FERC Natural Gas Markets: U.S. Government Data, Analysis, and Reports
address: http://www.ferc.gov/market-oversight/mkt-gas/overview.asp
U.S. Government data, analysis, and reports on the domestic natural gas market by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The most complete overview of the U.S. natural gas market. National, regional, and local state information of natural gas production and demand. Also, natural gas trading charts and graphs.
Trading charts and graphs:
- Gas Futures Price Rise
- Forward Price Curve
- Futures Open Interest and Volume
- Futures Prompt Monthly Price
- Physical and Futures Prices
- Physical and Futures Price Deviation
- Futures Strip and Spot/Bidweek Prices
- NYMEX Contract and ICE Look-alike Settlement
- Physical Basis Price Indices
- U.S. and U.K Forward Price Curves
National Overview Charts and Data:
- National storage chart
- Regional storage chart
- Henry Hub Spot Prices chart
- 5-Year Range of Henry Hub Spot Prices chart
- Demand by sector Pie Chart
- Drilling Rig Count Chart
- Monthly LNG Imports
- Daily Gas Sendout Chart
- U.S. and European Gas Prices
- World Gas Prices Map
- Henry Hub & Aeco Futures PRices
Regions: Midwest (West Central, Upper Midwest, Ohio Valley), Northeast (New England, New York, North Mid-Atlantic, West Virginia), South Central (Texas, South Central Other), Southeast (South, Florida, Virgina - Carolinas), Western (Southwest, California, Northwest, Mountain)
Regional Trading Charts:
- Yearly Hub Prices
- Spot Prices and Basis
- Average Basis to Henry Hub
- Trading Volumes
- Storage Inventory
Regional Data and Summary:
- Map
- Market Description
- Geography
- Major Trading Hubs
- Storage
- Demand
- Production
- Pipeline Flows
- Imports & Exports







[...] Live Currency Rates, Economic Indicators League Tables by IDD: Investment Bank Deal Rank and Stats FERC Natural Gas Markets: U.S. Government Data, Analysis, and Reports StreetInsider.com Official China Trade Statistics by Ministry of Commerce of the People’s [...]
Putting resources to use! Here’s a excerpt from my blog post Fast Money’s Joe Terranova Says Nat Gas June Highs July Lows

As you can see, other than the out-of-norm Katrina event in 2005, July natural gas prices have generally been lower than June prices. This weakness seems to persist from July into early or mid august. While natural gas prices in the following December-Januarys are usually higher than the July-August weakness, there are a few years where Natural Gas prices just keep sliding the rest of the year. I suppose Natural Gas prices still depend on the weather and how much of it is used, so it still has that random factor that we should all be aware of. However, this year, Natural Gas prices have been on a steady climb alongside crude oil’s climb, natural gas looking much less volatile than in the past. Natural gas isn’t a direct replacement of crude oil, but there are various users of energy who can switch between the two. When crude oil gets too expensive, they would switch to natural gas, thus increasing natural gas’s demand and raising it’s prices alongside crude. Jim Cramer offers a separate rule of thumb: Natural Gas prices trade at roughly 1/6 the price of crude oil. So, at the moment, either crude oil is too expensive or natural gas is too cheap.
[...] come in September and early October, and heating oil demand to drive oil demand in the winter, the coming months are usually bullish for energy. Now we just have to see how the price reacts to this bullish environment. If energy can’t [...]