Is A Natural Gas Correction On the Horizon?

 | Aug 20, 2020 04:10PM ET

Since the end of June, the natural gas futures market experienced a significant recovery. The price traded to a 25-year low at $1.432 in late June. Over the past sessions, the nearby NYMEX futures contract reached a peak of $2.465, over 72% higher in only three short months.

Warren Buffett’s purchase of Dominion Energy's (NYSE:D) transmission and pipeline assets for approximately $10 billion put a spotlight on the natural gas market and likely contributed to a shift in sentiment. While inventories remain at a high level compared with this time in 2019 and the five-year average, production has declined significantly. According to Baker Hughes, only 70 natural gas rigs were extracting the energy commodity from the crust of the earth in the United States on Aug. 14, compared with 165 in mid-August 2019. In commodity markets, the cure for low prices is often low prices, and natural gas at a quarter-of-a-century low was likely far too inexpensive. A value investor, Buffet, seized the opportunity to pick up a bargain in the natural gas market, and the price responded by moving more than 70% higher over the past weeks.

Today, the Energy Information Administration released its latest inventory data. The market had expected a 43-billion-cubic-feet injection into storage for the week ending on Aug. 14. The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG) moves higher and lower with the price of NYMEX natural gas futures. The BOIL (NYSE:BOIL) and KOLD (NYSE:KOLD) products provide double leverage on the up and downside in the volatile energy commodity.

h2 Market Expected 45-bcf Injection/h2

According to Estimize, a crowdsourcing website, the consensus estimates for the increase in natural gas inventories for the week ending on Aug. 14 was approximately 45 billion cubic feet.