Showing posts with label Matt Daily. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matt Daily. Show all posts

Thursday, March 8, 2018

Dow Chemical considers locking in low gas prices

Dow Chemical considers locking in low gas prices

Stock Market Predictions

NEW YORK (Global Markets) - Dow Chemical Co (DOW.N), one of the largest U.S. buyers of natural gas, is considering a hedging program for the first time in a decade to lock in rock-bottom prices for the fuel.

The move by Dow, the largest U.S. seller of chemicals, could signal growing concern in the nation's industrial sector that low gas prices will not last. Natural gas prices have fallen 50 percent in the last six months as output from vast U.S. shale fields flooded the market.

When asked if Dow is considering a hedging program to lock in low prices, Chief Executive Andrew Liveris said: "Yes."

"We used to do a lot of that in the late 1990s, early part of the last decade, and you can expect us to talk more about that in the future," Liveris said in an interview with Global Markets.

The price Dow pays for ethane, a component of natural gas that is used to make many chemicals, rose as high as 94 cents per gallon in the fourth quarter. Prices have eased 30 cents so far in the first quarter, but executives are clearly worried about volatility.

Every 10-cent drop in the cost of ethane boosts earnings by $200 million, Liveris said.

Analysts have been closely watching Dow and its peers for signs they are locking in low costs. Indications in the natural gas futures and options markets show some players may be staking out positions.

On Friday, the natural gas futures contract was down slightly at $2.48 per million British thermal units (BTUs). Natural gas prices have dropped nearly 50 percent in the past three years.

"Companies are looking at these prices and locking in. Whenever you get near $2 (per million BTUs) you are going to have people locking in for the long term," said Phil Flynn, president of futures brokerage PFGBest Research in Chicago. "I would imagine that we will see a lot of hedging at these prices."

Natural gas prices likely will rise back to $4 to $6 per million BTUs by the end of the decade, Liveris said during a conference call with investors following his company's quarterly earnings report on Thursday.

High prices in the last decade, which peaked above $13 per million BTUs in 2005, made U.S. petrochemical and fertilizer manufacturers less competitive with their global counterparts, denting their market share.

The recent drop in price is largely due to the shale deposits in the United States. As a consequence of booming production, ConocoPhillips (COP.N), Chesapeake Energy Corp (CHK.N) and other producers have said the low prices made production at some U.S. natural gas wells uneconomical.

If Dow is able to lock in natural gas prices near current levels, its would solidify its cost advantage over European rivals, such as BASF (BASFn.DE), many of which use crude oil-derived naphtha, rather than natural gas, to produce chemicals.

Dow is planning to build two chemical plants on the U.S. Gulf Coast and bring them online later this decade to process even more natural gas. Later this year, the company will reopen a chemical plant -- also known as a cracker -- in southern Louisiana, Liveris said.

Despite some forecasts that ample natural gas supplies will keep prices low for at least the next several months, recent trading in the options market indicates many players are staking out positions that give them insurance against a sudden sharp upward move in prices.

"Implied volatility" in the options market has spiked to its highest level in more than two years, moving above 64 percent, or about twice the level for most of 2011.

Traders watch implied volatility to gauge risk and a high number suggests a greater chance gas prices could move sharply.

Implied volatility shot up in December and January as the NYMEX front-month gas futures contract tested and finally broke below a key psychological barrier at $3 per million BTUs on its way to a 10-year low of $2.23, hit just last week.

(Reporting By Ernest Scheyder, Joe Silha, Matt Daily, and Ed McAllister; Editing by Andre Grenon and Steve Orlofsky)

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Yingli Green posts loss, cuts shipment view

Yingli Green posts loss, cuts shipment view

Stock Market Predictions

(Global Markets) - China-based Yingli Green Energy Holding Co posted a quarterly loss, hurt by a steep slide in solar panel prices, and cut its full-year photovoltaic module shipment outlook.

Like other solar makers, Yingli has been hit hard this year as a glut of panels has knocked prices lower, squeezing profit margins and pushing its shares down 64 percent so far since 2010.

On Tuesday, Suntech Power Holdings, JA Solar and other Chinese companies reported disappointing earnings and said the market would remain weak into the first half of 2012.

At the request of some U.S. solar companies, the Obama Administration is investigating whether Chinese manufacturers, including Yingli, have engaged in "dumping" their solar panels at below-market prices.

Yingli has strongly denied the dumping charge, and China's industry fired back this week, saying it might seek an investigation into possible dumping of polysilicon by U.S. companies.

Yingli Green's net loss for the third quarter was $28.3 million, or 18 cents per American Depositary Share ADS, compared with a year-earlier profit of $68.2 million, or 44 cents per ADS.

Revenues rose 36 percent to about $667.7 million.

Yingli's gross margin shrank to 10.8 percent from 22.1 percent in the second quarter and 33.3 percent a year earlier.

For 2011, Yingli cut its module shipment forecast to a range of 1,580 to 1,630 megawatts from its previous estimate of 1,700 to 1,750 MW. The revised figure represents growth of about 50 percent from 2010 shipment levels.

Shares of Yingli Green rose 1 cent to $3.55 in premarket trading on Wednesday.

(Reporting by Arup Roychoudhury in Bangalore and Matt Daily in New York; Editing by Supriya Kurane and Lisa Von Ahn)

Monday, August 28, 2017

Jury says Exxon must pay $1.5 billion for leak

Jury says Exxon must pay $1.5 billion for leak

Stock Market Predictions

TOWSON, Maryland (Global Markets) - A jury in Maryland awarded plaintiffs suing oil company Exxon Mobil about $1.5 billion for a 2006 leak at a gasoline station, according to court documents.

Verdicts released by the Baltimore County Circuit Court on Friday showed the jury awarded the 160 plaintiffs in the case against the oil company more than $1 billion in punitive damages.

That figure is in addition to the $495 million in compensation that the jury awarded the plaintiffs for damage caused by the 26,000 gallons of gasoline that leaked from a pressurized line in Jacksonville, Maryland over 37 days in January and February in 2006, according to media reports.

Exxon Mobil said the company would appeal the verdict.

"As we've stated throughout the last five years, we sincerely regret this unfortunate accident. We apologize to the Jacksonville community and have devoted significant resources to clean-up, recovery and remediation activities," a spokeswoman said in an emailed statement.

The damage award is far higher than the $900 million that Exxon Mobil paid in civil penalties for lawsuits related to the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska's Prince William Sound, although the company has said it spent more than $4 billion on clean-up costs and total legal settlements.

In the Valdez case, Exxon successfully appealed a jury's original ruling that called for it to pay $5 billion in punitive damages, and eventually had that amount cut to about $500 million.

The Maryland case stemmed from a fuel leak that reached the groundwater in the community, which relies on private wells for drinking water.

The company has said it already had spent more than $46 million on the spill's cleanup and been fined $4 million by the state.

The case is the second related to the spill. The jury in the first lawsuit, which involved fewer plaintiffs, awarded $150 million in compensatory damages. Exxon Mobil has appealed that verdict.

Shares in Exxon Mobil closed up 66 cents to $82.04 on the New York Stock Exchange, in a broadly higher market.

(Additional reporting by Matt Daily in New York; Editing by Derek Caney)