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Everyone likes a good comeback story where large obstacles are overcome on the way to a favourable outcome.
And we’re about to see one in the investment world…
The shale gas boom seemed to be a disaster for the natural gas industry as the price of natural gas plummeted over a five-tear period to reach a multi-year low below $2 per million BTU in April 2012.
But as Money Morning Global Energy Strategist Dr. Kent Moors forecast, natural gas prices have rebounded with a vengeance since then. The price has more doubled (trading at about $3.80 now) since that bottom last spring, becoming this year’s top performing commodity. Nat gas hit a 20-month high of $4.43 per million BTU in April.
That trend of steady to rising prices is likely to continue thanks to increasing demand.
These factors, often pointed out by Moors, include the switchover by utilities from coal-fired power to gas-fired power, the start of exports soon of liquefied natural gas, and increased demand from industries such as the chemical industry.
And the trend is huge news for natural gas stocks, and their investors – especially when you look at what happened nearly 10 years ago…
First, let’s look at what has happened to natural gas stocks this year.
Logic would dictate that the last year or so has been a great time to be invested into natural gas stocks.
In the past few years, many natural gas companies have reduced their costs while keeping production in check in order to stay viable in a tough market environment.
This has put a good number of them in a position of strength to benefit from the higher natural gas prices we’ve seen in 2013.
The companies that are poised to benefit the most are those with the lowest cost of production and that are leveraged to the price of natural gas.
Robert Mark, oil and gas analyst for Canadian firm MacDougall, MacDougall & MacTier, told the Globe & Mail ’Companies that have been producing profits over the past two years [when selling prices have been low] have proven their worth and are attractive investments.‘
But the market is rarely logical. Despite the most sustained upward move in natural gas prices in over 10 years, the shares of most gas companies have yet to embark on a sustained move upward.
Read the rest of this article at Money Morning