Natural Gas (NG=F) Price Forecast: Market Stalls at $3.19 as Storage Builds and LNG Demand Rises

Natural Gas (NG=F) Price Forecast: Market Stalls at $3.19 as Storage Builds and LNG Demand Rises

With inventories approaching 4.0 Tcf, LNG flows at 15.78M Dth, and resistance at $3.20, Natural Gas balances bearish seasonal patterns with bullish winter outlook | That's TradingNEWS

TradingNEWS Archive 9/8/2025 9:36:42 PM
Commodities NATURAL GAS NG=F

Natural Gas (NG=F) Price Analysis: Supply Glut Meets Seasonal Shifts

Failed Breakout Leaves Sellers in Control

Natural Gas NG=F began the week testing resistance near $3.19, its highest level in 32 days, but momentum quickly faded. After climbing through the 50-day moving average at $3.12, sellers defended the late-July swing high and forced prices lower, closing in the bottom half of the session range around $3.11. That retreat signals exhaustion in the short-term uptrend, and if prices close back below the 50-day EMA, the failed breakout would reassert bearish control. Immediate downside risk targets last week’s low of $2.87, a level that previously validated the weekly bullish reversal.

Seasonal Patterns and Demand Outlook

The transition into autumn has historically brought weak demand periods, with the U.S. shoulder season limiting power burn as cooling demand falls before winter heating ramps up. October contracts roll on September 26, aligning with the period traders typically start positioning for winter. European energy buyers remain in focus, with $250 billion in projected U.S. energy imports over the next 12 months, much of it tied to LNG flows. This seasonal pattern suggests one more dip before the winter rebound gains traction.

Storage Path and Futures Positioning

Storage injections remain robust, with inventories projected to reach near 4.0 Tcf ahead of peak demand season. Futures have responded with volatility, but the latest NGI data shows optimism for a tighter balance heading into Q4. Monday’s rebound reversed Friday’s losses and kept prices above the $3 handle, but the market still reflects fragile conviction. Traders eyeing storage are watching whether injections ease earlier than anticipated, which would strengthen the bullish case into November.

Global LNG Demand Adds Tailwinds

International demand continues to reshape the backdrop for NG=F. U.S. LNG export flows stood at 15.78 million Dth on September 8, down slightly from 16.45 million Dth the prior day but still near record highs. Facilities including Sabine Pass, Cameron, Freeport, and Calcasieu Pass are running close to capacity. Asian buyers, led by China, increased spot purchases while Norway cut exports for maintenance, adding upward pressure on global benchmarks JKM and TTF. With Europe’s storage near 90% but winter hedging continuing, LNG demand is expected to absorb U.S. supply at elevated levels, providing a floor to Henry Hub-linked pricing.

Technical Levels Driving Price Action

Near-term resistance sits firmly at $3.19–$3.20, where recent rallies have failed. Breaking this barrier with volume could send prices toward $3.40, but each rejection strengthens the bearish case. Support holds at $2.87, with a breakdown exposing $2.50 as the deeper downside target. The weekly chart still shows a constructive higher-high and higher-low pattern above $3.02, but the wide engulfing candle formed in August leaves room for volatility swings before any sustainable uptrend emerges.

 

Regional Spot Prices Reflect Mixed Fundamentals

Spot markets highlight the split fundamentals. On September 8, Henry Hub printed at $2.96/MMBtu, down $0.05, while Algonquin Citygate prices fell $0.455 amid weaker Northeast demand. In contrast, NOVA/AECO C in Canada gained $0.27, reflecting local tightening, while PNGTS spiked $6.75 on constrained New England supply. Northwest Sumas remained under pressure at –$1.33, underscoring regional oversupply. The national average slipped $0.03, showing the market still leans bearish despite global LNG support.

Macro Forces and Weather Catalysts

Weather remains a decisive swing factor. Mild conditions across the U.S. are limiting near-term demand, but forecasts show warmer temperatures ahead next week, which could offer short-lived support. Tropical storm activity fizzled, removing a bullish catalyst that traders had priced into last week’s advance. As winter approaches, heating demand outlooks and NOAA’s long-range forecasts will guide expectations. Stronger-than-normal cold snaps could flip sentiment quickly, given tight balances between production, storage, and LNG exports.

Investment Stance on NG=F

With NG=F trading near $3.11, the market stands at an inflection. The bullish case is anchored by rising LNG flows, a shallower storage build, and seasonal winter demand. The bearish argument centers on failed breakouts, persistent resistance at $3.20, and oversupply in U.S. hubs. Short-term traders face a fragile setup: hold above $2.87 keeps the bullish weekly reversal valid, but breaking lower risks accelerating toward $2.50.

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