Natural gas futures pulled back Thursday after Wednesday’s significant 35.1-cent gain, as markets brace for what analysts expect to be a bearish storage report from the EIA. The May Nymex contract faces resistance at the 50-day moving average ($3.887) and a short-term pivot at $3.935, despite successfully testing the major pivot at $3.361 yesterday.
At 12:56 GMT, Natural Gas Futures are trading $3.703, down $0.113 or -2.96%.
President Trump’s announced 90-day pause on reciprocal tariffs for 56 countries (excluding China) boosted market sentiment Wednesday, triggering a broad market recovery and prompting short covering in natural gas futures. While the broader pause was approved, the 10% levy implemented on April 5 remains in place for all U.S. trading partners, and tariffs on Chinese goods are set to increase to 125%.
Weather forecasts have shifted cooler from the Midwest to the eastern US for April 14-18, potentially boosting heating demand. NatGasWeather reports a late-season chilly system sweeping across the Great Lakes and East over the next 7 days with highs of 40s-50s and lows of 20s-30s, interrupted by a brief warmer break Monday. The western, central, and southern regions will remain mild to warm.
Lower-48 state dry gas production reached 103.9 bcf/day (+3.1% y/y) on Wednesday, while demand registered 77.2 bcf/day (+11.5% y/y). LNG net flows to export terminals were 16.6 bcf/day (+15.5% w/w). Electricity output has increased 4.05% y/y for the week ended April 5, reaching 74,475 GWh, supporting natural gas demand from utilities.
Consensus expectations for Thursday’s EIA report project a build of +62 bcf for the week ended April 4, substantially above the five-year average of +17 bcf. Current inventories (as of March 28) remain 21.5% below last year and 4.3% below the 5-year average.
BloombergNEF projects U.S. gas storage will remain 10% below the 5-year average this summer, suggesting continued market tightness. President Trump’s January decision to lift restrictions on gas export projects could provide longer-term price support by increasing LNG export capacity and boosting overall demand.
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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.