Natural Gas Price Fundamental Weekly Forecast – Ripe for Short-Covering, but Gains Likely to be Capped by Storage Build
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Despite bearish supply fundamentals and test of the lowest level since February 15, natural gas futures managed to eke out a small gain last week, signaling that perhaps the short-term buying may be greater than the selling at current price levels. The market was headed for a steep loss until a closing price reversal bottom on the daily chart turned it higher for the week.

Last week, May Natural Gas futures settled at $2.664, up $0.002 or +0.08%.

There was very little change in the fundamentals on Friday, nonetheless, the market turned higher, erasing all of the week’s earlier losses. Traders attributed the turnaround to good, old-fashioned profit taking after a prolonged sell-off from March 19.

Driving most of the selling pressure last week were weaker spot gas prices across most of the country and milder temperatures throughout the week that softened demand. Furthermore, a larger-than-expected storage build marked the official start of storage season.

Losses were likely limited by forecasts for the return of colder temperatures next week, which could have a potential impact on demand and storage supply rebuilding.

As Bespoke chief meteorologist Brian Lovern put it, “We still have slightly above-normal demand” once the current warm spell dissipates, but with a weaker-than-normal cold air source available up in Canada and more storm variability in play, the upcoming blocking pattern has not been able to push the pattern any further to the cold side.”

On Friday, NatGasWeather added that the American weather models reflected slightly cooler trends across the northern United States from Thursday (April 11) to April 16, but then was little changed before and after. They went on to say that the third week out was likely to come in as seasonal to neutral for this time of the year, “but with the potential to trend cooler in time across the northern United States.”

U.S. Energy Information Administration Weekly Storage Report

On Thursday, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported that U.S. natural gas stockpiles increased by 23 billion cubic feet for the week-ending March 29. The consensus called for a build of 2 BCF although some guesses were as high as 10 Bcf. The five-year average for the week is a withdrawal of 28 billion cubic feet, and last year’s withdrawal totaled 29 billion cubic feet, according to the government data. Additionally, Total U.S. stockpiles now stand at 16.8% below last year’s level and 30.9% below the five-year average.

The EIA reported that U.S. working stocks of natural gas totaled about 1.130 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) at the end of last week, around 505 billion cubic feet below the five-year average of 1.635 Tcf and 228 Bcf below last year’s total for the same period. Working gas in storage totaled 1.358 Tcf for the same period a year ago.