The Important Level To Watch In Natural Gas

 | Sep 09, 2019 02:10PM ET

  • Hurricane Dorian lit a fuse
  • Seasonality takes over- No significant reaction to the latest inventory report
  • Watch the critical level on the upside
  • When a market has every reason to move lower, and it does not, it is often a sign that the path of least resistance of the price is higher. The price of natural gas fell below the 2017 and 2018 low in April 2019 and declined to the lowest level since 2016 at $2.029 per MMBtu in early August.

    Hurricanes have a history of lifting the price of the energy commodity. In 2005 and 2008, a pair of ferocious storms took the price of natural gas future over the $10 per MMBtu level. At the end of August, Hurricane Dorian was approaching the US. The storm passed over parts of the Bahamas as a Category Five hurricane leaving a path of devastation in its wake. However, it missed a direct hit on Florida, and while it did more than a little damage in the Carolinas, the hurricane did not do much to push the price of natural gas higher.

    At the same time, last Thursday’s inventory report from the Energy Information Administration was bearish. After a positive result from the storm and a higher than expected injection into storage, the price of natural gas did not move lower. The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG) is an ETF product that tracks the price of the energy commodity.

    Hurricane Dorian lit a fuse

    Reports that a massive hurricane was forming and could be heading towards the southern United States during the week of August 26 lifted the price of natural gas futures. The price rallied from under $2.20 per MMBtu on the nearby futures contract to the $2.31 level on the final trading session of August. As Florida and other states in the south braced for a direct hit, the price of the energy commodity closed before the long Labor Day weekend at $2.28 per MMBtu.

    The first sign that the natural gas market was ready to move higher was its reaction when the storm missed Florida and a weaker than expected hurricane lashed the Carolinas. In the past, the wake of a hurricane that did not result in significant damage caused the price of futures to retreat. Natural gas moved higher in the wake of Hurricane Dorian. The weather lit a bullish fuse that the change in seasons kept burning.

    Seasonality takes over- No significant reaction to the latest inventory report

    After the Labor Day weekend, the natural gas futures market begins to look towards the season of peak demand that starts each year in mid-November. The injection season ends at the start of the winter as inventories in storage begin to decline. Therefore, the end of August and beginning of September is a reminder that the peak demand for the energy commodity is just around the corner.

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    The second sign that the path of least resistance for the price of natural gas has turned higher was its reaction to the September 5 data release from the Energy Information Administration. The market had expected an increase of around 71 billion cubic feet of natural gas for the week ending on August 30. News that stockpiles rose by 84 bcf did not cause selling but buying in the futures market.