Natural Gas Has More Room To Rally

 | Jul 14, 2020 11:02AM ET

  • A new low leads to a recovery
    • New clues from open interest
    • Always expect the unexpected in natural gas and you will never be surprised

    Last week, in an article for ETF Daily News, I wrote: “Natural Gas could have more room on the upside, given the technical position of the energy commodity.” I wrote that on July 3, when the price of the active month August futures was trading at $1.726 per MMBtu. At the end of this week, gas futures were at the $1.80 level, after trading to a high of $1.924, the highest since early June.

    I had pointed out that the rise in the total number of open long and short positions in natural gas from early May through late June, when the price dropped, was a sign that speculative shorts had returned to the market.

    They pushed the price to a new and lower twenty-five-year low in late June. While the August contract fell to $1.517, the continuous contract hit $1.4232 per MMBtu. The low in August futures was on two consecutive sessions on June 25 and 26, which formed a double-bottom formation in the futures arena. Since then, the price recovered by almost 19% in the volatile futures market.

    The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG) is the ETF product that tracks NYMEX futures price action. The UGAZ and DGAZ ETNs that magnify the moves on the up and downside are highly liquid short-term trading instruments that are extremely popular with market participants looking for price volatility without venturing into the futures arena at NYMEX.

    h2 A New Low Leads To Recovery/h2

    At the end of June, natural gas fell to a low of $1.432, but the active month August contract reached a bottom at $1.517 per MMBtu.