Dec Nymex natural gas (NGZ22) on Friday closed -0.191 (-3.25%).
Dec nat-gas prices Friday fell for the third session on expectations for prolonged warm U.S. temperatures that would reduce heating demand for nat-gas. Â The Commodity Weather Group said Friday that much warmer-than-expected weather is expected in the eastern half of the U.S. during Nov 2-6. Â Maxar on Thursday forecasted warmer-than-normal weather for the Eastern half of the U.S. at least through Nov 10.
Lower-48 state dry gas production on Friday was 101.1 bcf (+4.4% y/y), mildly below the record high of 103.6 bcf posted on Oct 3, according to BNEF. Â Lower-48 state total gas demand Friday was 73.1 bcf/day, up +8% y/y, according to BNEF. Â LNG net flow to U.S. LNG export terminals Friday was 12.3 bcf/day, up +7.8% w/w, according to BNEF.
An increase in U.S. electricity output is bullish for nat-gas demand from utility providers. Â The Edison Electric Institute reported Wednesday that total U.S. electricity output in the week ended Oct 22 rose +2.2% y/y to 69,780 GWh (gigawatt hours). Â Also, cumulative U.S. electricity output in the 52-week period ending Oct 22 rose +2.1% y/y to 4,114,795 GWh.
Nat-gas prices have support as EU countries agreed to cut nat-gas demand from Russia by 15% by early 2023. Â Also, Russia recently slashed nat-gas exports to Europe to 20% of capacity, putting upward pressure on European nat-gas prices. Â Russia has already halted nat-gas shipments to Demark, Finland, Bulgaria, Netherlands, Poland, and Latvia and reduced supplies to Germany for not acceding to its demand for gas payments in Russian rubles.
Nat-gas prices have seen downward pressure from the prolonged outage at the Freeport LNG export terminal, which curbed U.S nat-gas exports and put upward pressure on domestic supplies. Â The Freeport terminal accounted for about 20% of all U.S. nat-gas exports before the explosion on June 8 knocked it offline. Â The Freeport LNG terminal normally receives about 2 bcf, or 2.5%, of the output from the lower 48 U.S. states. Â The current projected opening date is November 21.
Thursday's weekly EIA report was supportive for nat-gas prices since it showed U.S. nat gas inventories rose +52 bcf in the week ended Oct 21, less than expectations of +61 bcf and the 5-year seasonal average gain of +66 bcp. Â Inventories remain tight and are -5.5% below their 5-year seasonal average.
Baker Hughes reported Friday that the number of active U.S. nat-gas drilling rigs in the week ended Oct 28 fell by -1 rig to 156 rigs, which was below the 3-1/4 year high of 166 rigs posted in the week ended Sep 9. Â Active rigs have more than doubled from the record low of 68 rigs posted in July 2020 (data since 1987).
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More Natural Gas News from Barchart
- Nat-Gas Prices Fall on Outlook for Warm U.S. Temps
- Nat-Gas Prices Fall Back on the Outlook for Warmer U.S. Temps
- Crude Rallies on Dollar Weakness and Tight U.S. Fuel Supplies
- Nat-Gas Rallies Sharply on IEA Director's Comments