Natural Gas Hits Magical $3; What Next?

 | Oct 22, 2020 18:55

The last time the front-month contract in U.S. natural gas hit $3 was almost two years ago. With the ceiling broken again on Wednesday, the market seems to be bracing for more cold later this month—versus warmer forecasts issued just a week ago.

“As fickle as the weather” isn’t a saying coined without reason, and the icy blasts projected in the eastern United States from the end of next week are expected to have a significant impact going forward on natural gas storage updates provided by the government.

Starting the ball rolling is today's report from the Energy Information Administration, due at 10:30 AM ET (14:30 GMT).

Analysts expect the EIA to say that U.S. utilities added a smaller-than-normal 52 billion cubic feet (bcf) of natural gas into storage for the week ended Oct. 16 following a rise in liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports, despite lower than usual heating demand.

A 52 bcf addition is nearly half of the 92 bcf injection during the same week a year ago and less than the five-year (2015-2019) average build of 75 bcf for the period.

And there’s a chance the build could be even lower. Take for instance the previous week to Oct. 9: the forecast injection was 55bcf while the actual number came in at 46 bcf.

If last week’s build comes in at 52 bcf as forecast, it will raise gas in storage to 3.929 trillion cubic feet—some 9.2% higher than the five-year average and 9.7% above the same week a year ago. 

While the net gain in stockpiles would be bearish for gas prices over time, modest weekly rises can help the market generate and sustain a rally in the near-term—especially in the midst of an intense winter. 

Wednesday’s price action showed how quickly a rally can build.