It's A Big Week For Natural Gas

 | Nov 12, 2019 03:08PM ET

  • Seasonality takes the price higher
  • The injection season is ending
  • The risk of a long position rises with the price of the energy commodity
  • Natural gas is a volatile fuel in its physical form, and the price action in the futures market can be equally combustible at times. Periodic price explosions and impositions are the reason why speculators flock to natural gas. Price volatility creates a paradise of opportunity for nimble traders with their fingers on the pulse of markets.

    Natural gas is now entering what is typically the time of the year with the highest degree of price variance. In November 2018, the lowest level of inventories in years, cold weather at the start of the winter season, and uncertainty over the average temperatures during the winter months combined to send the price to the highest level since 2014. Natural gas futures ran out of buying at just shy of $5 per MMBtu last year at this time. By August, the price dropped to its lowest level since 2016 when it traded to just over $2 per MMBtu.

    Each year is always a new adventure in the volatile energy commodity, and the price action over the recent weeks reflects the uncertainty of demand during the coming winter months. The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG) follows the price of natural gas higher and lower. The triple leveraged UGAZ and DGAZ ETN products attract lots of volume because they magnify the price action in the market that already exhibits a high degree of variance. We are likely to see more market participants flock to the natural gas arena over the coming weeks as we enter the peak season of demand in the United States. Recently, the price action has not disappointed those looking for broader trading ranges.

    Seasonality Takes The Price Higher/h3

    Seasonality is a powerful force in commodity markets. In the grain markets, prices tend to rise during the spring and early summer as the uncertainty of crop peaks when seeds go into the ground. In gasoline futures, prices often rise in the spring as the summer driving season increases demand for the fuel. In animal protein futures markets, prices typically move higher during the spring as the summer grilling season approaches. In natural gas, the shift from the injection to the withdrawal season tends to be a powerful bullish force during November. The uncertainty of the average temperatures during the winter months determines the demand for heating and natural gas each year during the peak season.

    The Injection Season Is Ending/h3

    In mid-October, the natural gas futures market fell to a higher low at $2.187 per MMBtu. Since then, the price has taken off on the upside.