The Benefits of Liquidity

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The Benefits of Liquidity

Liquidity is perhaps one of the most important elements in gauging opportunities in a market.

At its core, liquidity is the collective expression of traders’ opinions on the market.

Like any other market, these opinions are represented in a futures market either as existing positions held by traders, known as open interest, or as buy or sell orders communicated to the rest of the market but yet to be executed.

The size and price of these orders may vary considerably, but the key element to consider is that the more opinions that are expressed in the market, the more liquid the market is.

Liquidity is such an important element of market opportunity because the more participants there are, the more expressions of opinion on the market, the greater the likelihood that a single trader, like yourself, will encounter another with an opposing viewpoint that results in you both agreeing on a quantity and price to trade.

Example

Compare the Natural Gas (NG) futures market to the U.S. natural gas (UNG) ETF market. One NG contract is equivalent to 10,000 mmbtu of natural gas exposure. At a price of $2.722 per mmbtu, the notional, or dollar, value of a single contract is $27,220.

Notional Value = Price X Contract Multiplier

Notional Value = $2.722 X 10,000 (NG multiplier)

Notional Value = $27,200

At an average daily volume of 322,441 contracts as of fourth quarter 2014, the dollar value total of natural gas futures traded between participants on an average day is just shy of $8.8 billion.

The UNG ETF contract, which tracks the price of natural gas, trades at $13.94 per share. UNG reports an average daily volume of 12,582,300 shares, making the average notional value traded within the market of only about $175 million per day.

Conclusion

Understanding liquidity in a market is a critical consideration for traders before jumping into a trade. Futures markets offer deep liquid markets that let traders express their opinions in a tremendously efficient way.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Natural Gas Calendar Spread Options

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Calendar Spread options, or CSOs, are options on the spread between two futures contract months, rather than a single underlying contract month.

Unlike vanilla options that give the holder the right to enter  a long or short futures position, calendar spread options exercise into two separate futures positions: one long and one short.

For example, a Natural Gas option derives it price and potentially exercises into a Natural Gas futures contract. Whereas, a Natural Gas calendar spread option derives its price from the price differential between two Natural Gas futures contract months.

The Natural Gas term structure is defined by seasonality. The withdrawal season, thought of as winter, ranges from November to March and is noted for its volatility. The injection season, referred to as summer, ranges from April to October and is generally less volatile.

During the winter season, gas consumption peaks because of increased heating demand from residential, commercial and industrial end-users.

During the summer season, gas demand decreases while production continues, resulting in excess natural gas to can be stored. Because of unpredictable winter demand, the winter Natural Gas futures typically trade at a premium to the summer futures.

Calendar Spread Options provide a leveraged means of hedging against, or capitalizing on, a change in the shape of the futures term structure.

A call option can be exercised into a long futures position that is closest to expiration and a short futures position in a more distant month. The put option can be exercised into a short futures position that is closest to expiration and a long futures position in a more distant month. The strike price is the price differential between the long and short futures positions.

CSO Example

A trader is expecting a colder-than-normal winter and is bullish on the March/April spread, expecting March futures prices to trend much higher relative to April futures prices.

On December 1, the March/April spread is trading at a differential of 20 cents with March at $3.10 and April at $2.90.

The trader believes the March/April spread will settle higher than $1 when it expires at the end of February. The trader purchases a CSO call on the March/April spread at a strike price of 65 cents at a cost of 13 cents.

In order to break even, the March/April spread must reach at least seventy-eight cents upon expiration.

Purchasing a call limits the trader’s downside risk versus going long the futures spread. The maximum loss on the CSO is the premium paid, 13 cents, where the maximum loss on a futures position can be much greater.

At March futures expiration, the March/April spread settles at 1.10: March at 4.20 and April at 3.10.

The trader’s bullish sentiment was correct – and his CSO call settled in-the-money by 45 cents, netting a profit of 32 cents.

Traditionally, market quotes on CSOs were obtained through a broker or chat system. Now, market participants can transact CSOs through electronic trading platforms, like CME Direct.

Request for Quote

A Request for Quote (RFQ) is created by a market participant by selecting the option instrument or option spread instruments. An RFQ allows the submitter to anonymously gauge the market for price and size for an instrument or strategy. After the RFQ has been processed by CME Globex, the Request for Quote and any associated market price and size is disseminated to the marketplace.

Traders can then execute based on those prices or counter with their own price. Or they can do nothing at all – because there is no obligation to trade on a submitted RFQ.

Oil and gas prices are highly elastic with respect to various fundamental factors including weather, geopolitical risk and unanticipated supply and demand. Unpredictable changes from any of these factors can have an impact on forward curve prices and the correlation between the calendar months.

Calendar spread options provide a leveraged means of hedging against or capitalizing on, a change in the shape of the futures term structure. CME Group has a diverse product offering of Calendar Spread Options across Crude Oil, Natural Gas and Refined Products.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Introduction to Natural Gas

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Natural gas is the third most important source of energy after oil and coal. The use of natural gas is growing quickly and is expected to overtake coal in the second spot by 2030.

Natural gas was first developed commercially in 1825 in the United States, but took off as a major source of energy around the world in the 1970s. Today, natural gas is used by power plants to generate electricity, as well as for domestic cooking and heating.

The world’s largest producers of natural gas are currently the United States, Russia, Iran, Qatar, Canada, China and Norway. These countries have excess natural gas that can be exported to other countries around the world, which is either transported through pipelines or as liquefied natural gas (LNG).

LNG

LNG is natural gas that has been cooled to a temperature of minus 260 degrees Fahrenheit, or minus 160 degrees Centigrade. At that temperature, natural gas becomes a liquid and can be transported around the world by special refrigerated transport ships.

When it reaches its final destination, the LNG is allowed to regasify and can be sent through the normal pipeline system. Before the development of LNG, gas markets around the world operated independently, as they were based on local pipeline networks.

Regional Natural Gas

The three most developed demand centers for natural gas are western Europe, North America and north Asia. These regions have dense pipeline networks and high demand for natural gas.

Henry Hub

Natural gas is the fastest growing energy source in north America. There are dozens of natural gas trading hubs around the United States. But by far the most dominant is the Henry Hub in Louisiana. Henry Hub is strategically situated in a major onshore production region and is also close to offshore production.

Henry Hub also has excellent connectivity to storage facilities and to pipeline systems. This allows natural gas to be moved from supply basins and exported to major consumption markets. This highly integrated network is served by both interstate and intrastate natural gas pipelines. It is no surprise that the price of natural gas at Henry Hub has become the dominant global reference price for natural gas. Henry Hub is the delivery location for Natural Gas futures contracts at CME Group, the largest gas futures contract in the world.

UK and Norway

In western Europe, gas is the dominant fuel for electricity production. Prices are set at several trading hubs around the region. The two most important hubs in the region are the National Balancing Point or NBP in the UK and the Title Transfer Facility or TTF in the Netherlands. CME Group lists futures contracts based on both the NBP and TTF.

North Asia

In Asia, there tend to be fewer pipeline connections between different countries than is the case in Europe and North America. This explains why, until now, there has been no major price benchmark for natural gas in Asia. But this situation is changing with the increase in Asian imports of natural gas in the form of LNG. Platts, the price reporting service, assesses the north Asian LNG price through its Japan/Korea Marker or JKM index, which is listed for trading on CME Group.

Summary

The development of LNG means all the major production centers are now linked to the major demand centers. For the first time in history a truly global gas market is evolving.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Introduction to Natural Gas Seasonality

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Learn About Natural Gas Seasonality

When it comes to natural gas prices, traders see regular patterns of price fluctuation throughout the year. These patterns reflect the seasonal changes in weather.

Seasonality plays an important role when analyzing natural gas supply and demand. It helps gas producers, storage facilities and energy utilities manage their physical volume exposure as well as financial price risk in the market. By anticipating seasonality, they can adjust their operations and look to reduce their financial risks. Supply, demand and storage are the three major factors used in analyzing natural gas seasonality. Gas production is relatively stable, but may experience unexpected disruptions such as unscheduled pipeline maintenance, explosions or extreme weather.

In the United States, the gross production of natural gas has increased steadily over the past five years.

Within each of those years, seasonality plays a small role in production level changes. Seasonality patterns appear regularly on storage and consumption volumes, where there is a relative high price elasticity. This means storage levels and gas consumption respond quickly to market price changes.

You can see seasonality in this chart of U.S. monthly underground storage of natural gas. Storage levels tend to be highest between the end of October and mid-November, during the lead up to winter, and lowest at the end of winter after a season of high consumption.

Consumption Driving Patterns

When you look at consumption, heating and cooling demand are the main drivers for the cyclical pattern. In winter, the increase of space heating for both residential and commercial use leads to the surge of demand of natural gas. During the summer, use of natural gas is much lower due to summer cooling through air-conditioning. Other factors may influence the demand of natural gas, including climate change and the price of competing generation fuels sources such as coal and fuel oil. We can see the seasonal curve of storage matches the consumption curve. One of the most liquid futures contracts, Henry Hub Natural Gas futures, shows a distinct seasonal pattern. The cyclical change of production, storage and consumption are reflected on the price of this derivatives contract.

Having a general understanding of seasonality in natural gas markets and the potential impact on gas prices is important to anyone planning a natural gas trading strategy.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Oil: How the Market Dynamics Have Changed

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Oil prices are rising, driven by strong global growth and the reemergence of a Mideast risk premium. The market dynamics of this round of oil price increases, however, are strikingly different from recent episodes, such as in 2008 or 2012-2013. There are two key differences this time around that deserve our focus: (1) shale oil supply may respond more rapidly to price incentives than older technologies, and (2) the U.S. is now an oil exporter (as well as importer). As we explore these two topics, we will see some special nuances and caveats, too.

Figure 1: WTI Crude Oil Prices since 1996.

The collapse in the price of oil that began in the fourth quarter of 2014 and hit its trough in February 2016 was a delayed response to the massive increase in supply brought about by the U.S. shale oil revolution. The first stage of the price recovery during 2016 into the $40 to $55/barrel range was mostly an unwinding of the price, having been driven considerably below the marginal cost at which U.S. shale producers could profitably extract oil. During the oil price slide, there was selling by institutional pension and endowment funds, mostly through third-party managers, as these funds cut their asset allocation to commodities in general and oil in particular. There were also forced liquidations due to financial distress among certain oil market participants. Once the asset allocators had rebalanced and the financial distress selling had ended, the oil price drifted back up to better reflect the supply economics of the shale extractors who were emerging as the swing producers to challenge OPEC in the global market.

We are now in a second stage of price increases taking the range up toward $60 – $85/barrel. This time around the drivers are, first, the faster pace of global growth and secondly, the arrival of a Mideast risk premium due to rising tensions between Iran and Saudi Arabia, major oil exporters.  (See CME Group Senior Economist Erik Norland’s  research report from March 21, 2018, “Oil: Could Iran Risk Reverse Options’ Bearish Signal?” . Both the global growth and Mideast risk premium price drivers are expected to remain in play for the rest of 2018 and into 2019, keeping upward pressure on the price of oil. There are, however, mitigating factors, too.

Figure 2: Improving Global Growth Driving Oil Demand Higher.

With U.S. shale oil producers able to lift production more rapidly than more traditional extraction technologies, oil supply may be more elastic, at least over a 6-to-18-month time horizon than during past episodes of oil price rises. OPEC, or we should say Saudi Arabia and Russia, may also stop curbing production as prices rise closer to their target range.

In addition, at the end of 2015, the U.S. lifted its ban on oil exports, and since then the U.S. has become an important oil exporter on the world scene even as the U.S. continues to import oil. The importance of the U.S. being a meaningful oil exporter does not so much impact the level of prices as it does to forge a tighter linkage between competing benchmarks, especially West Texas Intermediate (WTI) and North Sea oil or Brent. Let’s turn first to the increased supply elasticity factor and then to the links between WTI and Brent.

Increased Oil Supply Elasticity

When a commodity has a relatively fixed or inelastic supply, then for given changes in demand the impact on prices is magnified compared to a commodity with highly flexible or elastic supply.  Natural gas is an example of a commodity in which supply responses to higher or lower prices are highly constrained in the short and even medium term.  Not surprisingly then, natural gas exhibits considerable price volatility due to demand swings, often driven by changing weather patterns.

Even before shale oil, crude oil production was always more elastic and responsive to price changes than natural gas. Short-term demand changes may be met by adding to or withdrawing from inventories. Also, Saudi Arabia often acted as the swing producer, feeling that it was in its long-term interest to have a less volatile price of oil. If upward price pressures persist and are perceived as long lasting, then both U.S. shale producers and OPEC may implement plans to increase long-term production.

Clearly, shale oil has changed the calculus for medium-term supply responses. Shale wells can be drilled and completed much more rapidly than traditional wells. With shale, the oil production peaks after 3 or 4 months and then declines towards zero in 18 to 24 months. What this means is that if the oil price rises considerably above the marginal cost of completing a new shale well, then shale oil producers can respond relatively rapidly to higher oil prices.  Since the shale production occurs over an 18-to-24-month time span, the impact on supply will dissipate naturally if the price falls and removes the incentive to put more shale wells into production. We also note, that shale producers are more likely to use risk management techniques, especially strips of oil futures contracts, to hedge price risk, since the flow of production from a shale oil well is reasonably predictable over its 18-to-24-month life. This means that the production pattern from that well will be unaffected by any subsequent price changes.  Oil production six to 12 months out, however, still will depend on new shale wells going into production, which will be a function of price, as well as many other constraining factors.

While the estimated marginal cost of putting new shale wells into production is a key metric, a sole focus on marginal costs will tend to over-estimate the supply response to higher prices.  Not all shale oil rigs are created equal.  Modern rigs can maximize output with sophisticated drilling sensors and more precise geological mapping.  As supply ramps up, some older, less efficient rigs may enter production, too.  Rigs also require skilled workers, who may be in short supply as production rises.  Inputs into the hydraulic fracturing process may also hit constraints, such as the supply of sand to mix with water and pump into the wells.  We note that while financing is generally available, there can be delays in arranging financing for capital projects and rising interest rates are raising financing costs.  Finally, one needs to consider that from time to time, there may be limits of the quantities of certain types of oil that refineries can easily accommodate, which could limit shale’s production temporarily.

Figure 3: Oil Production in the Three Major Countries.

None of these constraining factors are going to stop the rise of shale oil production in the U.S. as oil prices rise and remain above $60/barrel. We want to caution that the estimating a supply response to higher prices is much more complex than simply looking at the spread of the oil maturity curve versus the expected costs of production.

This time around, with oil prices above $60/barrel and rising with global growth and Mideast tensions, the production increases in the second half of 2018 and into 2019 are likely to take U.S. oil production toward 12 million barrels per day in 2019. This compares with current Russian production of around 11 million barrels per day and Saudi Arabian production of about 10 million. One must remember that just before cutting production, both Saudi Arabia and Russia bumped production up close to their limits to make the cuts look bigger. Still, if we are correct that OPEC may roll back its production restraints, then as much as 1.5 million additional barrels a day of Saudi oil may be coming to market in 2019 and possibly 0.5 million barrels a day of Russian oil.

This amount of new production would put a cap on oil prices even with growing global demand if it was not for the Mideast risk factor. To estimate the current Mideast oil premium, we want to examine the oil price futures maturity curve. The oil curve is in backwardation as of mid-April 2018, with WTI nearby month prices over $65/barrel, while the 24-month futures price is close to $57/barrel.  There are other factors influencing the maturity curve than the Mideast risk premium, but as recently as October 31, 2017, the curve was flat in the mid-$50s territory. We estimate that a $7/barrel risk premium may already be priced into the market and a $10 to $12/barrel premium is possible if Saudi-Iranian tension continues to escalate.

Figure 4: WTI Crude Futures Prices Maturity Curves.

The shape of the maturity curve also has a big impact on the willingness of shale oil producers to expand production. The spot price is the headline grabber, but the 6-to-24-month futures curve represents prices at which future production from a completed shale oil well can be hedged.  And the 6-to-24-month futures price range is still below $60/barrel. That is high enough to incent more production, yet again we are sounding the warning not to get too excited about future U.S. oil production going through the roof – steady growth though, seems highly likely.

U.S. Oil Exports and the Brent-WTI Price Spread

What matters to the Brent-WTI price spread is the connection point around the world. Back in the early stages of the shale oil production ramp-up, oil production overwhelmed the pipeline infrastructure and the Brent-WTI spot price spread widened to $20/barrel or more. Then, railroads came into play and massively increased capacity to bring Bakken oil to the East Coast refineries, where it could compete with Brent, or Brent substitutes, being shipped from Europe and the Mideast. That drove the spread closer to $10/barrel, or more or less the cost of railroad transport. As the pipeline infrastructure was improved the price spread narrowed further. And with the U.S. now an oil exporter, the global connection price is partly determined by shipping costs.

Figure 5: US Import/Exports of Oil.

Figure 6: Brent and WTI Spot Price Spread.

Shipping costs are a moving target, due to different vessel sizes, different contract terms (spot or term contracts for multiple shipments), fuel costs, etc. Nevertheless, somewhere in the $4 to $5-plus range, a tanker full of U.S. crude can leave the U.S. Gulf of Mexico and head for Europe or China.  As more and more U.S. shale oil production comes on line, some of it will find its way to export facilities in the Gulf of Mexico and thus serve as a key link in the Brent-WTI price spread determination process.

Conclusions

  • U.S. oil production may steadily rise to over 12 million barrels a day by the second half of 2019, so long as the 12-to-24-month futures price of oil remains around $55/barrel or higher.  Note, that it is the medium-term futures price, not the spot price, that will drive U.S. production higher.
  • If Saudi Arabia and Russia resume full production as oil approaches their price targets, the combination of U.S., Saudi and Russian oil production increases may serve as powerful limit on further oil price increases.
  • The upside wild card is the Mideast oil price risk premium, currently estimated at $7/barrel, which could go higher if Saudi-Iran tensions worsen.
  • The downside wild card is the sustainability of healthy global growth, which would be endangered if a full-scale tit-for-tat trade war broke out.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Is Crude Oil Taking Cue from Vegetable Oils?

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It looks like the ultimate case of the tail that wagged the dog: soybean oil foreshadowing price trends of crude oil (Figure 1).  It seems odd.  How could the modest soybean oil, whose average daily volume in dollar terms amounted to $2.8 billion in February 2017, lead the colossal West Texas Intermediate crude oil market, whose volume that same month was 21 times greater?

Everybody knows that the muscles in a dog’s tail aren’t strong enough to wag the animal but, as any dog owner knows, a canine’s tail is highly expressive and can indicate its feeling and what it intends to do.  Likewise, it’s fairly obvious that vegetable oils aren’t causing crude oil prices to move up or down.  But the vast difference in the size of the crude oil and vegetable oil markets may be a part of the explanation for their behavior.  Because of the relatively small size of the market, vegetable oil prices may be highly sensitive to subtle supply and demand shifts in crude oil.

Figure 1:

The key mechanism that drives the relationship is biofuels.  Sixty-four countries have or are considering biofuel mandates or targets, including the 27 nations of the European Union.  If crude oil is in short supply, refiners may increase their purchases of biofuels, driving the price higher.  Likewise, if crude oil supply is abundant or if demand is weak, refiners may reduce their buying of vegetable oils, driving the price down in a manner that appears to anticipate a coming decline in crude oil prices.

Over the past dozen years, the relationship between movements in vegetable oil prices and ensuing changes in crude oil prices have been quite remarkable:

Soybean oil ignored the rally in crude oil prices in 2006, and later that year crude oil prices corrected lower to the level of soybean oil prices.

As crude oil was falling in late 2006 and early 2007, soybean oil prices began to surge, ahead of the massive January 2007 to July 2008 bull market rally in crude oil to its all-time high.

Soybean oil prices peaked in March 2008, four months before crude oil prices reached their all- time highs in July of that year.

Soybean oil prices hit bottom in December 2008, followed four weeks later by crude oil.  By the time crude oil prices had regained their footing in February and March 2009, soybean oil was well into a rally.

Vegetable oil prices reached their post-financial-crisis peak in February 2011, almost three months before crude oil prices topped out at the end of April 2011.

While crude oil prices range-traded between $80 and $115 per barrel from 2011 through mid-2014, vegetable oil prices began a long bear market that foreshadowed the abrupt collapse of crude oil in late 2014.

Soybean oil prices bottomed in August and September 2015, almost six months before crude oil prices hit bottom in January and February 2016.

Recently, soybean oil prices have been plunging even as crude oil rallies.  Does this presage a coming decline in crude oil price?

There is no guarantee, of course, that such a relationship will hold up in the future.  There are at least two factors that could temper the apparent relationship between vegetable oil and crude oil prices: 1) some countries may sour on biofuel mandates and repeal them.  2) if crude oil traders accept that vegetable oils may be a leading indicator of crude oil prices, they might change their behavior and respond more quickly to moves in vegetable oil prices.  However, that doesn’t appear to be the case for the moment.

For the time being, crude oil traders might well be advised to heed the most recent moves in soybean oil and palm oil, and to give serious consideration to the possibility that the next move in crude oil might be downward.  There are other reasons to think that crude oil might be vulnerable to a decline, including:

Inventories, which continue to grow, are up 7% year on year.

U.S. production continues to grow and is up nearly 600,000 bpd since July.

Oil and gas rig counts continue to rise, implying a further increase in U.S. production over at least the next two months, if not longer.

Oil markets might also get jittery if they begin to doubt the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ ability to maintain production cuts in May when the producer group must decide if it will extend its six-month output reduction agreement that began January 1.

Oil prices have plenty of upside risks as well, including those coming from possible increases in demand and potential supply disruptions.  That said, if oil prices were to fall over the coming weeks or months, don’t say that the vegetable oil markets didn’t warn you.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Veg Oil vs. Crude Oil: Tail Wagging the Dog?

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Crude oil lies at the heart of our economic universe. Its byproducts gasoline, diesel and jet kerosene essentially serve as humanity’s only viable transportation fuels. From cosmetics to medicines to the ubiquitous plastic bottle, crude oil touches our lives in a myriad of ways, at times even without us knowing of it. Its presence is also felt strongly in the daily trading cycles of the various markets across the world, and we have written copiously this year on how changes in crude oil prices tend to move equity markets, and can cause certain equity sectors to outperform or underperform against major indices. Trading volume in crude oil and its products typically run into the tens of billions of dollars per day. However, despite its strategic heft, West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil prices have, over the past 15 years, consistently followed in the footsteps of a modestly traded product: vegetable oils. More specifically, soybean oil and palm oil can be said to be the tail that wags the dog (Figures 1 and 2).

Figure 1: Soybean Oil: A Leading Indicator of Crude Oil?

Figure 2: Palm Oil (in USD) has also Tended to Lead Crude Prices.

Vegetable oils leading price movements in crude oil began to be noticeable exactly 10 years ago. In the summer of 2006, WTI oil prices peaked at a then-record high of $77 per barrel, and by January 2007 had crashed to $51. Vegetable oils were unmoved by the crude oil correction and continued to rally, foreshadowing the powerful resumption of the crude oil bull market that took prices to over $140 by July 2008. Since then, vegetable oil markets have tended to lead crude oil on a number of bull and bear moves, including:

  • Vegetable oil prices peaked in March 2008, four months before crude oil prices reached their all- time highs in July of that same year.
  • Palm and soybean oil prices hit bottom in November and December 2008, two to four weeks before the bottoming of crude oil prices. By the time crude oil prices had regained their footing in February and March 2009, soy and palm oil were well into a rally.
  • Vegetable oil prices reached their post-crisis peak in February 2011, almost three months before crude prices peaked out at the end of April 2011.
  • While crude oil prices range-traded between $80 and $115 per barrel from 2011 through mid-2014, vegetable oil prices began a long bear market that foreshadowed the abrupt collapse of crude oil in late 2014.
  • Soy and palm oil prices bottomed in August and September 2015, almost six months before crude oil prices hit bottom in January and February 2016.
  • Vegetable oils peaked out in April 2016 and have since begun to correct, possibly indicating a slide in crude prices that might have begun this month.

Figure 3: High Levels of Inventories Might Bode Ill for Crude Oil Prices This Summer.

We are not certain why vegetable oils appear to lead crude prices, but one possibility is that when there is too much crude oil, vegetable oils get squeezed out of fuel blends or at least have their use reduced. By contrast, when there is a shortage of crude oil, vegetable oils might find themselves suddenly in higher demand. Producers may also not be as willing or able to store vegetable oils as they might for crude oil, which has seen massive fluctuations in storage levels (Figure 3).

Bottom line: Vegetable oil traders often look to crude oil markets for guidance on pricing, but crude oil traders might be well advised to look at the behavior of soybean oil and palm oil as a possible leading indicator of movements in crude prices.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Crude Oil Traders Sell on the Rumor and Buy on the News

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Market prices often move in the opposite direction of the expected impact of breaking news.  This is usually the case when the breaking news is not only expected but fully discounted into current prices.  An old saying is to “buy on the rumor. Sell on the news.”  and on the other side , to “sell on the rumor.  Buy on the news”.  The logic is that faster traders have already anticipated how the news would impact the markets and have already taken positions in order to sell to slower traders when the news is finally announced.

Oil traders had been expecting The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to announce production increases which would depress crude oil prices in the futures markets. After a week of tense negotiation in Vienna, Austria, OPEC was expected to make an announcement on Friday regarding production quotas for member countries over the next six months.  Over the past eighteen months, the cartel had agreed to cut production in order to support oil prices.  And the production cuts were supposed to extend to the end of 2018.

Iran has been a staunch opponent of production increases, since they need to keep the price of oil high enough to offset some of the country’s finances from US imposed sanctions.  Iraq and Venezuela also opposed the proposed increases.  But Iran’s nemesis, Saudi Arabia, which is OPEC’s biggest producer, has been advocating for an increase of one million barrels per day.  So have Russia and the US, who are not OPEC members, but are the world’s largest oil producers, along with Saudi Arabia.  On Friday, US President Donald Trump tweeted ahead of the scheduled press conference for OPEC members to help “keep prices down”.

Since May 22nd, crude oil futures had declined from 72.90 to a low of 63.40 a few days before the announcement.  But before the announcement was made, news leaked that the oil producing countries had agreed to start pumping more oil, and crude oil futures rallied strongly to settle at 69.28.  OPEC’s official statement said that member countries would return to 100% compliance with the 2016 deal to cut production.  Compliance had reached 152% by last month, meaning that OPEC members were cutting 600,000 additional barrels per day.  Since the original deal to cut production, along with Russia, is still in effect, the announcement just means that OPEC will not be cutting as much so that actual oil pumped will still increase.  But the news was enough to satisfy oil traders who had sold on the rumor of production increases and bought back crude as the expected outcome was announced.

One reason for a willingness to buy back may be the fact that US inventory numbers continue to show a drawdown, which adds to bullish sentiment.  And there is reason to believe that bullish inventory reports will continue into the future.  Ahead of an OPEC quota hike, member countries typically raise production as evidenced by their export figures.  Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and UAE are all reporting higher exports this month.  In the chart below, Saudi crude exports (blue line) from May to June jumped 500,000 barrels per day compared to the same period in 2016.  At the same time, the share of exports going to Asia (red area) has increased to its highest level since the production cut deal in 2016.  The increased Asian share has come at the expense of exports to the US

The effect is that the US has been forced to dip into their inventories to make up for the shortfall in supply.  While US production continues to increase because of fewer regulations and technological improvements, US economic growth is also picking up, which translates to a higher demand for crude oil in general.  Last week, the API inventory report showed that US oil inventories fell 3.02 million barrels, while the EIA reported a drop of 5.9 million back on June 15th.  Because the US is considered the most transparent market in the world, US inventory numbers are considered more reliable and have more effect in the crude oil market.

On the daily chart below, crude oil futures had been travelling up an expanding price channel (in blue)from a low of 45.58 on August 31st of last year.  On April 11th of this year, crude made a new price high and confirmed the price channel after several touches on both the upper and lower trendlines.  On June 1st, it broke below the price channel on low volume, and then retraced back up the bottom of the lower trendline before falling further to make an even lower low price (on even lighter volume).  Because the breakout from the price channel was on such low volume, it had a high probability of being a false breakout.  Even more importantly, price did not make a proper head-and-shoulders topping pattern within the expanding price channel; instead, it broke out too fast immediately after forming the head of the pattern.  This made it likely that we will see another new price high for 2018 at 72.90 inside the original blue price channel. And on Friday, the crude rally saw it recover back inside the original blue channel.

On the weekly chart below, we can see that the rising blue price channel was itself a roll-up breakout from a longer term rising price channel (in yellow).  In the third price wave of this pattern, it not only confirmed the price channel by making a new high, it also broke out into a steeper rising channel.  Another roll-up breakout channel from the blue channel into a steeper channel would probably be the final roll-up before a more serious correction.  If crude does not decline back into the original yellow channel and instead rolls up into an even steeper channel, the long term price target would be the original long term downward breakout at $100 (yellow dotted line).

 

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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WTI and the Changing Dynamics of Global Crude Oil

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The new storage and pipeline infrastructure in the United States is so significant that it is likely to have a transformational impact on the crude oil market for years to come. These changes are likely to spur more trading in U.S. domestic grades and will magnify the role of WTI as a global benchmark.

The catalyst for this transformation has been the sharp rise in U.S. oil production, and more recently, the lifting of the export ban on U.S. crude that occurred at the end of 2015. In order for the U.S. to turn itself from a net crude importer to exporter, several key pipelines had to be reversed. At the same time, oil refiners and storage operators along the Gulf Coast set about increasing the amount of available storage capacity. A number of new terminals are in the process of being built along the U.S. Gulf Coast to handle the rising number of ships arriving to load crude destined for the international markets. These infrastructure changes will transform the U.S. into the marginal supplier of the world rather than a regional supplier. This will allow producers to take advantage of arbitrage opportunities that present themselves beyond U.S. shores.

U.S. Crude Oil Production Proves Resilient

U.S. crude oil production has risen substantially from 5.1 million barrels per day (b/d) in January 2009 to 8.811 million b/d in October 2016, after its most recent peak of 9.55 million b/d in March 2016. U.S. oil producers have proved resilient in adapting to the lower oil price environment, defying expectations for significant production declines. However, output has not been unaffected, and since April 2015, output in the U.S. has fallen by around 800,000 b/d (October 2016), according to the Energy Information Administration (EIA).

U.S. drillers have had to be proactive at managing their costs to adapt to the lower oil price environment. With lower costs, some U.S. producers are able to continue producing when oil prices are much lower than had previously been envisaged.

The lifting of the export ban has created new opportunities for U.S. producers. This means that in countries outside of North America, U.S. crudes are able to compete alongside crudes from Europe and Asia. Houston is fast becoming a major export hub, and the infrastructure is being constructed and altered to accommodate higher export volumes. Traders will benefi from increased operational fl xibility to seek out arbitrage opportunities in the global oil markets.

Wood Mackenzie have forecast the longer-term outlook for supply in the United States, and according to their analysis, supply is expected to remain healthy for years to come. Based on the chart below, total crude supply that is already slated for commercial production is expected to plateau at around 12 million b/d during the period of 2025 to 2030. This would imply a supply gain of around four million b/d from 2017 to 2025.

Chart 1: U.S. Crude Oil Supply Forecast Remains Extremely Robust

Oil production in the non-conventional “tight” oil areas are a focus for U.S drillers, and production volumes are expected to remain robust going forward. “Tight” oil refers to the crude oil produced from shale, sandstone and limestone formations, as typically found in the Permian Basin, Bakken, and Eagle Ford areas. The Permian Basin includes the Wolfcamp and Bone Spring areas. Crude oil production from the onshore conventional areas have declined, but this is replaced by tight oil production from the Permian Basin, Eagle Ford, and Bakken. Chart 1 clearly shows the switch from conventional oil to non-conventional tight oil through 2035.

The WTI-Brent spread has become a true indicator of value for the U.S. crude exporters. With the spread trading between $1 and $2 per barrel discount to Brent, traders say that increased volumes of WTI linked crude oils may flow to countries outside of the US and Canada. Part of this is due to the relatively low cost of freight with traders able to benefit from the ability to offer a US bound cargo and a now a US origin crude oil export cargo as a single transaction to a ship owner. Without US crude oil exports being permissible, ship owners were previously only able to pick up US bound cargoes and struggled to find any return cargoes leaving their vessels out of place for subsequent voyages. Shipowners now have the choice of a back-haul crude oil cargo or a refined product cargo as the US exports both. This tended to result in higher freight costs to a charterer due to the lack of economies of scale (for the ship owner).

Further, the recent expansion of the Panama Canal allows for enhanced shipping alternatives for cargoes to transit from the U.S. Gulf to the Far East. The significant discounts for WTI compared to Brent from the past are unlikely to re-appear as any mispricing would be quickly re-aligned through a rise in U.S. crude exports, which was not the case in the past when U.S. crude remained non-exportable.

The WTI-Brent spread, when measured as a percentage of flat price, has changed significantly since 2012. Previously, when WTI was trading at a $28 per barrel discount to Brent, this represented around 23% of the flat price crude value. Currently, the WTI is trading between $1.00 and $1.50 discount to Brent, or 3% of the flat price. Volumes of WTI- Brent Futures and Options remain strong, and traders see the value in the spread as the true measure of the viability of U.S. exports.

Chart 2: WTI-Brent Arbitrage Price Narrows as U.S. Crude Oil Export Ban is Lifted

U.S. Exports Are Increasing

The lifting of the U.S. export ban has seen the volume of U.S. crude sold beyond North America rise noticeably. The volumes of U.S. exports will largely depend on the value of the WTI-Brent spread, and therefore volumes will be volatile when measured on a month-by-month basis. According to EIA data, the volume of crude oil sold to non-Canadian destinations averaged nearly 200,000 b/d over the January through August 2016 period, up substantially from 40,000 b/d in 2015. In October 2016, which is the latest data available, U.S. crude exports rose to 491,000 b/d.

Crude oil exports from PADD 3, which encompasses the U.S. Gulf Coast region, rose to a record high of 410,000 b/d in August 2016, surpassing the previous peak recorded in October 2015.

Chart 3: U.S. Crude Oil Exports by district (PADD)

Expansion of Crude Oil Infrastructure In The U.S. Gulf Coast

The U.S Gulf Coast comprises approximately 55% of the U.S. crude oil storage capacity, while Cushing comprises 13%. In recent years, storage capacity has seen an increase to accommodate the growing crude oil production. Moreover, commercial companies have continued to make investments in expanding their infrastructure portfolios.

The infrastructure investment in the U.S. Gulf Coast has transformed WTI into a waterborne crude, with extensive export capacity. The Seaway Pipeline links Cushing, Oklahoma to the Houston export market, with 850,000 b/d capacity. The Transcanada Marketlink Pipeline provides additional capacity of 700,000 b/d from Cushing to Houston. Further, the Magellan BridgeTex and Longhorn Pipelines carry up to 475,000 b/d from Midland, Texas to Houston. In addition, the Dakota Access Pipeline will provide additional capacity of around 450,000 b/d delivering Bakken crude oil to Houston when completed in 2017. All in all, the Houston market has become export- focused, with a terminal network with storage capacity of 65 million barrels and an additional 20 million barrels of storage capacity projected to come into service in 2017.

In Louisiana, the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (LOOP) is planning to transform itself into a dual-use terminal that will handle both exports and imports. LOOP is expected to allow Ultra-Large Crude Carriers (ULCC’s) and Very-Large Crude Carriers (VLCC’s) to load for export starting in 2018. Currently, LOOP can only handle in-bound crude oil tankers offloading crude oil for the refineries along the Gulf Coast. In addition, LOOP operates 70 million barrels of storage capacity, with additional tankage under construction.

Chart 4: Change in U.S. working crude oil storage capacity (Sept 2011 – March 2016 in millions of barrels)

NYMEX WTI Futures Volumes Outpace Brent Futures

Volumes on the NYMEX Light Sweet Crude Oil Futures contract (“WTI futures”) have been strong, in part reflecting the higher levels of volatility in both crude oil and refined products. The total volume of WTI futures when compared to Brent futures has been rising sharply, and the gap between the two contracts has been widening.

According to exchange data, the total volume of NYMEX WTI Futures traded for year-to-date (through December 31 2016) was 1.1 million contracts per day compared to 785,000 lots per day in ICE Brent Futures. Over the full-year 2015, WTI average daily volume was 800,000 lots per day, and Brent average daily volume was 685,000 lots per day. Year on year growth in WTI Futures is around 36%.

Chart 5: NYMEX WTI vs. ICE Brent Futures: 30-Day Average Daily Volume

Brent Production in Decline

As the crude oil supply picture continues to strengthen, the opposite would appear to be happening in the North Sea, where production output is set to decline sharply as producers struggle to contain the effects of the falling oil price.

The longer term viability of the North Sea is being called into question with producers either selling assets or cutting back on capital expenditures, which will curtail output in future years. Economists are predicting that North Sea output could decline sharply from 2017 onwards as the lower price environment puts pressure on the production outlook.

In our analysis of the Wood Mackenzie upstream data, the decline of the Brent, Forties, Oseberg and Ekofisk (BFOE) fields from 2020 onwards is expected to be significant. Based on their data, production is expected to fall from the current 850,000 b/d to under 600,000 b/d by 2023 which is less than one cargo of crude oil per day. This assumes that no changes to the number of crudes in BFOE complex are made before then.

Chart 6: Production Profile for the North Sea – 2016 to 2035 (in b/d)

Leading price reporting agency Platts (a division of S&P Global Inc.) has been making changes to the cash BFOE mechanism (or forward Brent market) and Dated Brent benchmarks by widening the delivery window from 15- days to month ahead. This increases the number of physical cargoes that can be delivered into the Dated Brent assessment. However, they (Platts) are continuing to look at possible solutions to address the issue of falling output in the North Sea and how to maintain stability in the Dated Brent benchmark in the years ahead. Platts have considered adding new grades into BFOE, but this is likely to alter the quality of Brent, and further modifications may be required to deal with the changing quality. Platts is considering the addition of a Norwegian crude oil stream called Troll2 which is classified as Light Sweet. This crude, if formally adopted by the market, could be potentially added to the basket of crude oils, referred to as BFOE, that make up Platts Dated Brent. This is the first possible addition to BFOE since 2007.

Dated Brent-related Derivatives Remain A Focus

In the Brent futures complex, in addition to the monthly Brent futures, there are also Dated Brent futures contracts, which traders use to hedge specific shorter-term exposure to physical Dated Brent. These futures contracts are a mixture of interrelated monthly and weekly futures contracts and form part of the overall Brent complex.

The suite of Dated Brent futures contracts provide a critical component for traders hedging Dated Brent risk on a shorter or longer term basis. The cleared volume of Dated Brent futures contracts has risen steadily over the past four years. According to exchange data, overall cleared volumes of Dated Brent futures were around 26,000 lots per day in 2016, up from 8,000 lots per day in 2013.

Chart 7: Dated Brent-related Futures: Cleared Average Daily Volumes (ADV)

As a result of these changing dynamics, NYMEX WTI has re-established its position as the premier pricing reference and is well placed to fulfil its role as the main crude price reference in the Atlantic Basin, as the supplies of WTI and other linked crudes (to WTI) begin to displace other light sweet crude streams. European and Asian refiners have been offered U.S. crude oil on a WTI-related pricing basis which will help to cement the role of WTI in the global crude oil marketplace.

Summary

The rise in importance of the U.S. crude market comes at a challenging time for crude oil markets in Europe. In the North Sea, as oil producers battle to maintain output in a lower oil price environment, U.S. drillers would appear to have a much more flexible cost base on which to adjust to different levels of price. Given the rise in U.S. production over the past five years, the role of WTI as the price reference for the marginal barrel of oil has increased significantly, and consequently, WTI has become the price leader again.

One potential opportunity could be that global markets adopt more WTI based pricing into their crude oil contracts. The lifting of the U.S. export ban has had a significant impact on global oil flows, and will lead to greater market efficiencies as companies look to gain arbitrage opportunities with the improved logistics of free trade. As a result, WTI has fully re-gained its status as the leading indicator for price discovery in the crude oil market.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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Are Crude Oil & Natural Gas Prices Linked?

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All examples in this report are hypothetical interpretations of situations and are used for explanation purposes only. The views in this report reflect solely those of the authors and not necessarily those of CME Group or its affiliated institutions. This report and the information herein should not be considered investment advice or the results of actual market experience.

Crude oil and natural gas are major fuels in the global energy mix. Their price linkage has been examined by many economists and industry observers due to its implications on broad swaths of the market including trading strategies, investment decisions, energy policy, and portfolio optimization.

Crude oil and natural gas prices have historically moved in tandem as a result of the linkage between the two commodities on the supply and demand sides. But their price relationship reached an inflection point after 2008 and they have since decoupled. The article discusses how the price relationship between crude oil and natural gas has evolved over time and the economic mechanisms behind their linkage from the supply and demand prospectives.

Figure 1

Chart Source: CME Group

Resource Competition

From the supply side, the crude oil and natural gas price linkage is mainly driven by the direct competition for drilling resources at the wellhead. Natural gas can be produced from three types of wells: associated, non-associated, and condensate wells. The associated wells produce primarily oil with natural gas as a by-product. The non-associated wells refer to the wells that produce just natural gas, sometimes with just a small amount of oil. The condensate wells produce natural gas along with natural gas liquids (NGLs). The economics of non-associated gas fields are different from the economics of associated gas fields as the development of the latter depend on the dynamics of the oil market.

Since most Exploration & Production companies produce both natural gas and oil, they have to make a decision related the allocation of capital and resources to the exploration and development of either commodity based on the return on investment. With respect to natural gas extracted from an oil rig, an increase in crude oil prices may likely lead to an increase in associated gas production which would likely exert downward pressure on natural gas prices.

On the other hand, an increase in crude oil prices may lead to increase oil drilling which would decrease natural gas drilling, potentially leading to higher natural gas prices. The price signal between the two commodities is a catalyst that can prompt suppliers to produce one fuel source instead of the other in order to maximize profits. To some extent, the oil-natural gas price relationship depends on the source of the natural gas.

Fuel Substitution

Some refined fuels produced from crude oil are competitive substitutes to natural gas. Residual fuel oil competes directly with natural gas in the electric power generation and industrial sectors. An increase in crude oil prices would likely encourage the substitution of natural gas for petroleum products, which would increase natural gas demand and then prices. This substitution effect is sometimes referred to as “burner-tip parity”. This implies that natural gas prices converge with the price of the competing fuel at the burner tip or at the final destination on a BTU-equivalent basis. Any increase in crude oil prices motivates end-users to substitute natural gas for petroleum products in consumption where possible. This in turn increases natural gas demand and hence prices.

Figure 2

Chart Source: CME Group

Crude-Gas Ratio

The industry has traditionally relied on the crude-gas ratio to measure the relative value of both commodities. Since 2000, this ratio has fluctuated between 3:1 and 54:1 which is different from the theoretical ratio of 6:1 based on the thermal parity also known as the Btu ratio. This ratio is derived from the fact that one barrel of oil is equivalent to 5.85 MMBtu. This implies that if the market prices of the two fuels were equal based on their energy content, the ratio of crude oil prices to natural gas prices would be approximately 6. As depicted in Figure 2, the ratio averaged 8 from 2000- 2007, then started to increase at the end of 2008 in response to the significant decline of crude oil prices during the recession. Afterwards, the ratio started to recover, reaching 27 in 2009, and continued to climb to reach a record 54 in 2012, due to the drastic increase in the oil price and decline in the natural gas price. During this period, the increase in the oil price was largely a result of the unstable political climate caused by the Arab Spring.

Meanwhile, natural gas prices weakened as production from the northeast Marcellus shale play started rising. The crude-gas ratio remained strong until 2014, which encouraged drilling for oil instead of natural gas. Concurrently, weak natural gas prices favorably impacted NGL economics by encouraging producers to switch to drilling more profitable NGL-rich wells. This led to the expansion of the processing industry which invested in infrastructure. From the demand side, end-users shifted their fuel preference to natural gas in order to cut costs. This shift in fuel preference is reflected through the growing trend of natural gas electricity consumption as illustrated in Figure 3.

Figure 3

Chart Source: EIA

The economic factors linking natural gas and crude oil markets through substitution and competition effects would suggest they are connected through a long-run relationship. As shown in Figure 1, crude oil and natural gas prices predominantly moved in synchronization prior to 2008 except for some periods in which natural gas prices spiked and moved independently of crude oil.

These price shocks were attributed to commodity-specific events as shown in Figure 4 & 5. In particular, natural gas is more prone to short-term price shocks and supply imbalances due to seasonality, storage dynamics, and weather-related events, which tend to increase the volatility and cause disequilibria to the short run oil and gas linkage. For example, in 2005 hurricanes Katrina and Rita caused a supply disruption that triggered a significant spike in natural gas prices, while the impact on oil prices was not significant. On the other hand, oil has a more geopolitical dimension and responds to global events. For example, following global economic expansion, oil prices rose to reach $145/bbl. In July 2008 then collapsed to below $40/bbl. because of the credit crunch and recession.

Figure 4

Figure 5

Chart Source: CME Group

The price relationship between natural gas and crude oil underwent a shift whereby natural gas prices strayed from oil prices following 2008. This apparent departure from the norm may have been attributed to the changes that affected the substitution and competition linkage between natural gas and crude oil.

For the past decade, the demand for residual oil for electricity production has contracted significantly for various reasons including: (1) the retirement of ageing petroleum generation assets, (2) the surge of new gas-fired combined cycle capacity turbines which have enhanced efficiency, (3) increased usage of natural gas in power generation due to low natural gas prices, and (4) environmental concerns which rise from high sulfur content of residual oil. These factors suggest that displacement due to gas-to-oil switching is a shrinking factor in determining the price relationship between natural gas and crude oil in terms of demand.

With respect to changes in the supply side, the Permian Basin in West Texas and New Mexico is at the center of the relationship between natural gas and oil production via associated gas. The production of both commodities has been experiencing soaring growth due to the lower breakeven costs and vast acreage that the basin offers. Permian associated gas is estimated at approximately 7 billion cubic feet (Bcf). Major players, including ExxonMobil, are spending billions of dollars to expand the infrastructure in the Permian because of its favorable drilling and production economics. The build-out in oil drilling and production is expected to stimulate an increase in associated gas. Although associated gas is an important component of US natural gas supply, the impact of this link has been relatively muted by strong supply from other shale plays specifically Marcellus/Utica, which has contributed to downward pressure and weak gas prices. Therefore, shale production has proved extremely important in the decoupling of oil and gas prices.

Conclusion

Natural gas and crude oil are both extremely important to the U.S. economy. The energy arbitrage between the two fuel sources was a significant determinant of their long-term price relationship, which in the past was relatively stable. The recent shale revolution has redefined the supply structure of the two fuel sources and has led to the decoupling of oil and gas prices. This fundamental shift is likely to prevail in the foreseeable future, unless the supply-induced downward pressure on gas prices is alleviated by a significant increase in exports of U.S. natural gas in the form of liquefied natural gas (LNG).

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

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