Market Commentary

August 30th, 2019

atural Gas Price Fundamental Daily Forecast – Seasonality Shift Causing Heightened Volatility

Natural gas futures are edging lower early Friday after posting impressive gains in heat related activity. However, gains were likely capped by a dip in spot gas prices.

“Recent strength in the cash market helped prop up NYMEX futures for much of the week,

but speculative traders that had notched a record number of short positions earlier in the month remained

in the driver’s seat even as cash prices retreated on Thursday,” according to Natural Gas Intelligence.

At 09:05 GMT, October natural gas futures are trading $2.280, down $0.016 or -0.70%.

Technical chart factors and the rollover to the October futures contract continue to be the main focus for traders although they are keeping an eye on Hurricane Dorian.

Despite the bearish chart pattern and fundamentals, prices soared on Thursday after weak short aggressively covered positions when $2.226 failed to hold as resistance.

This also occurred to some extent when $2.273 and $2.278 were breached.

U.S. Energy Information Administration Weekly Storage Report

Thursday’s EIA report was bearish on paper, but that didn’t prevent the huge short-covering rally.

The EIA reported a number that was on the high end of the estimates. The EIA reported a 60 Bcf injection but a few Bcf above the five-year average of 57 Bcf, according to the government.

Total working gas in storage as of August 23 stood at 2,857 Bcf, 363 Bcf higher than last year and 100 Bcf below the five-year average.

Short-Term Weather Outlook

According to NatGasWeather for August 29 to September 5, “Comfortable conditions will continue across the Midwest, Northeast and

Mid-Atlantic regions due to weather system with showers and cooling for light demand.

The West into Texas will be hot with highs of 90s and 100s as high pressure rules for strong regional demand.”

“Tropical storm Dorian will bring rains to Florida and portions of the Southeast Sunday through Tuesday,

while high pressure will expand across much of the country Tuesday through Wednesday for a minor bump in national demand, although cooling off again late in the week.”

“Overall, national demand will be moderate to low across the central and northern US but high over the West into Texas.”

Daily Forecast

We’re at a critical point in the year where volatility can increase due to seasonality shifts.

With the summer cooling season winding down, traders start to prepare for the winter heating season starting around September 1.

Most of the price action is likely to be determined by what the massive amount of short-sellers decide to do with their positions.

They can continue to press the market lower, or start taking profits and lifting shorts. This can produce periodic rallies.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *