Investing
Natural gas: Another 5% win week despite hovering at $2
© Reuters
By Barani Krishnan
Investing.com — Natural gas bulls aren’t making much progress beyond the mid $2 level, but a second weekly win of 5% might assure those long on America’s favorite fuel for indoor temperature control that a price breakout could be imminent.
The most-active on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Henry Hub settled down 1.6 cents, or 0.7%, at $2.221 per mmBtu, or metric million British thermal units.
For the week though, May gas was up 5.1%, mirroring last week’s run-up.
The debate on when the bearish tide would irrevocably turn for ‘natty’ — as the all-season fuel for indoor heating and cooling is known — has raged since gas prices began their headlong fall from 14-year highs of $10 in August to crash to 2-1/2 year lows beneath $2.
At brief intervals over the past two months, the market had appeared to be on a cusp of a serious rebound — like in late February when it got above $3 after breaking below $2 earlier that month for the first time since September 2020.
This week, again, such a phenomenon appeared when the front-month May gas contract rallied to almost $2.40 — a level it had not reached since late March — exciting traders and analysts over the prospect of $3 pricing and beyond.
Friday’s slide in gas prices came as investor focus returned to the abysmal state of U.S. gas inventories held in storage, after one of the warmest winters on record.
for the week ended April 14 rose by 75 billion cubic feet, or bcf, after all the burning done for power generation as well as for heating as some unexpected chill for this time of the year surfaced, the Energy Information Administration, or EIA, reported.
That 75-bcf injection bumped up total gas inventories to 1.930 trillion cubic feet, or tcf, EIA records showed. At current levels, the gas storage stands at 34% above the year-ago level of 1.442 tcf and nearly 21% higher than the five-year average of 1.601 tcf.
In the short-term, Henry Hub prices could continue to recover in the higher $2 trajectory, said analysts at Houston-based energy markets advisory Gelber & Associates.
“Weather forecasts from major weather models still show a cold front coming through in the coming days, leading to colder than average end of April and beginning of May,” Gelber’s analysts said in a note issued on Friday to the firm’s natural gas clients. “This cold front is expected to increase weather driven demand to high levels.”
But the mid-term outlook remained cloudy, the note said.
“Overall, the market still has way too much supply for these small weather runs to significantly affect the supply/demand balance,” Gelber’s analysts added.
Read the full article here
-
Investing4 days ago
This All-Access Pass to Learning Is Now $20 for Black Friday
-
Passive Income4 days ago
How to Create a Routine That Balances Rest and Business Success
-
Side Hustles5 days ago
Apple Prepares a New AI-Powered Siri to Compete With ChatGPT
-
Side Hustles2 days ago
A Macy’s Employee Made Accounting Errors Worth $132 Million
-
Passive Income5 days ago
Customers Want More Than Just a Product — Here’s How to Keep Up
-
Side Hustles6 days ago
MIT Gives Free Tuition For Families Earning $200,000 or Less
-
Side Hustles4 days ago
Gift the Power of Language Learning with This Limited-Time Price on Babbel
-
Investing1 day ago
Factbox-How Trump can overhaul US financial regulators when he takes office By Reuters