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Natural Gas News: 50-Day MA Resistance Holds as Weather and Inventory Weigh on Prices

By:
James Hyerczyk
Published: May 13, 2025, 12:34 GMT+00:00

Key Points:

  • Natural gas futures dip as $3.90 technical resistance and weaker short-term demand limit bullish momentum.
  • Cooling weather trends and soft early-week demand undermine near-term support for natural gas futures.
  • Traders watch $3.438 as the next key pivot if June natural gas fails to break back above $3.733 resistance.
Natural Gas News

Natural Gas Slides as Technical Resistance Holds and Storage Builds Weigh on Outlook

U.S. natural gas futures continued lower for a second straight session Tuesday, as traders responded to renewed technical resistance and weak short-term demand. The front-month June contract struggled to hold above key levels, with the $3.733 pivot and 50-day moving average at $3.90 acting as firm barriers.

At 12:26 GMT, Natural Gas Futures are trading $3.659, up $0.013 or +0.36%.

Is Resistance at $3.90 Proving Too Strong for Bulls?

Daily Natural Gas

The market’s failure to reclaim $3.733 on Monday signaled waning buying interest, exposing the June contract to downside risk. Should bearish momentum persist, traders are eyeing a potential retreat toward the minor pivot at $3.438. A break above $3.900 would be needed to confirm renewed upside strength, opening the path to test $4.062 — a key resistance level for bullish extension.

Weather Turns Cooler While Short-Term Demand Softens

Near-term weather patterns have moderated expectations for demand. While parts of the Southwest and Texas will see highs in the 90s to low 100s mid-to-late week, national demand is projected to remain light initially before turning moderate.

NatGasWeather noted a slight cooling trend for the 7–15 day outlook, particularly across the Midwest and Northeast, limiting the potential for a sustained demand bump from heat-driven cooling needs.

Rapid Inventory Builds Reinforce Bearish Pressure

Traders are increasingly concerned about the pace of storage builds. The EIA reported a 104 Bcf injection for the week ending May 2, lifting total working gas in storage to 2,145 Bcf.

This is 30 Bcf above the five-year average and only 1.4% above the same point last year, despite softer market fundamentals. NGI expects a further 114 Bcf build in the next EIA report due May 15, underscoring how subdued demand and rising renewable generation are enabling stronger-than-usual injections.

Production Eases but Still Fails to Offset Soft Fundamentals

While production has pulled back slightly, it has yet to materially alter the oversupply narrative. With seasonal demand still tepid and renewables reducing gas-fired generation needs, the market continues to price in robust end-of-season storage levels — keeping pressure on near-term contracts.

Market Forecast: Bearish Bias Holds for Now

With weather-driven demand still underperforming and technical resistance firmly capping gains, natural gas remains under bearish pressure in the short term. Unless prices can decisively clear $3.90, the path of least resistance leans lower, with $3.438 acting as the next key level for traders to watch. Storage data and mid-May weather trends will remain the critical catalysts for direction.

More Information in our Economic Calendar.

About the Author

James Hyerczyk is a U.S. based seasoned technical analyst and educator with over 40 years of experience in market analysis and trading, specializing in chart patterns and price movement. He is the author of two books on technical analysis and has a background in both futures and stock markets.

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