Natural Gas Price Forecast $4: Storage Slides, UNG Climbs and NG=F Targets $5.50

Natural Gas Price Forecast $4: Storage Slides, UNG Climbs and NG=F Targets $5.50

Henry Hub rebounds from $2.04 to $5.49 and consolidates above $4.00 as a 166 Bcf storage draw, record ~18.8 Bcf/d LNG feedgas and 3,413 Bcf inventories keep a $5.50 breakout in play | That's TradingNEWS

TradingNEWS Archive 12/30/2025 9:00:21 PM
Commodities GAS NG=F

Natural Gas Price Snapshot: NG=F Holds The $4 Handle As Winter Tightens

Natural Gas Futures, ETFs And Spot Curves Signal A Re-Priced Winter Market

U.S. Henry Hub natural gas futures NG=F have reset sharply higher into year-end. The front month exploded from a 2024 low near $2.04 to a December spike around $5.49 per mmBtu, before consolidating just over the $4.00 mark. January NYMEX briefly traded near $4.46, and after the rollover the February contract is sitting around $4.02, up roughly 0.85% on the session as liquidity concentrates in the new prompt month. That move pulls the entire curve out of the “distressed gas” zone and into a pricing regime that reflects genuine tightness rather than pure oversupply.

ETF flows line up with the futures tape. United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG) is trading near $13.26, up about 1.6% intraday after a 1.9% after-hours pop the previous session. The leveraged long product BOIL is adding roughly 2–2.4%, while inverse KOLD is losing about 2–2.5%. That structure tells you the speculative money is leaning long into winter, not fading the rally.

Fundamentally, the key driver is the combination of aggressive early-season draws and a real winter finally showing up on the models. The EIA reported a 166 Bcf withdrawal for the week ending December 19, taking working gas in storage down to 3,413 Bcf. Stocks now sit 129 Bcf below last year and 24 Bcf under the five-year average, which is a clean break from the oversupplied picture that dominated much of 2024 and early 2025. For a winter contract sitting just above $4.00, this storage profile is not excessive. It is justified by the balance sheet.

On the demand side, weather risk is finally doing its job. Heating degree days have risen from about 398 to 412 as forecasts turned colder into early January. February NG=F holding above $4.00 is the market’s way of attaching a premium to the possibility that these colder patterns persist and force another sequence of triple-digit withdrawals. If that happens, anything in the $4–$5 band can prove to be the lower half of the winter range, not the ceiling.

Storage, Balances And EIA Guidance Put A Floor Under NG=F

EIA Draws, Inventory Deficits And The Winter Cushion

The 166 Bcf weekly draw is not a one-off headline; it is a structural shift. Working gas at 3,413 Bcf with a deficit to both the prior year and the five-year average means the U.S. has burned through its storage cushion faster than expected. The year-on-year shortfall of 129 Bcf and the 24 Bcf gap versus the five-year line are modest in absolute terms, but the direction is what matters: the surplus that crushed NG=F in 2023–early 2024 is gone.

Forward-looking guidance reinforces that. Current projections point to Henry Hub spot prices averaging around $4.30 per mmBtu over this winter and roughly $4.00 for full-year 2026. That is entirely consistent with a storage path that stays slightly below “normal” but never flirts with crisis. The key for traders is whether weekly withdrawals keep printing above seasonal norms. NGI’s own storage models highlight that Lower-48 withdrawals will need to accelerate to match a typical winter burn rate; if they do not, the market will start to fade some of the risk premium embedded in NG=F above $4.00.

Europe adds an external layer to the storage story. EU inventories sit around 63–64% full, roughly 728 TWh in storage, which is 132.6 TWh below last year and about 116 TWh under the five-year average. That is not a disaster, but it is a material deficit. It explains why TTF benchmarks have pushed to one-month highs and why U.S. exporters are pushing record feedgas into LNG plants. For NG=F, this means that domestic storage has to serve two masters: U.S. heating demand and export flows that are increasingly tethered to European balances.

Supply, Production And The Permian Discount

On the supply side, the U.S. remains a monster. Lower-48 output in December is running at a record pace near 110.1 Bcf/d. That level of production would normally be enough to squash any rally, but the current draw profile shows that strong winter demand can still outstrip supply at the margin, especially when export pipes and LNG terminals are pulling hard.

At the same time, the market is not homogeneous. Waha cash prices in the Permian Basin have traded negative multiple times into year-end, with prints near minus $4 per mmBtu as local production overwhelms pipeline takeaway capacity. These negative spots are not a signal that NG=F is mispriced; they show a structural bottleneck. The Henry Hub benchmark reflects the national balance. Waha reflects a regional constraint in West Texas where supply keeps surging and pipes are capped.

This divergence creates a split picture. On the one hand, record national production and localized negative prices show the downside risk if winter fizzles and storage stays comfortable. On the other, persistent bottlenecks tell you that producer behavior will respond. If basis blows out and Waha collapses below zero, operators will have a real incentive to trim drilling or redirect capital to basins with better netbacks. That is inherently supportive for NG=F on a 12–24 month horizon.

LNG Exports, European Demand And Global Trade Flows

Record Feedgas, Tight Atlantic Basin And U.S. Export Leverage

LNG is the second pillar of the current bull case for NG=F. Feedgas flows to the eight large U.S. export facilities are running near all-time highs, around 18.5 Bcf/d with day-of peaks toward 18.8 Bcf/d. In practical terms, that means almost one sixth of total U.S. gas output is being pulled offshore, largely into the Atlantic Basin where Europe still requires U.S. molecules to manage its post-Russia reality.

Exports have erased the isolation that once protected U.S. gas from global shocks. When Europe’s storage runs below average and renewables underperform, U.S. plants push harder. That is exactly what you are seeing now: a combination of weaker wind and hydro output in Europe, colder weather, and the structural loss of Russian pipeline flows keeps LNG demand firm. U.S. NG=F is now a global commodity, not a purely domestic play.

On the other side of the map, Asian demand has been softer. Global gas consumption only grew about 0.5% in 2025, with Asia seeing flat or even declining use as China boosted domestic production and renewables while its industrial economy slowed. That weaker Asian bid is actually helping balance the global market. Europe can pay up for U.S. LNG without seeing the same kind of three-way tug-of-war that drove prices parabolic in 2022.

Geopolitics, Russian Volumes And Long-Term Upside Risk

Geopolitical risk remains firmly asymmetric to the upside. Russian production and exports have fallen sharply as sanctions, drone attacks on refineries, and restrictions on tanker fleets and technology limit flows. Even with pipelines like Power of Siberia into China, Russian gas exports are nowhere near pre-war levels. Every renewed disruption along the Black Sea, Baltic, or European import infrastructure pushes optionality value back into NG=F.

That risk premium is now smaller than it was in 2022–2023, but it has not disappeared. With Henry Hub around $4 and winter volatility returning, the market is paying something for the possibility that another geopolitical shock tightens the Atlantic Basin again. For a trader, that is a key part of the skew: downside is driven by weather and U.S. production, while upside can be amplified by events well outside domestic control.

Macro, Dollar And U.S. Federal Reserve Policy Impact On NG=F

Dollar Index, Fed Cuts And The Funding Side Of The Trade

The macro overlay is constructive rather than dominant. The U.S. dollar index is sitting near the 98 region after backing away from recent peaks as traders price in Federal Reserve easing in 2026. Futures markets imply something like an 80%+ probability of no change at the January meeting and around a 16% chance of an early cut. But the curve further out has started to build in two or more cuts over the year.

A softer dollar is generally supportive for commodities by improving purchasing power for non-U.S. buyers and easing funding conditions. For NG=F, the relationship is not as tight as for gold or oil, but the direction matters. A dollar that grinds lower into a rate-cutting cycle lowers the financial cost of holding long positions and reduces the macro headwind that often caps rallies.

At the same time, inflation has eased through 2025, with core measures drifting lower in Q4. That gives the Fed room to act without triggering a panic around runaway prices. If rate cuts support industrial activity and power demand, especially as large data centers in Texas and the PJM region ramp up electricity usage, the structural load for gas-fired generation will rise. Forecasts already point to about 1.7% growth in electricity generation in 2026, much of which will lean on gas as the flexible baseload resource behind intermittent renewables.

Competition From Coal And Renewables

Gas is not operating in a vacuum. High prices in 2025 pushed some U.S. utilities back toward coal as a short-term hedge against expensive gas. That switchback is visible in the data as a modest uptick in coal-fired generation for the first time in three years. If NG=F spends too much time above $5, this coal substitution risk will keep appearing in dispatch stacks and cap upside.

However, the medium-term trend is very different. Coal units are still retiring, renewable capacity is still being added, and gas remains the preferred partner fuel for balancing wind and solar. In Europe, periods of weak renewable output in 2025 forced utilities to lean more heavily on gas plants despite high prices. In other words, the very volatility of renewables reinforces the need for gas, which supports NG=F on a multi-year view.

Technical Structure: NG=F Has Built A Multi-Year Base

Long-Term Bottom Between $1.60–$2.40 And The $5.50 Trigger

From a long-term technical perspective, NG=F has done the hard work of forming a base. The $1.60–$2.40 band has acted as a major support zone since 2000, with cyclical lows in 2002, 2009, 2016, 2020 and again in early 2024 at around $2.04. Each time, rebounds from that zone eventually carried prices into the $6–$10 area. The bounce from $2.04 to $5.49 into December 2025 is fully consistent with this history.

The weekly chart shows a clear rounding base that has been forming since the 2024 low. Volatility compressed above $2 while price carved out a curved structure, which is a textbook accumulation pattern. The breakout sequence toward $5.49 is the first test of that base. The key level now is $5.50. A sustained push and weekly close above that band would confirm a completed bottom and open a technical path toward the upper historical range near $10 in 2026.

Momentum indicators support that bullish bias. On both monthly and weekly timeframes, RSI has turned higher without hitting overbought extremes, which leaves room for continuation. The current consolidation near $4.00 is best viewed as a pause inside a new up-cycle rather than a final top, provided that $3.00–$3.20 holds on pullbacks.

Shorter-Term Levels, Volatility And Futures Curve

On shorter horizons, NG=F is grappling with the usual winter chop. February futures reclaiming and holding the $4.00 mark after the rollover shows strong dip-buying interest. Immediate support sits in the $3.60–$3.80 pocket, with deeper structural support closer to $3.00. The $4.50–$4.60 region where January settled and where the earlier spike topped around $5.49 creates a thick resistance band that will require persistent bullish catalysts to break.

The curve itself has shifted from deep contango toward a flatter structure as the front end re-prices higher. That reduces the negative roll yield that crushed long ETF holders like UNG in prior years. It does not eliminate decay, but it makes directional bullish positioning more viable over multi-week horizons if the fundamental backdrop stays tight.

Natural Gas Equities And ETF Signals Around NG=F

UNG, BOIL, KOLD And Gas-Weighted Producers

The behavior of gas-linked equities confirms the message from NG=F. UNG grinding higher into the $13 range with daily gains around 1.6–1.9% and BOIL adding 2–2.4% tells you that levered and unlevered long vehicles are attracting capital. KOLD sliding 2–2.5% shows that the short side is not getting paid in this phase of the cycle.

Gas-weighted producers like EQT are also trading firmer, with prints near $54.5 and moves around +1.2% as prompt prices firm. Cheniere and other LNG exporters are gaining roughly 1.5–2.0%, reflecting the value of their tolling spread as both feedgas volumes and international benchmarks stay strong. If NG=F can hold the $4+ area and make a credible attempt at $5.00–$5.50 later in winter, these equities should continue to rerate upward.

At the same time, basis blowouts like negative Waha highlight that not every producer participates equally. The market is rewarding entities with access to premium hubs, firm transportation and export optionality. That is another indirect support for NG=F: capital will migrate from trapped basins into better-connected assets, which slows the growth of surplus volumes in the most constrained regions.

NG=F Trading Stance: Bullish With Defined Risk And Weather-Dependent Upside

Given this entire backdrop, NG=F is no longer a cheap optionality play. It is a repriced winter contract supported by real deficits and record export demand. Storage has flipped from surplus to modest deficit, LNG feedgas is near record highs around 18.5–18.8 Bcf/d, and EU inventories have slipped below their five-year benchmark. U.S. production is at a record 110.1 Bcf/d, but that supply is being fully absorbed by domestic heating loads, power demand and exports at current prices.

Technically, the long-term base between $1.60–$2.40, the rebound from $2.04 to $5.49, and the current consolidation above $4.00 all point to a developing bullish cycle. The key inflection level is $5.50. A sustained break above that zone would unlock a path toward $7–$10 in 2026. Failure to clear $5.50, combined with weaker weather and softer withdrawals, would keep NG=F locked in a broad $2–$5 consolidation band.

On balance, the data support a bullish bias with a clear risk framework. Dips into the low-$3 range look like accumulation zones as long as storage stays below the five-year average and LNG exports remain near current levels. A weekly close above $5.50 would justify upgrading that stance toward an aggressive long targeting higher double-digit percentage gains. A decisive break back below $3.00 with shrinking draws and fading export strength would invalidate the bull case and flip the tape back toward a range-bound or bearish view.

Right now, with NG=F near $4.00, winter weather still turning colder, storage already 129 Bcf under last year, and the global trade grid structurally tighter than in the pre-LNG era, the weight of evidence favors staying on the long side and treating volatility as an opportunity rather than a threat.

That's TradingNEWS