-- US natural gas futures extended losses in midday trade on Wednesday, pressured by robust supply conditions and storage builds that continue to run above seasonal norms, while near-term weather demand signals remain limited.
Both the front-month Henry Hub natural gas futures contract and the continuous contract declined 2.21% to $2.63 per million British thermal units.
Prices extending recent weakness in a market increasingly driven by supply-side fundamentals rather than short-lived weather fluctuations.
Weather models continue to point to below-normal temperatures across roughly the eastern two-thirds of the US into early May, extending a cooler pattern that developed in the second half of April, according to NRG Energy.
However, analysts cautioned that the temperature deviation is not expected to be strong enough to meaningfully lift heating demand or materially tighten balances.
Trading Economics echoed that view, noting that forecasts for slightly cooler-than-normal conditions through early May are unlikely to significantly increase consumption given the broader seasonal transition into spring.
On the supply side, US natural gas production remains stable, holding above 106 billion cubic feet per day, NRG Energy said. Although output eased in April, daily production has fallen by 3.8 billion cubic feet per day over the past 22 days to a preliminary 12-week low of 108.3 Bcf/d, as persistently low prices have prompted some producers to scale back activity.
Despite this moderation, supply remains ample. LNG export feedgas has strengthened further, rising to 18.9 Bcf/d so far in April from 18.6 Bcf/d in March, surpassing the previous monthly record of 18.7 Bcf/d set in February.
Storage conditions continue to exert additional pressure on prices. Traders are expecting Thursday's weekly storage report to show another above-average injection, which would mark the fifth consecutive build above the five-year average.
Trading Economics said US gas inventories are now estimated to be about 8% above seasonal norms for the week ended April 24, up from 7% the prior week, reflecting sustained mild weather and subdued demand.
Market sentiment remains anchored by strong production, rising inventories, and only modest demand support from weather, leaving prices under continued downward pressure despite intermittent cold snaps.