Natural Gas: It’s Beginning To Look A Lot Like A Warm Christmas...

 | Dec 24, 2020 17:32

To the longs in natural gas, Santa’s sleigh seems to have just whizzed past this year, without making a pit stop to deliver gifts at the Henry Hub.

Hopes of pre-Christmas cheer for gas bulls were dashed on Wednesday after a much lower stockpile drawdown for heating was reported by the U.S. Energy Information Administration than anticipated by the market. The EIA said gas in storage slid by 152 billion cubic feet for the week ended Dec. 18. The consensus of analysts’ estimates for the draw was 160 bcf.

While an 8-bcf shortfall may not seem like much, in a market already weakened by questionable demand for heating due to a fall season that has seen more warmth than cold, it can be vexing.

In the previous week to Dec. 11, the storage decrease in natural gas was larger than the 5-year average, due to a blast of frigid temperatures that took inventories down to 3.57 trillion cubic feet. Even so, that stockpile level was still 6.5% above the typical 5-year metric. 

The latest storage report, released a day earlier than the typical Thursday schedule due to Friday’s Christmas holiday, reverses any positive impact created by the previous week’s outsize draw, said Dan Myers, analyst at Houston-based gas risk consultancy Gelber & Associates.

More Cold Will Be Needed/h2

In an email to the firm’s clients on Wednesday, Myers added:

“This withdrawal failed to live up to G&A’s more bullish expectations and indicated that the market was still evenly supplied last week on a temperature adjusted basis.” 

“More cold will be needed in upcoming forecasts if the market is going to recover its footing going into the holidays and prevent a collapse to the January contract’s prior lows.”

Weather forecasts generally show temperatures trending around 40 degrees Fahrenheit over the next four days in the U.S. Northeast. That’s much higher than the freezing point levels of 32 Fahrenheit and below needed to ensure good heating demand in the country’s largest gas-fired heating region. Also, the four-day stretch shows that the Christmas period is almost certain to be warmer than usual.