- Blog

If I Could Turn Back Production – How Increasing Natural Gas Output Defies Price Signals

The natural gas market just managed to dodge a collision this summer between excess gas supply and available storage capacity. Now about a month into the gas winter season, storage inventories are still near record levels after topping 4.0 Tcf just two weeks ago. The Henry Hub CME/NYMEX January contract price closed yesterday (December 2, 2015) at $2.165/MMBtu, historically low even as we head into the highest demand months of the year. It’s now clear that 2016 will inherit this bearish market unless there is a Polar Vortex Tsunami in January and February. But what does this mean for producers, and how much will demand respond? In today’s blog, we begin a series on potential scenarios for the 2016 gas market balance.

- Blog

Tightening Up? Natural Gas Demand Response Emerging

CME/NYMEX Henry Hub natural gas futures prices for August delivery continue to trail $1.50/MMBtu behind year-ago levels and natural gas production volumes show little sign of softening. Gas demand is rallying to record-setting levels and the balance is tightening. But there is still a long way to go before the storage inventory surplus is reined in. Today we revisit supply/demand balance and its impact on storage this summer.