NGL Prices
Posted: Tue Jan 03, 2017 2:14 pm
For several weeks, I have been telling you in my weekly podcasts that the outlook for NGL prices has turned extremely bullish. Below is cut from RBN Energy's forecasts for 2017:
"NGL production growth has subsided due to lower prices for crude, gas and NGLs. But over the next two years, five to eight new mostly ethane-only petrochemical plants (steam crackers) will come online at the same time new ethane export capacity is cranking up. Some of that ethane demand can be met by reducing volumes of ethane that today are being “rejected” (that is, sold as natural gas). A decline in rejection volumes only happens if ethane prices increase relative to gas, which they will. But it won’t be enough. Flexible crackers that are now running ethane will need to switch off ethane and run more of other feedstocks, mostly other NGLs—propane, some butane, even natural gasoline (pentane plus). The net result will be an increase in NGL prices back to the levels relative to oil and gas that were “normal” before 2012, the year when oversupply hit the NGL market. The implications for the NGL market, and energy markets in general are profound."
Let me add that the propane market has tighten a lot in the last two weeks and the weather forecast for January is bullish for more propane demand.
Homework assignment: Go to the bottom of the SM Energy forecast model and look at how much NGL they produce.
You can find the production mix for each company at the bottom of their forecast models. This is an extremely valuable tool that we provide at EPG. Learn to use it.
"NGL production growth has subsided due to lower prices for crude, gas and NGLs. But over the next two years, five to eight new mostly ethane-only petrochemical plants (steam crackers) will come online at the same time new ethane export capacity is cranking up. Some of that ethane demand can be met by reducing volumes of ethane that today are being “rejected” (that is, sold as natural gas). A decline in rejection volumes only happens if ethane prices increase relative to gas, which they will. But it won’t be enough. Flexible crackers that are now running ethane will need to switch off ethane and run more of other feedstocks, mostly other NGLs—propane, some butane, even natural gasoline (pentane plus). The net result will be an increase in NGL prices back to the levels relative to oil and gas that were “normal” before 2012, the year when oversupply hit the NGL market. The implications for the NGL market, and energy markets in general are profound."
Let me add that the propane market has tighten a lot in the last two weeks and the weather forecast for January is bullish for more propane demand.
Homework assignment: Go to the bottom of the SM Energy forecast model and look at how much NGL they produce.
You can find the production mix for each company at the bottom of their forecast models. This is an extremely valuable tool that we provide at EPG. Learn to use it.