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Natural Gas News: Bearish Forecast Targets $4.220 & $4.142 on Today’s Chart

By:
James Hyerczyk
Published: Nov 18, 2025, 14:26 GMT+00:00

Key Points:

  • Natural Gas futures breach key support at $4.455; expert analysis points to extreme bearish pressure.
  • High inventory and warm weather forecast are driving the sharp market drop toward the $4.142 retracement level.
  • The crucial inventory flip is coming: analysts predict a 17 Bcf withdrawal to ignite the next major market rally.
Natural Gas News

NatGas Gets Roughed Up: Looking for Buyers at Value

U.S. natural gas futures are taking a hit this morning, bleeding out after yesterday’s ugly slide put us squarely beneath the 200-day moving average. That $4.455 level is now resistance, plain and simple. We’ve got two sessions of heavy selling, and the December Nymex contract is down another nickel, with the focus squarely on inventory and soft near-term demand. The consensus is we’re running into a pocket of mild weather, forcing a flush out toward support.

At 14:16 GMT, December Natural Gas is trading $4.327, down $0.034 or 0.78%.

The Weather-Induced Pullback Is On

The near-term weather is the anchor dragging us down. The NatGasWeather outlook for the rest of the week through next weekend shows a quick cool blast in the Northeast fading fast. Most of the country is warming up, running highs from the 40s all the way to 80s down south. This means demand goes from “Moderate” to “Low” real quick. It’s a classic wait-and-see move as players sit on their hands until the next legitimate cold snap shows up.

Supply Is Too Stout to Ignore

The fundamental story keeping a lid on any rally is production. The Lower-48 states are pumping out a massive 110.0 bcf/day, which is a solid 7.1% jump year-over-year (y/y). The EIA sees no let-up, hiking its 2025 production forecast to 107.67 bcf/day. We also whiffed on last Friday’s storage report, posting an inventory build of +45 bcf—way over the +34 bcf whisper. This leaves stockpiles sitting +4.5% above the 5-year average. Too much supply on the screen, period.

LNG and Power Demand Keep the Floor Solid

It’s not all doom and gloom, though. The downside is limited by relentless export demand. LNG flows are still running hot at around 17.6 bcf/day. More importantly, power demand is creeping higher; last week saw Lower 48 power producers consume 6.1% more gas. We’ve got earnings coming up from Helmerich & Payne and Nvidia this week, which will give us a read on drilling activity and the future pull from massive data center construction. This structural demand boom is what keeps the longer-term bulls in the game.

The Crucial Flip to Withdrawal

The immediate focus is the EIA print for the week ended November 14. Analysts are calling for the first real drawdown of the season—a 17 Bcf withdrawal. That’s a massive shift from the 5-year average injection of 12 Bcf. This signals that heating demand, driven by a 24-week/week jump in Lower 48 heating degree days, is finally kicking in. This flip to a withdrawal could be the catalyst that triggers the bottom for this pullback.

Market Forecast: Bearish Near-Term, Watch for the Dip Buy

Daily Natural Gas

The outlook is bearish for the session. We’re in sell-off mode, flushing out positions as the market waits for weather to turn cold. The technical targets on the downside are the $4.220 and $4.142 50% retracement levels.

We should see buyers step in for the initial test of that zone. The $4.020 50-day moving average is the major support—if we break that, the short trade gets ugly. Upside means getting back above the $4.455 pivot.

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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