Why Natural Gas Will Test Its March 2016 Low

 | Feb 13, 2020 03:01PM ET

  • Expectations for a withdrawal of 118 bcf
  • continued to grind lower
  • A blow-off low is necessary to bring volatility back and inject fear
  • Natural gas continued its descent as the price moved below the $1.80 level over recent trading sessions. The price fell to its latest low of $1.753 per MMBtu on the active month March futures contract on February 11. The energy commodity attempted to consolidate between $1.80 and $1.90 since late January, but the overwhelmingly bearish sentiment in the market sent the price to a new low and the lowest price since March 2016. In 2016, the price dropped to a low of $1.611, the lowest price since 1998, when it traded only one tick lower at $1.61 per MMBtu. Natural gas appears to be steaming toward a test of those technical support levels. With only six weeks to go in the withdrawal season, the market has shifted into spring mode when the price tends to reach a seasonal low.

    The Energy Information Administration provided little support for the price of Fund (NYSE:UNG) moves higher and lower with the price of the nearby futures contract on NYMEX. These days, both have been on a one-way street to the downside.

    As the chart highlights, stocks declined by 115 bcf at the end of last week. Inventories stood at 2.494 trillion cubic feet, 31.7% above last year’s level, and 9.4% above the five-year average for this time of the year. With only six weeks to go in the withdrawal season, stocks would need to decline by an average of 231.17 bcf over the coming weeks to reach last year’s end of season low at 1.107 tcf. As inventory declined tend to trail off at the end of the peak season for demand and the highest withdrawal so far this season was only 201 bcf, stocks will go into the injection season at a significantly higher level in 2020 than in 2019.