Will Natural Gas Hold Its $3 Support?

 | Nov 05, 2020 06:35

From a near 2-year high of almost $3.40, natural gas prices lost 10% in a flash—during just three days this week. 

For a commodity so notorious for its volatility that it’s sometimes referred to as the ‘Bucking Bronco’ of the energy space, such a drop is virtually nothing. 

Yet, in the grander scheme of gas pricing, it is a concern to bulls in the trade because it hints at something else: a possible test and break of the $3 per mmBtu, or million metric British thermal units, level the market has held the past week as support.

And with a snap of pre-winter cold in play since mid-October looking set to wane in the coming weeks, those concerns are growing.

Dan Myers, analyst at Gelber & Associates, a gas risk consultancy in Houston, Texas, said in a note to the firm’s clients on Wednesday:

“After trading at nearly 21-month highs approaching $3.40/mmBtu with December as the prompt contract, the market’s recent bullishness continues to be tempered by a wave of relative warmth settling over the eastern US in the first half of November.” 

“As a result of this milder weather, demand expectations have been slashed, subsequent storage changes have been adjusted upwards, and the December contract has moderated towards support at the $3/mmBtu mark today.”

December, the front-month gas contract on New York’s Henry Hub, hovered at just under $3.040 per mmBtu, down 0.8%, at 2:00 AM ET (0600 GMT) Thursday. It had held the $3 support since Oct. 21, and got to a 22-month peak of $3.396 on Oct. 30, or last Friday.