Last Week in Natural Gas
Thursday’s EIA release for the week ending April 24 came in at +79 Bcf — a clean miss versus the +88 Bcf survey median and well under the running narrative that shoulder builds were accelerating. Working gas in storage moved to 2,142 Bcf, leaving the cushion at roughly 6% above the five-year average. The print was the first crack in a string of triple-digit and near-triple-digit injections that had pinned shoulder-season sentiment heavy. Front-month NG=F closed Friday near $2.79, capping a +6–7% weekly bounce on a combination of a Cameron LNG feedgas dip and a dry-production rollover that traders flagged as the cleanest supply-side tell in weeks. Curve structure refused to follow the front higher in any clean way — the June-to-July spread stayed near $0.29, holding the curve in roughly 10% contango and signaling the rally was as much short-cover and supply-side as a fundamentals reset. NOAA’s CPC kept its El Niño Watch active, with the latest ONI bulletin flipping positive at +0.11 for FMA off the OND lows.
The Week Ahead
Thursday May 7 brings the EIA release for the week ending May 1, where early survey work is clustering in a +78 to +88 Bcf range against a five-year average near +77 Bcf — a print on the lighter end would be the second confirmation that the shoulder surplus has stopped widening, while a triple-digit number reopens the structural-build story. Watch dry-production tape closely: another week below the recent 108-handle keeps the supply-rollover narrative alive and supports the front; a snap-back above 110 Bcf/d hands the bears their setup back. Cameron, Sabine Pass and Plaquemines feedgas nominations are the obvious LNG checkpoints, with Plaquemines and Golden Pass Train 1 still ramping into capacity. CPC’s May–July outlook continues to tilt above-normal across the southern and western US, aligning with the Super El Niño emergence the FMA ONI just confirmed. The split keeps the front-month range-bound while the August peak-summer contract carries the cleanest setup; Hormuz disruption keeping TTF anchored around €45–47 remains the structural LNG netback floor.
In Plain English
Natural gas prices firmed up last week, helped by a drop in domestic production to its lowest level in nearly three months and a brief slowdown at one of the big Gulf Coast export plants. Government storage figures showed gas going into underground inventory at a slower pace than analysts had expected, easing some of the worry that supply was getting too plentiful too fast. Looking ahead, traders are watching whether production stays soft and whether forecasts continue to point to a hot summer across the South and West. The bigger picture is more mixed: this summer looks supportive for prices, but the winter ahead is shaping up to be milder than usual.