Why gas prices were under pressure on the last inventory report

Why inventory reports caused crude and natural gas prices to fall (Part 4 of 4)

(Continued from Part 3)

Natural gas inventories beat expectation for the past week

On Thursday, June 19, 2014, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (or EIA) reported that natural gas inventories increased by 113 bcf (billion cubic feet) for the week ending June 13, bringing current inventories to 1,719 bcf. A survey of experts had estimated the increase in inventories to be 110 bcf.

Last week’s build in natural gas inventories was more than the market’s expectation, which indicated weaker demand or stronger supply than expected. Investors can interpret this as a negative signal for natural gas prices. Natural gas prices traded lower on the day to close at $4.58 per million British thermal units (or MMBtu) compared to $4.66 per MMBtu the previous day.

Natural gas price volatility is important for gas-weighted energy producers like Chesapeake Energy

Investors with stake in natural gas through an exchange-traded fund (or ETF) such as the U.S. Natural Gas Fund (UNG) or natural gas producers such as Chesapeake Energy (CHK), Devon Energy (DVN), Range Resources (RRC), and Quicksilver Resources (KWK) should monitor inventory draws and builds because they’re significant data points in the national supply and demand picture of natural gas. The supply and demand dynamics of the commodity affect its price and, in turn, the margins of companies that produce natural gas. This week’s decrease in natural gas prices is a negative for these companies.

Background: Natural gas inventories are far lower than average

Current natural gas inventories are roughly 33% lower than the average of the past five years because last winter brought extremely cold weather. Natural gas demand surged, which resulted in a large depletion of inventories as well as an increase in prices. The front month natural gas futures contract was trading around ~$3.50 per MMBtu in early November and peaked above $6 per MMBtu at points in February. It is currently at ~$4.50 per MMBtu.

The markets will be watching to see how natural gas inventories move through the spring and summer ahead of the peak winter demand season. Inventory levels that remain below average could prime natural gas prices for a rally this coming winter.

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