natural gas

Fourth Quarter 2022 Market Letter: Bad News Is Good News

Fourth Quarter 2022 Market Letter: Bad News Is Good News

Read our Market Letter publication for the fourth quarter 2022 titled, Bad News Is Good News, in which George Hosfield, CFA, Peter Jones, CFA, and Joe Herrle, CFA, share our thoughts on inflation, interest rates, the energy sector and housing supply in the United States.

Growth, Gas and Golf

by Shawn Narancich, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

Suspended Animation

 Despite an improving job market and a spring thaw that appears to be lifting the economy out of its winter doldrums, U.S. equity investors felt the chill of a sell-off that left benchmark stock indices underwater for the year. Confronted by the dawning reality that the Fed’s ultra-accommodative monetary policy is going away and, by implication, that projected inflation premiums are rising, high-flying tech stocks like Facebook, Twitter, and Amazon have been particularly hard hit. In contrast, amid a bond market rally that few foresaw at the start of the year, interest-sensitive stocks within the utility sector and REIT space have performed quite well. In general, value stocks are outperforming growth and, from out of the blue, emerging market stocks have begun to excel. Despite the distinct possibility that tighter monetary policy in countries like Brazil, South Africa and India could push these economies into recession, the markets of these BRICS constituents have rallied recently. For our part, we expect waning fiscal headwinds and a renewal of fortunes in the energy and manufacturing sectors to produce faster U.S. economic growth as the year progresses.

Shoulder Season

With the dawn of April, U.S. natural gas markets have officially transitioned from heating season to what is known as “injection season.” Commonly, the clean burning commodity falls in price this time of year as cold weather wanes and heating demand disappears (often referred to as “shoulder season”), allowing natural gas producers to start injecting gas into underground storage caverns in preparation for next winter. Front-month gas prices are down from the $6.00/Mcf level reached in February, but prices have been notably firm around the $4.50 level recently, and are much higher than the $2.00 lows reached in 2012. Prices have risen because of demand growth from utilities using more gas to generate electricity, but more immediately because of an unusually cold winter that has depleted storage inventories to 10-year lows. Surprisingly, a more than doubling of gas prices has happened without a lot of fanfare, as gas bears beat the drum of supply response from “gas behind pipes.”

Gas Bulls

The key question now is whether a domestic energy industry more focused on drilling for shale oil will be able to replenish gas supplies in time for the next heating season. At current prices, count us as skeptics. Natural gas directed drilling is at the lowest level since 1992, and while associated gas from oil directed drilling has provided a key source of supply, we doubt it will be enough to adequately refill depleted storage caverns. The reality is that curtailed gas flow doesn’t exist on any meaningful scale, and with the typical shale oil project still much more profitable for producers, we don’t expect adequate gas drilling to materialize until futures prices reach the $5.00-to-$5.50 level. Because of the substantial lead times necessary to transport drilling rigs and hydraulic fracturing equipment from oil to gas basins, combined with the time it takes to actually drill and complete new gas wells, the industry will not be able to turn on a dime. As a result, price spikes could occur until adequate new supplies materialize.

A Tradition Unlike Any Other

As the world’s best tee it up at Augusta National this week, money managers are gearing up for a pursuit of their own, less affectionately known as earnings season. Aluminum producer Alcoa kicked things off in acceptable fashion earlier this week and, following early reports from Wells Fargo and JP Morgan, reporting starts to kick into a higher gear next week.

Our Takeaways from the Week

  •  Stocks have retreated from recent highs despite generally improving economic data
  • Depleted supplies and healthy demand growth appear to have ended the bear market in natural gas

Disclosures

Underneath it All

RalphCole_032_web_ by Ralph Cole, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

Workin’ for a Livin’

The U.S. jobs report has become the most watched economic indicator in the world. The jobs report comes out on the first Friday of the month and includes the unemployment rate and number of new jobs created the prior month. Both January and February reports were underwhelming due to weather, but we think employment will strengthen more than people think in the coming months.

Dan Clifton of Strategas alerted us this week to some underlying trends that will be playing out in the labor market in the coming months. Extended unemployment ran out at the end of December. The Senate voted this week to retroactively extend those benefits through May of this year, which may or may not become law. The fact is that long-term unemployment benefits ran out for a significant number of people in December. History tells us that many of these folks will go out and find jobs, bringing down the unemployment rate faster than people expect.

We have a real-life example in North Carolina. North Carolina’s emergency benefits ran out six months ago. Since that time, the state’s unemployment rate dropped 2 percent!  During that same time period, employment in North Carolina increased 1.3 percent versus the national average of just .5 percent.

The Gambler

Vladimir Putin continues his quest to win over Crimea. He has been admonished by every major country in the world, but will not give in until after Crimea’s secession referendum on Sunday. The U.S. and other major powers have stated that this is an illegal vote that is contrary to the Ukrainian constitution. How this plays out in the near term is important, but the more interesting part of the story is the long-term implications of Russia’s aggression.

We’ve written at great length about the energy revolution here in the U.S. and the benefits that will accrue over time because of it. Much of Europe’s natural gas comes from Russia, with more pipelines in the works. This partnership is being questioned in light of Russia’s latest activities, resulting in our European allies turning their attention to “the Saudi Arabia of natural gas” (i.e., the United States). While the U.S. won’t be able to assist in the near term, we think recent tensions will cause additional pipelines and liquid natural gas terminals to be approved in the coming months.

Our Takeaways from the Week

  • The labor market is stronger than people believe and will lead to rising interest rates in the coming months
  • Vladimir Putin has overplayed his hand. While he may win the Crimea vote on Sunday, he just offended his country’s largest customer
  • Uncertainty in China and Russia led to a sell-off in the S&P 500 of 1.7 percent for the week

    Disclosures

Money Talks

Jason Norris of Ferguson Wellman by Jason Norris, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

Money Talks

Earlier this week, Facebook anted up close to $20 billion (with a capital B) to purchase WhatsApp, a mobile texting company. The company is estimated to gross $300 million in revenues this year and $500 million in 2015 by charging $0.99 per year to allow users to by-pass texting fees from their wireless provider. One can argue if the price will be “worth it” for Facebook, but we do know that WhatsApp’s 50 employees are pleased.

This deal is just one of the several major merger and acquisition (M&A) deals we have seen this year. On top of the Facebook deal, over the last week we saw a major take-out for Forest Labs, talk of Safeway going private, and Comcast bidding for Time Warner Cable. Corporate America is flush with cash and, as we forecasted, is putting it to work. Industry analysts have yet to declare that we are off to the races for M&A, but confidence is improving.

Modern Day Cowboy

Move over Henry Ford, here comes Elon Musk, the CEO and Chief Product Architect for Tesla Motors. The high-end electric car maker continues to push the limits on manufacturing and innovation.  While global demand is picking up and Tesla has been ramping up production to meet these needs, profitability and valuation are key determinants of a good stock, on top of a good company. One can get caught up in the hype of the revolutionary envelope Tesla pushes on a manufacturing basis (check out this video for a demonstration). Is a good company necessarily a good stock?  When you look at the value investors are giving Tesla, it is $817k per vehicle sold. The auto average is $13k. One could argue that Tesla should command a premium, but the current premium may be a little too rich for our taste.

Baby, It’s Cold Outside

The recent polar vortex that has affected most of the U.S. the last few weeks has impacted several economic indicators (as highlighted last week by Ralph Cole) as well as commodity prices, specifically natural gas. Natural gas prices in mid-January hovered around $4.00/btu. Since then, gas has spiked to over $6.00/btu. While this may have a short-term impact on the cost of energy, we do not foresee much more upside pressure to gas prices. At these levels, we are likely to see some shift in exploration and production from oil to gas since the cash flows at these prices can be very attractive. Therefore, as demand slows with warmer weather and more supply comes online, we would expect gas prices to trend lower.

This phenomenon in the U.S. has led to an energy/manufacturing renaissance. Low energy prices have allowed manufacturers to “on shore” their production because the costs have become more attractive. Especially those industries where natural gas is a major feedstock:  chemicals, fertilizer, etc. There are plans for 10 new ethane facilities (or crackers) in the U.S. due to the increased supply of energy and natural gas. This will result in a major increase in polyethylene supply, which is a major input for plastic, thus, lowering the cost for thousands of consumer and commercial products, while increasing jobs in the U.S.

Takeaways for the Week

  • M&A deals are starting to pick up and companies are paying premiums for growth
  • Low commodity prices and technological innovation is a boom for the U.S. economy, thus benefitting the U.S. consumer

Early Christmas Gifts

by Shawn Narancich, CFA Executive Vice President of Research

Early Christmas Gifts

In what turned out to be a surprisingly action-packed week before Christmas, the markets finally shook off the shackles of worry concerning what would happen when the Fed began tapering its program of quantitative easing (QE). Bernanke proved that he’s no lame duck chairman and investors learned that stocks can still go up despite a slightly less accommodative Fed. In reducing monthly purchases of Treasury and mortgage-backed bonds by $10 billion per month, our central bank is acknowledging a slowly improving labor market and an expanding economy that is being boosted by several key drivers: a renaissance in U.S. energy production and manufacturing and, increasingly, the wealth effect of rising house and stock prices that is giving a nice lift to consumer spending. Looking ahead, we expect incoming Fed Chair Janet Yellen to continue what Bernanke started. Our view is that further reductions to QE will be commensurate with continued improvement in labor markets, subject as always to the Fed’s other key mandate—keeping inflation low.

Always a Bear Market Somewhere

In stark contrast to stock prices that are once again setting new highs, gold prices have fallen substantially. After attracting increasing amounts of attention as a hedge against monetary dislocation and unchecked growth in the money supply, gold is increasingly being abandoned by investors now more attracted to robust stock market returns and, for those with a lower risk tolerance, bonds that are now offering real rates of return. From its high in August 2011, gold is now down 36 percent. It may be pretty to look at, but with the Fed now in the early stages of unwinding QE, it has lost its shine.

Blue Burner

Sticking to the commodity theme, one key source of energy whose price is going the opposite direction is natural gas. Much maligned by investors because of its seeming ubiquity, the front-month contract is up 31 percent since August. Cold weather has boosted the demand for natural gas, one of the nation’s most common sources of home heating. Weather vicissitudes aside, we like the longer-term demand case for the cleaner burning fuel to take market share of electricity generation from its dirtier cousin coal. Will gas currently priced for $4.40 per-million-BTUs go to $5.50? In the short-term, probably not, because the prolific shale fields in Pennsylvania, Wyoming and Texas will induce considerably more production if prices continue to rise.

Nevertheless, key suppliers can make a lot of money with natural gas prices in the $4.00 to $5.00 range. More importantly, our economy should increasingly benefit from using low cost natural gas and natural gas liquids to generate cheaper power and manufacture plastics. In the latter case, low cost ethane, propane and butane feedstocks are displacing oil-based naptha, incenting major chemical companies like Dow and the petrochemical arm of Shell to locate plastic manufacturing facilities stateside. The beneficial result for America is new jobs, additional exports, and healthier levels of GDP growth.

In this festive season, we wish all our friends and clients a Merry Christmas and a very happy and healthy new year.

Our Takeaways from the Week

  • Investors took the start of Fed tapering in stride, as stocks rallied to new highs
  • A continued flow of encouraging economic data points to faster GDP growth in 2014

Disclosures