Forecasters to Natural Gas Bulls: Put Your Head on the Shoulder Season

 | Mar 23, 2023 05:41AM ET

  • Gas market at pivotal stage between end of storage draws and start of injection
  • The just-ended winter, one of the warmest, has left incredible gas balances
  • Challenge now is for front-month gas to stay above $2
  • ‘Put Your Head on my Shoulder’ says Paul Anka in his 1960 song, where he tells his lover he’s ready to support her any way she wants.

    A few weather forecasters appeared to be offering similar love to natural gas longs this week, saying even with the end of winter, temperatures might be cool enough to generate a little heating demand as the market experiences its own ‘shoulder season’.

    In gas market terminology, the ‘shoulder months’ are the months just before and after summer, i.e., March through April and September through October.

    Since temperatures are usually more moderate in late spring and early fall, fewer people rely on gas to heat and cool their homes during those times.

    With 2022/23 winter already being one of the warmest on record, the current shoulder season should actually be a greater demand killer for gas.

    Yet, judging from the temperature calls made by some forecasters on Wednesday, there could be a little hangover chill from the just-ended winter — which had its last day on Monday — to make it through the next few weeks.

    That should theoretically lead to more burns of gas in storage for heating, before the start of the so-called ‘injection period’ for gas where producers of the fuel would start filling underground holding caverns for the fuel with more supply.

    Houston-based energy markets advisory Gelber & Associates said in a note issued Wednesday:

    “Cooler temperatures will be bullish for the remainder of the withdrawal season’s storage withdrawals”.

    Gas draws were projected to last another 3 weeks before the start of the injection season, Gelber said. Typically, the injection season comes after large withdrawals of gas from storage over a stretch of eight to 10 weeks.

    The just-ended winter, however, has left incredible gas balances in those caverns.

    The US Energy Information Administration, or EIA, said storage totaled 1.972 tcf, or trillion cubic feet, as of March 10. That was up 36% from the year-ago level of 1.451 tcf and 24% higher than the five-year average of 1.594 tcf. Any additions during the injection season will only add to those eye-watering levels.