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The standardized NYMEX natural gas futures contract is for delivery of 10,000 million Btu of energy (approximately 10,000,000 cu ft or 280,000 m 3 of gas) at Henry Hub in Louisiana over a given delivery month consisting of a varying number of days. As a coarse approximation, 1000 cu ft of natural gas ≈ 1 million Btu ≈ 1 GJ.
3:05 p.m. ET: Natural gas for February sees record-setting spike Gas for February delivery spiked 72% suddenly in afternoon trading, reflecting the biggest jump on record, according to Bloomberg.
In recent days, a couple of LNG vessels that were either heading for Freeport (LNG Rosenrot) or had waited outside the plant (Prism Brilliance) have moved onto other ports. Federal pipeline safety ...
Power, Natural Gas, Emissions, Coal ICE: European Climate Exchange: ECX London, United Kingdom Emissions founded in 2005, acquired by ICE in 2010 and merged into ICE Futures Europe: London Commodity Exchange: LCE London, United Kingdom Agricultural: Merged into LIFFE in 1996 Energy Exchange Austria: EXAA Vienna, Austria Energy, Emissions
Natural gas futures have been on an upward trend in recent months amid colder-than-expected weather, optimism over increased exports to Europe, and growing electricity demand. “In 2025, the ...
NYMEX began offering standardized natural gas contracts with delivery at the Henry Hub in April 1990. In 2011, the Henry Hub was the site of a land dispute, in which Sabine sued to condemn land near the site of their hub, and expropriate it from the Broussard family, who had owned it for generations, arguing that it was acting in the national ...
An energy derivative is a derivative contract based on (derived from) an underlying energy asset, such as natural gas, crude oil, or electricity. [1] Energy derivatives are exotic derivatives and include exchange-traded contracts such as futures and options, and over-the-counter (i.e., privately negotiated) derivatives such as forwards, swaps and options.
For instance, natural gas futures in the United States usually have the Henry Hub as a delivery point, [2] and gold may have a delivery point of New York or London. Futures contracts that differ only in the delivery point will typically have slightly different prices, reflecting localized supply and demand and transportation costs. [citation ...