Last Week in Natural Gas
Thursday’s EIA release printed a +63 Bcf injection for the week ended May 1, comfortably below the roughly +74 Bcf consensus and below both the five-year average and last year’s comparable build. A bullish surprise on the headline, but the front-month reaction was muted — NG=F settled the week in the high $2.70s, essentially flat after the prior week’s double-digit rebound. The curve held its shape, sitting in roughly 9% contango with the Jun-to-Aug wedge near $0.32; peak-summer length is still being paid for over a soft shoulder front. Storage carried in around 2,205 Bcf, running approximately 6% above the five-year norm despite the lighter weekly add. Production stayed pinned at multi-week lows near 108 Bcf/d as sub-$2.80 Henry Hub kept producer curtailments engaged. The structural story compounded all week: NOAA’s ONI ticked to +0.11 FMA off the -0.55 OND lows, El Niño emergence is formally favored at 61% for May-July, and the latest seasonal model runs now have the warm build pacing ahead of the 1997 and 2015 Super El Niño analogues.
The Week Ahead
The next EIA storage report lands Thursday May 14 covering the week ended May 8, with early consensus settling into the +90 to +100 Bcf zone — heavier than the prior week’s +63 print but in line with peak injection-season seasonality. The May 12 STEO release is the other scheduled catalyst; watch for revisions to the 2026 production path and the LNG export utilization assumption now that feedgas has trended firmer coming out of spring terminal maintenance. CPC’s 6-10 day outlook is leaning warmer than normal across Texas, the Southeast, and the interior West, which would lift the 7-day power burn average off shoulder norms and start to validate the Aug-Oct strip’s persistent winter-risk premium — Oct continues to trade above Aug, which is not how an ordinary shoulder behaves. Curve structure matters here: the front needs to hold the high-$2.70s to keep producer curtailments anchoring supply; a break under $2.65 invites length toward the back of the strip rather than the prompt. Don’t press shorts into the Aug-Oct bid while the El Niño build is accelerating.
In Plain English
Natural gas prices held roughly flat last week, settling in the high $2.70s after the prior week’s sharp rebound. The government’s Thursday storage report showed utilities added less gas to underground inventories than traders expected — a modestly bullish signal for prices. Even so, the country’s stockpile is still running about 6% above what’s normal for this time of year, which is keeping a lid on the front of the market. Looking ahead, weather forecasters are flagging warmer-than-usual conditions across Texas and the South over the next week or two, and a strengthening El Niño pattern is shaping up to deliver a hotter summer for cooling demand — but also, further out, a milder winter that could weigh on heating bills.