Dear Sir,
LNG prices do not follow crude prices closely. This is because these are two different markets and LNG is not produced from crude but from natural gas.
I am now retired and since most of the industry data, such as Platt's LNG Price Assessment are not accessible unless paid for. (All these were available to me when I was working). Only relevant literature I could find was:
"Prices for LNG in Japan hit $10.069 per million Btu (MMBtu) on December 15, having fallen from around $16 at the start of 2014. As LNG contract prices are typically based on the average of the preceding six to nine months, it will be mid-2015 before suppliers feel the full effects of lower oil prices on their cash flow.
The LNG price decline came in two stages. Prices dropped in the summer, as new supply from ExxonMobil’s Papua New Guinea (PNG LNG) project hit the market. Prices then fell further as Brent oil dropped from $110/bbl in August, to below $60/bbl in December.
When Brent crude sells for $100, oil-linked natural gas contracts typically translate to around $14 MMBtu, giving U.S. LNG a big price advantage. This advantage disappears as crude prices fall, with crude at $60 LNG indexes to $8.40 per MMBtu. U.S. LNG producers have been targeting prices of $11 or $12 per MMBtu to be profitable after absorbing the costs of buying the gas, liquefying it, shipping it around the globe and regasifying it."
Full articl at:
https://breakingenergy.com/2015/01/21/impact-of-falling-oil-prices-on-lng/
For period 2016 /2017 :
"Asia spot LNG prices have continued to slide lower in recent weeks, falling below the levels seen in December 2016 and 2017 despite most of the current year having been stronger than the two before.
The ICIS front-month East Asia Index plummeted from $10.850/MMBtu on 16 November by more than two dollars to $8.525/MMBtu on 14 December. It’s now down almost four dollars from the year-high of $12.25/MMBtu seen in mid-September. The EAX represents the value of deliveries to Japan, South Korea, China and Taiwan.
High temperatures had brought a price spike in June 2018 as they boosted air-conditioning demand in Japan. Prices were again strong in September/October as China prepared early for winter, filling up its storage tanks in an attempt to avoid a repeat of the strong prices brought about by the country’s unexpected surge in demand the previous winter. But those high inventory levels have been met by an unusually mild start to winter in the east Asia region, sending prices tumbling lower.
Full article link:
https://www.icis.com/energy-connections/2018/12/asia-spot-lng-drops-below-2017-and-2016-levels/
You would note that LNG prices in the Asian region were hovering around $8 to 9 per mm Btu during that period. Both Pakistan's & Indian term prices are generally in line. Traditionally the Industry relates the LNG term prices to crudes prices because the total volume of trade in crude oil is far greater than the LNG volume, which to my knowledge is less than 140-million tons per annum, hence less vulnerable to manipulation.
I think this topic has now been discussed to the nth degree. I repeat my assertion that I do not believe that any 'Hanky panky' was involved. I have never met the guy nor have had any relations with him ever. However. those who continue to believe that Shahid Khaqan Abbasi skimmed off billions of rupees in this contract, they are welcome to go on doing so. No skin off my back.
I have nothing else to say on this subject.