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Issue 4, July/August 2005
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Natural Gas Pricing: Do Oil Prices
Still Matter?
For a number of years, natural
gas and refined petroleum products have been used as
close substitutes in U.S. industry and electric power
generation. Industry and electric power generators have
switched back and forth between natural gas and residual
fuel oil, preferring to use whichever energy source
was less expensive. Consequently, movements of natural
gas prices in the United States have generally tracked
those of crude oil. Most often, crude oil prices are
shaped by world oil market conditions, and natural gas
prices adjust to oil prices.
Over the past 10 years, however,
the number of facilities able to switch between natural
gas and residual fuel oil has declined. And in the most
recent five years, natural gas prices seemed to move
somewhat independently of oil prices. Natural gas prices
rose above what was seen as their historical relationship
with crude oil prices in 2000, 2002 and 2003. In the
first half of 2005, natural gas prices seemed to fall
below this historical relationship.
Consequently, many may wonder
whether oil price movements still shape those of natural
gas and whether the old rules of thumb for relating
natural gas prices to those of crude are still useful.
The analysis presented here shows oil prices do still
matter for natural gas prices, but the old rules of
thumb relating natural gas prices to those for oil are
of limited usefulness.
Two Simple Rules of Thumb
One commonly used rule of
thumb relating natural gas prices to crude oil is the
10-to-1 rule, in which the price of natural gas is one-tenth
the crude oil price:
PNG
= .1 x PWTI ,
where PNG
is the Henry Hub price of natural gas in dollars per
million Btu and PWTI is the price
of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil in dollars
per barrel. Under this rule of thumb, a WTI price of
$20 per barrel would mean a natural gas price of $2
per million Btu at Henry Hub, and $50 oil would mean
$5 natural gas.
Some energy analysts have argued
that natural gas really ought to trade at the same price
per million Btu as crude oil. Because a barrel of WTI
contains 5.825 million Btu, those analysts have used
a 6-to-1 rule, in which the natural gas price ought
to be roughly one-sixth the crude oil price:
PNG
= .1667 x PWTI .
Under this rule of thumb, a WTI
price of $20 per barrel would mean a natural gas price
of $3.33 per million Btu at Henry Hub, and $50 oil would
mean $8.33 natural gas.
When used to assess the relationship
between U.S. natural gas prices and WTI, neither the
10-to-1 nor the 6-to-1 rule of thumb seems to perform
well (Chart 1). The 10-to-1 rule consistently
underforecasts natural gas prices, and the 6-to-1 rule
generally overforecasts them. Moreover, as oil and natural
gas prices have risen, they seem to be making a transition
from the 10-to-1 rule to the 6-to-1 rule.

Burner-Tip Parity
A few analysts have interpreted
the apparent transition from the 10-to-1 rule to the
6-to-1 rule as indicative of improving market conditions
for natural gas. In fact, the seeming transition in
pricing may reflect a more complex relationship between
natural gas and oil prices. The competition between
residual fuel oil and natural gas occurs where they
are used—at the burner tip. Therefore, natural
gas pricing should yield parity at the burner tip, and
prices at the trading hubs should adjust to whatever
is necessary to achieve burner-tip parity. In fact,
residual fuel oil sells for less than WTI, and natural
gas costs more to move to end users than residual fuel
oil.
If we explicitly consider the
historical relationship between prices for residual
fuel oil and WTI, convert to million Btu and subtract
the higher costs of transporting natural gas to market,
we obtain a rule of thumb based on burner-tip parity:
PNG
= –.5 + .1511 x PWTI .
Under this rule, a $20 per barrel
price for WTI would mean a natural gas price of $2.52
per million Btu at Henry Hub, and $50 WTI would mean
$7.06 natural gas. For these prices, a 150 percent increase
in the oil price would mean a 180 percent increase in
the natural gas price. Regression analysis using monthly
data yields
PNG
= –.4744 + .1543 x PWTI .
With the relationship obtained
through regression analysis, a $20 per barrel price
for WTI would imply a natural gas price of $2.61 per
million Btu at Henry Hub, and $50 WTI would mean $7.24
natural gas. For these prices, a 150 percent increase
in the oil price would mean a 177 percent increase in
the natural gas price.
Fitted values from the regression
analysis and those obtained through the burner-tip parity
rule show that U.S. natural gas prices generally track
those of WTI (Chart 2). Nonetheless, there
appear to be a number of occasions when natural gas
prices have decoupled from those of crude oil. In particular,
natural gas prices seem to have pulled away from oil
prices in 2000, 2002 and 2003 and then fallen behind
in 2005.

Seasonality and Storage
Seasonality and the natural
gas in storage also play a prominent role in natural
gas prices. Because natural gas consumption is seasonal
but production is not, natural gas inventories are built
during the summer for use in the winter (Chart 3).

This seasonality leads to
higher winter prices and lower summer prices. In addition,
inventories above the seasonal average depress prices,
and inventories below the seasonal average boost prices.
Taking these additional factors into account in a regression
analysis using weekly data yields
PNG
= –.3345 + WSF – .0265 x ST
+ .1503 x PWTI ,
where WSF is a weekly seasonal
addition to or subtraction from the price of natural
gas and ST is the percent deviation of natural gas in
storage from the weekly seasonal average for the previous
five years. Seasonal factors affect the price of natural
gas considerably—adding 94 cents per million Btu
in the last week of the year and subtracting 55 cents
per million Btu in the 38th week of the year (Table
1). Storage 10 percent below the weekly seasonal
average adds 26 cents per million Btu.
| Table 1 |
| Estimated Weekly Seasonal Factors |
| Week |
Factor |
Week |
Factor |
| 1 |
.7755 |
|
27 |
–.0192 |
|
| 2 |
.6901 |
|
28 |
–.1600 |
|
| 3 |
.6833 |
|
29 |
–.1948 |
|
| 4 |
.3790 |
|
30 |
–.2917 |
|
| 5 |
.6603 |
|
31 |
–.3226 |
|
| 6 |
.6289 |
|
32 |
–.2775 |
|
| 7 |
.4511 |
|
33 |
–.3579 |
|
| 8 |
.0766 |
|
34 |
–.4062 |
|
| 9 |
.0660 |
|
35 |
–.4215 |
|
| 10 |
.4768 |
|
36 |
–.5056 |
|
| 11 |
.0605 |
|
37 |
–.5435 |
|
| 12 |
–.1538 |
|
38 |
–.5510 |
|
| 13 |
–.0649 |
|
39 |
–.5060 |
|
| 14 |
–.0977 |
|
40 |
–.4112 |
|
| 15 |
–.0431 |
|
41 |
–.3920 |
|
| 16 |
.0545 |
|
42 |
–.3888 |
|
| 17 |
.0118 |
|
43 |
–.2843 |
|
| 18 |
–.0269 |
|
44 |
–.1322 |
|
| 19 |
–.0579 |
|
45 |
–.0257 |
|
| 20 |
–.1216 |
|
46 |
–.0460 |
|
| 21 |
–.0935 |
|
47 |
–.0475 |
|
| 22 |
–.0356 |
|
48 |
–.0252 |
|
| 23 |
–.0233 |
|
49 |
–.0833 |
|
| 24 |
.0060 |
|
50 |
.4254 |
|
| 25 |
–.0223 |
|
51 |
.7122 |
|
| 26 |
.0335 |
|
52 |
.9427 |
|
|
| NOTE: By construction, the
weekly seasonal factors have a zero mean. |
These weekly seasonal factors
and storage conditions allow for considerable variation
in the price of natural gas for any given oil price.
With natural gas 10 percent above the normal seasonal
average, a $20 per barrel price for WTI would imply
a natural gas price of $1.86 per million Btu at Henry
Hub in the 38th week of the year. With natural gas 10
percent below the normal seasonal average, a $20 per
barrel price for WTI would imply a natural gas price
of $3.88 per million Btu at Henry Hub in the last week
of the year. Comparable figures for $50 WTI are $6.36
and $8.39 per million Btu, respectively.
With variations in natural gas
storage of ±10 percent, a 150 percent gain in
the crude oil price could result in the natural gas
price rising by less than 65 percent or more than 350
percent. It’s no wonder that analysis using rules
of thumb to price natural gas suggests that the relationship
between natural gas and crude oil prices has changed.
In contrast, fitted values from the regression analysis
with weekly seasonal factors and storage conditions
taken into account show that U.S. natural gas prices
track those of WTI quite well (Chart 4).

A Relatively Stable and Complex
Relationship
A number of common rules
of thumb imply that the relationship between U.S. natural
gas and crude oil prices has changed or that oil prices
no longer affect natural gas prices. This view has been
bolstered by the observation that industrial and electric
power-generation facilities are less able to switch
between natural gas and residual fuel oil than they
were in the past. When we take into account the normal
seasonal variation in natural gas prices and the amount
of natural gas in storage, however, we find compelling
evidence that U.S. natural gas prices continue to be
related to those for crude oil. The relationship is
relatively stable and complex.
—Stephen P. A. Brown
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| About
the Author
Brown is director
of energy economics and microeconomic policy
analysis in the Research Department of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Note
The author thanks
Mike Cox for helpful conversations and Raghav
Virmani for able assistance. |
| About
Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
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