Massive Reversal in Natural Gas After Hitting Historic Lows

 | Aug 04, 2020 10:57AM ET

Seasonality is a critical factor in the natural gas futures market. The price tends to reach highs as the winter months approach, and lows in the early spring after the peak season of demand.

The most recent high in the NYMEX natural gas market came in November 2019, when the energy commodity reached a high of $2.905 per MMBtu. In November 2018, the low level of stockpiles going into the peak season for heating demand took the price to nearly a four-year high at $4.929.

The lows typically come in February and March, at the end of the withdrawal season as stocks begin to build for the next peak season. By the summer months, natural gas prices are already looking forward to the coming winter. Meanwhile, 2020 has been anything but a typical year in any market. Natural gas fell to a new 25-year low in June at $1.432 per MMBtu. In July, the price remained under pressure and was at its lowest level of this century. The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG) tracks the price of the energy commodity futures higher and lower. The BOIL (NYSE:BOIL) and KOLD (NYSE:KOLD) products provide double leverage on the up and downside in the natural gas market.

Price Action Was Bearish in July

At the end of last week, the now active month September natural gas futures contract had bounced from a higher low at $1.646 on 20. In late June, September futures hit bottom at $1.583. Meanwhile, the continuous contract reached $1.432. The premium for the September contract is a function of both seasonality and the high level of stockpiles, which were at 3.241 trillion cubic feet as of July 24.