Natural Gas: What A Difference A Year Makes

 | Jun 08, 2021 11:57

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Natural gas fell to a 25-year low last June
  • The price is more than double that level in June 2021 - Demand is back and better than ever
  • US energy policy - Elections have consequences
  • Higher lows and higher highs on the horizon
  • Hurricane season has potential for fireworks - Inventories remain below last year’s and the 5-year average levels

Natural gas began trading on the CME’s NYMEX division in 1990. The combustible energy commodity in its natural form is also highly volatile when it comes to price action. Over the past 31 years, natural gas futures have traded from a low of $1.02 to a high of $15.65 per MMBtu. The low came in 1992, when the futures market was immature. The high was in 2005, when storms ravaged the Louisiana Coast, home to natural gas infrastructure and the delivery point for NYMEX futures.

The market has changed over the past years. Massive discoveries of natural gas in the Marcellus and Utica shale regions of the US and technological advances in extracting gas from the earth’s crust via fracking dramatically increased supplies.

Since necessity is the mother of invention, the demand side of natural gas’ equation also grew as liquefication allowed exports to other countries worldwide, where prices are far higher to soar. The burgeoning LNG business continues to grow. Simultaneously, US power generation switched from coal to natural gas, increasing demand for the energy commodity.

Under the previous administration, the US followed a “frack-baby-frack” policy, increasing output as technology lowered production costs. On Jan. 20, 2021, that policy changed, as President Joseph Biden pledged to address climate change by limiting hydrocarbon production in favor of alternative energy sources.

Over the past weeks, the prices of crude oil and natural gas have been trending higher. The trend is always your best friend in markets. In early June 2021, natural gas prices were more than double the price in late June 2020, which could be a sign of things to come for the volatile energy commodity.

h2 Natural gas fell to a 25-year low last June/h2

One year ago, at the end of June, nearby natural gas futures reached the lowest price since 1995, when it found a bottom at $1.432 per MMBtu.