Last Week in Natural Gas
Last week’s tape did two things at once. Thursday’s EIA print landed at +85 Bcf for the week ending May 8, matching the +85 Bcf consensus and lifting working inventories to roughly 2.3 Tcf — a level that keeps the surplus to the five-year average sitting in the +140 Bcf neighborhood. Despite that fat carry, the front rallied to a six-week high near $2.96 by Friday’s close, finishing up better than 6% on the week as Lower-48 dry production rolled to a multi-week low on producer curtailments and Freeport LNG’s train restart added incremental feedgas pull. The bigger structural news arrived from CPC: the El Niño Watch was officially issued with 82% emergence probability for May-July and 96% odds of El Niño persisting through December-February 2026-27, with the seasonal ensemble track still pointing toward a potentially record-class event. ONI prints +0.11 for FMA, cleanly positive off the -0.55 OND lows. TTF crossed €50 on the week, keeping European netback firm into the late-summer cargo window.
The Week Ahead
Focus this week sits on Thursday, May 21, when EIA releases its build for the week ending May 15. Early analyst surveys are clustered in the high-80s with a range running from the high-70s to mid-90s — a print above the five-year norm near +95 Bcf would extend the surplus and reinforce shoulder-season carry; a sub-80s surprise would validate the production-rollover narrative and give the front cover to test $3. Watch powerburn for confirmation that cooling load is starting to bleed into the cash market as the shoulder window closes, and watch LNG feedgas: with Freeport back, the next read is whether Golden Pass and other seasonal maintenance windows close cleanly into June. The curve still has almost no winter premium built into the 2026-27 slot — October trades only fractions above August — so any verification signal on the Super El Niño track through the early-June diagnostic window will land into a setup that has barely begun to discount it. Headlines on Plaquemines Phase 2 and Corpus Stage 3 commissioning remain forward catalysts.
In Plain English
Natural gas prices firmed up last week, reaching their highest level in about six weeks as some U.S. producers cut back output and a major Gulf Coast export plant came back from a maintenance outage. The catch: storage tanks are filling up faster than what’s normal for this time of year, so prices stayed below the $3 mark even with the rally. Forecasters also officially flagged that an El Niño weather pattern is taking shape — typically that means hotter southern summers and milder winters across much of the U.S. For households and businesses, the early read is summer cooling bills could run warm, but next winter’s heating demand may come in lighter than usual.