A Bullish Summer In Natural Gas As Peak Season Is On The Horizon

 | Aug 20, 2021 10:56

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • A new high and a correction
  • Natural gas reached the highest price in August since 2011
  • A higher base price because of US energy policy
  • Warren Buffet saw value in June 2020
  • Expect a wild ride this winter- Inventories are low

When producers extract natural gas from the earth’s crust, the energy commodity is highly combustible. The price action in the natural gas futures arena can be just as volatile because the market has a three-decade history of price explosions and implosions. Since natural gas began trading on the CME’s NYMEX division in 1990, the price range has been $1.02 to $15.65 per MMBtu. Natural gas rose above the $10 level when hurricanes wreaked havoc along the US Gulf Coast in 2005 and 2008. The NYMEX delivery point is the Henry Hub in Erath, Louisiana.

Massive discoveries of quadrillions of cubic feet of reserves in the Marcellus and Utica shale regions of the US caused the price to decline. As necessity is often the mother of invention, the demand side of the energy commodity’s fundamental equation adapted. Natural gas replaced coal in US power generation. Technological advances allowed for liquefying natural gas for export beyond the pipeline system. Today, US LNG travels by ocean vessels to areas of the world where the price is appreciably higher.

Over the past year, natural gas had made higher lows and higher highs. At a time of the year when the price traditionally experiences weakness, the energy commodity continued to rise, reaching its latest peak in early August at $4.205 per MMBtu, the highest price since late 2018. Meanwhile, natural gas rose to the highest price in August in a decade.

h2 A new high and a correction/h2

After reaching a low of $2.594 on Mar. 18, September natural gas futures made higher lows and higher highs, reaching a peak at $4.2050 per MMBtu on Aug. 4 and 5.