Natural Gas: Pullback As Expected, Then Bullish Reversal

 | Sep 09, 2020 03:08PM ET

  • Price failure below the November 2019 high
  • It may be too early for a significant rally: A bullish reversal at the end of last week could be technically significant
  • Stockpiles are likely to cap the upside – U.S. election could determine the path of least resistance of the price of natural gas
  • Natural gas rose to a high of $2.743 per MMBtu on the nearby October futures contract on Aug. 28. The price had rallied from a low of $1.70 in late June. While the 61.4% increase was impressive, the continuous NYMEX futures contract rose by 91.5% from the low of $1.432 per MMBtu. Over the past week, gravity hit the natural gas market at the beginning of September.

    There are still 11 weeks to go before stockpiles of natural gas in storage across the United States begin to decline during the winter months, which is the peak season of demand for the energy commodity. Inventories were substantially above last year’s level and the five-year average as of the end of August. The rally may have come a bit early for the natural gas market, and the winter season is still a little under three months away.

    I had expected a recovery rally in the natural gas market when the price was below the $1.80 per MMBtu level. However, the price action blew away my upside target at the $2.10-$2.16 level. I had been shorting the energy commodity in the futures market and with the KOLD (NYSE:KOLD) ETN product as the price rallied, with very tight stops. At each higher high, I re-entered the short position at each new high and continued to stop out when the price of natural gas reached higher levels.

    Over the past week, the strategy was successful as the price corrected. While natural gas rose to a new high for 2020, it was too early for the energy commodity to challenge the November 2019 high at $2.905, the upside target. However, the price action on Friday was decidedly bullish.

     

    The 91.5% rally from the late June 25-year low took the price of the nearby natural gas contract to a high of $2.743 on Aug. 28.