[ccpw id="5"]

Home.forex news reportIs Natural Gas Heading Lower as the Shoulder Season Approaches?

Is Natural Gas Heading Lower as the Shoulder Season Approaches?

-


Natural gas is a seasonal commodity that typically reaches annual highs during the coldest winter months, when heating demand peaks. In my January 15, 2026, Barchart report on energy commodities in Q4 and 2025, I wrote the following on the prospects of NYMEX natural gas futures prices in early 2026:

Natural gas and coal prices should remain volatile through the winter as demand will depend on weather conditions.

Nearby NYMEX natural gas prices settled at $3.686 per MMBtu on December 31, 2025, and were lower at the $3.334 level on January 12. Cold weather across the United States pushed prices for February delivery to $7.827 per MMBtu during the week of January 26, where they ran out of upside steam and fell to far less than half that price in early February.

The weekly continuous U.S. natural gas chart for March delivery highlights the extreme price volatility caused by cold weather across the country over the past weeks.

The chart shows that natural gas for March delivery reached a high of $5.496 in early December 2025 before plunging 53% to a low of $2.578 in early January 2026. The cold conditions and snowstorms increased heating demand in late January, lifting the price 71.6% to a high of $4.425 per MMBtu before it slipped back to below $3.20 on February 9.

While the March continuous futures contract rose to just below $5.50 per MMBtu, the now-expired February NYMEX natural gas futures contract reached $7.827 per MMBtu, the highest price since September 2022.

Over the coming weeks, temperatures are likely to rise, ushering in the U.S. natural gas shoulder season in spring, when demand for heating and cooling reaches an annual low. Barring any widespread cold periods, we could see natural gas prices fall to $3 per MMBtu or lower. However, with at least six weeks of winter left, the potential for periodic rallies remains high.

According to the EIA, natural gas stockpiles declined 360 billion cubic feet for the week ending on January 30, 2026.

<i>Source: </i><i>EIA</i>
Source: EIA

As the chart shows, at 2.463 trillion cubic feet, U.S. natural gas stockpiles are only 1.7% above last year’s level but are 1.1% below the five-year average for the end of January. The EIA will report natural gas stocks for the week ending on February 6 on Thursday, February 12. According to estimize.com, the consensus forecast is for another substantial withdrawal of 256 billion cubic feet due to ongoing heating demand with freezing temperatures on the East Coast and Midwest.



Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

LATEST POSTS

Blockchain.com Secures UK FCA Registration as Gemini Exits Market

By Exec Edge Editorial Staff Blockchain.com has secured registration with the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to operate as...

Scope Prime Joins LMAX and GMG in MetaQuotes Ultency Adoption Wave

Scope Prime, the institutional liquidity arm of Rostro Financial Group, integrated MetaQuotes' Ultency matching engine into its infrastructure, giving MT5-based brokers faster access to its multi-asset liquidity...

Follow us

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe

Most Popular

spot_img