Natural Gas (XNG/USD) prices could be turning around soon as the current drop in temperatures across Europe is suddenly eating into the Gas reserves. Although stockpiles are still comfortably full, some gas storages for certain European countries saw a quite large drawdown, of 5% to even 10%, in just a matter of a few days. This could suggest that European consumers are no longer worried about elevated energy bills as they used to against the past two years. Signs of increasing demand, coupled with steady or declining supply, tend to lift prices.
Meanwhile, the US Dollar (USD) is still trying to claw back against the weakness it registered in November. The Greenback depreciated for a third straight week on Friday evening at the close. Markets will be on the lookout for the US Jobs Report on Friday and the last US Federal Reserve Meeting of the year next week.
Natural Gas is trading at $2.69 per MMBtu at the time of writing.
Natural Gas might have reached the end in its continuous decline throughout November. With European gas storages starting to see substantial drawdowns after just three days of negative temperatures, the question will be if these reserves are big enough to face several days in a row of freezing cold. Adding the technical angle, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) trades in oversold territory, signalling that a pickup in demand might be due.
Meanwhile, pressure is building again in Gaza with Israeli troops advancing on several fronts, further escalating the situation. Adding this to the cold front in Europe, Natural Gas could edge up to $3.0 as the level to watch. Just above, the 100-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at $3.01 could throw a brief spanner in the works. Once bulls have dealt with a break above this 100-day SMA, look for $3.06 and $3.20 as next profit levels on the upside.
With the support of the 200-day SMA gone now, a further decline will target two intermediary levels on the downside. the fIrst one is the purple line near $2.57, which triggered a bounce on August 24. In case that fails, the low of the summer near $2.48 might be strong enough to catch any falling knives, with the RSI by then severely in oversold regime.
XNG/USD (Daily Chart)
Supply and demand dynamics are a key factor influencing Natural Gas prices, and are themselves influenced by global economic growth, industrial activity, population growth, production levels, and inventories. The weather impacts Natural Gas prices because more Gas is used during cold winters and hot summers for heating and cooling. Competition from other energy sources impacts prices as consumers may switch to cheaper sources. Geopolitical events are factors as exemplified by the war in Ukraine. Government policies relating to extraction, transportation, and environmental issues also impact prices.
The main economic release influencing Natural Gas prices is the weekly inventory bulletin from the Energy Information Administration (EIA), a US government agency that produces US gas market data. The EIA Gas bulletin usually comes out on Thursday at 14:30 GMT, a day after the EIA publishes its weekly Oil bulletin. Economic data from large consumers of Natural Gas can impact supply and demand, the largest of which include China, Germany and Japan. Natural Gas is primarily priced and traded in US Dollars, thus economic releases impacting the US Dollar are also factors.
The US Dollar is the world’s reserve currency and most commodities, including Natural Gas are priced and traded on international markets in US Dollars. As such, the value of the US Dollar is a factor in the price of Natural Gas, because if the Dollar strengthens it means less Dollars are required to buy the same volume of Gas (the price falls), and vice versa if USD strengthens.
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