Bearish forecast grows for natural gas futures as 50-day MA resists gains. Inventory builds and mild weather reduce demand, keeping prices under pressure.
U.S. natural gas futures continued lower for a second straight session Tuesday, as traders responded to renewed technical resistance and weak short-term demand. The front-month June contract struggled to hold above key levels, with the $3.733 pivot and 50-day moving average at $3.90 acting as firm barriers.
At 12:26 GMT, Natural Gas Futures are trading $3.659, up $0.013 or +0.36%.
The market’s failure to reclaim $3.733 on Monday signaled waning buying interest, exposing the June contract to downside risk. Should bearish momentum persist, traders are eyeing a potential retreat toward the minor pivot at $3.438. A break above $3.900 would be needed to confirm renewed upside strength, opening the path to test $4.062 — a key resistance level for bullish extension.
Near-term weather patterns have moderated expectations for demand. While parts of the Southwest and Texas will see highs in the 90s to low 100s mid-to-late week, national demand is projected to remain light initially before turning moderate.
NatGasWeather noted a slight cooling trend for the 7–15 day outlook, particularly across the Midwest and Northeast, limiting the potential for a sustained demand bump from heat-driven cooling needs.
Traders are increasingly concerned about the pace of storage builds. The EIA reported a 104 Bcf injection for the week ending May 2, lifting total working gas in storage to 2,145 Bcf.
This is 30 Bcf above the five-year average and only 1.4% above the same point last year, despite softer market fundamentals. NGI expects a further 114 Bcf build in the next EIA report due May 15, underscoring how subdued demand and rising renewable generation are enabling stronger-than-usual injections.
While production has pulled back slightly, it has yet to materially alter the oversupply narrative. With seasonal demand still tepid and renewables reducing gas-fired generation needs, the market continues to price in robust end-of-season storage levels — keeping pressure on near-term contracts.
With weather-driven demand still underperforming and technical resistance firmly capping gains, natural gas remains under bearish pressure in the short term. Unless prices can decisively clear $3.90, the path of least resistance leans lower, with $3.438 acting as the next key level for traders to watch. Storage data and mid-May weather trends will remain the critical catalysts for direction.
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Mr.Hyerczyk is a technical analyst, market researcher, educator and trader. Jim is an expert in the area of patterns, price and time analysis, Forex and stocks.