CNBC Guest Blog
- Busch: The Debt-Interest Rate Paradox
- Busch: Markets Smell a Country Rat
- Schork Oil Outlook: Mission Impossible For The Bears?
- Losey: Asset Allocation At Retirement
- Farrell: Obama Hectored, Ignored and Restricted?
- Don't Dwell on Investment Mistakes; Move on, Like Buffett
- Hirschhorn: Greed...or Fear
- Schork Oil Outlook: Some New Hope For Nat Gas Bulls
- Insights for Growing the Economy: the State of Entrepreneurship
- Tamminen: California Is At It Again
MOST SHARED
- The 'Real' Jobless Rate: 17.5% Of Workers Are Unemployed
- GM's Agreement to Sell Saab To Swedish Firm Falls Apart
- US Home Prices Up 5th Month, 2nd Straight Quarter
- Buyers Look For Bargains At Luxury Condo Auction
- FDIC Fund Falls into The Red, Bair Urges Lending
- Revised GDP Reading Puts Growth at 2.8%; Inflation Tame
- Weak Dollar Is Golden for Mining Companies
- Behind The Scenes With Warren Buffett
- 10 Holiday Cocktail Recipes from Top Mixologists
- Novartis 'Cells' Its Flu Vaccine Technology
- Silicon Valley and Hollywood Now Fast Friends
- Markets Can Rise 5-10% in the Near-Term: Strategist
- Busch: The Debt-Interest Rate Paradox
- The Lloyd's Prayer, Leggo My Eggo, Plate Hate & Your Emails
- Buy These 'Competitively Positioned' Stocks: Portfolio Manager
- Behind The Scenes With Warren Buffett
- 'Why the American Consumer Will Keep on Buying No Matter What'
- On Assignment: Europe & Asia
- $42 Billion US Bond Auction Receives Strong Demand
- GM's Agreement to Sell Saab Unit Falls Apart
- Consumer Confidence Improves but Still Shaky
- US Home Prices Up 5th Month, 2nd Straight Quarter
- FDIC Fund Falls into The Red, Bair Urges Lending
- Six Ways to Boost Your Income in a Big Way
- Buyers Look for Bargains at Luxury Condo Auction
- Ron Paul's Plan to Audit Fed a 'Serious Attack': Mishkin
- Strong Banks, Weak Credit: Treasury Rethinks TARP
RSS FEED

Stephen Schork
Editor of
"The Schork Report"
Last week we ushered in the summer solstice, which also means that the “dog days of summer” are here. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, this is the period of exceptionally hot and humid weather that often occur in July, August, and early September in the northern temperate latitudes.
The name originated with the ancient Greeks, Romans, and Egyptians; they believed that Sirius, the dog star, which rises simultaneously with the Sun during this time of the year, added its heat to the Sun’s and thereby caused the hot weather. Their belief that dogs were subject to spells of madness at this time also may have contributed to the name. Because people tended to become listless during the dog days, Sirius was held to have a detrimental effect on human activities… including trading energies.
As we see in the Chart of the Day in today’s issue of The Schork Report, large (>90 Bcf) injections are about to ebb. The U.S. refill season exhibits a distinct seasonal pattern which can be separated into three time buckets. In the first bucket, which generally lasts through early July, is when we see the largest injections of the season, i.e. ≈100 Bcf per week. Current injections are averaging 104 Bcf since May 01st. The second bucket of the injection season takes us through the dog-days of July and August. Thus, if we get a hot July/August regardless of the proliferation of nonconventional drilling, we can then expect average weekly injections to fall below 70 Bcf per week. The third and final bucket of the season will take us through the peak hurricane season in September and October. Average injections then tend to rebound as temperatures ease and utilities top off storage ahead of the winter.
Bottom line, the nearby fundamental picture appears as bearish as ever. Underground caverns, mines and aquifers are brimming. The 5-year average surplus (interpolated) inched down by 42 bps to 22.2% but increased by 10 Bcf to 482 Bcf. During last season’s dog days, natural gas demand from the Grid summed 1.55 Tcf. Thus, the current 482 Bcf overhand covers an extra 19 days of last summer’s a/c load.
_________________________
Stephen Schork is the Editor of, "The Schork Report" and has more than 17 years experience in physical commodity and derivatives trading, risk systems modeling and structured commodity finance.








