cents under the screen from more than 30 cent under last week.

WSC expects above normal Northeast and Mid-Atlantic temperatures on Wednesday to moderate to closer to normal levels by the weekend. In the Southeast and Florida, readings will average normal to slightly above normal through Sunday.

In the Midwest, below seasonal midweek temperatures are expected to moderate to seasonal or slightly above by the weekend. Texas will range on either side of normal, while below normal Southwest temperatures Wednesday and Thursday will warm to normal or above Friday through Sunday.

The NWS six- to 10-day forecast released late Wednesday calls for normal temperatures for most of the nation, with some above normal readings expected in the upper Midwest.

Chart traders noted December this morning briefly poked above resistance in the $2.49 area, then stalled and slipped back on profit taking. Next support was seen in the mid-$2.30s, with further buying expected at last week's $2.24 low and then at the September 2 low of $2.14.

Resistance was pegged first at today's high of $2.51 and then at the recently-formed double top at $2.63-2.64. Major selling should emerge at the autumn highs at $2.715-2.719.

In the cash Wednesday, Henry Hub swing quotes on average firmed three cents to the low-$2.30s. Midcon pipes were little changed at about $2.30. In the West, El Paso Permian was three cents higher in the low- $2.30s.

Swing gas at the Chicago city gate was fairly flat in the mid-$2.40s, while New York also was little changed in the low-to-mid $2.50s.

The NYMEX 12-month Henry Hub strip slipped 1.4 cents to $2.304. NYMEX said an estimated 45,707 Hub contracts traded today, down slightly from Tuesday's revised tally of 47,191.

11/11 17:00 Cold weather supports U.S. spot natgas prices

NEW YORK, Nov 11 - U.S. spot natural gas prices remained strong on
Wednesday as a cold front moving toward the East sustained heating demand, industry sources said.

Gas prices at Henry Hub were quoted at $2.30-2.35 per mmBtu, with the higher-priced deals reported done in early trade.

In the Midcontinent, swing prices held in the high-$2.20s to low-$2.30s, with Chicago city-gate prices pegged again in the mid-$2.40s.

In west Texas, Permian Basin gas traded mostly in the low-$2.30s, while the San Juan market also clung to the top of Tuesday's trading range in the low-$2.30s, sources said.

At the southern California border, however, prices fell about nine cents to the low- to mid-$2.50s. Trading was light due to the Veterans Day holiday.

Also, maintenance was underway at Transwestern's WT-2 compressor station, which is affecting deliveries south of the station on the west Texas lateral today and Thursday.

In the East, Appalachian and New York city-gate prices remained stable in the low- to mid-$2.50s, traders said.

Separately, estimates for today's American Gas Association storage report mostly showed a withdrawal of five to 10 bcf, according to a Reuters poll.

The storm system that swept across the northern plains with high winds earlier this week is now moving eastward, Weather Services Corp. said, dragging temperatures lower in the Midwest and Northeast.

11/11 17:02 Canada natural gas firms in west in slow holiday trade

NEW YORK, Nov 11 - The Remembrance Day holiday kept trading very quiet in the Canadian spot natural gas market on Wednesday, with additional strength seen in the west, industry sources said.

Linepack on NOVA's system in Alberta eased late Tuesday to about 12.747 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd). The return to near target levels prompted NOVA to change its tolerance level back to +10/-10 on Tuesday afternoon.

However, restrictions continued at the Alberta-British Columbia border. NOVA said they totaled 136 million cubic feet per day today.

NOVA also said its Winchell Lake compressor station was back in service this morning following a brief outage.

Meanwhile, an outage at NOVA's Gold Creek Compressor Station is expected to continue until about 1800 MST on Thursday.

Capacity upstream of the station in Segments 1-4 and partial Segment 7 will be 2800 mmcfd, NOVA said.

Prices at Alberta's AECO storage hub were notionally little changed in the low-C$2.60s per gigajoule (GJ).

At Station 2, B.C., prices were quoted widely at C$2.60-2.80 per GJ.

At the Sumas/Huntingdon export point, prices rose another seven cents to about US$2.05 per million British thermal units (mmBtu), though many deals for Thursday had already closed on Tuesday ahead of the holiday.




To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (13430)11/12/1998 10:00:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
DAILY REVIEW OF NATURAL GAS & CRUDE OIL PRICING - ALONG WITH RELATED
NEWS / Part 2

NATURAL GAS - Continued

CANADIAN NATURAL GAS EXPORT & DOMESTIC PRICES

Canadian spot natural gas export prices - November 11th

EXPORT (NOV SWING) $CDN/GJ $US/MMBTU

HUNTINGDON B.C. 2.95/3.02 N 2.05/2.10 N
KINGSGATE B.C. (TO PNW) 2.93/3.00 N 2.04/2.09 N
MONCHY SASK 2.85/2.92 N 1.98/2.03 N
EMERSON MAN 2.99/3.06 2.08/2.13
NIAGARA ONT 3.64/3.71 2.53/2.58

Canada/U.S. dollar conversion based on Bank of Canada rate.

Canadian spot natural gas domestic prices - November 11th

DOMESTIC (NOV SWING) $CDN/GJ $US/MMBTU

ALBERTA PLANT-GATE 2.47/2.52 1.72/1.76
ALBERTA BORDER - EMPRESS 2.76/2.81 1.92/1.96
STATION 2, B.C. 2.71/2.76 1.88/1.92
SASK. PLANT-GATE 2.47/2.52 1.72/1.76
TORONTO CITY-GATE 3.61/3.68 2.51/2.56
1-YR PCKGS - EMPRESS 2.79/2.84 N 1.94/1.98 N
AECO 2.59/2.64 1.80/1.84

N=notional. One yr package beginning Nov. 1, 1999.
Canada/U.S. dollar conversion based on Bank of Canada noon rate.
One year packages converted to U.S. dollars at a 12-month forward rate.





To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (13430)11/12/1998 10:19:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
DAILY REVIEW OF NATURAL GAS & CRUDE OIL PRICING - ALONG WITH RELATED NEWS / Part 3

CRUDE OIL

Index To Articles
11/11 14:30 Concern rises in Kuwait as Western diplomats leave
11/11 16:16 World Oil edges up as U.S. reinforces Gulf troops
11/11 17:09 NYMEX oil ends off highs, U.S. adds Gulf firepower
11/11 17:13 U.S. cash crude - Weak Texas grades baffle traders
11/11 17:22 U.S. foreign crude - Forcados heads for U.S. Gulf
11/11 17:26 North Sea Brent firms a cent in late U.S. trade
11/11 17:40 U.S. spot products-Mogas drops on pipeline freeze
11/11 21:34 U.S West Coast crude diffs flat, trade thin again

11/11 14:30 Concern rises in Kuwait as Western diplomats leave

KUWAIT, Nov 11 - Concern over a potential Iraqi threat grew in Kuwait on Wednesday after several Western embassies authorised the departure of non-essential staff and advised people staying behind to stock up on food and water.

But concern has not yet hit February's level when in a similar crisis residents bought gas masks, stockpiled basic goods and sealed rooms to serve as safe areas in case of Iraqi chemical weapons attacks.

Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait led to the Gulf War in 1991.

Some 65 percent of Kuwait's population are foreigners, mainly from Asian and Arab countries.

Both the American and British embassies in Kuwait announced on Wednesday that some of their staff and all dependents were authorised to leave.

Canadian Ambassador Terence Colfer told Reuters that the some 2,000 Canadians in Kuwait were offered "friendly counsel and common sense tips".

"We have not yet reached the level of the British and the Americans but that could change very rapidly and we are very sensitive to what is going on and monitoring the situation," Colfer said.

The French community of some 600 people is due to hold a meeting on Friday with embassy officials to discuss the Iraq crisis and what precautionary measures might be needed.

The United States has a tested plan to evacuate its some 8,000 civilians in Kuwait. There is a similar plan to evacuate some European Union citizens.

Americans who are in charge of executing the U.S. plan are due to meet on Friday to discuss the situation.

The British embassy advisory to some 4,500 Britons in Kuwait said: "We advise against all non-essential travel to Kuwait. Non-essential British Embassy staff and their dependents have been authorised to leave, if they wish.

"In view of this, British nationals in Kuwait may wish to consider their own plans."

There are also some 550 British military personnel deployed at a Kuwaiti air base close to the border with Iraq, along with 12 Tornado warplanes which are on standby for possible action.

Britons who plan to stay on were told to "take sensible precautions and maintain a reasonable stock of food and water in the home".

The United States issued a similar statement earlier on Wednesday. "Private American citizens may want to consider departing the country," the statement said.

Similar messages in the previous standoff with Iraq in February caused alarm in Kuwait, which clearly backed military action against its former occupier.

The U.S. message said that although the possibility of Iraq launching chemical or biological weapons at its southern neighbour Kuwait was remote, "it cannot be excluded".

11/11 16:16 World Oil edges up as U.S. reinforces Gulf troops

LONDON, Nov 11 - Oil prices battered by steep losses under a torrent of excess supply recovered weakly on Wednesday after U.N. staff withdrew from Iraq in preparation for a possible U.S. military strike.

World marker Brent blend crude oil for December delivery settled seven cents higher at $12.11 a barrel, a tentative improvement following a loss of $1.23 late last week when prices fell precariously near to the 10-year lows seen in August.

The recovery was on the back of some short-covering following the withdrawal of U.N. weapons inspectors from Iraq in what a U.N. spokesman in Baghdad said was a precautionary safety measure.

But the market barely budged on news that the United States had ordered a second aircraft carrier to the Gulf and additional warplanes including F-117 stealth fighters as part of its troop buildup in the region.

"Much of the short-covering against the Iraq situation has been done. For now the market is looking for something more solid to go on -- like the first missile," a futures trader said.

And a later expression from Moscow of Russian opposition to any military attack on Iraq helped dampen bullish sentiment.

Iraqi oil exports of some 1.9 million barrels per day (bpd) under the current phase of the oil-for-food programme, which expires later this month would continue uninterrupted, U.N. special envoy to Iraq Prakash Shah said in Baghdad.

Oil analysts say the tensions over Iraq, which have simmered since Baghdad suspended cooperation with U.N. arms inspectors two weeks ago, have been factored into the price, which remains more than $6 below last year's average.

They point out that with oil stocks in industrialised nations at high levels, it would take a very big supply disruption to have any impact on prices given that producers have already taken out some 3.1 million bpd from the market so far this year without much improvement in price.

The International Energy Agency (IEA), the Western world's energy watchdog, said in its recent oil market report that commercial stocks in Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development countries were 172 million barrels higher at end September than the same time last year.

The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries holds its biannual meeting in Vienna on November 25 amid signs its leading members are opposed to further production curbs. OPEC members have watched helplessly as the crude stockpile and falling demand has frustrated their efforts to raise prices by agreeing a 10 percent cut in production this year.

Venezuelan Energy Minsiter Erwin Arrieta reiterated on Wednesday that his country was not considering any new oil production cuts to shore up prices.

That view has been echoed by OPEC giant Saudi Arabia, whose minister Ali al-Naimi is likely to see Arrieta in Buenos Aires on Wednesday where both are attending climate talks. Arrieta said he may discuss market conditions with Naimi if the opportunity arose on the sidelines of the conference.

11/11 17:09 NYMEX oil ends off highs, U.S. adds Gulf firepower

NEW YORK, Nov 11 - NYMEX crude oil futures came off highs Wednesday and ended almost flat as the U.S. intensified a military buildup for a possible strike against Iraq and as U.N. personnel withdrew from Baghdad.

Traders said the market's retreat in afternoon trade signalled players were unwilling to bet that the U.S. would quickly launch a military strike against Iraq.

"Pressure seems to be building up toward an attack, but until it occurs, nobody is willing to buy heavily," said a Midwest trader for an oil company.

President Bill Clinton said in a Veterans Day speech that he was prepared to act with force, if needed, to end Iraq's defiance of U.N. arms inspectors.

But December crude, which had climbed 38 cents higher to $13.90 a barrel before he spoke at midday, retreated some after the speech.

"People were expecting some type of belligerent talk from Clinton," said the trader.

Other market players noted that, as the president's speech did not indicate any concrete military action, sellers reacted by selling off some positions.

After clinging to a gain of about 10 cents in the early afternoon, a wave of late selling hammered the December crude contract. It settled at $13.55, up three cents, after slipping as low as $13.53 near the close.

Heating oil futures pared down gains and ended at 37.92 cents a gallon, up 0.16 cent. The contract traded between 37.85/38.85 cents.

Gasoline futures weakened on news that Colonial Pipeline had frozen its November gasoline nominations as its line to northern markets was filled for the month.

The news helped push down cash gasoline prices for the Gulf Coast by a penny.

At the NYMEX, one trader said big trading houses led a sell-off on the news and the December contract ended at 40.54 cents a gallon, down 0.66 cent, just slightly above its day's low of 40.45 cents. In early trading, it hit a high of 41.80 cents.

Colonial Pipeline, the largest oil products pipeline in the country, extends from Houston to the northeast and includes a 1.2 million barrel-per-day gasoline line.

Earlier Wednesday, Clinton issued his warning to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein as 300 U.N. arms inspectors and relief workers began pulling out of Baghdad.

Clinton said he hoped the Iraqi leader would allow unfettered access to U.N. arms inspectors.

"We must be prepared to act if he does not," he said.

Later, the U.S. authorized the departure of non-essential embassy personnel in Israel and Kuwait.

The Pentagon, meanwhile, ordered 129 more warplanes, including B-52 bombers and stealth jet fighters, and 3,000 additional troops to the Gulf.

A U.S. battle group led by the carrier Eisenhower stationed in the Gulf is ready to attack without warning.

On Tuesday the carrier Enterprise was ordered to speed up its sailing so it can be in the Gulf by Nov. 23 instead of Nov. 26. The Enterprise is supposed to replace the Eisenhower.

Earlier, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan decided to cut short his trip to North Africa because of the Iraq crisis, a U.N. spokesman said.

Through all the day's ramblings, Iraq remained defiant. Iraq sparked the latest crisis on Oct. 31, when it announced a decision to end cooperation with U.N. arms inspectors, who are charged with destroying Iraq's chemical and biological weapons.

Completion of the inspectors' job is crucial to the U.N. considering lifting sanctions imposed by the U.N. after it invaded Kuwait in 1990.

Despite the latest tension, however, the U.N.'s envoy to Iraq said that the oil-for-food program, under which Iraq is allowed to sell about 1.9 million barrels per day of oil, with proceeds used for humanitarian needs of Iraqi citizens, would continue.

A NYMEX trader said that was bearish for the oil markets.

"The current crisis has not changed anything," he said. "Market players are watching whether the supply of crude out of Iraq would go down. Until there is evidence that it will, there will be people willing to sell off crude."

11/11 17:13 U.S. cash crude - Weak Texas grades baffle traders

NEW YORK, Nov 11 - The domestic cash crude oil market was mostly steady, but traders said they were baffled by the weakness in Texas grades on Wednesday.

Crude oil futures, which began trading on a strong note, petered out by the afternoon, to settle a mere three cents stronger at $13.55 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

With exchange for physicals unchanged at plus 3-4 cents, traders said December cash West Texas Intermediate/Cushing was valued around $13.55-13.60 a barrel.

The December-January WTI spread was mostly steady on Wednesday, ranging between minus 25-22 cents.

As a result, postings-related WTI/Cushing was also steady, around $2.32-2.34, traders said.

West Texas Sour/Midland, the main U.S. sour crude, traded down to $1.78 under benchmark WTI/Cushing, but also traded at minus $1.75, minus $1.74 and minus $1.73. WTS was talked about eight cents weaker than Tuesday's range at $1.80-1.75 under WTI/Cushing, traders said, without being able to explain the grade's weakness.

"There might have been some trader activity," said one cash trader, sounding perplexed as he noted having seen some buying interest in the grade on Wednesday.

WTI/Midland also lost some ground, with deals reported done at minus 42 cents and minus 40 cents. Midland was talked at 45-42 cents under benchmark WTI/Cushing, about seven cents weaker than
Tuesday.

Light Louisiana Sweet/St. James was heard done at minus 45 cents, minus 44 cents and minus 43 cents on Wednesday, but remained firmly in its range of 45-42 cents under WTI/Cushing.

Heavy Louisiana Sweet/Empire was not heard sold on Wednesday, and was notionally valued at 66-57 cents under WTI/Cushing, traders said.

Activity was slight in the offshore sour crudes as well. Eugene Island crude was talked in a wide range of $1.45-1.25 under WTI/Cushing, as was Bonito Sour, at minus $1.15-1.05.

11/11 17:22 U.S. foreign crude - Forcados heads for U.S. Gulf

NEW YORK, Nov 11- The U.S. remained awash in foreign crude on Wednesday, with a backlog of both sweet and sour grades keeping sentiment in the market decidedly bearish.

WEST AFRICAN, NORTH SEA

-- New York and London crude oil futures both crept higher on Wednesday, leaving the spread between the two markets at $1.48 a barrel, more than enough to make incremental crude sales from the North Sea to the U.S profitable.

-- Crude traders have taken the opportunity to offer a flood of North Sea Brent into the Gulf Coast, including a million barrels being shown by a player at January West Texas Intermediate (WTI) less $1.05 for mid-December arrival. On top of that, two other traders are also said to be offering December North Sea Brent around the same level.

-- West African crudes also remain well-supplied. A U.S. major oil company bought an LR2 of Nigerian Forcados on Tuesday at parity to Dated North Sea Brent, and plans to bring the barrels into the U.S. Gulf Coast.

Another trader is said to be offering a Forcados cargo loading around 20-21 November at 75 cents under WTI into the U.S. Gulf Coast. But traders are hesitant to chase Forcados cargoes because of recent interruptions to loadings at Shell's Nigerian terminal.

"It's going to take some kind of discount to force Forcados in here," one trader said Wednesday, adding that there were more than enough other West African crudes to choose from, including Qua Iboe and Bonny Light.

-- Indeed, one Bonny Light cargo loading 16-17 November and destined for the U.S. was said to have sold on Tuesday at the equivalent of about North Sea Dated Brent plus five cents a barrel.

-- Also, a cargo of Angolan Cabinda loading around 26-27 November is being shown in the Gulf Coast at January WTI less $1.35 a barrel, traders said Wednesday

LATAM - VENEZUELA, COLOMBIA, ECUADOR, CHILE, MEXICO

-- Latin American traders said Venezuela has nearly sold out of all its December program for light crudes, with just one or two cargoes of sour Mesa/Furrial and one sweet Santa Barbara cargo still available. On Tuesday, Mesa sold at about $2.73 under WTI, or about five cents weaker than last week.

The last Santa Barbara trade was reported at $1.65 under WTI.

-- U.S. traders said Wednesday there was no shortage of Colombia's Cusiana in the market, with the light sweet crude assessed around $1.65/1.50 under WTI.

-- Mexico's Pemex said on Wednesday it produced 3.03 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude in the third quarter, slightly lower than the 3.07 million bpd it produced during the same period a year ago. The state-owned oil company also said third quarter crude exports averaged 1.64 million bpd, compared to 1.79 million bpd during last year's third quarter.

-- There was no news of repairs to Colombia's second largest pipeline, the Cano Limon-Covenas line, which was bombed on Tuesday for the 70th time this year, forcing all crude pumping to be halted.

IRAQ

-- Iraq's sour Basrah Light is making its way into the Gulf Coast as well, with offers for early January barrels said to be at WTI less $2.10 a barrel.

-- Meanwhile, tensions between the U.S. and Iraq continue to escalate, with President Clinton warning Baghdad that the U.S. was prepared to act with force if Iraq doesn't comply with U.N. arms inspectors. Backing his statements, the U.S. ordered 129 warplanes and over 3,000 troops to the Gulf.

In anticipation of possible U.S. strikes, the U.N. has withdrawn all its arms inspectors, though some staff remained to monitor the "oil-for-food" program.

11/11 17:26 North Sea Brent firms a cent in late U.S. trade

NEW YORK, Nov 11 - December North Sea Brent crept a cent higher in late U.S. trade on Wednesday.

December Brent was valued at $12.12 a barrel in the aftermarket, or a cent higher than its close on the International Petroleum Exchange earlier in the day. January North Sea Brent was placed at $12.49 a barrel, after a 200 lot partial cargo traded at $12.49 and a 100 lot partial cargo traded at $12.50 a barrel.

January North Sea Brent closed at $12.48 a barrel on the International Petroleum Exchange.

Meanwhile, one full cargo of December cash Brent changed hands on Wednesday at $12.12 a barrel. Also, traders said a 100 lot December partial cargo was done at $12.14 a barrel.

They added that the December-January spread traded twice at minus 34 cents a barrel.

11/11 17:40 U.S. spot products-Mogas drops on pipeline freeze

NEW YORK, Nov 11 - A freeze on gasoline nominations on prompt November gasoline on the Colonial Pipeline dragged down both U.S. Gulf Coast gasoline differentials and the NYMEX late Wednesday, traders said.

Gulf Coast gasoline differentials shed a penny which lead to New York Harbor levels slipping 0.20 cent on prompt supplies and a penny on December barrels.

Chicago gasoline however ended with the greatest losses, of around two cents, partly on the back of the losses in the Gulf, but also as it extended a price correction, traders said.

The Colonial Pipeline told shippers that nominations for remaining November cycles (32 and 33) showed rapid recent growth due to market conditions, and it had frozen Line 1 gasoline nominations for the 32 cycle and was monitoring the 33 cycle.

One analyst said "I think there's a better than 50/50 chance that they will soon allocate, or prorate, the distillate line, as they did in 1997 and other prior years". "The freeze shouldn't be a huge surprise, as refineries are finally back up to near capacity and, up to now, the market has been paying them to maximize gasoline instead of some distillates. The latter may change now to a maximum distillate mode, which will likely precipitate that proration," he added.

Gasoline futures also took a cue from the bearish cash market although one NYMEX trader said the fall was directly due to big trading house selling.

"The (futures) market is tired of waiting for something to happen with Iraq," said a source.

December gasoline on the NYMEX settled down 0.66 cent per gallon at 40.54 cents, defying the upward trend crude and heating were taking on the Iraq tensions.

December crude settled three cents per barrel higher at $13.55 while heating oil closed 0.16 cent per gallon firmer at 37.92.

But part of the fall on gasoline futures was also due to bearish stock data, some sources said.

The American Petroleum Institute (API) report late Tuesday said there was an unexpected gasoline build of 1.6 million barrels to 202 million barrels.

The API also said crude stocks rose 1.9 million to 314.8 million barrels, while distillates drew 332,000 barrels to 147 million barrels.

GULF COAST

The gasoline freeze on the Colonial Pipeline dominated the market in the afternoon, with few sellers with November supplies turning aggressive and bringing down regular gradedifferentials by a penny.

Prompt regular conventional M4 gasoline on the back 32 cycle traded at a 7.00 cents discount from the morning quotes at 5.75 to 5.95 cents discount, and the anys at 6.40 cents from 5.85/5.65 cents under.

But the freeze stymied talk and trade on the rest of the grades and the market, traders said.

"It dried up the market..nobody is doing anything else," a trader said.

One analyst said, "The 32 cycle gasoline nomination freeze will not affect a lot of barrels, as most everything that wants to move has already been nominated - but a few sellers are left looking for buyers who not only want extra product, but also have the space to move it".

Premium conventional V4 grades were pegged notionally at a 3.10 cent regrade to the M4, the reformulated regular A4 at a 2.75 cents discount to the print.

On the distillates, prompt low sulphur diesel was pegged steady at 1.50/1.40 cent under and heating oil at a 2.75/2.65 cents discount.

Jet fuel which schedules on the back 32 cycle, traded steady on the 54-grade at a 1.00 cent over the screen and the 55-grade pegged at a 1.00 cent regrade.

MIDCONTINENT

Chicago gasoline and diesel differentials extended their weaker tone from the morning, aided by drop in the Gulf gasoline.

"But both were overpriced and had room to come off," a trader said.

Gasoline took the brunt of the fall, crashing by around 2.0 cents to a 4.75/4.50 cents discount, the anys at 5.00/4.75 cent and ratable December traded at 5.50 cents down.

Low sulphur diesel in Chicago fell 1.50 cent to a 2.50 cents premium on the prompt second cycle, 1.50 premium on the third and 1.00 cent down on the December ratable.

Group Three's early week fall found a momentary floor with more buyers emerging although some traders were still bearish amid hefty pipeline supplies.

Low sulphur diesel in the Group was pegged steady at flat to 0.25 cent premium while regular gasoline traded at 4.75 and 4.95 cents below the print compared to previous day's quotes at 5.00/4.90 cents below the print.

NEW YORK HARBOR

Harbor differentials slipped on weaker Gulf differentials that cratered on news of the Colonial Pipeline freezing prompt gasoline allocations, traders said.

Prompt gasoline differentials slipped about 0.20 cent to 2.25/2.00 cents under for material by November 15, and slipped about a penny to over 4.00 cents under the screen for December supplies.

Heating oil differentials, strong all week, slipped slightly on market talk of a possible looming chance of a freeze on the distillates section of the pipeline.

But heat was still comparitively strong, about 0.60 cent higher than last week, at 0.60/0.40 under the screen, with trades at 0.50 cent under. Sellers were still holding supplies to store to take advantage of the strong futures contango, traders said.

Low sulphur diesel was unchanged in thin trade at 0.15/0.25 cent over the December screen, with only Laurel pipeline trade heard at 0.30 cent over the print.

Jet fuel 54-grade firmed on pipeline restrictions in the Northeast to 5.60/5.80 while 55-grade was pegged at 6.50/6.75 cents over the screen.

Prompt conventional M5-gasoline differentials strengthened slightly with supplies by Nov. 15 pegged at 1.75/1.50 cents under the screen, and the anys at 2.25/2.40 cents under.

Regular RFG A5 grade was steady at a 0.35/0.50 cent premium, A9 at a 1.50 cents premium, and premium grade D5 at a 2.25/2.50 cents premium.

11/11 21:34 U.S West Coast crude diffs flat, trade thin again

LOS ANGELES, Nov 11 - U.S. West Coast crude oil differentials were flat again Wednesday with no fresh deals reported.

Business remained slow because traders were returning from the American Petroleum Institute's (API) annual meeting which many players attended in San Francisco.

West Coast refinery buyers were said to be busy with calculations aimed at avoiding large year-end inventories which could result in large tax liabilities.

Dealers said it might take some time for refineries to assess their remaining supply needs for the year and that could further dampen trading until the end of the week.

The benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose slightly for a second straight on further Middle East tensions.

The discount of Alaska North Slope (ANS) crude for delivery on the West Coast remains at $1.37 a barrel, so the notional spot price for ANS edged up to $12.18/12.34 a barrel, a rise of some nine cents.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (13430)11/12/1998 10:34:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
DAILY REVIEW OF NATURAL GAS & CRUDE OIL PRICING - ALONG WITH RELATED NEWS / Part 4

CRUDE OIL - CONTINUED

Index To Articles

11/12 01:46 US Crude Outlook - Imports soar, bears in control
11/12 01:56 US Products Outlook-Imports, restarts pound products
11/12 03:18 Qatar says expects West to hit Iraq before Nov 30
11/12 07:49 U.S. ready for decisive Iraq strike - officials
11/12 07:38 Early NYMEX Energy Futures Calls: Higher


11/12 01:46 US Crude Outlook - Imports soar, bears in control

NEW YORK, Nov 9 - The U.S. crude market could be set for another bruising this week, as a stream of imports heading for an already saturated market looks likely to keep oil prices the defensive, traders said Monday.

Even rising tensions between Iraq and the United Nations appeared to take a back seat to worries about oversupply on Monday, as the front-month futures contract settled down almost 50 cents a barrel.

By the close of trade, the New York Mercantile Exchange contract stood at just $13.38 a barrel, the sixth consecutive session that the contract has finished lower.

"I think the flat price is going to test $13 pretty quickly," one cash crude trader said Monday. "There's just too much oil around." U.S. crude stocks have climbed steadily higher over the last month, and at 344 million barrels, stand some 31 million barrels above last year, according to the latest American Petroleum Institute (API) figures.

This week's API report could show another sharp rise in stocks, given the stream of imports heading into the U.S. Gulf Coast, traders said.

The explosion in imports includes crude cargoes steaming over from the North Sea and West Africa, attracted by the relatively wide spread between world benchmarks West Texas Intermediate/Cushing and North Sea Brent. By the close of trade Monday, WTI stood at a $1.48 a barrel premium to Brent, easily enough to make incremental shipments from Europe to the U.S. profitable.

On the Gulf Coast, December Brent is being offered at $1.05 a barrel under January WTI/Cushing prices, compared with offers at a 90-cent discount last week.

Colombia's Cusiana is also well supplied, after more than 2.5 million barrels of the light sweet crude was sold to U.S. companies last week. The four cargoes, scheduled to load between Dec. 8-22, were sold between $1.49 and $1.64 under WTI/Cushing by state oil company Ecopetrol. In the previous Ecopetrol sale, three early December loading cargoes were done at around minus $1.60-1.55 a barrel.

As competition to supply both sweet and sour crude intensifies, Saudi Arabia and Mexico have announced sharp cuts to their official selling prices over the last couple of days.

For the Americas, Pemex lowered its price on Maya heavy crude oil by 30 cents per barrel, while cutting its price on extra light Olmeca by 10 cents and Isthmus by 20 cents for December. The cuts, one trader said, came as yet another sign that "the market is looking bad."

Crude traders said the Saudi price cuts were no less steep, reporting a 25-cent decline in Arab Light and Arab Heavy prices, and a 35-cent drop in Arab Medium prices. They added that the Berri Extra Light price was cut 20 cents to $2.60 under WTI/Cushing.

Oversupply is also taking its toll on U.S. crude prices, particularly Light Louisiana Sweet/St. James, the grade most sensitive to competition from imports.

LLS/St. James was valued at a relatively cheap 45-40 cents under benchmark West Texas Intermediate/Cushing on Monday. Heavy Louisiana Sweet/Empire, which is less liquid than LLS, appears similarly weak at 67-62 cents under WTI/Cushing.

Also, an international major is said to be offering Cusiana out of the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (LOOP) at parity to LLS/St. James.

Sycrude Canada, meanwhile, said Monday that its synthetic oil production was nearing its 230,000 barrels per day capacity once again after it had been cut in about half last week by mechanical problems at an upgrading plant. The supply interruption had provided some short-term support to sweet crude prices, but a company spokesman said repairs had been completed over the weekend.

11/12 01:56 US Products Outlook-Imports, restarts pound products

NEW YORK, Nov 2 - Bearish pressure from imports and from last week's return of two U.S. refineries from fall turnarounds should dominate oil products this week, traders said.

"You think gasoline is cheap here? The price is desperately cheap in Asia and Europe," said one Gulf trader about the situation cracking open the arbitrage window in the New York Harbor.

While traders said at least 12 cargoes of gasoline were in the water on their way to the New York Harbor, one Gulf trader said six cargoes were fixed to ports all over the U.S. on Monday alone.

Those six included cargoes from Europe, where the Rhine River, a major route to the Rotterdam refining hub, is flooded and partially closed to barges, and a cargo from St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Also adding pressure on products is the fact the scheduled maintenance season is over, with no more major turnarounds on the slate until the spring.

Last week Sun Co. <SUN.N> restarted its 177,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) crude distillation unit at its Philadelphia refinery which was just part of around 430,000 bpd of production to return from maintenance shutdowns that week.

The Sun turnaround came just Tosco's Bayway turnaround, and the two combined helped knock East Coast crude runs to their lowest level in five years.

The low level of crude runs caught some New York traders short last week after a small draw on gasoline brought about in part by short supplies of blending stocks. This week traders said prices should be beaten down.

"Gasoline has been unusually strong with a number of turnarounds in the northeast - i expect it will soften," said one New York trader with a major refining company.

"On the distillates, it is the same type of situation -- there will be a bit more pressure until the we see colder weather," he added.

Distillates in the northeast were supported last week as traders with storage took advantage of the contango in the market to buy the cheaper prompt supplies of the heating fuel, lifting outright prices by over a penny to around 38 cents per gallon.

Now Gulf traders say the additional storing of heating oil in the New York Habor leaves little room for Gulf gasoline to be sold to up North. In addition, adding further pressure, traders said that gasoline storage was high in the Midcontinent trading hub and the Caribbean.

"Nothing looks bullish here all week," said one Gulf trader.

In the Harbor, traders said jet fuel was the only thing looking up, still in short supply from refinery problems in the Gulf. "There is not a whole lot of jet around...there is a lot of demand but very low stocks," said a Northeast trader.

11/12 03:18 Qatar says expects West to hit Iraq before Nov 30

KUWAIT, Nov 12 - Qatar's foreign minister said in remarks published on Thursday that he expected military strikes against Iraq to be launched before the end of November.

"I can say that the inclination towards a military strike is stronger than before and I expect that the strike will occur before the end of the current month," Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jabr al-Thani told al-Rai al-Aam daily in an interview in Doha.

"The situation now is escalating and this escalation must not continue because I see the doors for a diplomatic solution almost closed or closed. The situation between Iraq and the United Nations has become critical to a point that a diplomatic solution would be hard to find," he added.

The United States on Wednesday ordered a major build-up of troops and weapons near Iraq and U.S. President Bill Clinton said he was ready to use force to compel Baghdad to submit to U.N. weapons inspections.

The United Nations, Britain, Australia and the United States have begun moving staff in the Gulf region out of harm's way, and for the first time in seven years all U.N. weapons inspectors and their support staff were withdrawn from Iraq.

Baghdad says it will not reverse its October 31 decision to halt cooperation with inspectors trying to enforce compliance with U.N. resolutions ordering the eradication of Iraqi nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.

Qatar "told the brothers in Iraq that the subject is important and serious and there must be cooperation with" the U.N.'s arms inspection teams, Sheikh Hamad said.

11/12 07:49 U.S. ready for decisive Iraq strike - officials

KUWAIT, Nov 12 - The United States and Britain are beefing up their forces in the Gulf for a major military campaign against Iraq, officials and defence sources said on Thursday.

"It is not going to be like Afghanistan and Sudan, firing a few cruise missiles in the air," said a senior Western officer familiar with preparations for possible strikes to punish Iraqi President Saddam Hussein for refusing to cooperate with United Nations weapons inspection teams.

"It is going to be a far-reaching and major operation provided he does not raise his hands in the air after the first day and say 'I had enough'."

Other military experts and officials cited the number of additional U.S. ships, planes and troops being sent to the region as a sign that Washington was planning to bomb Iraq into meeting all U.N. arms inspection demands.

"This does not look like a surgical operation against a few key targets," a Western ambassador said. Washington is sending 18 B-52 and B-1 bombers along with 12 radar-avoiding F-117A "stealth" jets. The buildup, the second this year, will bring U.S. forces poised near Iraq to more than 300 aircraft and 20 ships, including two aircraft carriers. Some 3,000 U.S. troops are also expected to come to Kuwait to join the 1,500 regularly deployed near the Iraqi border.

"If you listen closely to Washington and London you will realise that they stress on the word 'decisive' action -- that is the critical word. They plan to seriously hit the regime and its capabilities," said a Western officer.

But defence experts doubt the operation would include a ground confrontation as crossing into Iraq could draw major objections from other world powers and regional states.

"But you never know with Saddam," one Gulf official said. "If he retaliates against the strikes by trying to cross into Kuwait again or fire missiles at neighbours then you could see a need and sufficient support for ground operations."

Although no date has been set, some officials in the region say a strike could be days away, adding Washington had told Abu Dhabi it would take into consideration the opening of the annual Gulf Arab summit in the United Arab Emirates on December 7.

Arab opposition to military action is slowly building, although some states blame Iraq and have urged Baghdad to reverse its decision to end cooperation with the U.N. teams.

Iraq is under stringent sanctions and U.N. weapons monitoring over its 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

The military buildup comes at a time when Gulf Arab states are suffering from a sharp drop in revenues due to weak oil prices, limiting their ability and desire to at least partly finance the operation.

Haggling over payment has led to many disputes since the costly 1991 Gulf War, with repeated buildups in response to crises with Iraq.

A caricature in the Thursday edition of Kuwait's al-Rai al-Aam newspaper showed American, British and French representatives filling money bags every November from a tap marked Gulf.

The last crisis with Iraq ended in February with an accord brokered in Baghdad by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

11/12 7:38AM - Early NYMEX Energy Futures Calls: Higher

New York-Nov. 12-FWN--

--Crude oil futures are called to open 25 cents higher.

--Heating oil is called 100 points higher and unleaded gas futures are called to open 70 points higher.





To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (13430)11/12/1998 10:42:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15196
 
INTERNATIONAL BRIEF REVIEWS

Ramco seeks more work in ex-Soviet Union

CHICAGO, Nov 11 - Independent oil company Ramco Energy Plc, the Aberdeen, Scotland-based partner in the massive Azerbaijan International Operating Consortium (AIOC), is looking to develop more projects in the former Soviet Union, Chairman and Chief Executive Steve Remp said on Wednesday.

"I would very much like to see us in Kazakhstan and we are endeavoring to acquire some offshore acreage in Kazakhstan as we speak," he told Reuters in an interview.

"And we're also looking at a gas project with a major western partner in Uzbekistan. For that to succeed would require a partnership with Gazprom <GAZPq.L> in order to move Uzbek gas into Russia," he added.

The 12-company AIOC consortium operates the Azeri, Chirag, Gunashli (ACG) field in the Caspian Sea off the coast of Azerbaijan, which is estimated to have a minimum of five billion barrels of recoverable reserves.

Ramco Energy has a 2.0825 percent stake in the AIOC.

British Petroleum Co. Plc <BP.L>, which currently has a 17.13 percent stake in the AIOC, will emerge as by far the largest partner after its merger with Amoco Corp. <AN.N>, which will raise its share to 34.14 percent in the consortium.

Remp noted that by the end of the year, the ACG field would be producing 100,000 barrels per day, far exceeding earlier forecasts.

"The five wells are all producing at twice the original forecast rate of 10,000 barrels per day," he said. "The performance of the reservoir has exceeded best expectations."

Industry sources estimate production for the ACG field should peak in 2006 at around 870,000 barrels per day.

Ramco also has an interest in further development of the adjacent shallow-water Gunashli field, a project in which Conoco Inc. <COC.N> has become the major partner. Conoco is still majority owned by DuPont Co.<DD.N>

The shallow-water Gunashli field is estimated to have a minimum of 750 million barrels of recoverable reserves.

Conoco has been negotiating with SOCAR, the state oil company of Azerbaijan, about further development of the Gunashli field, where production has declined to about 100,000 barrels a day from a peak of 140,000 barrels.

The cost of recovering the Gunashli field's oil has been estimated at about $1.5 billion. Ramco Energy's interest in the project has been estimated by sources in Baku at 15 percent to 20 percent.

"By our standards, that would be a very big project," Remp said.

Earlier this year, Ramco also struck a deal with Montenegro for the rights to half the country's offshore acreage.

Remp said he was looking for one or more major partners to join Ramco with drilling to begin in the year 2000.

"Probably the most exciting thing that we're doing is Montenegro," Remp said, referring to the republic within the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. "Clearly, this is just a project at the moment, and we need to find there is big oil."

Qatar's gas sector faces tough times ahead

DOHA, Nov 12 6:30AM - (AFP) - Qatar's gas industry faces tough times ahead but is in a better position than most to emerge unbowed from the economic turmoil that has strained the sector, industry sources said.

Qatar, a country of just 522,000 people, four-fifths of whom are expatriates, is sitting on top of the world's third largest gas reserves, but its geographical fortune has produced little wealth so far.

The prospects of a turnaround in the near-term look grim as its main market, Asia, continues to writhe in economic agony and some of its established markets, like South Korea, look distinctly wobbly.

But industry sources this week said that while the gas wealth will be delayed, its eventual arrival, in as little as four years, is secure.

"The projects will come on-line more slowly than planned, but they are already mostly financed and, unlike some other gas producers, it is a question of when those projects are completed rather than if," one industry insider said.

Despite predictions to the contrary, Qatar has not cancelled any of its gas projects, although many have been slowed down in the face of stagnant or retreating markets in Asia.

This may have dampened expectations, but Qatar's situation looks distinctly rosier than other producers who left their financing until after the global economic crisis began.

"Today, I don't see any grassroot projects surviving, because of the cost," the Gulf emirate's Energy and Industry Minister Abdulla ibn Hamad al-Attiyah told AFP in an interview earlier this week.

But even once Qatar's gas projects are completed, there still remains the problem of finding buyers.

The emirate is already struggling to off-load its current production of liquefied natural gas (LNG) and despite large contracts with Japan, Korea and India there is still substantial excess production.

It also has the disadvantage that its long-term deals with Japan's Chubu Electric Power Co., seven smaller deals with Japanese power and gas firms, Korea Gas Corp. and India's Petronet will take some time to kick in.

The Chubu contract, for instance, includes a phase-in over three years from 1997 until 1999. The other deals will not reach their full contractual amount until, in some cases, 2002.

On paper this should give Qatar's two gas companies, Qatargas and Rasgas, combined sales of more than 18 million tonnes a year by 2002, but some doubt remains as to whether all the contracts will survive at their present scale.

Diplomats in Doha familiar with the country's gas sector said that Rasgas may be preparing to divert production to the new 20-year Petronet if the Korean contract is cut back or cancelled.

Because of Asia's economic troubles, gas producers, including Qatar, will face shorter contracts, lower prices and less creditworthy clients in the medium-term, according to industry analysts.

Qatar's gas firms have tried to fill in these demand gaps through new practices like spot sales, but the success of these schemes has been limited.

Qatargas this year secured its first spot sale with Duke Energy of the United States, but it was only for 51,000 tonnes of LNG in December.

Meanwhile, gas producers are hoping that these sorts of measures will only be a stop-gap until new long-term demand emerges from an Asian recovery in the next decade.

"A period of slowed economic growth for Asia will delay, but not reverse, the region's trend of increased gas use, particularly in the form of LNG," Naji Abi-Aad, a senior advisor at the Observatoire Mediterraneen de L'Energie said at a gas summit in Abu Dhabi last month.

Today in the energy markets - Nov 12th

DIARY OF ENERGY MARKET EVENTS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12

ROME - Second Annual Global Gas, business opportunities and gas strategies upstream and downstream conference organised by Global Pacific and Partners at Rome Cavalieri Hilton Hotel. For information see www.glopac.com (To November 13).

NEWBURY RACECOURSE, England - British BioGen industry group holds annual conference. Speakers from across the industry and government will present a new vision for large-scale deployment of bioenergy in the first decade of the next millennium.

LONDON - Gas-to-Liquids world forum conference and exhibition to be held at the Renaissance London Heathrow Hotel by IBC conferences.

LONDON - International Conference on the Future of Transportation Fuel Quality in Europe conference organised by the Institute of Petroleum to be held at the Rutherford Conference Centre.

CHENNAI, India - Energy Summit (Second day).

BUENOS AIRES - International conference on climate change (Eleventh day).

BUENOS AIRES - "Expominar" international mining industry seminar (Final day).

LYON, France - UNCTAD Partners for Development Summit (Final day).

MELBOURNE - VicGas 98 Summit (Final day).

TOKYO - International oil symposium on the challenges facing the petroleum industry, hosted by the Japan Cooperation Center for Petroleum (Final day).