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Keith Schaefer

Keith Schaefer

Keith is the publisher of the Oil & Gas Investments Bulletin – an investment newsletter that looks at opportunities within the Canadian small cap oil…

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What 9 Company Hedge Books Are Revealing about the Natural Gas Market

What 9 Company Hedge Books Are Revealing about the Natural Gas Market

You can see it clear as day in their hedging strategies...

Natural gas producers are increasingly bearish on prices for their sector.

The numbers tell the tale.  Canadian gas producers surveyed for the Oil and Gas Investments Bulletin hedged AECO-sold production at $5.27 in 2011. Hedge prices have dropped steadily for gas sold since—to $4.27 in 2012, and to $3.29 for currently-hedged production in 2013.

Why the falling hedge price?  Because it made sense – Natural gas prices fell steadily from the beginning of 2010 through to early 2012. Faced with two years of declines, producers looked to stave off further price risk by forward-selling (hedging) their output.

So what has happened since the second quarter of 2012?

Gas prices have been rising. The monthly average AECO (the Canadian benchmark price out of Edmonton AB) price is up 110% over the last year. NYMEX gas has gained 95%.

Producers, however, have not responded with the same confidence. Despite stellar gains in the gas price, firms continue to hedge at low levels. In fact, for the first time in years, hedges appear to be working against producers—forcing them to sell gas at prices below market value.

Here's what one junior gas producer says about their hedging strategy...

“We’re actually thinking of unwinding some of our gas hedges now—at least in part,” says Heather Christie-Burns, President and COO of Angle Energy (NGL-TSX).  “Our hedge book for natural gas is in a loss position right now, for what our strip pricing was then.”   She adds that Angle does not have any hedging on for 2014.

So, could a rising commodity price and continued bearishness from industry insiders be a recipe for investor profits?

Hedging: A Good Idea... at the Wrong Time?

To see what hedge books tell us about the direction of the natural gas market, I surveyed nine major, Canadian-focused gas producers and their hedges. (This is information that investors can find buried in the back of annual financial statements for most companies).

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What we can confirm from these hedge books is that hedges are now starting to work against producers.

As mentioned above, in 2011 my surveyed producers hedged AECO gas at an average of $5.27. During that year, AECO spot had a monthly average of $3.48. Hedging paid off.

Same in 2012. During that year, producers hedged at an average $4.27, while AECO prices averaged $2.28.

But with prices rising through most of the past year, hedgers are now close to underwater. The average AECO hedge for 2013 is $3.29. But AECO prices have averaged $3.01 through to the end of April—a razor-thin discount to hedged prices. In fact, prices for April averaged $3.28–right at the strike price for the average hedge.

Producers that hedge on the NYMEX—indexing their sale price to Henry Hub rather than AECO—have seen a similar pattern.

NYMEX hedgers locked in an average $5.97 in 2011—nearly a 50% premium to the average Henry Hub spot of $4.00 that year.

In 2012, the average hedge of $5.40 was almost double the $2.75 average hub price.

But the differential has now narrowed. NYMEX hedges for 2013 average $4.19, while the spot Henry Hub price through the first quarter of the year ran at $3.49.

As the chart below shows, NYMEX hedges are fairing a little better than AECO hedges in maintaining a premium—but the gap is closing fast.

Optimism or Pessimism: A Look at What's Ahead

The really interesting part: Despite the doubling of gas prices over the past year, producers are continuing to hedge year-out production at relatively low prices.

The average AECO hedge price for 2014 is $3.80—just 15% higher than the $3.29 producers hedged at in 2013.

For NYMEX production, the hedging outlook is even less optimistic. NYMEX hedges for 2014 average $4.38. That’s barely above the $4.19 average for 2013.

These low-price hedges are looking like an increasingly risky bet. If prices rise just a little, producers will be losing money on the forward sales that previously improved their bottom line.

Despite this risk, gas companies are continuing to hedge aggressively. Look at the historical pattern. In 2011—when AECO prices were holding in the $3 to $3.50 range—AECO-hedged producers grew more optimistic. Only two of them, Pengrowth (TGF-TSX) and Penn West (PWT-TSX), hedged AECO production in the next year, 2012. Others tried to maintain exposure to spot prices, believing things could improve.

Related Article: Natural Gas Seeps May Contribute Significantly to Greenhouse Gas Levels

Of course, 2012 turned out to see a cliff-dive in the AECO price, to below $2.00.

That spooked producers. To the point where, even though we’re back at the same +$3 prices we saw in 2011, gas players are continuing to hedge heavily. Where only two companies hedged at these levels before, six firms are hedged for 2013 and three companies are already hedged for 2014—at the low prices mentioned above.

This looks like a classic case of the “know it best, love it least” syndrome, meaning this could be a buying opportunity—at least for the right companies.

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What It All Means for Investors

With more firms hedging, investors looking for upside from rising gas prices need to be careful about where they put their money—especially today. With hedging activity rising the last few years, good deals in the hedge market are getting hard to find.

You can see this in the spread. In 2011, average AECO hedges for our surveyed companies ranged from a low of $3.81 (Angle Energy, NGL-TSX) to a high of $6.43 (Enerplus, ERF-TSX). That’s quite a difference in prices and profits!

But today elevated prices are hard to come by. 2013 hedges have a tight spread, ranging from $3.09 (Crew Energy, CR-TSX) to a high of just $3.37 (Baytex Energy, BTE-TSX).

If you’re hedged today, you’re getting a mediocre price for your gas. Plain and simple.

The good news for investors betting on a rising gas price is that not all companies are hedging the same volumes.

Companies like EnCana (ECA-TSX) and ARC Resources (ARX-TSX) are hedging as much or more gas next year. While firms like Crew Energy and Enerplus appear to be keeping significant volumes uncommitted for now—perhaps looking for price appreciation.

Angle Energy is our sole surveyed producer that has not hedged any output for 2014.

“I don’t think NYMEX natural gas prices are going to rock over $5/mcf, but it could touch $5,” says Christie-Burns.  “There is a ceiling, there’s a lot of coal.  But good hedges by the majors have allowed a lot of activity over the last two years, and now they aren’t making money on them.  They can’t redeploy hedging gains back into more drilling like the last couple years.

“That bodes well for 2014—we think there’s upside for 2014.”

That reminds me of commodity guru Don Coxe, who said opportunities come in sectors where “those who know it best, love it least.”

The quote fits today’s natural gas sector to a T.

By. Dave Forest, special to the Oil & Gas Investments Bulletin


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Leave a comment
  • Edmond Dantes on May 26 2013 said:
    Hedging does not necessarily indicate a certain market view for large producers. While some smaller producers may take speculative risk on prices, most larger producers may not.

    For example, if economics indicate a positive NPV for a well at $4 (a frequently cited break-even point for horizontal wells, why would a producer go unhedged when they could lock in >$4? It is not the role of an energy producer to take speculative risk in most circumstances. Leave that to the banks and trading houses.

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