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Natural gas down 19% on the week after ‘dead cat bounce’

Published 03/10/2023, 02:04 PM
Updated 03/10/2023, 02:47 PM
© Reuters.

By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com -- Is natural gas returning to $3 anytime soon? That seems to be the question on the minds of almost everyone in this market though it may not be articulated as much, with the heating fuel posting another spectacular double-digit weekly loss after appearing to be on a higher trajectory just last week.

The most-active April gas contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Henry Hub settled Friday's trade at $2.43 per mmBtu, or metric million British thermal units, down 11.3 cents, or 4.3%.

For the week, April gas was down nearly 19%.

Gas futures rose a compounded 30% in the prior two weeks, hitting a 5-week high of $3.027 on March 3, on expectations of late winter chill after months of unseasonable warmth.

But like a curse to the bulls, this week’s weather models were back to pointing at higher temperatures, triggering another market crash that proved the rally of the past two weeks to be nothing more than a “dead cat bounce.”

Charts for April gas suggest that the path of least resistance is lower, says Sunil Kumar Dixit, chief technical strategist at SKCharting.com.

“As gas breaks below the previous week's low, immediate resistance shifts to $2.66, above which $2.80 is the next challenge,” said Dixit. “Below the $2.55 support, we can witness a further drop to $2.30 and $2.18.”

Fundamentally, the outlook for gas has undergone a paradigm shift after this week’s change in the weather model readings, said Houston-based energy markets advisory Gelber & Associates.

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“Production is still strong at 100.5 billion cubic feet per day,” Gelber said in a note that affirmed gas output back to late January highs after recent declines below 100 bcf. “NYMEX natural gas prompt month price, as a result, has largely traded sideways.”

​​An unusually warm winter has led to considerably less heating demand in the United States this year, leaving more gas in storage than initially thought.

Storage of natural gas stood at a total 2.030 tcf, or trillion cubic feet, as of March 3 — up 32% from the year-ago level of 1.537 tcf and 19% higher than the five-year average of 1.671 tcf, the EIA, or Energy Information Administration, reported.

Responding to the warmth and lackluster storage draws, gas prices plunged from a 14-year high of $10 per mmBtu in August, reaching $7 in December before hitting a 2-½ year bottom of $1.967 in late February.

“When is natty returning to $3? Or will we plumb a new low for this year before that happens? That’s what everyone wants to know,” said John Kilduff, partner at New York energy hedge fund Again Capital.

Latest comments

ALWAYS FAKE DUMP! I hope this week is flat green
Krishnan only talks about two factors affecting NG price week after week. 1. Weather models. 2. Storage amount report by EIA. This is too simplitic. The energy from NG is used everywhere on almost eveything we produce, so weather and how much left in storage do not tell much.
What are the other 'seasonal' factors associated with NG demand other than weather such as fertilizer production and other demands for NG other than heating homes. Too much storage of some fertilizers could be hazardous. But high demand for fertilizers in the spring planting season could cause demand for NG to accelerate. Whatever happened to the rising trend to use more NG for power generation too. Or the production of plastics, etc. Or reports of producers to cut production, selling assets or even going bankrupt because of low prices and higher debt interest rates. I agree Tom, it appears someone is choosing to ignore other bullish factors.
$1.5 was the lowest and $14 was the highest in the last 20 years. Look at the price now. If you were to bet on NG now, it doesn’t look like you can’t lose more than 40%. But, if you were to bet against it, you could lose 99%. How will you bet? Considering higher cost to produce NG with inflation, the price of it is not likely to reach a new low.
Production costs are fixed costs ie not dependent on volume. They will keep producing more and more as they are able to sell every bcf they produce
Please enlighten how production costs are fixed during mist of high inflation. I am comparing costs in the last 20 years
What is the lowest and highest price of NG in the last 20 years?
So gas is as cheap and plentiful as 1993? OMG has this been smashed down. Tell you what. If it goes to zero can I buy all of it?
Gas Natural is a dangerous bet than anything else. Gas Nat definitely like cryptocurrencies. It becomes easy to fall or rocket so fast for no reason. It can make you money fast or lose it all quickly. I rate Gas Nat is the biggest scam than the rest of the commodities
1.8 hard stop. Boil reverse split cannot be avoidable and so is KOLD century.
Gap 2.37 , 2.05 & 1.78 too close to be missed lol
I'd like to see this weather model you speak of? Both 6-10 and 8-14 day say cold weather across the US.
The trend is your friend. Remember Nat Gas is not your friend! Its Natty.
Ha ha ... true, guru! It's nutty :))
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