Natural Gas: After Recent Rally, Will Selling Emerge Again?

 | Apr 13, 2020 01:04PM ET

  • A surprise rally catches some shorts sleeping

  • The target is just above $2 per MMBtu

  • Will selling emerge again?

  • Spring is a time of the year for new beginnings. As the sun begins to break through the cold and cloudy winter months, birds start to sing, plants pop out of the ground, and more people venture from their homes for outdoor activities. The start of the spring season in 2020 is a lot different than in past years. The global pandemic continues to spread around the globe like wildfire. Many people in nonessential roles in the global economy remain sheltered in place, only going out for groceries, medicine, or a brief period of exercise. The future of the lockdown is in the hands of the scientists working on treatments and a vaccine for the virus. Central banks and governments have been treating the financial symptoms with unprecedented amounts of monetary and fiscal stimulus to stabilize the economy until the pandemic recedes. The human and economic toll will be high, and the legacy of Coronavirus will outlive its threat to human life and wellbeing.

    Most markets have responded to the pandemic with increased price variance in an overall deflationary environment. However, the price action in the natural gas market could be telling us that the energy commodity has blinders on as the price moved higher in what was a typical spring rally over the past week. At the start of the injection season, the price action in the natural gas arena appears typical in a period that is far from ordinary. The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG) is the ETF product that tracks the price action of nearby NYMEX natural gas futures.

    h2 A surprise rally catches some shorts sleeping/h2

    At the end of March, the price of nearby NYMEX natural gas futures fell to the lowest level since 1995 at $1.519 per MMBtu. On April 2, May futures declined to within two ticks or $0.002 of that bottom.