Natural gas prices erase last week's gains and fall below $4/MMbtu
The May Henry Hub contract fell 23c to $3.84/MMbtu this week, reversing all of last week’s gains. Winter '25/’26 settled 20c lower at $4.72/MMbtu, while Summer ’26 gained 6c to finish at $4.16/MMbtu. Prices were relatively stable until a sizeable sell-off on Friday saw prompt gas fall 23c to the lowest level of the week.
While the newly announced US tariffs have had a severe impact on global markets, domestic natural gas prices are likely to see little impact unless global prices weaken materially from current levels. Gas prices in Europe and Asia sold off amid fears of a slowdown in economic and industrial activity. ICIS said on Friday that “West and Central European gas demand in the industrial sector to take a hit in 2025 by some 3.6% for the remainder of 2025 and 2.6% in 2026.” Industrial demand accounts for about 27% of Europe’s total gas demand, and weaker demand could result in fewer spot LNG deliveries. Meanwhile, Rabobank said in a note that “some countries might look at increasing US LNG imports in the future to reduce tariffs, while others might do the opposite.” TTF natural gas prices fell $1.24 to $11.57/MMbtu on Friday, and while the arbitrage between Henry Hub and European and Asian hubs remains open, further weakness or trade disruptions could reduce profit margins for US LNG exporters.
So far this year, US LNG feedgas demand has been robust, averaging 15.72 Bcf/d. However, with temperatures along the US Gulf Coast beginning to warm up, inflows to export plants will begin to decline. Higher ambient temperatures reduce the efficiency of LNG plants, and summer maintenance will see flows at certain facilities temporarily drop. The total impact could result in feedgas demand averaging approximately 2 Bcf/d lower than total capacity.
AEGIS typically recommends hedging summer months with swaps and winter months with costless collars. However, elevated levels of call skew can be found in Summer ’26 and Summer ’27, potentially making costless collars attractive hedging instruments for the next few summer strips as well.
Natural Gas Factors
Price Trend. (Bullish, Priced In) Gas prices have surged to multi-year highs, with the April 2025 NYMEX contract reaching $4.899.
S&D Balance. (Mostly Bullish, Priced In)
Long Range Weather Forecast. (Bearish, Surprise) Current long-term weather forecasts show temperatures are expected to be above average this winter. Although, it is important to note that the accuracy of long-range forecasts can be low.
Super-warm La Niña Novembers have led to mixed December outcomes, ranging from colder-than-normal to notably warmer. The warmest November (2001) was followed by a warm December, while the second warmest (2016) led to a colder December. Historical data groups these into three December outcomes: colder than CWG (2016), near CWG (2020, 1999), and warmer than CWG (2011, 2001), often influenced by a positive Eastern Pacific Oscillation (+EPO). Current conditions show a weak La Niña, similar to 2020 but with notable differences in ocean temperatures. The CWG outlook remains warmer than the 30-year average but cooler than the 10-year average. The NOAA model suggests a pattern resembling 2016, implying a possible cold December and warm Q1 2025, while a warmer December could mean more cold volatility in early 2025.
1-15 Day Weather. (Bullish, Priced In) Two-week forecasts have supported prices lately, with this January being the third coldest of the past 25 years.
Storage Level. (Mostly Bearish, Priced In) The storage level is a bearish priced-in factor due to the high levels of gas in inventories relative to the five-year average. According to the latest EIA weekly natural gas inventory report, the surplus to the five-year average stands at 21 Bcf above the five-year average and 20 Bcf above last year.
Dry Gas Production. (Bearish, Surprise) These are the most critical drivers of gas prices outside of weather. A material increase in either would pressure prices lower and loosen the supply-demand balance. These are also longer-lasting factors that can weigh on prices for years. Since the start of 2024, gas production has fallen sharply, driven by substantial curtailments and seasonal declines in Appalachia. Given low gas prices, producers may continue to curtail gas production until economics improve. A material drop in production could improve storage balances, but if prices begin to improve, there is a large amount of supply that can be brought back to market, which would be a bearish risk. With some evidence that production is now returning to the market, the dry gas curtailment bubble has been shifted to the bearish quadrant. A large amount of production was likely taken offline this year, which is now waiting to come back. Some operators may also have been drilling and completing wells during this time, which are ready to flow gas if economics have improved enough.
Associated Gas Production.(Bearish, Priced In) With oil prices remaining high and additional egress capacity coming to the Permian in the form of the Matterhorn pipeline, associated gas production may continue to grow in 2024. The Matterhorn pipe will send an additional 2.5 Bcf/d to the Gulf Coast, posing a bearish risk to Henry Hub and regional basis prices such as Houston Ship Channel.
Renewables. (Mostly Bearish, Partly Priced In) Renewables remain a perennial threat to gas prices and gas's share of the power stack. Renewable capacity additions in 2023 are expected to set a new record and are now the second-most prevalent source of electricity generation. Still, renewables have proven unreliable at times, which has exacerbated the global energy squeeze as gas usually serves as a flex-fuel when other sources underperform. We think this is priced in, but the effect at the summer peaks on gas generation has some bearish potential.
LNG Outages. (Bearish, Surprise) Feed-gas levels are at their near max capacity, and if there's any unplanned maintenance event or an outage, it might act as a surprise bearish factor for natural gas prices.
Slow Supply Response. (Bullish, Surprise) If production remains near where it is currently and does not grow into winter, this would be a bullish factor for gas prices. Typically, the Northeast region sees higher production receipts in the higher-demand months of the year. Still, due to lower activity levels over the past year, production growth may be more muted.
LNG Schedule. (Bullish, Surprise) With a significant amount of new LNG feedgas demand coming this year and the next few years, if these facilities startup sooner than anticipated it should be a bullish factor for gas prices. One example of this occuring is the recent startup of Plaquemines LNG, which saw feedgas levels reach more than 1 Bcf/d much sooner than anticipated.
Production Front-Running. (Bearish, Surprise) If producers begin to ramp up gas production in advance of the new LNG demand, this could lead to a temporary mismatch between supply and demand and weaken gas prices. The other option would involve producers waiting for a price signal from the market before increasing output.
Hedge Activity. (Bullish, Surprise) Following the sharp rally in January, many producers may have taken advantage of the higher prices and layered in more hedge volumes. This could result in less selling pressure down the curve if they are more adequelty hedged now.
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