Natural Gas: Fall Season Matters More Than Lower Output or Australian Strike

 | Sep 14, 2023 15:45

  • Gas prices up relatively little over past week, less than 9%, despite all that’s going on 
  • Mid-$2 support strong, next levels seen at between $2.80 and above $3
  • Weekly gas build likely to be below-average 48 bcf versus year-ago 74 bcf
  • Against a backdrop of shrinking gas rigs, output squeezes from operational disruptions, and an Australian labor strike that just refuses to end, ​​natural gas prices have only moved 8.5% over the past week — remarkably little, considering the circumstances.

    Yet something else is commanding much of the market’s attention and would be the driver of sentiment and price over the coming weeks: the approach of the fall, or autumn, season, which officially begins Sept. 23.

    “As is often the case as autumn draws near, weather can trump all other factors,” trade journal naturalgasintel.com said in a post Wednesday.

    NatGasWeather cautioned in the same post that cooler conditions looked set to snap the market’s climb from mid-$2 to $2.70 per million metric British thermal units, or mmBtu.

    The forecaster noted that fall-like temperatures had settled in across the North, and Hurricane Lee, moving across the Atlantic and toward the East Coast Wednesday, was bound to deliver chilly conditions to the Northeast by the weekend.