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By Tom Armistead |
April 4, 2013
Low natural gas prices and volatile oil prices should not hinder investors in the oil and gas sector. In fact, low prices carry their own benefits.
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By Zig Lambo |
March 21, 2013
As a former analyst with a strong background in geology, Malcolm Shaw uses his technical and market experience to dig through piles of news and company data to uncover resource investment situations that often go unnoticed by mainstream analysts.
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By Keith Schaefer |
October 11, 2012
When will electricity producers in the US switch over from using natural gas back to coal?It’s an important question as natural gas prices are breaking out above their recent low trough.
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By Keith Schaefer |
August 3, 2012
The shale oil boom is causing a steep price drop in natural gas liquids (NGLs) in North America, hurting gas producers. NGLs are very important – vital even – now for regular, dry gas producers.
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By Elliott Gue |
June 21, 2012
investors shouldn’t assume that the recent bout of fuel-switching marks the end of king coal. For one, two consecutive colder-than-average winters in 2009-10 and 2010-11 helped eliminate the utilities’ supply overhang in the wake of the financial crisis and Great Recession.
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By Karen Roche, JT Long |
May 14, 2012
Casey Energy Opportunities Senior Editor Marin Katusa, Global Resource Investments Founder and Chairman Rick Rule and Casey Research Senior Editor Louis James, turn their attention to oil and natural gas prices and opportunities in equities.
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By Keith Schaefer |
December 3, 2010
Western Canadian gas exports to the United States could be completely displaced into Northern California by 2014, according to a new study.
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By Karen Roche, Brian Sylvester |
December 2, 2010
Even if the pace of China's growth slows dramatically, count on the commodities boom to continue, says the Adrian Day Asset Management chairman.
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By Dave Forest |
November 22, 2010
It's hard to believe, but just ten years ago $2 per thousand cubic feet (mcf) was a pretty good natural gas price.
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By Dave Forest |
November 17, 2010
Shale gas changed everything. Using hydraulic fracturing technology, North American gas producers over the past decade have unlocked trillions of cubic feet of new, unconventional gas reserves from shale.