Natural Gas: What Price Momentum, Relative Strength Indicators Are Telling Us

 | Jun 04, 2020 14:39

After trading to a high of $2.364 per MMBtu on May 5, the price of natural gas has been falling. July futures were trading at a healthy premium to the expired June contract, but the price of July has converged as it was trading below the $1.80 level going into the latest inventory report from the Energy Information Administration on June 4.

We are now in the summer season, and the demand for cooling will rise from June through September. Natural gas is the primary input in power generations in the U.S. A hot summer would cause increased demand for the energy commodity as production has declined.

The number of rigs operating in the natural gas market is significantly lower than last year at the start of June because of the low price level below the $2 per MMBtu level. During the first week of June in 2019, nearby natural gas futures traded in a range from $2.305 to $2.475 per MMBtu. The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSE:UNG) replicated the price action in the volatile natural gas futures market.

Market Expected 111 bcf Injection Into Inventories

According to Estimize, the crowdsourcing website, the market had expected a triple-digit 111-billion-cubic-feet increase in stocks for the week ending on May 29.