Breaking News

Detroit hosts auto show against bleak backdro...
9:51 PM  01/09/09

Cisco CEO sees economy growing by second half
9:36 PM  01/09/09

Dow industrials finish sharply lower Friday, ...
4:02 PM  01/09/09

Citigroup, Morgan Stanley in talks to merge b...
3:41 PM  01/09/09

Reading Rubin's Move
10:30 PM  01/09/09

CES: 1; Apple: 0
10:30 PM  01/09/09

A highflying marketing concept goes global
4:31 PM  01/09/09

Deal to restore Russian gas hangs in balance
4:31 PM  01/09/09

more »

Energy ETFs and Katrina

By Bill Luby | August 26, 2008 | 12:18 PM | 0 Comments

With Hurricane Gustav now packing 90 mph winds and apparently headed in the direction of the Gulf of Mexico, this seems like a good time to pull up some data from the Hurricane Katrina period to get a sense of what happened to energy stocks during this time.

Recall that of Katrina was the fourth strongest Atlantic hurricane ever recorded and the most intense hurricane ever to enter the Gulf of Mexico at the time it made landfall on August 29, 2005. Amazingly, just three weeks later, Hurricane Rita turned out to be even stronger than Katrina, reaching maximum sustained winds of 180 mph on September 21, before losing strength and making landfall on September 24 with 115 mph winds. While Katrina ended up doing most of the damage, the appearance of an even stronger Rita headed toward an already damaged energy infrastructure almost certainly had a much stronger psychological impact on the markets. Katrina, which strengthened considerably just before making landfall, arrived with much less fanfare than Rita.

In the chart below, I have captured the relative performance of crude oil, natural gas, the broad energy select sector SPDR ETF (NYSE: XLE), and the oil services HOLDRs ETF (NYSE: OIH) for a period of a little over six months leading up to and following Katrina and Rita. Note that there was very little net change in crude oil, XLE and OIH from the end of July to October/November; almost all of the action was in natural gas.

Comments (0)  |  Related Topics  » | | | | | |

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
More information about formatting options Captcha Image: you will need to recognize the text in it.
Please type in the letters/numbers that are shown in the image above.