
Tight propane inventory deserves more attention than weekly expectations
March 27, 2017 By Mark Rachal and Dale Delay
U.S. propane prices are hammered when propane inventory data doesn’t line up with industry expectations.
Read MoreU.S. propane prices are hammered when propane inventory data doesn’t line up with industry expectations.
Read MoreDespite most of the country experiencing, on average, a relatively warm winter so far, certain non-weather-related factors are contributing to higher prices for propane and heating oil when compared to the same time last year, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) reports.
Read MoreThe inventory draws in January and for the week ending Jan. 13 make it almost a certainty inventory will end this winter at its lowest point in three years.
Read MoreU.S. propane inventory ended 2016 at 84.123 million barrels after dropping 2.746 million barrels in the final week of the year.
Read MoreThe U.S. domestic propane market continues to change. That’s the message from ICF International in a guest column written for LP Gas magazine.
Read MoreFor the week ending Dec. 9, the U.S. Energy Information Administration reported a 3.629-million-barrel draw in U.S. propane inventory.
Read MoreLP Gas finds out what factors specific to the current heating season will impact total propane inventory through March 2017.
Read MorePropane inventory fell three weeks in a row, but traders remain calm. Find out why.
Read MoreEIA changed its methodology for collecting data on exports, including propane, in an effort to try and make its weekly estimates more accurate.
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