Will Natural Gas Break The 2016 Lows?

 | Mar 02, 2020 03:25PM ET

The natural gas futures market ended last week with another new low. While markets across all asset classes were panting from a week of wild volatility, natural gas quietly slipped below the $1.70 per MMBtu level after the March futures rolled to April. Natural gas can be one of the most volatile futures markets. Last week it established a streak of seven consecutive losses. Other markets plunged, including crude oil, and natural gas moved to its lowest price since 2016.

The spread of coronavirus to South Korea, Iran and Europe caused panic selling across most asset classes. At the same time, the success of U.S. Presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders, a self-proclaimed Democratic Socialist, increased the potential of significant policy changes in the United States. A Sanders presidency could create dramatic shifts in the landscape for taxes, energy and the overall direction of the U.S. economy and position in the world.

Markets reflect the economic and political landscapes. Meanwhile, the price action in natural gas reflects the upcoming end to the peak season for demand, so it was no surprise. The United States Natural Gas ETF product (NYSE:UNG) moves higher and lower with the price of the nearby natural gas futures contract. The UGAZ and DGAZ ETNs turbocharge the price action on the up and downside. The ETNs offer market participants a triple-leveraged return that magnifies the typically volatile futures arena.

h3 If You Blinked, You Missed The Move Above $2/h3

On February 20, the price of April natural gas futures moved above the $2 per MMBtu level for the first time since January 17. It remained above two bucks for about one hour.