US Natural Gas Futures Plunge Amid Shifts in Weather Forecasts and Tech Stocks' Selloff
The US natural gas market experienced a significant downturn on Monday, with futures sinking 8.2% to $3.697/mmBtu, following a substantial warmup in February temperature forecasts and easing demand after last week's Arctic blast.
According to Mizuho analysts, the drop was partly driven by a three-year-high net long speculator position as of last Tuesday, which is likely to increase towards the end of the week. The market is also getting pulled into the "energy infrastructure providing gas to utilities to generate power for data centers" theme, following losses in energy and tech stocks due to China's development of a cheaper AI model.
In contrast, weekend updates on early February weather forecasts have taken some of the chill out of the market. Analyst Eli Rubin from EBW Analytics notes that while bullish outcomes remain possible with nearly half of winter still ahead, they appear increasingly less likely after fundamental shifts over the weekend. The Nymex front-month contract was off 6.5% at $3.766/mmBtu.
The market's decline is also linked to last week's Arctic blast, which is expected to be reflected in a bullish inventory report this week. A hefty withdrawal from storage is likely to turn the surplus over the 5-year average into a deficit. Overall, the plunge in US natural gas futures suggests that the energy market is becoming increasingly sensitive to weather forecasts and tech-related factors.
The US natural gas market experienced a significant downturn on Monday, with futures sinking 8.2% to $3.697/mmBtu, following a substantial warmup in February temperature forecasts and easing demand after last week's Arctic blast.
According to Mizuho analysts, the drop was partly driven by a three-year-high net long speculator position as of last Tuesday, which is likely to increase towards the end of the week. The market is also getting pulled into the "energy infrastructure providing gas to utilities to generate power for data centers" theme, following losses in energy and tech stocks due to China's development of a cheaper AI model.
In contrast, weekend updates on early February weather forecasts have taken some of the chill out of the market. Analyst Eli Rubin from EBW Analytics notes that while bullish outcomes remain possible with nearly half of winter still ahead, they appear increasingly less likely after fundamental shifts over the weekend. The Nymex front-month contract was off 6.5% at $3.766/mmBtu.
The market's decline is also linked to last week's Arctic blast, which is expected to be reflected in a bullish inventory report this week. A hefty withdrawal from storage is likely to turn the surplus over the 5-year average into a deficit. Overall, the plunge in US natural gas futures suggests that the energy market is becoming increasingly sensitive to weather forecasts and tech-related factors.