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Natural gas posts worst quarterly drop of 50%; Bulls count on summer demand next

Published 03/31/2023, 03:12 PM
Updated 03/31/2023, 03:21 PM
© Reuters.

By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com -- U.S. natural gas prices experienced what appeared to be their biggest plunge in a quarter, handing bulls in the space a loss of more than 50% for the December to March period, as an unusually warm winter led to a huge inventory of the fuel used for heating.

Natural gas for May delivery settled at $2.216 per mmBtu, or metric million British thermal units, on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Henry Hub — up 11.2 cents, or 5.3%, on the day.

For the week, the benchmark gas contract fell 6% while for the month, it lost 19%. Worst was the quarter, where it tumbled 50%.

The selloff in gas came amid weaker-than-usual demand for heating that has left 1.853 trillion cubic feet, or tcf, of gas in U.S. storage, the Energy Information Administration, or EIA, said in its latest inventory reading for the week ended March 24.

The current U.S. gas storage is 31% higher from the balance at the same time a year ago and 21% up versus the five-year average for storage, the EIA said.

The gas balance for 2023 is the highest in recent memory and remains the bane of bulls in the market who’ve been trying to restart a spectacular rally they enjoyed just months ago, before an unusually warm winter season led to less heating demand, sending excess gas supply into storage.

The path forward for gas bulls would be to hope for outsized summer demand that would lead to higher-than-usual storage draws of the fuel for cooling, said analysts.

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Barring a scorching and long summer, “we still need a decent supply move downward this summer to facilitate balancing this market,” Eric McGuire, analyst at Wood Mackenzie, said in comments carried by naturalgasintel.com.

Latest comments

Where is your most electicity come from in the US? It’s not solar, wind, petro, nuclear, or coal. It’s NG. Why is this author keep looking at heating homes as the only usage of NG? No NG, no electricity to recharge your electric cars
mmBtu is a million (1,000,000) British thermal unit. One Btu is defined as the amount of heat or energy required to raise the temperature of one pound (453.6 Millilitres) of water by one degree Fahrenheit. M was used as thousands in Roman numbers. Therefore, MM (or lowercase “mm”) is 1,000 * 1,000 equal to 1,000,000, which is 1 million.
No reason for it to go up with  (The current U.S. gas storage is 31% higher from the balance at the same time a year ago and 21% up versus the five-year average for storage, the EIA said.) So the rise in price won't last and should probably head back toward 2.00 once again next week or even lower possibly. Oil is a much easier play then gas. If it was totally up to Sleepy administration they would control that and get rid of it too. this is the admin that our forefathers warned us about.. So don't be woke (eat up with the d.a.'s agenda)
The exploration and delivery industry is beginning to scale back activity with many companies on the verge of collapse. The high price of capital integral to operations combined with low delivery revenue and increased governmental regulation will have a certain and perceptible impact on supplies in the second half of 2023.
Interesting. Almost feel like they lie or low ball it for climate change hopes. History shows there is usually a spike in April to Mid,End May. Thinking of trying to ride it up. What do you guys think?
Natgas is going to 1.5 before summer
Consumer spending is a key driver of economic growth.
The global economy is becoming more interconnected.
Nat gas is a screaming buy
Lot of people are bull on natural gas Hence hitting bottom, Next month rally
If it goes to zero I'm going all in!
GO NEGATIVE PLS
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