Chart Of The Day: Natural Gas Heats Up As Deep-Freeze Covers Much Of U.S.

 | Feb 16, 2021 09:34AM ET

Bone-chilling weather throughout a significant portion of the United States over the past few days—including a rare deep freeze accompanied by winter storms across much of the country's south, including the state of Texas—has left millions of people without electricity and taken a toll on the Lone Star state's energy industry. According to Reuters, the storms in Texas, "by far the country's largest crude producer, [is] shutting oil refineries and forcing restrictions from natural gas pipeline operators."

WTI crude, which had recently been hovering above the $60 level, this morning fell back below it, despite the rolling black-outs throughout Texas causing disruption to the production of oil. Sellers took advantage of the psychological round-number resistance and used it as an opportunity to take profits and refocus on natural gas, which has continued soaring because of the unexpected cold and fears of supply disruptions.

March contracts on NatGas jumped 5.5% to $3.073 per MMBtu, with March gasoline following with a 5.3% gain to $1.7813 a gallon.

The spike in price helped complete a series of bullish patterns for the energy commodity.