Natural Gas Could Be Setting Stage For A Recovery

 | Jun 09, 2020 12:55

The price action in the natural gas market has been bearish since early May, when the July contract traded to a high of $2.364 per MMBtu. Last week, the price fell to a new low on the active month that traded to a bottom of $1.802 in March, when nearby futures hit a 25-year low at $1.519 per MMBtu.

July natural gas traded to a low of $1.742 on June 1 before recovering to settle last week around the $1.80 level. On the weekly chart, natural gas has made a series of marginal higher lows since March. Even though the price action has not been bullish over the past month, an emerging pattern in the energy commodity is starting to look a lot like it did in 2016. During that year, the price fell to a multi-year low and moved higher during June.

Natural gas is a highly volatile commodity that has traded as high as $15.65 and as low as $1.02 per MMBtu since 1990. In late 2018, the price reached a peak of $4.929 before it fell to $1.519 in March 2020. Over the past few months, the price action could signify that the March low was a significant bottom and that the path of least resistance is now higher.

The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG) is the unleveraged ETF product that follows the price of natural gas futures higher and lower. UGAZ and DGAZ are leveraged instruments for those looking to magnify the price action in the volatile natural gas future arena.

In 2017-2019, Price in June Was Higher Than Current Level

Natural gas settled at $1.782 per MMBtu level at the end of the first week of June.