Natural Gas Futures - Jun 13 (NGM3)

 
This page contains a brief summary recommendation for Natural Gas: either strong Buy, Buy, Strong Sell, Sell or Neutral signals. It also offers a detailed technical analysis based on the buy/sell signals of moving averages (simple and exponential for a wide range of periods) and Buy, Sell, Overbought, Oversold or Neutral signals of common chart indicators (including RSI, MACD and CCI). In addition, the page contains pivot point levels for Standard, Fibonacci and Camarilla, among others. All CFDs technical studies are available in different time frames.
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4.227 -0.035    (-0.81%)
  24/05 GMT - Closed. Currency in USD ( Disclaimer )
Type: Commodity
Group: Energy
Unit: 1 Mmbtu

  • Prev. Close: 4.261
  • Open: 4.254
  • Day's Range: 4.216 - 4.295

Natural Gas Technical Analysis

Summary:STRONG SELL
Moving Averages:SELLBuy (4)Sell (8)
Technical Indicators:Strong SellBuy (1)Sell (7)
Pivot Points  May 25, 2013 12:03AM GMT
NameS3S2S1Pivot PointsR1R2R3
Classic4.2244.2274.2324.2354.2404.2434.248
Fibonacci4.2274.2304.2324.2354.2384.2404.243
Camarilla4.2334.2344.2354.2354.2364.2374.238
Woodie's4.2244.2274.2324.2354.2404.2434.248
DeMark's--4.2324.2354.240--
Technical Indicators  May 25, 2013 12:03AM GMT
Symbol Value Action
RSI(14) 41.434 Sell
STOCH(9,6) 34.717 Sell
STOCHRSI(14) 8.501 Oversold
MACD(12,26) 0.015 Buy
ADX(14) 31.876 Sell
Williams %R -86.076 Oversold
CCI(14) -72.1161 Sell
ATR(14) 0.0167 More Volatility
Highs/Lows(14) -0.0133 Sell
Ultimate Oscillator 50.014 Neutral
ROC -1.388 Sell
Bull/Bear Power(13) -0.0210 Sell

Buy: 1

Sell: 7

Neutral: 3


Summary: Strong Sell
Moving Averages  May 25, 2013 12:03AM GMT
Period Simple Exponential
MA54.235
Sell
4.232
Sell
MA104.234
Sell
4.240
Sell
MA204.257
Sell
4.243
Sell
MA504.231
Sell
4.230
Sell
MA1004.194
Buy
4.193
Buy
MA2004.113
Buy
4.138
Buy

Buy: 4

Sell: 8


Summary: SELL

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Latest Natural Gas Comments  
goldman  gets feds up the azz feds have
goldman gets feds up the azz feds have   May 25, 2013 11:40AM GMT
The Natural Gas Bubble Email Print Share Share on reddit Posted on Jan 4, 2013 Flickr/Paul Hocksenar By Thomas Hedges, Center for Study of Responsive Law The natural gas industry is waging an aggressive public relations campaign to bolster investor confidence, despite evidence showing that shale gas is an unreliable resource and that the production process releases large amounts of methane into the atmosphere. Although hydraulic fracturing (or fracking) is in the media’s hot seat, the prospect of a drilling bubble coupled with the underreported problem of methane leakage may be the most destructive qualities of natural gas in the United States. From commissioning false field reports to flooding television with commercials, natural gas companies are convincing Americans that gas will save the U.S. market; it will not. The public relations push is an effort to revive a campaign that started in 2006 and was subsequently killed when the economic crisis hit two years later. Natural gas companies tripled the number of existing wells in those two years, hoping that a glut would attract a large consumer base before raising the prices back up again. Financial companies pumped billions of dollars into the industry, only to see it crumble. As time passes, data on natural gas production, which goes back only a few years, indicate that shale gas is an unreliable energy source. Reserves are declining up to 70 percent per year. Where corporate reports show that decline leveling off through the use of theoretical models, figures point to an unrelenting decline that predicts the reserves will dry up in a few years. Financial backers such as Goldman Sachs and AIG are hurriedly funding the development of the natural gas sector to attract other investors before reality sets in. If they fail, the billions of dollars spent from 2006 to 2008 will have been wasted. Advertisement <a href='****://***.truthdig****/banners/***/delivery/ck.php?n=abee66dc&cb=1966031601' target='_blank'><img src='****://***.truthdig****/banners/***/delivery/avw.php?zoneid=8&cb=1966031601&n=abee66dc' border='0' alt='' /></a> These firms are financing energy companies to buy up cheap land, quickly drill wells, label the fields as profitable, and then bundle up those leases and sell them for up to $30,000 per acre to clueless investors. The average acre, according to the founder of Energy Policy Forum and former investment banker Deborah Rogers, is sold to developers for no more than $1,200, and sometimes as low as $100. These industries are doing the same thing they did leading up to the 2008 crash, only swapping out subprime mortgages for unproved shale gas reserves. Just as in 2008, companies control the ratings agencies. They “guide” them, arguing that these deals are too complex for the agency to rate by itself. They’ve created confusing financial products as well, luring investors in with Volumetric Production Payments (VPP), which are indecipherable structures of payments much like derivatives. The hype surrounding natural gas is a last push to take toxic assets—literally, in this case—dress them up as fancy investments, and then sell them off to unsuspecting Americans. “Public policymakers need to be very aware of the promotional aspect of shale gas,” petroleum geologist Art Berman says. “This is a very efficient public relations and business machine. They have done a really good job of convincing public policymakers that shale is revolutionary.” The industry’s reach, many say, infects the Department of Energy and its Energy Information Agency. Geologists such as Berman and Post Carbon Institute fellow Dave Hughes have looked at figures in the reports and say the conclusions do not match the findings. “Companies [which influence the EIA] are applying a hyperbolic decline model to the data,” Hughes says, “which is just an equation with different input parameters. It has nothing to do with reality. The only data we have to fit is from four years ago. And then these companies are saying that, after using the hyperbolic model, these wells are going to last for 40 years. So you get a lot of gas but it’s all theoretical.” A series of emails released in 2011 from within the EIA shows that some employees were skeptical of the agency’s reports. “The Annual Energy Outlook 2011’s rosy view of shale gas is what you get when the current senior managers’ predilections are in effect and their modeling minions are forced to rely way too much on data from press releases and journalists’ reports, i.e. incomplete/selective and all too often unreal data,” David Morehouse wrote in an April 2010 email to a colleague within the agency. The oil and gas industry is influential enough that politicians refuse to introduce reform to the agency for fear of losing campaign contributions. “The [EIA] is corrupt,” says Rogers, who was featured in a 2011 New York Times article “Insiders Sound an Alarm Amid a Natural Gas Rush.” “There’s no way that the Department of Energy and the EIA, which falls under its auspices, is not corrupted by the oil and gas industry. There’s just too much money involved as far as political contributions. “The EIA has found itself between a rock and a hard place. It’s the same thing that’s happened with the Environmental Protection Agency in a way. The U.S. government isn’t as powerful as the oil and gas industry. It doesn’t have deep pockets. If they come out with anything that’s not favorable to the industry, the industry sues.” The industry’s public relations exercise is also a grave threat to the green energy movement. As the U.S. seeks to wean itself off oil and coal, scientists say that within the next few years the country must use the interim period to build an infrastructure that supports clean energy. The campaign for investment in natural gas could distract U.S. policymakers from beginning to fund and build an infrastructure that favors wind, solar and biomass, which climatologists say needs to happen immediately. Hughes says that, beyond this issue, many scientists say that natural gas is worse for the environment than oil or coal. A 2011 report from Cornell University found that methane leaks at all stages of the production process, from the wellhead to when you turn on your stove. Methane is 70 times more effective at trapping heat than is CO2, but it escapes the atmosphere faster. In the first 40 to 50 years, gas is worse for the environment than oil or coal. After that, it is cleaner, but Hughes and Berman say gas won’t last half that long. Hughes says that this corporate campaign has killed a crucial conversation. He says we should be talking about how to couple renewable sources of energy with more mass transit. “We should be rethinking cities,” he says, “and bringing food production back home. “The forecasts coming out of the EIA are saying that we can continue to ramp up energy consumption ad infinitum,” he says, “and that’s not a realistic worldview. The average U.S. citizen consumes 22 barrels of oil per year. The average citizen in China consumes 2.8. The average U.S. citizen consumes about five times as much oil as
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goldman  gets feds up the azz feds have
goldman gets feds up the azz feds have   May 25, 2013 11:36AM GMT
a hahahah mild in east wetaher is bear bear injections and goldman scammers keep ng aat 4 plus ahahah what a fuking joke fale weather reports every week by goldman who pays noaa and others never buy bull here you will lose your house
  Reply

goldman  gets feds up the azz feds have
goldman gets feds up the azz feds have   May 25, 2013 11:35AM GMT
Feds Investigate Natural Gas Price-Fixing Allegations Feb 16th, 2013 | By fjgallagher | Category: Lead Articles, Regulation Federal regulators are investigating irregular price swings in the natural gas markets, according to a story published in the Wall Street Journal recently. Image credit: ***.123rf**** Federal regulators are looking into volatile price swings in the natural gas commodities market that occurred during the past 12 months in connection with the release of weekly natural gas inventory information, according to an articlepublished in The Wall Street Journal this morning. Ed. note: If you enjoy the content you get here at NaturalGasWatch.org, please take a moment to click on one of the advertisements you’ll find on the right side of the page. Your support will help us keep this site up and running. Thanks, Fj. Investigators at the federal Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which regulates the Wall Street commodities trading, detected “suspicious trading strategies around the reports by the U.S. Energy Information Administration,” the WSJ story reported. The EIA issues regular weekly reports on the country’s energy inventory, including a report that details the amount of natural gas that is held in storage. The EIA report is viewed as the most accurate gauge of short-term supply and demand. CFTC investigators believe that commodities traders armed with equipment that lets them execute transactions at extraordinarily high speeds use the capability to create artificial price swings by flooding the market with transactions in the moments before the EIA report is released. From The Wall Street Journal story: The CFTC has found that a large proportion of trading volume around the data is being conducted by high-frequency firms, according to people familiar with the matter. One person said that many commercial traders, a category that includes energy producers and consumers, typically avoid trading immediately before and after the data to avoid the swings. The EIA publishes a report at 10:30 a.m. EST each week, almost always on Thursdays, that provides an update on the amount of natural gas added or removed from U.S. stockpiles. The figure is widely considered the best gauge of gas supply and demand in the U.S., and typically results in the week’s busiest trading window. Traders have pointed to unusual trading patterns as recently as last week. In the minute before the EIA report was released on Feb. 7, volume in natural-gas futures traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange spiked to 1,954 contracts after trading well below 1,000 contracts for the majority of the morning. CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler had told the WSJ in March 2012 that the agency would be increasing its scruti
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