US NATGAS: Northeast EOD – Outflows Favor New England over Midwest

Apr-15 19:49

Current flow data showing increased d/d outflows to New England on TGP and AGT while outflows to the Midwest on Nexus maintain their d/d decline. 

  • Northeast demand is revised 100 mmcf/d lower to 34.4 bcf/d, up 1.25 bcf/d d/d after lower revisions in yesterday’s demand. Demand is 2.32 bcf/d below the 30-day average.
  • To the east, compared to the previous GFS 15day forecast, NYC  lost 14 HDDs, for a total of 142 HDDs. This is 14 less than the 10yr normal.
  • To the west, compared to the previous GFS 15day forecast, Columbus OH  added 7 HDDs, for a total of 133 HDDs. This is 112 HDDs less than the 10yr normal.
  • Within the region, total End User demand revised 120 mmcf/d higher to 15.9  bcf/d. Comprised of 42% power generation, 41% rescom, and 17% industrial.
  • Net outflows from the region revised 40 mmcf/d lower to 14.52 bcf/d.
  • Production in the region revised up 80 mmcf/d to 35.98 bcf/d, all in the Appalachian shale play.
  • Imports from Canada are flat at 395 mmcf/d today.
  • Feedgas exports to Cove Point LNG is flat at 856 mmcf/d.
  • This puts the daily supply surplus at around 1.71 bcf/d widening by 0.39 bcf/d on the day.
  • The NE region refers to New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and Maryland. All flow and production data is from Bloomberg.

Historical bullets

FED: March Economic Projections: Higher Inflation, Weaker Growth, Same Rates

Mar-14 21:28

The MNI Markets Team’s expectations for the updated Economic Projections in the March SEP are below. 

  • The unemployment rate is likely to rise slightly for 2025 alongside a downgrade in GDP growth, while the 2025 core and headline PCE inflation projections are set to rise again. Changes to later years will likely be limited, however.
  • More detail on the shift in Fed funds rate medians is in our meeting preview - we will add more color next week.



 

FED: Market Pricing Nearly 3 2025 Cuts As Conditions Tighten

Mar-14 21:25

Amid rising government policy uncertainty, sentiment among businesses and consumers has fallen sharply since the start of the year, while equities and the dollar have reversed their post-election rise. Overall, financial conditions have tightened, even if stress is not yet mounting, e.g. no major widening of credit spreads (the accompanying chart shows the Fed’s financial conditions impulse index but only through January).

  • Combined with growth fears, this has affected expectations for the Fed’s rate path, with around 18bp more cuts expected in 2025 compared with what was seen after the January FOMC. 65bp of cuts are priced for the year as a whole. 2025 cut pricing reached 71bp before the February inflation data and 76bp before the February payrolls report.
  • A rate cut is seen with near zero probability for March’s meeting, but the first full cut is just about priced for June, with a second nearly priced by September.
  • Chair Powell has no reason to endorse or refute these expectations – he’s likely to be happy with a press conference that ends with little discernable change in pricing.

 

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CANADA'S CARNEY ANNOUNCES ELIMINATION OF THE CONSUMER CARBON TAX

Mar-14 21:17
  • CANADA'S CARNEY ANNOUNCES ELIMINATION OF THE CONSUMER CARBON TAX