How Natural Gas Market Is Telling Us That Better Days Are Ahead

 | Apr 07, 2020 03:05PM ET

The Natural Gas Futures market began dropping long before the global pandemic caused a deflationary spiral in stocks, commodities, and markets across all asset classes. After rising to a pre-peak season high of $2.905 per MMBtu, the natural gas futures market has done little but make lower highs and lower lows. On every attempt at a recovery, selling emerged.

Throughout the peak winter season, inventories remained above last year’s level and the five-year average, according to the Energy Information Administration. At the same time, the weather conditions during the winter season were not supportive of the price. It took until the week of March 27 for stockpiles to finally decline below the 2-trillion-cubic-feet level. In 2019, at the end of the withdrawal season, stocks dropped to 1.107 trillion cubic feet in March.

Last week, natural gas futures did not reach another new low, but it came within two ticks of the lowest price since 1995. As April futures had rolled to May, the price action gobbled up all of the contango as the new active month did reach a contract low. The United States Natural Gas Fund, LP (NYSE:UNG) moves higher and lower with the price of the forlorn energy commodity.

A perfect bearish storm going into the injection season

Natural gas prices continued along a slippery bearish path last week after April futures rolled to May.