Natural Gas: After Blowout Q2, Does This Rally Still Have Legs? 

 | Jul 01, 2021 09:46

As the second quarter dust settled on Wednesday’s markets, Henry Hub futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange stood atop the commodities heap with a 43% gain.

While natural gas bulls unabashedly toasted the blockbuster win, some discerning analysts caught what starry-eyed longs in the market had missed (or probably noticed but waived away in their euphoria)—for the first time in seven sessions, prices were unable to break out of their trading range to set a new definitive high for the day.

Wednesday’s peak for the front-month gas futures on Henry Hub was $3.8114 per mmBtu, or million metric British thermal units. It marked a 2-½ year high, being the loftiest level since the December 2018 peak of $4.666. Yet, on closer scrutiny, it was virtually unchanged from Tuesday’s high of $3.811. 

To some gas analysts, it meant that volatility—an inherent nature of this market that has been conspicuously missing for some time, to the surprise of its long-time followers—might be coming back in a bigger way.

Fatigue From One-Way Prices vs. Summer Heat/h2

That ultimately raises the question: after a blowout second quarter, does this natural gas rally still have legs?

Or, more precisely, will the rally be running on slightly slower legs after this, given the natural fatigue from one-way price direction juxtaposed against forecasts for runaway summer heat across the United States?

Dan Myers of Houston-based gas markets consultancy Gelber & Associates was among analysts mulling the permutations for gas prices after Wednesday’s outcome.

“Despite an early 12-cent move upward in the morning, prices were unable to break out of yesterday’s trading range,” Myers said in a note circulated to clients of the consultancy and shared with Investing.com.