Tradingvesting..com
Natural Gas
Natural Gas | Commodities
Copper (Cu, atomic number 29) is a reddish, soft, malleable metal prized for its excellent electrical/thermal conductivity and corrosion resistance, making it vital for daily life. . Read More
Big Chart
Invest
Explain
ECONOMIC REPORTS
1
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
MARKET CORRELATION
1
   
   
   
5
EXTERNAL FACTORS
1
2
3
 
Oil - Gold - Silver - Copper - NatGas - Compare
 
 
Natural Gas1. Natural Gas (1 of 6)
Copper2. Copper (2 of 6)
Silver3. Silver (3 of 6)
Commodities | Oil4. Oil (4 of 6)
Gold5. Gold (5 of 6)
Market Correlation6. Market Correlation (6 of 6)
Prev Category Prev Oil Gold Silver Copper NatGas Compare Next Next Category
    → Big Chart   → Explain
MARKET CORRELATION
 
Description
Frequency
Day
Hour
Importance
Rev
 
 
1
Weekly
Thu
10:30
 
 
2
Weekly
Wed
17:30
 
 
3
Weekly
Wed
17:30
 
 
4
Weekly
Thu
17:30
 
 
5
Weekly
Thu
11:00
 
 
Definitions Definitions Big View Big Data Small View Small Data Reports Reports   Snapshot I Snapshot i Snapshot II Snapshot II Slides Slides Economics Reports Global
 
         
Copper - Alternative WebSites
Yahoo Yahoo! CNBC CNBC Bloomberg Investing GooglFin GoogleFin TradingView TradingView Morningstar StockCharts
       
Tradingvesting.com   How to Invest... USA Natural Gas | Commodities   Today's Week Today's Week
         
         
Top of Page
       
  Charts | Daily Monthly USA Natural Gas | Commodities   Today's Week Today's Week
1. NATURAL GAS (UNG)
   
1. NATURAL GAS (UNG)
   
         
Top of Page
       
Tradingvesting.com   Definitions | Explain USA Natural Gas | Commodities   Today's Week Today's Week
     
   
NATURAL GAS

Why Commodities are so important?

The reason commodity prices are so important to the Market Correlation picture is that they play a major role as a leading indicator of inflation. Trends in the Commodity markets tell us a lot about the strength of the economy, which way inflation is heading and the direction of Interest Rates.

Commodity prices influence Bonds, which then influence stocks. They trend in opposite direction of Bond Prices. Keep in mind, that Commodity Markets represent prices in their raw material stage. Turns in Commodity prices usually precede turn in broader gauges of inflation such as CPI and PPI.

Stock Market Impact

A rise in Oil and Gold can cause pain to Bond bull Traders. GoldOil and Copper have a direct bearing onthe stock market sectors that are tied to these commodities. By watching crude prices, which are first in the chain of production trends, one can sometimes spot inflation in the pipeline.

Remember that Copper is use to build autos and homes and is very correlated with the S&P Index. It also very correlated with Bond prices creating an inverse relation between Copper and Bond prices. If Copper start to rise, that means economic strength and that will push Bonds prices lower and Interest Rates higher. On the other hand, falling Copper price means economic weakness.

Bond Market Impact

Commodity prices, represented by the CRB Index, trend in the same direction as Treasury bond yields and in the opposite direction of Bond prices.

Turns in the CRB Index often leads turns in the Bond market and one has to consider that Commodity prices trend in the opposite direction of Bond prices creating an inverse relationship.

Printing Money values Commodities

Whenever governments have printed money throughout history, people put their money in real assets, whether it's rice or silver or natural gas. People protect themselves against inflation.

As for supply: "Commodities are based on supply and demand. You can have demand go down, but if supply goes down more you are going to have a bull market. Price of energy has a psychological effect on inflation and Gold is viewed as a traditional leading indicator of inflation.

A rise in Oil and Gold can cause pain to Bond bull Traders. Gold, Oil and Copper have a direct bearing onthe stockk market sectors that are tied to these commodities. By watching crude prices, which are first in the chain of production trends, one can sometimes spot inflation in the piepeline.

 

         
Top of Page
       
Tradingvesting.com   Data | Source USA Natural Gas | Commodities   Today's Week Today's Week
         
Related Links
Global View  
  Core PCE  
  Producer Price Index  
  Import and Export Prices  
  Employment Cost Injdex (PPI)  
  Cosumer Price Index (CPI)  
 
DATA INFORMATION NATURAL GAS
SOURCE Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), U.S. Department of Labor
WEB www.bls.gov
FREQUENCY Monthly
AVAILABILITY Mid-month
COVERAGE Data are for the previous month. Data for June are released in July.
REVISIONS No
IMPORTANCE Inflation - Very Important
         
Top of Page
     
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Meetings
Minutes
Beige Book
Growth
Growth
GDP
US Balance
Spending
Inflation
Growth
CPI
Core PCE
PPI
Employment
Employment
Payroll
Rate
ADP
Manufacturing
Manufacturing
ISM Mfg
Industrial
Factory
Real Estate
Real Estate
Starts
Permits
Shiller
stock market, online trading, ETF, portfolio, dividends, crypto, day trading, shares, how to start investing, broker, day trading, IPO, bull market, bear market, how to invest, margin account, futures, stock market today, stock market futures, investing, stock signals, stock alerts, stockmarket, alerts
 
 
Calendar | 52-Weeks | Global | Trend500 | Top News | Reports | Charts | Indexes | Today
Vix | Oil | ETFs | Stocks | Futures | 10-Year | S&P 500 | Markets | Register
About | Contact | Log-in | Register | WeDo | Times | Links
Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Risk Disclosure
 
Tradingvesting.com | Trading and Investing
 
All Rights Reserved | www.tradingvesting.com | © Copyright 2008
Discipline - Confidence - Patience