March natural gas futures are drifting lower on Wednesday as traders continue their preparation for the Spring shoulder season. The price action suggests traders have chosen to ignore forecasts calling for a cold shot to hit parts of the Midwest and East Coast from February 21 to February 25, choosing instead to focus on the warm weather pattern expected to arrive February 25 to March 1.
The current weakness reflects the rapid recovery from winter storm Fern just three weeks ago that shut down production in parts of Texas due to freeze-offs. It’s this resiliency combined with expectations of lower demand that are weighing on prices at this time and threatening to smash through the psychological $3.000 level, on its way to perhaps the $2.500 threshold.
A breakdown to the January lows at $2.595 to $2.578 will fill in the gap to $2.854 and essentially erase all of the two-week winter storm rally from late January.
Helping to guide the market lower is the 61.8% resistance level at $3.284 and more importantly the 50-day moving average, which is capping gains while controlling the downtrend. Even if these levels were taken out by some freak weather occurrence short-covering rally, fresh sellers would likely be waiting with both hands to refresh bearish positions at the 50% level at $3.502 and the 200-day moving average at $3.740.
With demand expected to steadily fall into the end of the month with the exception of a minor blip between February 21 and February 25, the focus will now shift toward production to see how fast it will take to rebuild storage after massive drawdowns the past two weeks of 260 bcf and 249 bcf. As of February 6, natural gas inventories were down 3.6% year-over-year and 5.5% below their 5-year seasonal average. This means that heading into shoulder season next month we could be facing a deficit, but one that is not insurmountable before the summer cooling season begins.
The current bearish price action reflects this thought. Additionally, the current projections for higher U.S. natural gas production, provided by the Energy Information Administration (EIA), are bearish. The EIA raised its forecast for 2026 U.S. dry natural gas production to 109.97 bcf/day from last month’s estimate of 108.82 bcf/day. Furthermore, last Friday, Baker Hughes reported that the number of active drilling rigs in the week-ending February 13 rose by 3 to a new 2.5-year high of 133 rigs. This is a whopper of a number considering that in September 2024 they were sitting at a 4.75-year low of 94 rigs.
Looking ahead, we’re bearish because improving weather and rising temperatures are going to weigh on demand. We also believe that strong production will soon erase the current supply deficit well ahead of the summer cooling season. Now we know that periodic cold spells can occur well into March, but for the most part, we expect gains to be capped and turned into shorting opportunities as we return to “sell the rally” days.
More Information in our Economic Calendar.
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.