For Natural Gas, Negative U.S. Crude Is Manna From Heaven

 | Apr 23, 2020 11:08

Natural gas bulls know a thing or two about negative pricing. They also know when it’s time for their fuel to make some hay — especially now, as the sun gets blotted out on gas’ more illustrious cousin, crude oil.

Long before Monday’s sub zero prices for U.S. crude, next-day natural gas at the Waha hub in the Permian Basin in West Texas had gone negative several times. In fact, almost exactly a year ago — on April 22, 2019 — Waha averaged minus 40 cents per million British thermal units.

That phenomenon was due to a supply glut exacerbated by the associated gas that came from shale oil drilling at the Permian, the second biggest shale gas basin in the United States. 

NatGas Market Slammed A Year Ago, While Oil Was Rocketing/h2

When natural gas was getting gutted a year ago, oil was going through the roof. The front-month in U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude hit near 6-month highs at $66.30 per barrel on April 22, 2019, as President Donald Trump’s crackdown on Iranian oil exports created an artificially tight market for oil.

Fast forward to a year later and the contrast couldn’t be more stark.