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Natural gas in 5th week of freefall that has more than halved its value

Published 01/20/2023, 02:21 PM
Updated 01/20/2023, 02:54 PM
© Reuters.

By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com -- Five weeks running and the bulls in natural gas aren’t catching a break yet from the weather.

Futures of the heating fuel on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Henry Hub fell 5% in the latest week, adding to their 48% drop over four previous weeks, as temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere remained unseasonably high for a winter.

Natural gas bulls are experiencing one of their most painful months ever, after the start of what the industry is calling the warmest winter in two decades.

The front-month February gas contract on the Henry Hub settled on Friday at $3.174 per mmBtu, or metric million British thermal units. It fell to a new 19-month low of $3.11 during the session, sending gas bulls up gasping for air on fears of the market tumbling to $2 levels. Fortunately, for the longs, the moment passed, with the $3 support holding.

Analysts say there is still time to fix the market, but Mother Nature has to cooperate — and quickly.

“There is still the remainder of January, as well as the months of February and March, left to go before the end of the winter withdrawal season, therefore, weather will still play a large role in the bullishness or bearishness of NYMEX gas futures prices,” analysts at Houston-based energy trading consultancy Gelber & Associates said in a note to their clients in natural gas.

“But without meaningful, extended cold periods in the longer-range forecasts, it sets up end-of-season gas storage to potentially land in notably bearish territory by April 1,” the note said.

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Gelber’s analysts observed that through the initial 2.5 months of the winter withdrawal season, natural gas inventories have fallen by a total of 760 bcf or billion cubic feet — which was 213 bcf bearish versus the five-year average.

“Even with the potential for at least another two sizable bearish withdrawals on the horizon, unless there are some big surprises from Mother Nature over the next few weeks, the 2022-23 winter will retain its position as the smallest to-date draw in the last five years well into February,” the analysts said.

Gas production, comparatively, is up more than 5 bcf per day year-over-year.

The conventional wisdom on the Henry Hub is that in order for the bulls to find upward trajectory, February needs to come in colder than average, culminating in at least one more 200-plus bcf storage withdrawal this season.

Another bullish catalyst would be if the Freeport LNG terminal — closed for months now, stalling consumption of 2 bcf per day or 60 bcf per month — resumes full operations by February, putting back on course exports of liquefied natural gas.

Latest comments

or use an option spread.....
low risk entry(long) with tight stop......
More bleeding. Its seems to be never ending but in casino style trading the smart players create fear in the market, flushing out retailers at lower prices while they are slowly taking positions at these dirt cheap prices. They may bleed NG to $1 while frackers are pumping massive amounts of NG into storage to make up for lower prices but for how long can they keep doing that?
 There's a billion more people in the world since you arrived in NYC. They all need energy.
 The debate is over natural gas prices, which are primarily determined by the northeastern US heating and cooling market. The question of a billion people or more needing energy doesn't affect the argument, aside from being a below-the-belt jab at me and my relative experience as a New Yorker.
 What? My comment wasn't at all meant to be a jab at you. The population of the world has grown by a billion more people since you said you arrived in NY.  Think macro. Your article states that the export terminal in Houston still being closed helps to keep the price of NG down in the US. It's not lost on me that US government continues to add requirements to extend the date of reopening. No reason to move fast, thank goodness for coal.
The ride from last April to now has been crazy to say the least! Peaked around 10$ in the summer and now heading below 3$ in the winter!!
Speculators are a crazy crowd
How low it can go so we start to buy
Now that NG is selling for 2 buck chuck, they can't blame the inflation on oil and gas anymore. Truth is, oil and gas never was the cause of inflation, because it was one of the last commodities to rise and the first to fall. The real cause of inflation was borrowed trillions given away to the land of no returns.
That's correct. Particularly non-productive "woke" social spending since early 2021.
price seems low. Russias gas is off the western market, so demand is huge. Usa's gas inventory dropping faster than predicted. Price seems manipulated imo.
At least due for a correction short term.
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