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Natural Gas News: Today’s Analysis — Bears Take Control as 50-Day Moving Average Looms

By:
James Hyerczyk
Updated: Nov 25, 2025, 17:03 GMT+00:00

Key Points:

  • Natural gas futures break through $4.634 pivot support, tumbling to $4.397 as record-high production overwhelms bullish weather signals.
  • Weather forecast shows cold shot mid-week, but milder December 7-11 outlook triggers selling as traders question sustained demand.
  • The 50-day moving average at $4.352 looms as the next critical support level — a break below flips the market bearish.
Natural Gas News

Natural Gas Tumbles as Record Output Drowns Out Cold Weather Hopes

Daily January Natural Gas

Natural gas futures are getting hit hard Tuesday, with prices sliding through key support levels as record-high production overwhelms any bullish weather signals. The selling started Monday with a close under the 200-day moving average at $4.733, but today’s break below the short-term pivot at $4.634 opened the floodgates — sending prices tumbling to the longer-term pivot at $4.397.

That level is the last line of defense before the 50-day moving average at $4.352. If that gives way, the near-term trend flips bearish and sellers take control. Winter demand bulls aren’t panicking yet — they’re watching for a catalyst to step in at what would be far more attractive levels than they saw two weeks ago.

Supply Glut Takes Center Stage

The bearish case writes itself right now. Lower-48 production hit a record 112.2 bcf/day on Monday — up 8.3% year-over-year — and there’s no sign of a slowdown. Rig counts are holding near two-year highs at 127, and the EIA recently bumped its 2025 production forecast to 107.67 bcf/day. That’s a lot of gas looking for a home.

Demand isn’t keeping pace. Lower-48 consumption came in at 83.1 bcf/day Monday, up nearly 5% year-over-year but not enough to absorb the flood of supply. LNG exports are steady at 17.7 bcf/day, and electricity demand is running hot — up over 5% in the latest weekly data — but production keeps setting records.

Weather Models Keep Traders Guessing

The forecast is doing nobody any favors. Near-term demand looks light as above-normal temperatures blanket most of the country — highs in the 40s-60s up north, 50s-80s across the South. A cold shot arrives mid-week, pushing into the Rockies and Northern Plains with lows in the single digits and teens, then spreading east through the weekend. That should boost heating demand heading into December.

But here’s the problem: models are showing a milder setup for December 7-11 as cold air retreats toward Canada. Weekend data trended colder for the first ten days, and prices actually rallied overnight Sunday on those revisions — only to sell off when traders focused on the warmer second-week outlook. December contract expiration over the next two sessions is adding noise to the tape as well.

The Bull Case Isn’t Dead — Just Waiting

Storage offers some support. Last week’s EIA report showed a 14 bcf draw versus expectations for 12 bcf and the five-year average build of 12 bcf. Inventories sit just 3.8% above seasonal norms — hardly burdensome. European storage at 81% is running well below the 90% five-year average, which could pull more US LNG cargoes as winter deepens.

But for now, supply is winning the argument. Bulls need a sustained cold pattern — not a few chilly days followed by a warm-up — to flip sentiment. Until then, the path of least resistance points lower, and the 50-day at $4.352 looms as the next battleground.

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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