Natural gas futures extended losses sharply on Thursday morning, weighed down by heavy selling and bearish weather expectations. The market gave back midweek gains as traders shifted focus from short-term cold to a milder outlook for the second half of December, triggering aggressive liquidation ahead of the EIA’s weekly storage report.
Prices have now dropped $0.85 on the week, with futures plunging below key levels. The break beneath the $4.495 technical barrier triggered significant selling, taking out the prior swing low at $4.390 and placing the October 29 bottom of $4.052 within reach.
At 15:15 GMT, January Natural Gas Futures are trading $4.326, down $0.269 or -5.85%.
Thursday’s EIA report is expected to show a sharply above-average storage withdrawal, reflecting last week’s colder-than-normal temperatures across the Midwest and Northeast. Forecast ranges are wide, from -167 Bcf to -174 Bcf, versus the five-year average draw of -89 Bcf.
While a draw of this magnitude would normally offer support, sentiment remains bearish due to the forecasted warmup. A strong print may provide only limited relief if traders believe next week’s milder pattern will suppress demand.
According to NatGasWeather, national demand will remain high through the weekend as frigid systems move through the Midwest and East. Highs in the 10s–30s and lows below freezing are expected to dominate through Sunday. However, next week’s forecast flips dramatically, with above-normal temperatures expected to spread across most of the Lower 48, sharply reducing heating demand into Christmas.
This warm bias has taken center stage for traders, undermining the impact of near-term cold and limiting upside momentum.
The break below $4.495, previously serving as the 50-day moving average, triggered heavy liquidation as algorithmic and technical traders exited long positions. A cascade of selling followed as the $4.390 level failed, leaving the October 29 low at $4.052 as the next downside marker. Without supportive weather or sustained demand, the market appears vulnerable to further retracement.
Unless today’s EIA draw significantly exceeds the high end of expectations or fresh cold returns to the forecast, the path of least resistance remains lower. With traders already pricing in next week’s weaker demand and technicals breaking down, near-term sentiment is bearish. The potential for sub-$4 retests grows if the storage print fails to shift the broader weather narrative.
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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.