US natural gas futures continued to retreat on Monday, as weather forecasts turned milder and LNG feedgas flows turned bearish yet again.
The front-month Henry Hub contract and the continuous contract both dropped by 2.48% to $2.867 per million British thermal units.
This comes as weather forecasts turned milder, with the northeastern US expected to see near-normal temperatures from July 20 to July 26, according to the National Weather Service, after weeks of above-normal heat stretching across much of the country.
US LNG feedgas flows are under pressure this week, estimated at just 17.45 billion cubic feet on Monday, compared to the 30-day moving average of 18.82 Bcf, according to the Bloomberg LNG Feedgas Model.
This comes amid the Freeport LNG facility undergoing major maintenance, which is set to last until late August, weighing on natural gas demand in the near-term.
At the same time, supplies remained ample, with Lower 48 gas output hitting 112.6 Bcf/d on Friday, up 5.2% over the year, according to Barchart, citing BNEF.
Gary Cunningham of Tradition Energy said that "power demands will be lower to start the week, with the heat in the south dissipating and Texas even trending towards cooler than normal for mid-July," while noting that markets will seek out a new area of support to arrest this decline.
According to Cunningham, this support could come from short sellers closing their positions to take profits, helping stabilize prices.