Natural gas drops 7%, sharpest decline since January following big run-up on supply concerns

Environment

Natural gas futures dipped as much as 8% on Wednesday, pulling back from a more than seven-year high above $6 per million British thermal units hit during the prior session.

The contract for November delivery fell to a low of $5.42 on Wednesday, before recovering some of those losses to settle 6.85% lower at $5.47 in the worst daily performance since January.

Natural gas prices have shot up this month amid an energy crunch in Europe that’s sent power prices to all-time highs.

Natural gas futures are up 26% for September, and prices have more than doubled since the beginning of the year.

Despite Wednesday’s downturn, some believe it’s a temporary halt in an otherwise upward trajectory.

“Natural gas fundamentals all point to higher prices: robust Chinese demand, shut-in offshore US production, and low supplies from Russia,” strategists at Oanda said. “The natural gas market has a supply problem and it doesn’t look like that will change anytime soon.”

Correction: A previous version misspelled Oanda.

Articles You May Like

Russia sanctions-busting? Big questions remain over UK car exports
Humza Yousaf is battling for political survival. How did we get here – and what happens next?
PM fails to rule out July election
Chevron beats earnings estimates but profit falls on lower refining margins and natural gas prices
‘A real wildcard’: World’s largest wealth fund issues inflation warning on hot commodity markets