Natural Gas ETFs: Bullish Call on a Sliding Commodity

As its name implies, FCG has significant natural gas exposure, though many of its holdings increased oil output when crude prices were high. Still, natural gas prices are part of the equation with FCG.

“The commodity has recently jumped from $2.75 per million Btu to about $3 per million Btu. During the winter, Perkins expects natural gas prices to rise to $4,” according to CNBC. “Yet Perkins grants that weather, that famous driver of natural gas, could throw a wrench in that thesis.”

Earlier this year, the iPath Series B Bloomberg Natural Gas Subindex Total Return ETN (NYSEArca: GAZB) debuted as an alternative to the iPath Bloomberg Natural Gas Subindex Total Return ETN (NYSEArca: GAZ).

Related: Hotter Temps Don’t Always Heat Up Nat Gas ETFs

GAZB will try to reflect the performance of the same index as GAZ, Bloomberg Natural Gas Subindex Total Return Index, which tracks the potential returns through an unleveraged investment in natural gas futures contracts.

Aggressive, risk-tolerant traders can exploit plummeting natural gas prices with leveraged exchange traded products such as the VelocityShares Daily 3x Inverse Natural Gas ETN (NYSEArca: DGAZ), which seeks to provide the daily inverse 3x or -300% performance of NYMEX natural gas futures. The ProShares UltraShort Bloomberg Natural Gas (NYSEArca: KOLD) provides the daily inverse 2x or -200% performance.

For more information on the natgas market, visit our natural gas category.