Natural Gas in $2 Death Grip as Storage Rampage Continues

 | May 11, 2023 03:59AM ET

  • Natural gas market is seeing a surplus in storage, with inventories 33% above year-ago levels and 20% higher than the five-year average.
  • The projected 74 bcf addition to gas storage would lift stockpiles to 2.137 trillion cubic feet, or tcf, for the week ended May 5 — 31% above the same week a year ago and about 18% above the five-year average.
  • Mild spring weather, low gas demand, maintenance on pipelines, and a drop in exports of liquefied natural gas have driven spot prices of natural gas to negative territory this week.
  • Storage. Storage. Storage. 

    The natural gas market just can’t seem to get enough of storage.

    With gas inventories from two weeks ago already 33% above year-ago levels and 20% higher than the five-year average, last week’s forecast addition of 74 billion cubic feet or bcf — which are just marginally lower historically — won’t do much for longs in the game wishing to escape the $2 price trap.

    The latest weekly gas build will be verified by the US Energy Information in an update due at 10:30 AM ET (14:30 GMT) today. 

    It comes after another round of barely supportive weather — for the gas market that is, though Americans would love the perfect not-too-cold, not-too-warm temperatures. 

    Just a fortnight ago, there were real chills that triggered some indoor heating. But all that dissipated after rains in recent days, and weak wind conditions that could not carry any coolness across the country.

    Said Houston-based energy markets advisory Gelber & Associates in a note on natural gas:

    “Precipitation and a low pressure system rolling through Texas currently have cooled the warmer temperatures that have materialized as of late reducing some of the necessary cooling demand.”

    For a precise reading, heat data from Reuters-associated data provider Refinitiv showed there were around 62 heating degree days, or HDDs, last week compared with a 30-year normal of 47 HDDs for the period.

    HDDs measure the number of degrees a day's average temperature is below 65 degrees Fahrenheit (18 degrees Celsius) to estimate demand to heat homes and businesses.

    The projected 74 bcf addition to gas storage last week would lift stockpiles to 2.137 trillion cubic feet, or tcf, for the week ended May 5. That would be 31% above the same week a year ago and about 18% above the five-year average — an improvement from the prior week but, as emphasized earlier, just marginally.

    Gelber’s analysts said in their note that US gas output remains slightly below the recent peak of 101 bcf per day, providing a little relief to longs in the space — though that would not be long.

    “[Output] is expected to return [higher] after maintenance [at production sites] ends,” the note said. 

    Offsetting any meaningful impact from the lower output was a drop in exports of liquefied natural gas, or LNG, Gelber’s analysts said, adding: 

    “All of this points to hefty storage injections in the coming weeks in the 100s.”

    Mild spring weather, low gas demand, and maintenance on pipelines had already driven spot, or cash, prices of natural gas to negative territory at the West Texas Waha hub this week. 

    In Wednesday’s trading, Waha prices closed at -$0.35 per million metric British thermal units. 

    It was the first time spot prices had settled in negative territory since October 2020. There were sessions this past October where Waha hub traded in the negative, but those sessions closed in positive territory. 

    The Waha hub's unusual dynamics — where there is a lot of supply but not enough takeaway capacity — combined with maintenance works and low gas demand put Waha in this position. 

    Analysts are of the opinion that even after maintenance concludes and demand regularizes, the Waha hub will return to normal pricing but remaining at a significant discount to gas futures on the Henry Hub.

    At the time of writing, Henry Hub’s front month, June, hovered at just under $2.20 per mmBtu — caught in the death grip of middling $2 levels that have been the mainstay of gas futures since February. Notwithstanding the relative stability of the futures market, Henry Hub’s front month is down more than 50% on the year since the start of the year.