Enron Mail

From:vince.kaminski@enron.com
To:clayton.vernon@enron.com
Subject:Re: from today's paper
Cc:vince.kaminski@enron.com
Bcc:vince.kaminski@enron.com
Date:Thu, 29 Jun 2000 01:08:00 -0700 (PDT)

Clayton,

It translates into a credit risk for those on the other side of the hedge.
Many producers have a long history of poor timing of hedges.
I could give you quite a long list. They definitely need a bright
adviser who will tell them the price of gas two years from now.

Vince







Clayton Vernon @ ENRON
06/29/2000 01:02 AM

To: Vince J Kaminski/HOU/ECT@ECT
cc:
Subject: from today's paper

Vince:

Here's an amazing factoid in today's paper related to the issue of how much
money you can "make" (sic) by hedging:

...

Other companies analysts say are saddled with hedges include El Paso Energy
Corp. and Coastal Corp., which are merging.

A Coastal official declined to comment on the company's forward positions.

Although El Paso is known for its pipeline business, it produces gas as
result of its $6.2 billion acquisition last year of Sonat. "More than 90
percent" of that gas is hedged through the rest of the year, said Bruce
Connery, vice president of investor relations. The forward contracts are for
$2.40, he said.

Hedging in the current market plays to the company's primary aim of meeting
investors' expectations, Connery said.

"Our first goal is to deliver the earnings goal that we set out, and that
dictates that we hedge out commodity volatility," he said.


...

$2.40??? Are you kidding????

Clayton