Natural gas futures broke decisively above the key $3 level, as a combination of early summer heat forecasts and robust export demand signals a tightening US supply balance.
Natural gas futures broke decisively above the key $3 level, as a combination of early summer heat forecasts and robust export demand signals a tightening US supply balance.

June natural gas futures surged 1.82% to settle at $3.014, breaking a technical ceiling that has capped prices for weeks and signaling a potential shift in a market that had been weighed down by oversupply concerns. The session high of $3.09 marks the peak of a four-day rally built on signs of a tightening supply-demand balance heading into the summer.
"The market spent the spring trading like supply was flooding in from every direction. Then production slipped and weather demand started building at the same time and the bears lost their argument," said James Hyerczyk, a technical analyst with over 40 years of experience.
The move was supported by a four-day rally that pushed prices cleanly through the 50-day moving average, a key technical indicator, at $2.936. The latest Energy Information Administration report showed an 85 billion cubic foot storage injection, below the 91 Bcf consensus estimate and a second consecutive week of a tighter-than-expected build.
With inventories now only slightly above the five-year average and forecasts calling for significant heat across the eastern half of the U.S. into early June, the market is now testing whether the rally has enough momentum to challenge the next major resistance level at $3.107. A sustained break higher could indicate a structural shift for producers like Comstock Resources (CRK) and Range Resources (RRC), who have been battered by low prices.
Three distinct demand channels are firing simultaneously, a rare alignment that has turned a rangebound market into a trending one. Forecasts for above-normal temperatures spreading across the South, Midwest, and East in late May are pulling forward demand for gas-fired power generation to run air conditioning. At the same time, pipeline exports to Mexico are running at historically strong rates.
The third driver is a robust global appetite for U.S. liquefied natural gas (LNG). Strong export demand has been a consistent support for domestic prices, as disruptions at facilities like Qatar's Ras Laffan and ongoing tensions around the Strait of Hormuz have pushed European and Asian buyers to seek reliable alternatives. Every U.S. LNG cargo removes supply from the domestic system, creating a structural tightening that is independent of weekly weather forecasts.
From a technical perspective, the breakout above the 50-day moving average at $2.936 is a significant bullish development. That level now becomes critical support.
"Trader reaction to $3.107 and $2.936 will set the tone," Hyerczyk said. "A sustained move over $3.107 will indicate the buying is getting stronger. If this move creates enough upside momentum, prices could soar into the resistance cluster at $3.405 to $3.438." Conversely, a failure to hold above the new support at $2.936 could trigger a quick pullback to the $2.841 pivot level. For now, buyers have defended every dip for four straight sessions, a pattern that suggests conviction.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.