Natural Gas (NG=F) tumbled to $3.09 per MMBtu, marking its lowest level in two and a half weeks as bearish fundamentals gripped the market heading into mid-October. Sellers dominated across global hubs, from the U.S. Henry Hub benchmark to Türkiye’s spot market, as warmer-than-expected forecasts slashed near-term heating demand and inventories swelled above historical norms. In the U.S., the November contract fell 4.99%, closing at $3.09, while Türkiye’s spot gas settled at ₺14,328.56 per 1,000 cubic meters, equivalent to roughly $342.45, a 0.5% drop from the previous session. Total trade volume on the Turkish Energy Exchange (EXIST) slipped to ₺15.86 million, as domestic pipeline inflows reached 137.7 million cubic meters—ample supply given muted consumption.
Surging U.S. Output and Storage Surpluses Reinforce Downtrend
The Energy Information Administration reported that U.S. natural gas inventories rose by +80 Bcf for the week ended October 3, surpassing market expectations of +77 Bcf but still under the five-year weekly average of +94 Bcf. Total storage now sits 4.5% above the five-year seasonal average and 0.3% higher year-over-year, leaving little urgency for buyers to chase prices higher. As of Friday, lower-48 dry gas production reached 108.1 Bcf/day, up 5% year-over-year, underscoring the oversupply dynamic. The EIA also revised its 2025 output forecast upward by 0.5% to 107.14 Bcf/day, marking a fresh record. The U.S. rig count climbed by two to 120 rigs, just shy of the two-year high of 124 rigs, reinforcing that production growth remains resilient despite recent price softness.
Weather Models and Demand Outlook Tilt Bearish
Forecasting firm Atmospheric G2 reported a sharp warming trend for the eastern United States between October 20–24, cutting expected heating loads during the key shoulder-season window. Lower-48 gas demand fell 6.7% year-over-year to 66.0 Bcf/day, while LNG feedgas exports edged up slightly to 16.0 Bcf/day, a modest +1.6% week-over-week rise. European fundamentals followed the same path: EU gas storage levels remained 83% full, compared to 91% five-year norms, while September demand slipped 2.7%. The benchmark Dutch TTF contract eased 1% to €32.87/MWh, still up 5% for the week on cold-weather risks tied to Ukrainian attacks on Russian infrastructure. The combination of mild weather, high storage, and soft consumption reinforced the global oversupply narrative.
Technical Breakdown Confirms Bearish Momentum for NG=F
The breakdown through the 20-day moving average at $3.16 accelerated selling momentum. Chart analysis shows key support clustered between $2.95 and $3.03, where the 50-day moving average aligns with the lower edge of a rising channel that has contained prices since early September. A confirmed close below $3.16 solidifies a double-top pattern previously triggered by the failure near $3.30, where the 200-day moving average capped earlier rallies. The RSI remains in neutral territory near 47 but trending lower, indicating room for further downside. The lower channel line intersects with anchored VWAP at $2.97, forming a high-probability support zone, while resistance remains firm at $3.30. A break above that level would neutralize near-term bearishness, though the weekly candle structure still tilts strongly toward sellers.
Pipeline Constraints and Regional Pricing Disparities Deepen
At the U.S. regional level, NGI data show persistent structural imbalances: Waha hub prices in West Texas averaged negative $1.20/MMBtu, the 21st consecutive session below zero, as ongoing maintenance and capacity constraints choked takeaway options. Meanwhile, the Trinity Gas Storage LLC hub in Texas registered its first Intercontinental Exchange-linked trade, marking a new frontier for year-round gas storage trading driven by data center and power-generation demand in the Haynesville Shale region. These localized disruptions highlight the disconnect between upstream production growth and midstream evacuation capacity—a recurring theme that continues to distort regional pricing and depress producer margins.
Global Interplay: LNG Feedgas Demand and Türkiye’s Market Stability
Despite U.S. domestic weakness, LNG flows held steady at 16 Bcf/day, reflecting stable export demand. Türkiye’s energy data further illustrate diverging regional fundamentals: while its spot market declined slightly to ₺14,328.56 per 1,000 cubic meters, the country imported a robust 137.7 million cubic meters of pipeline gas, showing steady long-term contract commitments amid moderate local consumption. With the Turkish lira trading at ₺41.85 per dollar, the domestic cost of imported gas remains elevated, but still manageable under BOTAS’s state-supported pricing mechanism. This balance between high nominal prices and steady inflows has helped Türkiye avoid the volatility gripping European hubs.
Forward Curve Compression Reflects Limited Seasonal Premium
Natural Gas Intelligence reported that forward prices fell sharply during the October 2–8 trading window, erasing early autumn gains as traders priced in record storage and warmer weather. The forward curve now shows minimal premium into winter—an unusual feature for this period—signaling market skepticism toward any sustained demand spike. The Henry Hub November contract leads the decline, but forward months through January have also retraced, compressing seasonal spreads. Historically, similar flattening in the curve preceded winter rallies only when unexpected cold waves disrupted supply. Without such an event, the curve suggests continued consolidation between $2.95 and $3.25.