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Natural Gas News: Technical Chart Signals Bullish Momentum

By:
James Hyerczyk
Published: May 2, 2025, 16:11 GMT+00:00

Key Points:

  • Natural gas futures rebound for the fourth time in five sessions, testing resistance at $3.733 after holding key support.
  • A +107 Bcf storage build outpaces the five-year average, flipping a deficit into a slight surplus above 2,036 Bcf.
  • Technical support at the 200-day moving average ($3.103) continues to anchor bullish momentum in natural gas futures.
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In this article:

Natural Gas Futures Climb as Technical Support Holds, Storage Builds, and Tariff Tensions Loom

U.S. natural gas futures extended their rebound on Friday, rising for the fourth time in five sessions as prices respected key technical support and traders absorbed a larger-than-normal storage build. Bullish momentum picked up after prices bounced from the 200-day moving average at $3.103, with eyes now on a potential test of resistance at $3.733.

At 17:01 GMT, Natural Gas Futures are trading $3.612, up $0.133 or 3.82%

Is Technical Support Signaling More Upside?

Daily Natural Gas

Since April 28, natural gas has held firm above its 200-day moving average, triggering a short-covering rally. The successful defense of $3.103 as a technical floor has strengthened bullish sentiment, and the current rally has enough momentum to test the $3.733 pivot. A decisive break above this level could drive a run toward the 50-day moving average at $3.966. However, if sellers step in near $3.733, a near-term cap could develop.

How Did the Latest Storage Data Move the Needle?

Thursday’s EIA storage report showed a build of +107 Bcf, near the high end of analyst estimates and well above the five-year average of +58 Bcf. The injection, driven by mixed weather—cooler in the Plains and Rockies, warmer elsewhere—erased the prior deficit and brought total storage to 2,041 Bcf, slightly above the five-year average. Regional breakdowns show inventories remain significantly below last year, especially in the East and Midwest, which are down 21.7% and 24.4%, respectively, year-over-year.

Will Light Weather Demand Stall the Rally?

From May 1–7, national demand is expected to remain weak. Most of the U.S. will experience mild spring weather, with highs in the 60s–80s and only localized cooling in the Midwest and Plains due to storm systems. The South will see some 90s, but overall, limited heating and cooling demand is expected. This could temporarily dampen upward momentum if weather-driven consumption fails to provide follow-through.

How Could Trade Tensions with Canada Disrupt Supply and Pricing?

Traders are also monitoring U.S.-Canada natural gas flows as potential tariffs threaten to impact bilateral supply. A proposed 10% import tariff on Canadian gas, if enacted after July, could constrain Northeast U.S. markets, where cross-border flows are more balanced. Canada’s new Prime Minister, Mark Carney, has threatened reciprocal tariffs, raising the risk of price volatility, especially in spot and cash markets during peak demand events.

Market Forecast: Bullish with Caution

Short-term sentiment leans bullish given the strong technical setup and robust storage build that confirms seasonal injection trends. However, weak demand in the near term and trade uncertainties could introduce volatility. Traders should watch the $3.733 level closely—acceptance above it could extend gains toward $3.966, but failure to break could trigger a pullback.

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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