Where Is Natural Gas Headed After Yesterday’s EIA Report?

 | Oct 25, 2019 02:40AM ET

  • The market had expected an injection of 91 billion cubic feet
  • The EIA report came in a touch lower, and the price edged higher
  • Only three weeks to go until stockpiles begin to decline
  • The end of the injection season in the Natural Gas market is now less than one month away. Last year at this time, the price of the energy commodity was preparing to blast off to the upside on a move that took it within ten cents of $5 per MMBtu. The energy commodity rose to the highest price since 2014 last November. During the week of October 22, 2018, the price of natural gas traded in a range from $3.102 to $3.25 per MMBtu. As of Thursday, October 24, the nearby natural gas futures contract traded from $2.213 to $2.322 per MMBtu, almost $1 lower than last year at this time.

    Each Thursday, the Energy Information Administration releases its weekly data on inventories held in storage around the United States. The stockpiles data always has the potential to move the price of the volatile energy commodity, particularly when the data is significantly higher or lower than the market expects. The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG) is the most liquid non-leveraged natural gas ETF product.

    The market had expected an injection of 91 billion cubic feet

    Coming into the data release for the week ending on October 18, the market’s consensus was for an injection of 91 bcf after last week’s 104 bcf increase in stockpiles.