Natural gas futures ended the week softer, pressured by persistent supply strength, mild shoulder-season weather, and bearish storage builds. Despite brief support from cooler forecasts and LNG exports, the broader setup continues to weigh on the market as traders reassess the balance heading deeper into April.
Last week, U.S. Natural Gas Futures settled at $3.527, down $0.310 or 8.08%.
Cooler-than-normal temperatures briefly lifted heating demand in the Northeast and Great Lakes, but that support appears short-lived. Most forecasts now show warming trends across the West, South, and Central U.S., capping residential and commercial consumption. National demand is expected to drift lower heading into the second half of April, with power burn not yet ramping up enough to compensate for the broader softness.
Recent EIA data confirms bearish sentiment, with consecutive injections of +29 Bcf and +57 Bcf—well above seasonal norms. Though total storage remains slightly below the five-year average, the pace of injections is a warning sign. It points to lackluster demand relative to available supply, and suggests the market could be entering refill season with more comfort than previously anticipated.
LNG export flows remain a firm support base, with net deliveries to terminals reaching as high as 16.6 Bcf/day—up over 15% week-over-week. That said, even this strength hasn’t been enough to drive prices higher. Export growth helps tighten balances in the background, but near-term demand drivers on the domestic side remain too soft to turn sentiment bullish.
Trade tensions have returned as a risk variable. U.S.–China disputes escalated further, with tariffs raised on both sides—China’s now at 125% on U.S. goods. While the market found some temporary relief from a tariff pause affecting other nations, traders remain cautious. LNG demand from key Asian buyers is being questioned, adding another layer of uncertainty to forward demand assumptions.
With supply holding steady, early storage builds outpacing historical norms, and national demand expected to decline further, the near-term outlook remains bearish. LNG exports and longer-term storage tightness provide some fundamental support, but without a clear demand catalyst, downside pressure is likely to persist heading into the latter half of April.
Technically, the key level to watch this week is the pivot at $3.361. If it fails then look for a sharp break into the 52-week moving average at $2.914. Buyers could reemerge on a pullback to this technical indicator. On the upside, the key level to watch is the pivot at $3.935. This is the last potential resistance before the $4.912 major top.
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James Hyerczyk is a U.S. based seasoned technical analyst and educator with over 40 years of experience in market analysis and trading, specializing in chart patterns and price movement. He is the author of two books on technical analysis and has a background in both futures and stock markets.