Natural Gas Seen Nearing $4 If More Shocks After Texas Deep-Freeze

 | Feb 18, 2021 04:04AM ET

Call it the black swan event of natural gas.

Just like how COVID-19 totally threw the world off guard, the Artic freeze that’s paralyzed part of the energy production in Texas has caught the US energy capital completely unprepared.

Horror story-like reports in the media tell of millions of Texans struggling without heat and electricity after the worst snowstorm in 30 years in the typically sweltering state. Those with power have a different nightmare: thousands of dollars in bills as electricity rates skyrocketed overnight. 

But that’s not all.

An Occurrence As Rare As A Pandemic/h2

Prompt prices of natural gas are already at $4 per mmBtu, or per million metric British thermal units, at some hubs. And the entire one-year calendar strip on NYMEX’s Henry Hub futures, from March 2021 to March 2022, has flipped to above $3—an occurrence as rare as a pandemic itself.