The EIA released its storage report for the last full week of 2023 (the week ended December 29) on Thursday, reporting a miniscule withdrawal of 14 Bcf. In a rarity for a time of year that is usually firmly in withdrawal season, the EIA reported an injection for the South Central region and flat week-on-week storage levels in the Pacific. As we wrote last week, the holiday effect resulting from the closure of stores and businesses frequently means that the week surrounding Christmas sees less gas usage than weather alone would imply. However, on a national level the storage withdrawal was the smallest of the past eight years when compared with the corresponding weeks, so the holiday effect alone cannot account for the anemic draw.
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Oops, (Winter's) Out of Time - Natural Gas Buyers Party Like It's 1999
After holding above $2/MMBtu in the first half of January, the CME/NYMEX February natural gas futures contract caved in this week, closing Tuesday and Wednesday at $1.895/MMBtu and $1.905/MMBtu, respectively. The last time we saw prices this low was in March 2016. But to see such levels trading in January, typically one of the coldest and highest-demand months of the year, you’d have to go back more than two decades — to 1999. Today, we explain the fundamentals behind the price collapse earlier this week and its implications for the 2020 gas market.
Carry That Weight – Impact of the Current Natural Gas Storage Surplus on Summer Prices
The U.S. natural gas market ended the winter withdrawal season with inventories carrying a record high overhang and an enormous surplus versus previous years. Since then, the historic surplus has begun to contract, and the CME/NYMEX Henry Hub futures contract has responded, rallying 11.2 cents since April 1st to settle at $2.068/MMBtu Thursday. Now, well into the third week of injection season, the big questions are whether the recent bullishness can be sustained and what it will take to relieve the surplus in storage. In today’s blog, we assess how the existing surplus will impact summer storage activity and prices.
The Long and Winding Road - U.S. Natural Gas Storage Whipsaws Prices - Again
The CME/NYMEX Henry Hub January contract settled yesterday at $3.54/MMBtu, about 30.8 cents (~10%) above where the December contract expired ($3.232) and 77.6 cents (28%) higher than where November settled ($2.764). The natural gas winter withdrawal season is officially underway—it’s a lot colder and gas demand has spiked. But this week also marks another key bullish threshold: as today’s Energy Information Administration (EIA) storage report will likely show, the U.S. natural gas inventory has fallen below the prior year’s levels for the first time in two years (since early December 2014). That’s in sharp contrast to where the inventory started the injection season in April—more than 1,000 Bcf higher compared to April 2015. Moreover, we expect the emerging deficit to grow substantially over the next several weeks. Today we look at the supply-demand fundamentals driving this shift and what it means for the winter gas market.