The Energy Information Administration reported a 108 bcf storage build for the week ending June 5. The Street expected 99 to 101. The five-year average was 95. That number wiped out Wednesday’s weather-driven bounce in one print. Temperatures are running in the 80s and 90s across the southern, central, and eastern United States. The Southwest is pushing 100s. None of it mattered. The market looked at the injection, saw triple digits despite the heat, and sold.
Total working gas inventories climbed to 2,686 bcf. That is 151 bcf above the five-year average, a 6% surplus heading into peak summer cooling season. The market is well supplied and the storage data just proved it.
July Nymex natural gas is trading at $3.076 at 15:39 GMT, down $0.109 or 3.42%.
July natural gas futures are lower shortly after the release of the new EIA storage data. At 15:39 GMT, the market is trading $3.076, down $0.109 or -3.42%.
A 50% resistance level stopped the rally on Wednesday at $3.207. Earlier today, the 50% level at $3.187 proved to be resistance. The selling came in before the report when sellers took out a pivot at $3.145, but the acceleration to the downside occurred when the market crossed to the weak side of the 50-day moving average at $3.117. All of these levels mentioned are short-term resistance. In fact, I don’t even think you can think of buying near-term momentum unless natural gas is on the strong side of the 50-day MA.
Sellers are now targeting Fibonacci support at $3.085 and this week’s low at $3.072. If they fail, prices could plunge below the psychological $3.00 with potential targets coming in at $2.978, $2.951 and $2.893.
I see weakness, but once the market drops below $3.000, selling below this level gets risky. Sub-$3.000 natural gas ahead of the summer is usually very attractive to aggressive counter-trend traders. I think we’re closer to a bottom than a washout to the downside.
The build was not concentrated in one region. The Midwest led with 37 bcf. The East added 34 bcf. South Central injected 28 bcf, split between 12 bcf in salt facilities and 16 bcf in non-salt storage. Mountain region added 4 bcf. The Pacific put in 6 bcf.
The Midwest and East numbers are the ones that sting for bulls. Those regions were supposed to be pulling more gas for cooling demand as temperatures climbed. Instead they posted the two largest injections of the week. Strong solar generation during the reporting period likely displaced some gas burn from power producers, letting volumes flow into storage even as the thermometer moved higher. The domestic market is absorbing the heat without tightening.
Lower-48 dry gas production averaged 109.1 bcf per day during the reporting period, up 1.8% from a year ago. The Energy Information Administration raised its 2026 production forecast to 111.0 bcf per day from 110.6. The supply side keeps getting bigger while the market is already sitting on a 6% surplus.
Baker Hughes reported one rig came off the count last week. Active natural gas rigs fell to 124. Down from 134 in late February but still well above the 94-rig low from September 2024. The rig count is not collapsing. Production is not declining. A 108 bcf injection on a week with above-average temperatures tells you supply is overwhelming demand even when the weather cooperates.
LNG exports are doing more heavy lifting than usual. Feedgas flows hit 18.6 bcf per day, up 9.3% from the prior week. That is supply leaving the domestic market and heading overseas. The Strait of Hormuz disruptions continue to choke off Middle Eastern natural gas exports. Qatar’s Ras Laffan Industrial City is still damaged with 17% of the world’s largest natural gas export plant offline. Repairs could take three to five years.
That global tightness keeps the call on U.S. LNG cargoes strong. Every tanker that loads at a U.S. terminal is gas that does not end up in domestic storage. At 18.6 bcf per day, the export pull is meaningful. It is not enough to offset a 108 bcf injection, but it is keeping the situation from getting worse.
NatGasWeather has strong high pressure holding across most of the country through the weekend. Highs in the 80s and 90s for major population centers. Chicago and portions of the East Coast could hit the 90s. Vaisala sees a warmer trend developing for the Midwest and eastern United States during June 15-19. Edison Electric Institute data showed electricity generation up 2.13% year-over-year for the week ending June 6.
Power demand is there. The problem is it is not translating into tighter balances. The market just posted a 108 bcf injection during a week with elevated temperatures and rising electricity output. Solar generation and strong production are filling the gap that heat was supposed to create. Bulls need sustained heat that overwhelms the supply side and pulls injections below the five-year average. One hot week is not doing it. The storage data made that clear Thursday.
Storage is running the trade right now. A 108 bcf injection with temperatures in the 80s and 90s tells you supply has the upper hand even when the weather cooperates. The 6% surplus above the five-year average is not shrinking. Production near 111 bcf per day keeps growing. Solar generation is displacing gas burn during the hours when cooling demand should be strongest. LNG flows at 18.6 bcf per day and the Ras Laffan outage provide a floor but they cannot overcome triple-digit injections on their own.
My read on this is the 50-day moving average at $3.117 is now resistance. Below $3.085 and this week’s low at $3.072, the selling accelerates toward the $3.00 level. Sub-$3.00 natural gas ahead of summer starts to attract counter-trend buyers, but the injection data has to cooperate before any bounce holds. Next week’s storage report decides whether this sell-off has legs or whether the heat finally shows up in the numbers. Until injections drop below the five-year average, rallies are sells.
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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.