This Week's Update:
The near-term natural gas market saw some weakness on Friday as the prompt month (Aug) closed more than eight cents lower to settle at $2.60/MMBtu. Through the end of the curve there were some gains in Cals ’26-’34, up one to five cents on the day.
Fundamentals:
Production has remained steady around the 101 Bcf/d levels for the past week
Demand has softened. LNG exports started last week off lower as few of the facilities took in less gas for Monday and Tuesday, but export volumes have rebounded to nearly 13 Bcf/d. Bentek is currently projecting a 20 Bcf injection for the week ending June 27
EIA/Gas Storage: For the week ending June 21, 2024, the EIA reported an injection of 52 Bcf into underground storage vs. an estimated injection of 56 Bcf. Inventories are 3,097 Bcf or 11.3% (314 Bcf) more than the same period last year and 20.6% (528 Bcf) more than the 5-year average.
Weather impact:
Weather forecasts indicate that above-normal temperatures will stick around along the East Coast and west of the Rockies to California for this week. Into the second week of July, that heat will be widespread, encompassing most of the country
DTN’s 16–30-day forecast could feature more than 206 CDDs in a fifteen-day span as extensive bullish anomalies extend over the Central US into the heart of summer
In short:
As noted last week, medium-term upside remains a distinct possibility for NYMEX futures, but incremental upside remains a highly weather-driven call. DTN is forecasting record July heat at 431 Cooling Degree Days (CDDs), with accompanying demand-pull strength likely to lead to upside potential for natural gas. If weather forecasts lapse, however—as over the prior week—downside is probable.
Brief weather weakness may also coincide with pipeline flow monitors exhibiting a tendency to trend higher into the end of the calendar month—offering near-term bearish risks for August.
A substantial rebound in dry gas production over the past two weeks—adding 1.6-1.8 Bcf/d (10-13 Bcf/week) has already softened upside for NYMEX pricing. A demonstrated proclivity for pipeline flows to rise into the end of the calendar month may lead to the impression of higher production—and softening prices—over the next 7-10 days. Further, many natural gas producers staring down historically weak market this spring opted to defer supply into the higher-priced summer—potentially leading to multiple well pads coming online into early July and further offset heat-based demand strength.
In Depth:
DTN’s 16–30-day forecast could feature more than 206 CDDs in a fifteen-day span as extensive bullish anomalies extend over the Central US into the heart of summer. The recent heat wave set records in many parts of the Lower 48—for June. A repeat of extreme heat anomalies during mid-July could prompt even more substantial demand gains, particularly if temperatures average 3°F above normal across Texas. Still, a weaker Madden Jullian Oscillation could lead the pattern to “deamplify” into the end of July, eventually spelling a respite in temperatures. This roasting pattern—and the accompanying tiny weekly EIA injections likely to result—do not appear fully baked-in to the market and, should it verify, offer NYMEX front-month prices retesting $3.00/MMBtu.
The 30-45 day window may remain a tug-of-war between boiling temperatures smashing records to lift demand and returning production bolstered by supply deferrals from a historically weak spring. Tropical threats may also pick up. Eventually, however, the market will have to reckon with bulging storage—potentially reaching 3,200 Bcf by the 4th of July—higher production, and rising demand risks, offering multiple bearish hazards into the 90-day window.
Natural Gas Prices:
For contracts expiring in next 3 months (or NMR):
Why buy now?—DRT for 12-Month contracts starting in Aug and Sept below:
General info regarding the start date: Gas is still relatively cheap vs. the past 24 months. There’s a lot of uncertainty about gas futures right now, especially in the near-to-medium term. With all the uncertainty, customers should consider adding to their portfolio while gas prices are fair.
For contracts expiring in 9-12 months:
Electric: