Why Is Natural Gas Trading Up?

 | Mar 10, 2020 05:33PM ET

Risk-off conditions gripped markets across all asset classes during the final week of February. The stock market and prices across all asset classes moved lower as many investors and traders exited positions and moved to the sidelines. The outbreak of coronavirus and fears of a global pandemic caused periods of panic selling. On the final day of February, the Chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve told markets that the central bank was ready to do whatever was necessary to calm the volatile markets in the face of the virus.

On Tuesday, March 3, the Fed put words into action with an emergency 50 basis point rate cut. While the kneejerk reaction in the stock market was an uptick, stocks finished the day significantly lower, with all of the leading indices between 2.80% and 3.00% lower. On the final day of February, the energy commodity fell to a new low of $1.642 per MMBtu, just 3.1 cents above the March 2016 low and 3.2 cents higher than the bottom from 1998. In a risk-off environment, both longs and shorts move to the sidelines. In natural gas, the trend has been lower since early November, with both supply and demand fundamental and technical data and indicators pointing lower. However, the overabundance of speculative shorts caused some risk-off behavior in the energy commodity that pushed the price higher. Natural gas jumped above the $1.90 level before selling returned to the market. The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG) tracks the price of the NYMEX futures higher and lower. The UGAZ and DGAZ triple leveraged products magnify the price moves but suffer from the time decay that creates the instrument’s gearing.

h3 Bearish Fundamentals Pushed Price To New Lows On February 28/h3

Supply and demand fundamentals in the natural gas market have weighed on the price of the energy commodity throughout the 2019/2020 peak season during the winter months. According to the Energy Information Administration, stockpiles of natural gas in storage across the United States were at over 48% above last year’s level and above 9% over the five-year average at the end of February. The high level of stocks during the withdrawal season combined with seasonally warm temperatures and caused the price of natural gas to make lower highs and lower lows since early November. On the final day of February, the price of April natural gas futures fell to a new low for the year at $1.642 per MMBtu. On Sunday evening, March 8, the price slipped to a new low for this century when it traded to 1.6100 per MMBtu, the lowest price since 1998.

h3 Every Attempt At A Rally Failed Since November/h3

Bearish supply and demand fundamentals created the condition for the downtrend that has caused the price to fail on any attempt at a recovery since early November 2019.

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