Natural Gas Is Rallying While Oil Is Plummeting

 | Apr 21, 2020 04:50PM ET

Last Thursday, the price of natural gas was looking like it was on a path to a new low. In late March, the price of the energy commodity traded to a low of $1.519 per MMBtu, the lowest level in a quarter of a century. At below the $1.60 level on Thursday, April 15, the price was within striking distance on the recent bottom. Below the March low, the next technical support levels in the natural gas futures market stand at $1.335 and $1.25 per MMBtu, the lows from 1992. The all-time bottom since natural gas began trading on the NYMEX division of the CME came in 1992 at $1.02 per MMBtu. However, the energy commodity put in a bullish reversal on the daily chart on April 16, sending the price back to just over the $1.80 level on April 17.

The current environment in the oil and gas markets reflects the level of demand as the U.S. and global economies have ground to a halt. Social distancing guidelines and instructions to remain at home for all but essential workers have caused energy demand to plunge. The longer coronavirus causes a self-induced coma in the economy, the lower energy prices could decline. Last week, an unprecedented 9.7-million-barrel-per-day reduction in output from OPEC, Russia, and other world producers did not stop the price of crude oil from probing below the $17.50 per barrel for the first time since 2001. Natural gas could face the same fate in the short term as a move below the $1.50 per MMBtu level would be just another lower low and a continuation of the pattern over the past six months. Natural gas avoided that fate late last week.

 

A bullish reversal on the daily chart stops the downward trajectory, for now

On Thursday, April 16, the natural gas market looked like it was heading for a test of the lows and levels below the $1.50 per MMBtu level.