Natural Gas: 2 Reasons To Buy On Dips

 | Jun 02, 2020 03:50PM ET

Energy has been a volatile sector in 2020. The price of NYMEX crude oil futures fell into negative territory on April 20 when the May contract expired, and longs had nowhere to store the petroleum. In March, the price of nearby NYMEX natural gas futures fell to the lowest level of this century when it reached $1.519 per MMBtu. The last time natural gas traded at a lower price was in 1995. The weakness in energy prices was a function of massive supplies and evaporating demand during the global pandemic.

The fundamental equations for crude oil and natural gas have been adjusting to compensate for the change in the balance between supply and demand. There is an old saying in commodities markets that the cure for low prices is low prices. When a commodity falls to a level where the cost of production is above the market price, output declines. Since natural gas futures began trading on NYMEX in 1990, the price range has been from $1.02 to $15.65 per MMBtu. At below $2, the price is a lot closer to the lows than the highs over the past three decades. Despite technological advances and the discovery of reserves that have lowered the production cost, the price of the energy commodity is at a level where producers are not making significant profits.

Moreover, debt levels in an environment where credit is tightening for companies with weak balance sheets threaten future output viability. Natural gas is in an oversold condition on the long-term chart, and production is falling. The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG) follows the price of nearby NYMEX futures higher and lower.

The Baker Hughes Data Is Not Bearish

The June futures contract in natural gas rolled to July last week. When the continuous contract on NYMEX fell to a 25-year low in mid-March, the low in July futures was at $1.802 per MMBtu.