Natural Gas: Why The Deep Price Freeze?

 | Nov 27, 2019 09:41

Like rats fleeing a sinking ship, the funds that feasted on the highs in natural gas futures just weeks ago have abandoned their positions on signs that the near-term icy blast expected in many gas-fired heating regions will take longer to materialize.

It’s not just the weather that’s weighing on the market. Weekly storage numbers for gas, due at 10:30 AM ET today, are expected to show a drawdown of less than 30 billion cubic feet for the week ended Nov. 22 — less than half of the consumption for the same week a year ago.

Production, meanwhile, is on the upswing again. According to energy markets intelligence firm Genscape, U.S. gas output on Monday was back to a record 94.39 billion cubic feet per day, after the freeze-offs and maintenance works earlier this month that reduced some output.

Funds Have Turned Heavy Sellers/h2

While a switch in the front-month gas contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Henry Hub to January from December had enabled the market to defend the $2.50 per million British thermal units support, analyst Scott Shelton warns that gas funds “had turned heavy sellers … and likely to sell more.” Just on Nov. 5, Henry Hub’s front-month had hit 8-½ month highs of $2.91 per mmBtu — about 14% above current levels.