Natural Gas Prices
Posted: Wed Dec 06, 2017 1:57 pm
Go here and watch the daily update video: https://www.weatherbell.com/premium/
The NYMEX natural gas contract for January is currently trading for $2.90/MMBtu
Tomorrow's natural gas storage report for the week ending December 1 will be bearish because the weather was mild over the eastern U.S. last week. The 5-year average draw from storage for the week ending 12/1 is 81 Bcf and tomorrow's report will be nowhere near that. However, natural gas in storage will still be more than 200 Bcf below where it was a year ago on December 1 and storage will still be lower than the 5-year average. Last year, just two cold weeks at the end of December push natural gas over $3.70/MMBtu.
BIG CHANGE IN THE WEATHER PATTERN: The December weather forecast is now extremely bullish for natural gas. If the actual weather is close to the December forecast at the link above, we are going to see big drops in the gas storage level for the next four weeks. My SWAG is that we are going to end December with storage levels near a record low. The last time this happened was December, 2013. In January, 2014 price of gas (driven by the physical market) spiked to over $5.00/MMBtu.
December + January can have a MAJOR impact on the gas price for the entire year because refiling storage is not an option. U.S. storage must be around 4,000 Bcf at the beginning of each winter to make sure demand for residential space heating can be met through the winter heating season. Each year, more and more homes heat with natural gas in the United States. So, utilities need more and more gas in storage each year.
Now go back and focus on the last map that Joe speaks from on the 12/6 update. If that super cold area over SE Canada moves just a hundred miles southeast it will be over the area of North America that burns the most gas for space heating. If that happens, it will get very interesting for the "gassers" in January.
BTW the forecast maps that Joe is speaking from today are NCEP maps, not his own.
The NYMEX natural gas contract for January is currently trading for $2.90/MMBtu
Tomorrow's natural gas storage report for the week ending December 1 will be bearish because the weather was mild over the eastern U.S. last week. The 5-year average draw from storage for the week ending 12/1 is 81 Bcf and tomorrow's report will be nowhere near that. However, natural gas in storage will still be more than 200 Bcf below where it was a year ago on December 1 and storage will still be lower than the 5-year average. Last year, just two cold weeks at the end of December push natural gas over $3.70/MMBtu.
BIG CHANGE IN THE WEATHER PATTERN: The December weather forecast is now extremely bullish for natural gas. If the actual weather is close to the December forecast at the link above, we are going to see big drops in the gas storage level for the next four weeks. My SWAG is that we are going to end December with storage levels near a record low. The last time this happened was December, 2013. In January, 2014 price of gas (driven by the physical market) spiked to over $5.00/MMBtu.
December + January can have a MAJOR impact on the gas price for the entire year because refiling storage is not an option. U.S. storage must be around 4,000 Bcf at the beginning of each winter to make sure demand for residential space heating can be met through the winter heating season. Each year, more and more homes heat with natural gas in the United States. So, utilities need more and more gas in storage each year.
Now go back and focus on the last map that Joe speaks from on the 12/6 update. If that super cold area over SE Canada moves just a hundred miles southeast it will be over the area of North America that burns the most gas for space heating. If that happens, it will get very interesting for the "gassers" in January.
BTW the forecast maps that Joe is speaking from today are NCEP maps, not his own.