Till The U.S. Freezes Over, Natural Gas Could Be Stuck Under $4

 | Dec 09, 2021 04:02AM ET

Call it the curse of the 'unwintry' winter. 

A cold season that’s lately been anything but freezing is spelling doom to prices of natural gas, the chief commodity for heating in the United States.

Until the semblance of recovery that crept up in the past three sessions, the spot gas contract on New York’s Henry Hub had lost an epic 30% plus over the past two weeks, falling from a November peak of $5.56 per million metric British thermal units to this week’s five-month low of $3.63 per mmBtu.

Without an appreciable drop in temperature, the market’s needle could be stuck below the key $4 mark for a while, and edge closer to the $3 support if gas stockpiles build more materially than the weather.

As market participants await another weekly update on US gas inventories from the Energy Information Administration, the consensus is that last week utilities burned close to the five-year average of gas required for heating and power generation, though this was still sharply lower from year-ago levels.