FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

US Natural Gas Update: Futures Slip on Easing Heat, Predicted Storage Build

By

US natural gas futures fell in midday trading on Wednesday as forecasts pointed to easing temperatures across the eastern US, reducing expectations for strong cooling demand after an early-season heat wave.

The front-month Henry Hub contract and the continuous contract were both down 3.08% at $3.018 per million British thermal units.

Forecasts indicate that extreme heat along the US coasts will moderate in the coming days, with warmer-than-average temperatures shifting toward the north-central part of the country next week, NRG Energy said.

Power demand has already begun to soften, with Gelber & Associates estimating consumption at 36.5 billion cubic feet per day, down from Monday's two-week high of 39.9 Bcf/d, as cooling degree days decline through midweek. The consultancy added that late-May temperatures are expected to further reduce modeled demand into next week.

On the supply side, NRG Energy said US gas production is expected to edge higher to 107.3 Bcf/d on Wednesday, roughly in line with recent levels and slightly above the May month-to-date average.

Gelber said Canadian imports remained steady at 5 Bcf/d, helping maintain ample physical supply coverage.

LNG demand offered some support to the market. NRG Energy said LNG export feedgas demand is forecast to rise to 17 Bcf/d after slipping below 16 Bcf/d on Tuesday for the first time since January, with overall demand still expected to remain elevated compared with last week.

Market participants are also closely watching Thursday's US storage report. NRG Energy said analysts expect a 95 Bcf injection for the week ended May 15, broadly in line with the five-year average but below the year-ago build. While inventories are expected to maintain a healthy surplus versus the five-year average, the surplus compared with last year is projected to continue narrowing.

Gelber & Associates forecast a similar 96 Bcf storage build and said a figure near that level would likely keep Henry Hub prices focused on the balance between strong LNG demand and weakening power-sector consumption.

"A materially smaller build would put more weight on export pull and early-season power demand, while a larger build would push the market back toward the same mild-weather narrative that has kept rallies difficult to extend once the domestic balance loosens," it said.

Related Articles

Commodities

DOE-Backed NLR Launches Agora Grid Test Bed for Data Centers

The National Laboratory of the Rockies launched Agora, a new grid integration platform designed to help data centers support power reliability, it said in a Tuesday statement.The US Department of Energy-backed project replicates the technical complexity of large-scale data center interconnections and marks the first dedicated large-load grid integration test bed across the national laboratory system, the NLR said.NLR developed Agora with support from the DOE's Office of Electricity and industry partners to address growing electricity demand from artificial intelligence and data centers."We built a 20th-century grid - but today we serve a 21st-century, data-driven, AI-enabled economy," Katie Jereza, assistant secretary at DOE's Office of Electricity, said.The laboratory said most data centers currently operate only as large electricity consumers, while utilities have limited visibility into whether facilities can reduce or shift power use during grid stress events.NLR said flexible operations at large facilities such as data centers could lower electricity costs and help utilities avoid rolling blackouts during periods of peak demand.Major industry partners including Schneider Electric, Compass Datacenters and Verrus are already using Agora to test approaches for integrating large electricity loads into the grid."As data centers become one of the fastest-growing sources of electricity demand in the US, utilities are being asked to manage large loads at a scale and speed the grid was not originally designed for," Jaquelin Cochran of NLR said.NLR said Agora creates a plug-and-play environment that brings together utilities, technology providers, researchers and data center developers to coordinate large-load grid integration strategies.Agora will operate alongside other DOE-funded grid management systems under the Advanced Research on Integrated Energy Systems platform focused on reliable, secure and affordable energy technologies.

Commodities

US Natural Gas Update: Hits Eight-Week High on Eastern Heatwave Demand

US natural gas futures extended gains in after-hours trading on Tuesday, rising for a fifth straight session and pushing benchmark prices to an eight-week high as an early-season heatwave across the eastern US fueled expectations of stronger power-sector demand.The front-month Henry Hub contract and the continuous contract each rose by 3.04% to $3.116 per million British thermal units.Soaring temperatures across the East Coast were sharply increasing air-conditioning demand and lifting gas-fired power burn. Phil Flynn, senior analyst at Price Futures Group, said temperatures along the East Coast could run 20 to 30 degrees Fahrenheit above seasonal norms, threatening or breaking more than 150 temperature records in major cities. "Highs in the 80s and 90s (with triple-digit heat possible in parts of the South and Texas) will spike air-conditioning use and power burn," Flynn said.Weather forecasters said the heatwave in the US Northeast was expected to ease by Thursday. Barchart, citing The Commodity Weather Group, said forecasts had shifted cooler, with mostly normal seasonal weather expected across much of the US between May 24-28.Still, near-term demand remained firm. Gelber & Associates said Tuesday's power burn was tracking near 38.9 billion cubic feet per day, "enough to keep weather sensitivity in the front of the market." Barchart, citing BNEF data, said total Lower 48 gas demand on Tuesday was estimated at 72.2 Bcf/d, up 2.3 Bcf/d from overnight levels and 5.5% higher than a year earlier.Despite stronger consumption, analysts noted the market remained comfortably supplied. Gelber said US dry gas production was estimated at 108.6 Bcf/d, while Canadian imports were running at 4.7 Bcf/d. "The market is not short of supply, but it is becoming more willing to reward heat when power burns are carrying more of the domestic load," the firm said.Gains were capped by weaker LNG feedgas demand as seasonal maintenance at US export facilities reduced feedgas flows to a four-month low. Estimated net gas flows to US LNG export terminals on Tuesday fell by 2.3 Bcf/d to 15.6 Bcf/d, down 15.3% from levels seen a week earlier."If the warmer turn verifies, Henry Hub should keep defending the $3 handle because the balance is finally getting meaningful summer demand from power," Gelber said. "If feedgas stays soft and the cooler front-end limits immediate CDD [cooling demand day] growth, the rally could pause even with prices still technically supported above $3."

Commodities

Brazil Boosts Soy Oil Exports Amid Record Crop and Weak Local Demand, Bloomberg Analysis Says

Brazil's soy oil exports climbed 47% through April as delayed biodiesel policy changes increased cheap overseas supplies, according to a Bloomberg analysis on Tuesday.A record soybean harvest and heavy crushing activity boosted soy oil production across Brazil, while slower domestic biofuel demand pushed more supplies into export markets, the analysis said.Chicago soy oil futures have rallied nearly 56% this year, although prices at Brazil's Paranagua port have lagged, widening discounts to the lowest levels since 2023, the analysis said, citing data from Commodity3.Lower prices helped lift Brazil's soy oil exports to the second-highest level in nearly 20 years.Brazil still blends 15% biodiesel into diesel fuel after authorities postponed a planned increase to 16% while additional technical testing continues.Strong soybean supplies kept crushing plants operating at high levels as exporters increased vegetable oil shipments to India, Bangladesh, and North Africa, according to the analysis.Joao Paes de Almeida, founder of advisory firm J.Pacta, said abundant soybean supplies will likely keep Brazilian soy oil prices below Chicago benchmarks unless the country raises biodiesel blending mandates.The report said Argentina has also faced unusually large soy oil discounts as record South American soybean supplies continue weighing on regional vegetable oil prices.