PODCAST · society
Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark
by Inception Point Ai
Check out Vanessa Clark's Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas Commidity Tracker podcast.For more info go to https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaihttps://www.quietplease.aiOr check out these deals https://amzn.to/3FkjUmwThis show includes AI-generated content.
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Henry Hub Hustle: Natural Gas Futures Eye Breakout Amid Production Swings and Global Shipping Jitters
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and what it means for you.Right now, the Henry Hub natural gas spot price stands at about 2.72 dollars per million BTU as of late last week, according to the St. Louis Fed data. Futures are hovering around 2.82 to 2.83 dollars per MMBtu on platforms like Investing.com, showing a slight uptick of 0.21 percent recently. Over the past trading day on Friday, May 1st, we saw a modest gain from 2.77 to 2.78 dollars, per StockInvest.us. But keep an eye on volatility - production remains steady near record highs around 108 billion cubic feet per day, which is pressuring prices amid comfortable storage levels, as reported by Trading Economics.What's the big news? A recent production drop sparked a market bounce, with futures eyeing a potential breakout, according to FX Empire analyst James Hyerczyk. We've got an 11 percent surge in some metrics pushing toward 3.82 dollars earlier, though it's pulled back a bit. Globally, MCX contracts in India are at 264 rupees per mmBtu, up 0.38 percent. Tensions in key shipping routes like the Strait of Hormuz are adding uncertainty, reminiscent of past spikes tied to global disruptions.For traders and consumers, this means watching support levels around 2.94 dollars and resistance near 3.29. If you're budgeting for heating or energy costs, lock in now before any summer demand kicks in.That's your daily update - stay smart with your energy plays. Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, hit that bell, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Natural Gas Bounces Back as Storage Build Misses Forecasts and LNG Demand Roars
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, as of this morning, natural gas is trading at about 2.675 dollars per MMBtu, up a solid 5.48 percent or 0.139 dollars from yesterday, according to FX Empire data. That's a nice rally after prices dipped to around 2.52 dollars earlier in the week, levels we haven't seen since late October 2024, as reported by the American Gas Association.What's driving this? The EIA's latest storage report showed a build of just 79 billion cubic feet for the week ending April 24—smaller than the expected 83 billion—which is bullish for prices. Barchart notes this sparked Thursday's sharp surge of over 4 percent on June futures. Storage is now at 2,142 billion cubic feet, 7.7 percent above the five-year average, thanks to mild spring temps slowing demand and super-fast injections—nearly twice the normal pace.Production's easing a bit, down 1 percent month-to-date from March per S&P Global, but still up year-over-year. LNG feedgas demand is roaring at near-record 18.7 billion cubic feet per day, fueled by new U.S. export capacity amid global chaos. The Strait of Hormuz closure since late February has halted LNG flows there, spiking European TTF and Asian JKM prices six times higher than our Henry Hub—TTF hit 14.80 dollars recently, per EIA.Rig counts ticked up too, with natural gas rigs at 129, up 20 percent from last year, Baker Hughes says. Globally, war tensions keep international prices elevated, but here in the U.S., we've got plenty of supply keeping things stable.Key takeaway: Watch for cooler temps boosting power demand and potential coal-to-gas switches if prices stay low. Could tighten things up this summer.Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Natural Gas Cools From Winter Highs as Michigan Feels the Energy Market Squeeze
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. I'm your host Vanessa Clark, and today we're diving into what's happening in the natural gas market right now.Let's start with the numbers. According to the most recent data from the CME Group, natural gas futures are currently trading at two point eight two seven dollars per million BTU, up point zero zero six from the previous session. That's a modest gain of about point two one percent today.But here's what's really interesting about the bigger picture. If we look back at the Henry Hub natural gas spot prices, we've seen some significant volatility lately. January of this year started at seven point seven two dollars per million BTU, which was quite elevated. Since then, prices have been cooling down. February settled at three point six two, March dropped to three point zero four, and we're seeing that downward trend continue into April at three point four two dollars per million BTU.This cooling comes after an exceptionally volatile period in late twenty twenty five when prices spiked dramatically. The February twenty twenty six contract actually expired at seven point four six dollars, nearly double the March contract which closed at three point seventy two.Now, while natural gas prices are moderating, there's a lot happening in the broader energy market that could affect us. Gasoline prices in Michigan have been surging due to geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and maintenance issues at Great Lakes area refineries. Gas prices jumped from three dollars seventy eight to four dollars twenty six in just over a week, and that kind of energy market stress can certainly influence natural gas trading patterns.The takeaway here is that while natural gas appears to be stabilizing after those winter spikes, we're still in a dynamic energy environment. Geopolitical factors and refinery operations remain key drivers to watch.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Make sure you subscribe and join us next time for the latest updates on natural gas trading and market insights.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Natural Gas Prices Hit 18-Month Low as Warm Spring and Storage Glut Outweigh Export Boom
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. I'm your host Vanessa Clark, and we've got some important developments to cover in the natural gas market today.As of yesterday, April 28th, natural gas futures were trading around 2.66 to 2.67 per MMBtu, marking prices near their lowest level in about eighteen months. We're hovering close to levels we haven't seen since October 2024, and there are some really interesting factors driving this decline.The main story here is that we've got a perfect storm of mild weather and rising storage levels. Above-normal spring temperatures have really cut into heating demand, and that's allowed storage levels to climb to about eight percent above seasonal norms. The EIA reported a massive 103 billion cubic feet injection into storage for the week ended April 17th, which was actually higher than market expectations. Total working gas in storage is now at 2,063 billion cubic feet, sitting about seven and a half percent above this time last year.On the supply side, we're seeing some interesting dynamics. Daily production has actually started to ease in April, dropping 3.8 billion cubic feet per day over the past three weeks to hit a preliminary twelve-week low of 108.3 billion cubic feet daily. That's because low prices have prompted major producers like EQT to scale back their output. However, LNG export feedgas has climbed to 18.9 billion cubic feet per day so far this month, surpassing previous monthly records.Now here's where it gets really interesting internationally. While Henry Hub prices have fallen nine percent since late February, international LNG prices are actually soaring. European TTF prices hit 14.80 per MMBtu, that's thirty-five percent higher than before a recent Strait of Hormuz closure. In East Asia, the Japan-Korea Marker jumped fifty-one percent to 16.02 per MMBtu over the same period.Looking ahead, we've got about 2.4 billion cubic feet per day of new DOE-authorized export capacity coming online between April and December 2026, which could eventually support higher domestic prices. But for now, the combination of ample storage and mild weather forecasts through early May is keeping a lid on Henry Hub prices.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and join us next time for the latest updates on natural gas markets.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Natural Gas Bounces to 3.10: Testing Resistance as Traders Eye Key Support Levels Ahead
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, fresh market moves, and what it all means for your energy watch.Right now, the Henry Hub natural gas spot price is hovering around 3.10 USD per MMBtu, up about 2.35% from yesterday's close of 3.05. That's according to real-time data from Markets Insider, showing a solid bounce after some recent dips. Just last week on April 20th, the Federal Reserve's FRED data pegged it at 2.81, so we've seen a quick recovery push. But hold on—FX Empire's latest forecast from April 27th notes this uptick is testing key resistance near the 10-day moving average at about 2.81, with sellers stepping in to cap gains. The broader trend? Still bearish, as technicals from Investing.com show moving averages leaning sell, though some indicators like RSI and Stochastic hint at short-term buy potential.What's driving this? Steady U.S. production near 108 billion cubic feet per day is keeping supplies comfortable, per Trading Economics reports, which also flagged a recent 4% drop to 3.30 before this rebound. Globally, energy eyes are on tensions like the Strait of Hormuz risks, as discussed in Macro Mondays analysis, though demand softness is balancing things out—no explosive spikes yet. Goldman Sachs is upbeat on oil but natural gas faces downtrend pressure unless it breaks higher.Key takeaway for you: If you're trading or hedging, watch that 2.85 level from the 20-day average—break it for bullish confirmation, or a drop below 2.58 could signal more downside. Stay nimble with these volatile swings.Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, hit that bell, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Natural Gas Hits 18-Month Lows as Mild Weather and Storage Surplus Keep the Heat Off Prices
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and what it means for you.Right now, natural gas futures are hovering around 2.57 dollars per million British thermal units, or MMBtu, marking a slight uptick of about 0.39 percent in early trading. That's according to real-time data from FX Empire. But let's zoom out: prices have dipped to near 18-month lows, sitting close to 2.52 to 2.56 dollars recently, as reported by Trading Economics. Over the past four weeks, we've seen an 11.81 percent drop, and year-to-date, it's down a whopping 37.62 percent. The Henry Hub spot price was last at 2.81 dollars as of April 20th from the St. Louis Fed data.What's behind this slide? Mild spring weather across the US has kept demand low, pushing storage inventories 8 percent above seasonal norms. Production's dipped too, down to 108.1 billion cubic feet per day, with big players like EQT cutting back due to these low prices. LNG exports are strong at near-record 18.9 billion cubic feet daily, but it's not enough to lift prices yet. Forecasts show cooler temps ahead, but heating season's over and summer AC demand hasn't kicked in.Technically, prices are trading sideways near 2.70 dollars, holding above key support at 2.62 dollars per Economies.com analysis. No major news catalysts right now, but keep an eye on weather shifts and global tensions that could spike things.For traders and homeowners, this means potential bargains if you're locking in futures or hedging energy bills. Stay nimble, folks – volatility could return with any demand surprise.Thanks for tuning in to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Subscribe, share with a friend, and catch you next time for more updates!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Hormuz Heats Up: Natural Gas Dips to 2.60 as Iran Standoff Shakes Global Energy Markets
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices amid some wild global tensions.Right now, natural gas is trading at about 2.60 dollars per MMBtu, down roughly 4.7 percent from yesterday's close of 2.598, according to FX Empire's live charts. We've seen it dip to around 2.58 in recent sessions, with a yearly drop of over 15 percent so far. But hold on, because the market's feeling the heat from the escalating US-Iran standoff in the Strait of Hormuz. Reports from Bloomberg and Democracy Now highlight how this chokehold on shipping is disrupting oil, gas, and even fertilizer flows, spiking European gas futures by 2.5 percent and pushing prices higher overall.TradingView analysts note bearish short-term pressure from steady US production, like in the Marcellus shale, but warn of bullish risks if Middle East conflicts drag on, with some eyeing targets up to 3.75 or even 4 dollars. YouTube trading shows like Topstep and Trading The Close point to rejection at key levels around 2.90, keeping the downward trend alive for now, while oil surges past 94 dollars add uncertainty.The big takeaway? Geopolitical flares like Hormuz could flip this bearish vibe bullish fast, so if you're hedging energy costs or trading futures, watch those support levels at 2.71 and stay nimble.Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, hit that bell, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Strait of Hormuz Sparks: How Middle East Tensions Could Push Natural Gas to $3.75
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, fresh market moves, and what's shaking things up globally.Right now, natural gas is trading around 2.73 dollars per million BTU, up a slight 0.55 percent from yesterday's close of 2.726, according to FX Empire's live charts. But keep an eye on futures, as they're hovering near 2.83 with a tiny 0.21 percent bump, per Investing.com data. Earlier this week, spot prices were fluctuating between 2.59 and recent highs around 3 dollars, with year-to-date down over 33 percent amid volatile swings.The big story heating things up? Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. Iran just attacked ships in the Strait of Hormuz, defying President Trump's ceasefire extension, as reported on The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell. Fox News Hannity called Iran beaten and battered, while NY Times business coverage notes the war's rippling effects on energy markets. Analysts on TradingView warn prices could spike toward 3.75 dollars if Middle East risks escalate, pushing natural gas, oil, and even fertilizers higher through year-end.EIA data shows Henry Hub spot prices kicked off 2026 strong at 7.72 in January but cooled to 3.04 by March, reflecting seasonal demand shifts. With volumes up lately but prices dipping in recent sessions, support sits near 2.94, while resistance looms at 3.29.For traders, watch for openings around these levels and stay nimble. Tip of the day: Diversify with hedges if you're exposed, and track Strait news closely, as it could send prices soaring.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, hit that bell, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Natural Gas Climbs on Production Drops While Storage Surplus Keeps Traders Guessing
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and what it means for you.Right now, US natural gas futures are trading around $2.70 per MMBtu, hitting a two-week high according to Trading Economics. That's up recently, thanks to a sharp drop in production—average output fell about 3.9 billion cubic feet per day over the past 15 days to an 11-week low of 108.2 bcfd. Meanwhile, flows to LNG export facilities are surging near record levels at 18.9 bcfd this April, keeping demand strong.But hold on, it's not all smooth sailing. Prices eased a bit to $2.66 per MMBtu in one session, tracking broader energy market dips amid hopes for a Middle East peace deal involving US Vice President JD Vance's trip to Pakistan. Storage levels are still high, about 7% above the five-year average as of April 17, fueled by mild spring weather and big injections. Warmer forecasts in the Midwest could mean even more builds ahead in this low-demand shoulder season.Technically, from FX Empire, natural gas is consolidating between key moving averages—the 20-day at $2.89 and 10-day nearby—hinting at a potential breakout. Bearish trends dominate longer-term, with support at $2.72, but watch for upside toward $2.97 or downside to $2.58.For everyday folks, this volatility ties into gas spending—recent retail sales jumped partly due to higher fuel costs from global tensions. If you're trading or hedging, keep an eye on LNG exports and weather shifts for quick moves.That's your daily nat gas update—stay smart out there. Thanks for tuning in, subscribe for more, and catch you next time!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Henry Hub Holds Steady as Geopolitics and Mild Weather Battle for Market Control
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, fresh market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, natural gas at the Henry Hub is trading around $2.66 to $2.84 per MMBtu, with a slight dip of about 0.93% to 1.63% in the early morning session. That's after a small weekend rally where prices edged up to around $2.71 to $2.81, hanging on by a thread amid lower production from planned maintenance. Trading Economics reports US futures just dropped to $2.65 per MMBtu yesterday, trimming gains as energy markets cooled on hopes for Middle East peace talks. US Vice President JD Vance is heading to Pakistan for round two, and Iran might join, which could ease tensions squeezing supplies.S&P Global says global natural gas prices have rocketed higher due to the ongoing Middle East war, nearly halting ships through the Strait of Hormuz. Even if traffic normalizes, tighter supply from damaged infrastructure means elevated prices through the end of 2026. Here at home, stockpiles are 7% above the five-year average thanks to mild spring weather and big inventory builds, keeping demand soft. But near-record flows to US LNG plants and a recent output drop of about 3.9 billion cubic feet per day are propping things up short-term.The trend? A wide falling pattern with negative signals, so expect some weakness ahead unless production stays low or exports surge. Mansfield Energy notes output should ramp back up soon.Key takeaway: If you're locking in hedges or planning usage, watch those peace talks and weather forecasts closely. Mild temps through May mean subdued demand, but geopolitics could spike prices fast.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Natural Gas Navigates Strait of Hormuz Tensions and the 2.62 Support Line
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, fresh market moves, and what's shaking up the energy world.Right now, as markets kick off this Monday morning, natural gas is trading around 2.72 to 2.79 dollars per MMBtu at the Henry Hub, according to spots from Investing.com and the St. Louis Fed's latest data through April 13th, with the front-month futures hovering near 2.675 on CME Group. That's up slightly from last week's close around 2.67, but we've seen some wild swings latelyprices dipped to a low of 2.62 before bouncing back above that key support level, as noted in today's analysis from Economies.com. Over the past week, it's been fluctuating in a tight range, with ample US supply keeping things in check despite steady production near 108 billion cubic feet per day.Big news impacting prices: Tensions in the Strait of Hormuz are front and center. Fox News reports US naval actions against Iranian ships attempting to break a blockade, as discussed by Rep. Buddy Carter and oil exec Tim Stewart from the US Oil and Gas Association. They warn of potential delays in global supply chains, which could push prices higher in the coming weeks, even as oil costs ease post-agreement to reopen the strait. Canadian gas prices might stay volatile too, per CityNews updates. Europe's jet fuel crunch adds more pressure, but America's refining muscle is holding strong.Looking ahead, watch that 2.62 supportif it holds, we could see a push toward 2.90, but any Hormuz escalation might spike things fast. Tip for traders: With volumes picking up on dips, consider hedging if you're in energy stocks.That's your daily trackerfriends, stay tuned to these headlines, and remember to subscribe for tomorrow's update. Talk soon!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Louisiana Gas Prices Dip as Mild Spring and Storage Surplus Keep Henry Hub Near Five-Month Lows
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. I'm your host, diving right into the latest on natural gas prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, as of this morning, natural gas at Henry Hub is hovering around 2.60 to 2.69 dollars per MMBtu. Long Forecast reports it closed at 2.599 dollars yesterday with no change, while FX Daily Report notes it's trading near 2.686 dollars, showing a slight bounce from recent lows around 2.584 dollars. Prompt month futures hit a five-month low of 2.60 dollars on April 14th, according to the American Gas Association's market indicators.Why the dip? Mild spring weather across the US has cut heating demand, boosting storage injections. The EIA's weekly report showed a 59 billion cubic feet build for the week ending April 10th, leaving inventories at 1,970 Bcf—about 6 percent above the five-year average. Production is strong too, up 3.4 percent year-to-date, though it dipped slightly in early April. Globally, things are hotter: Europe's TTF and Asia's JKM benchmarks are up 48 and 83 percent since late February due to Iran tensions, per Rystad Energy data. But a US-Iran ceasefire and Strait of Hormuz talks are easing oil fears, indirectly steadying nat gas.Looking ahead, the EIA's Short Term Energy Outlook sees prices near seasonal norms of 3.10 dollars through summer, with storage cushioning any spikes. Cooler US forecasts through April 20th could lift demand a bit, sparking some short-covering, as Barchart notes.Takeaway for you: If you're in energy stocks or hedging, watch weather and geopolitics closely—these low prices might not last if summer heat kicks in. Stay tuned for updates, thanks for listening, subscribe and tune in next time!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Natural Gas Tests Critical Support as Oversold Signals Hint at Potential Reversal Rally
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. I'm your host Vanessa Clark, and we have some really interesting market movements to cover today.As of yesterday, natural gas was trading around two dollars and sixty-three cents per million BTU, sitting deep within a long-term support zone that ranges between two dollars and fifty cents and three dollars. This is a significant level for traders watching the market closely.What's fascinating right now is that we're seeing some technical signals that suggest we might be near a turning point. The Relative Strength Index, which measures momentum, is deep in oversold territory and starting to curl upward. This typically means sellers are running out of steam, and we could see a corrective rally from these support levels.Looking at the bigger picture, natural gas has been on a downward trend since January when prices peaked near six dollars. The hundred and two hundred day moving averages are both sloping lower, confirming that bearish pressure has been the dominant force. However, if that long-term support floor at two dollars and fifty cents holds, traders are watching for a potential recovery all the way up to three dollars and eighty cents.Now here's what's really important for prices moving forward. Natural gas takes major cues from inventory data and weather forecasts. We're also watching geopolitical developments closely. Improving global supply conditions have been easing some upside pressure, but if tensions flare up again, we could see supply risks resurface and push prices higher.Government officials have also been weighing in. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent recently expressed optimism that gas prices could return to around three dollars per gallon this summer, which would certainly impact the broader energy market.The key level to watch is that two dollar and fifty cent support zone. If we see a decisive breakdown below that, it could open the door to deeper losses. But if support holds, we might be setting up for that corrective rally we mentioned.Stay tuned as we continue monitoring these developments. Thanks so much for listening to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker, and be sure to subscribe and tune in next time for the latest updates.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Storage Surplus and Spring Swings: Natural Gas Feels the Heat from Warm Weather and Record Inventories
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, fresh market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, at 1:48 AM IST on the MCX exchange, the April 27, 2026 natural gas contract is trading at 243.20 rupees per mmBtu, down 4.20 rupees or 1.7 percent from yesterday's close of 247.40. The day's range hit a low of 240.42 and high of 249.4, with solid volume at 65,231 contracts. Spot price at Hazira sits at 230.40 rupees per mmBtu. Over on NYMEX, the May futures closed Monday, April 13th at 2.627 dollars per mmBtu, after dipping from an open of 2.703 and touching an 18-month intraday low of 2.615. That's pressure from near-record storage levels at 1,911 BCF, up 4.9 percent from last year, per the EIA report.What's driving this? High U.S. production and exports, plus softer demand from warm weather in the U.S. and Europe, have kept prices subduedprices down over 24 percent since January. Globally, demand is growing, with the International Energy Agency noting a 2.7 percent rise in 2024 led by Asia's industrial boom, but supply is winning out. Futures are eyeing support around 2.60 dollars, with weather and storage reports key this week.Tip for traders and users: Watch EIA storage updates and U.S. demand forecasts showing a bump to 143 BCF per day soon. If you're hedging energy costs, consider locking in now before any spring volatility.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, hit that bell, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Hormuz Blockade Sends Natural Gas Futures Surging While Storage Stays Bloated
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the wild ride happening in the natural gas market amid escalating global tensions.Right now, the Henry Hub natural gas spot price stands at about 3.04 dollars per million British thermal units, according to the latest data from the St. Louis Fed as of early April. That's up from recent lows around 2.86 just days ago, but futures have been swinging hard—Trading Economics reports a recent jump of over 11 percent to 3.82 dollars per MMBtu, hitting an 18-week high amid steady U.S. production near 108 billion cubic feet per day.The big story shaking things up? The U.S. has imposed a blockade on the Strait of Hormuz, halting traffic to Iranian ports as of April 13, per ABC 10 News and Bloomberg reports. This critical chokepoint handles about 20 percent of global natural gas trade, and with peace talks collapsing, experts like Rebecca Babin from CIBC Private Wealth say supply disruptions could drag on longer than the market's optimistic two-month recovery timeline. Oil's spiking toward 99 dollars a barrel, and natural gas is feeling the heat too—expect ripple effects on LNG exports, fertilizer prices, and even your grocery bill if this drags into late 2026.U.S. storage is bloated, up 50 billion cubic feet above averages, keeping a lid on runaway gains for now, but ample supply meets this geopolitical wildcard. Keep an eye on output staying above 110 billion cubic feet daily and maxed-out LNG capacity.Actionable tip: If you're trading or hedging, watch those WisdomTree Natural Gas ETFs hovering around 5.86 dollars—they're down slightly but volatile. Diversify and stay informed on Hormuz updates.Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, hit that bell, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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119
US Natural Gas Holds Steady at 17-Month Lows While Middle East Tensions Rattle Global Markets
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and what it means for you.Right now, as of early Monday trading, US natural gas futures are sitting at about $2.68 per MMBtu, up just a touch from last week's close of $2.648. That's according to Trading Economics and FX Empire reports. Prices have been hovering near a 17-month low, down over 5% for the week, thanks to ample supply and mild weather keeping demand soft. The EIA just reported a bigger-than-expected 50 billion cubic feet injection into storage for the week ending April 3rd, pushing inventories higher and giving producers plenty of breathing room.But here's the wildcard shaking things up globally: escalating tensions in the Middle East. President Trump has ordered a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz after failed talks with Iran, as covered by Bloomberg and Euronews. That's spiking oil and European gas futures—Europe's up as much as 18% in extended trading—since 20% of LNG to Europe and Asia flows through there. Qatar's a big player, and any disruptions could ripple out. For now, though, US prices are holding steady, insulated by our strong domestic production and full storage levels.The short-term outlook? Neutral to bearish, with mild forecasts and steady LNG exports not enough to flip the script. Watch for any Hormuz updates—they could spark a short-covering rally here too.Key takeaway: If you're trading or hedging, stay nimble on supply builds but eye those geopolitics. Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, hit that bell, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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118
Natural Gas Heats Up: Why Your Energy Bill Just Got More Expensive and What Comes Next
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today, we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and what it means for your wallet and investments.Right now, natural gas futures are trading around 3.79 to 3.82 dollars per MMBtu, marking an 11 percent jump in recent sessions according to Trading Economics. That's a solid rebound from earlier dips, where prices fell over 5 percent to 2.71 dollars on Wednesday and about 4 percent to 3.30 dollars on Tuesday. Production remains steady near 108 billion cubic feet per day, with comfortable storage levels keeping things balanced, but this recent surge has pushed prices to an 18-week high—the highest since June.Geopolitical tensions are a big factor too. Middle East uncertainties, including shipping disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz and ongoing talks between Israel, Lebanon, and even US Vice President JD Vance with Iran reps, are rippling through energy markets. Global oil prices rebounded sharply—Brent crude up 1.2 percent to 95.92 dollars a barrel, Nymex crude climbing 3.7 percent to 87 dollars—which often pulls natural gas along. Over the past four weeks, nat gas is up 2.39 percent, and a whopping 17 percent in the last year.For traders, keep an eye on leveraged ETFs like ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Natural Gas at around 33 dollars or the short version near 33 dollars—they're volatile with recent swings of 1 to 2 percent. If you're heating your home or running a business, this uptick could mean higher bills soon, but watch for any ceasefire progress that might ease supply fears.Actionable tip: If you're investing, consider diversifying with nat gas ETFs during these swings, but set stop-losses around 3.50 dollars support. Stay tuned for tomorrow's update—prices can flip fast.Thanks for joining me on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Subscribe, share with a friend, and tune in next time for more!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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117
Natural Gas Dips to November Lows as Mild Weather and Storage Surplus Keep Prices Sliding
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and what it means for you.Right now, as of this morning, natural gas is trading around 2.77 dollars per million British thermal units on the NYMEX Henry Hub futures. That's down about 0.32 percent today, hovering near those multi-month lows we've been talking about. Just yesterday, prices dipped to 2.71, the lowest since November 2024, according to Trading Economics reports. Over the past four weeks, we've seen a sharp 13 percent drop, and year-over-year, it's down nearly 29 percent.What's behind this slide? Mild spring weather is keeping demand soft—no big heating needs, and forecasts stay warmer than normal through late April, per market analysts. That means bigger storage builds, now about 5 percent above normal. Plus, cheaper LNG prices in Europe are making US exports less competitive, easing pressure on our supplies, as noted by Interactive Brokers insights.Geopolitics is in the mix too—tensions with Iran and Strait of Hormuz issues haven't spiked prices much since our export terminals are maxed out anyway. Looking ahead, the EIA trimmed its 2026 forecast to 3.67 dollars per MMBtu, expecting near-average storage. But global LNG demand is growing fast, tying us more to world markets and potentially lifting price floors long-term, according to CoBank analysis.For traders and everyday users, keep an eye on weather shifts and storage reports—they could swing things quick. If you're hedging or planning energy budgets, this dip might be a buying window before summer demand heats up.Thanks for tuning in, friends—hit subscribe, share with a buddy, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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116
Natural Gas Treads Water as Mild Weather and Storage Surplus Keep Bulls at Bay
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, fresh market moves, and what it all means for your energy watchlist.Right now, as of this morning, natural gas at Henry Hub is hovering around $2.75 to $2.84 per MMBtu, after a rebound yesterday. Trading Economics reports US futures climbed over 2% to $2.87 on Tuesday, thanks to a dip in daily output—production dropped about 3 billion cubic feet per day to a two-week low of 108.9 bcfd, mostly in Louisiana and Arkansas. But don't get too excited; prices are still scraping near their lowest since September 2025, pressured by mild spring weather that's keeping demand soft and letting utilities pump more gas into storage.Sprague Energy notes the May NYMEX contract closed at $2.811 on Monday, April 6th, up from the prior session but after hitting an intraday low of $2.80. The EIA's latest storage report showed a 36 Bcf injection last week, right in line with expectations, with totals at 1,865 Bcf—5.4% above last year and 3% over the five-year average. Barchart adds that May Nymex futures rose 2.10% Tuesday, recovering from a recent low, though bearish vibes persist with inventories high and LNG exports steady around 18 bcfd amid elevated crude prices.Technical signals are mixed: Investing.com shows moving averages leaning sell, but indicators flashing strong buy with RSI at 39.9 and some overbought momentum. Energy Intelligence highlights global ripples too—like a Qatari LNG outage pushing EU prices up—while tastylive points to range-bound action as oil stays high near $114.Key takeaway? Watch for cooler forecasts or production cuts to spark a real bounce—could test resistance at $2.81 to $3.00. Stay nimble, folks; volatility's medium with daily swings around 0.5-1%.Thanks for tuning in to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker—subscribe, share with your trader buddies, and catch you next time for more updates!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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115
Natural Gas Dips Below $3 as Mild Weather and Storage Surplus Keep Prices Grounded
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, fresh market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, as of markets closing yesterday on April 6th, natural gas is trading around 2.85 USD per MMBtu, according to FX Empire. That's down about 1.67% from the prior session, with spot prices holding steady per Energy Intelligence's latest volume-weighted averages. StockInvest.us shows it ticked up slightly to 2.84 over the weekend from 2.80, but we're seeing some pressure keeping it in the low 2s range.What's driving this? Colder weather forecasts in the Upper Midwest through April 10th sparked a small rebound earlier, as noted by Barchart, with May Nymex futures up 0.39%. But bearish factors are piling on. Trading Economics reports recent dips near 7-month lows due to steady production around 110 billion cubic feet per day and comfy storage levels. Plus, XTB warns of a super El Niño brewing in 2026, potentially the strongest in 140 years, bringing milder US winters, higher storage, and weaker demand—think less heating and cooling needs.On the global front, Middle East tensions from the US-Israel-Iran conflict are spiking gas-fired power costs by 50%, per Ember Energy, while Qatar's LNG damage and Strait of Hormuz issues tighten supplies but haven't lifted US prices yet. EIA even bumped its 2026 production forecast higher, adding more supply pressure.Key takeaway: Stay nimble if you're trading or hedging—watch storage injections and weather shifts closely. Prices could swing between 2.81 and 3.98 in the next few months, per forecasts.Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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114
Natural Gas Hits Seven-Month Lows: Why Spring Weather and Storage Gluts Are Keeping Prices Trapped Below Three Dollars
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and what it means for you.Right now, natural gas futures are hovering around 2.80 to 2.86 dollars per MMBtu, near seven-month lows as we hit that spring shoulder season. Trading Economics reports US futures dipped to 2.86 recently, while FX Empire notes May contracts settled at 2.80 on Thursday, down point six seven percent amid high production and building storage. APA.az adds that May 2026 delivery futures slipped zero point five three percent to 2.792 per million BTU on the New York Stock Exchange. A YouTube analysis from just yesterday pegs spot trading at about 2.854, calling it a trap zone with downside risks below 2.76 or potential bounces above 3.14.What's behind this? Mild weather is curbing demand, letting storage build up—EIA data shows a 36 billion cubic feet injection last week, way above average. US output stays strong at over 111 billion cubic feet per day, keeping a lid on prices despite global LNG hiccups from Middle East tensions. No big rally in sight until fundamentals shift.For traders and investors, watch support at 2.71 to 2.80; a break could spark more selling. Upside needs to clear 3.00 for momentum toward 3.25 or higher. Energy stocks like EQT are up 44 percent this year, per TradingView, so broader sector strength might offer some play.Tip of the day: If you're hedging energy costs, lock in now at these lows before summer demand kicks in. Stay nimble and track storage reports.Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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113
Henry Hub Hits Six Month Low as Production Soars and LNG Exports Smash Records This April
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas markets as we kick off April.Right now, the Henry Hub prompt-month futures are sitting at about $2.82 per MMBtu, down from a close of $2.819 on the May NYMEX contract Wednesday, April 1st, according to Sprague Energy and AGA reports. That's a six-month low after a wild winter, with Thursday's session showing a slight dip of around 0.67 percent on Barchart. The April NYMEX even settled higher at $3.095 per MMBtu when it expired, per Shipley Energy, but we're seeing softer prices as we shift into injection season.What's driving this? U.S. production hit near-record levels in March, up 3 percent year-over-year thanks to efficiency gains and associated gas growth, even with fewer rigs, says S&P Global via AGA. LNG feedgas demand smashed a new record at 19.7 Bcf per day on March 28 from Rystad Energy, fueled by global tensions like the Strait of Hormuz issues, Qatar disruptions, and a cyclone hitting Australia's Wheatstone LNG, tightening supplies worldwide. Golden Pass is ramping up too, adding to export strength.Mild late-winter weather kept storage in surplus, easing demand from homes and power plants. Household heating bills stayed flat at $700 to $868 this season. Looking ahead, expect muted spring prices, but watch summer weather, power burns, and exports for upside risks.Tip for today: If you're budgeting energy costs, lock in hedges now while prices hover low. Stay tuned for tomorrow's update.Thanks for listening, friends. Subscribe, share, and tune in next time for more on your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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112
Natural Gas Exports Surge as America Becomes the World's Swing Producer
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, fresh market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, the May NYMEX natural gas futures contract is hovering around 2.88 dollars per MMBtu, after closing down about 2.25 percent yesterday at 2.884 dollars. That's a rebound from recent six-month lows, but still facing pressure from warmer spring weather cutting heating demand across the eastern US and Gulf Coast. Trading Economics reports futures ticked up to 2.86 dollars early today amid fading hopes for a quick Middle East resolution, while Barchart notes prices hit a five-week low on storage build expectations.But here's the big picture: U.S. natural gas is in a multi-year high phase for 2026. S&P Global says first-quarter prices firmed up big time, projecting a yearly average of 3.75 dollars per MMBtu—way above the 2-dollar floors of 2024 and 2025. Henry Hub spot prices started the year strong at 7.72 dollars in January, dipped to 3.62 in February, and the export boom is driving it. New LNG giants like Golden Pass, Plaquemines, and Cheniere's Corpus Christi Stage 3 are online, pushing exports past 15 billion cubic feet per day. Geopolitical heat in the Strait of Hormuz and Iran's moves are narrowing the gap between U.S. and global prices, turning America into the world's swing producer.Watch for Thursday's EIA storage report—analysts expect a 38 to 39 billion cubic feet injection, bigger than last year's. If Permian and Haynesville production doesn't ramp up, we could see prices rally toward 4 dollars by next winter. Producers are shifting to opportunistic mode with that 3.50-dollar floor.Key takeaway: This export surge means steadier high prices ahead—great for investors eyeing Cheniere Energy, but watch for overproduction risks by 2027. Stay tuned to track these swings.Thanks for joining me on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Subscribe, tune in next time for more updates, and have a great day!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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111
Gas Prices Dip Below Three Bucks: What Spring Weather and Surplus Supply Mean for Your Wallet
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm Vanessa, your go-to guide for all things natural gas, and today we're diving into the latest on prices, market moves, and what it means for you.Right now, the April NYMEX natural gas futures contract closed at 2.887 dollars on Monday, March 30th, according to Sprague Energy. That's down from the previous close, with prices dipping calmly to around 2.810 dollars as negativity from key indicators pushes a slow decline, per Economies.com. DailyForex notes the plunge below 3 dollars, driven by abundant US supply and warmer temperatures ahead, with support at 2.70 dollars and potential drops to 2.50 dollars if it breaks.On the bigger picture, the GECF Annual Gas Market Report 2026 highlights robust growth: global consumption hit a record 4.22 trillion cubic meters in 2025, up 1.2 percent, with LNG trade surging 6.5 percent to 437 million tonnes. US Henry Hub prices averaged 3.6 dollars per MMBtu last year, but spot prices are cooling now amid steady production and storage levels 5.2 percent above last year, as EIA data shows.Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East are stirring things up, but North America is stepping in as a supply stabilizer, with projects like Venture Globals CP2 boosting exports. Chinas imports dipped slightly early this year, while new fields in Angola ramp up.For you at home or investing, heres your takeaway: with a bearish trend and trading range of 2.620 to 3.000 dollars today, watch weather forecasts and storage reports closely. If youre hedging energy costs, consider locking in now before any rebound tests resistance near 3 dollars.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with a friend, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Stay savvy!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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110
Natural Gas Dips as Spring Shoulder Season Arrives: What the 2.93 Floor Means for Your Wallet
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on natural gas prices, whats driving the market, and some smart tips to help you navigate it all.Right now, Henry Hub April futures are hovering between 2.95 and 3.02 dollars per million British thermal units, with spot prices dipping to about 2.93 this morning according to Price Group reports. Thats down from recent winter peaks, thanks to warmer temperatures sweeping the eastern US where most heating demand lives. FXEmpire notes the market fell hard today on that demand drop, with production roaring at record levels near 110 billion cubic feet per day and plenty of supply keeping things abundant.Were in shoulder season, folks too warm for heavy heating, not yet hot enough for big cooling needs. Storage is shifting too EIA data shows levels at 1829 billion cubic feet last week, up 90 billion from last year, and Thursdays report could see the first big injection of 40 to 42 billion cubic feet. Execs in the Dallas Fed survey predict Henry Hub averaging 3.60 dollars by years end, rising to 3.53 in six months. Even with global oil spiking to 111 dollars a barrel at Fortune, our natural gas stays steady around three dollars, insulated by US supply as EENews highlights.Heres your takeaway if youre trading or hedging, watch that 2.70 floor and 3.28 resistance from FXEmpire analysis fade rallies near the 50-day moving average, and consider shorts if we break lower toward 2.50. For homeowners, milder weather means your bills should ease up enjoy the breather.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share with a buddy, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Stay savvy out there.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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109
Natural Gas Climbs to $3.91: Lock in Rates Now Before Spring Weather Swings Hit Your Wallet
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and some smart tips to help you navigate it all.Right now, Natural Gas futures at the NYMEX Henry Hub are hovering near 3.91 dollars per MMBtu for the April contract, up about 1.15 percent today according to Capital Street FXs market outlook. Thats after closing at 2.999 dollars yesterday on a nice climb, spurred by the EIA storage report showing a bigger-than-expected withdrawal of 54 billion cubic feet for the week ending March 20th, leaving stocks at 1,829 billion cubic feet, Mansfield Energy and Sprague Energy report. Thats 90 billion cubic feet higher than last year but still within the five-year range, signaling a well-supplied market as we shift to injection season.Prices faced some negative pressure earlier, settling below 3.45 dollars with a bearish forecast eyeing support at 2.81 dollars per Economies.com analysis, thanks to strong production around 109 to 110 billion cubic feet per day and warmer weather curbing heating demand. LNG exports are steady at about 20 billion cubic feet per day, adding some support amid global tensions.Heres your actionable takeaway: If youre budgeting for home heating or energy costs, lock in fixed-rate plans now while prices are in this contested range around 3 to 3.90 dollars, avoiding potential spikes from weather shifts or geopolitics. Keep an eye on next weeks storage data for more clues.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe so you never miss a daily update, and join me next time for more on natural gas prices and trends. Talk soon!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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108
Natural Gas Holds Steady at $2.99 as Hormuz Crisis Drives Import Surge While US Production Cushions the Blow
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today, were diving into the latest on natural gas prices, whats driving the market, and tips to help you stay ahead.Right now, the Henry Hub natural gas price sits at about 2.99 dollars per million British thermal units, up just a touch by zero point one percent from yesterday. Pintu News reports it hit 2.9863 today after bouncing from a low around 2.88, showing some mild buying pressure but staying range bound between 2.95 and 3 dollars. Economies.com notes its holding negative stability below the 3.45 dollar barrier with a bearish forecast, eyeing a potential drop to 2.81 dollars if it weakens more, though a break above could push toward 3.75 dollars.Big news shaking things up: US import prices for natural gas jumped 24.7 percent in February, the biggest spike in years, per MarketMinute. Thats tied to the Hormuz Crisis, where Middle East tensions shut down key shipping routes and hit Qatars massive LNG hub, sending global supplies into chaos. Europe and Asia prices soared, but our domestic market stayed steady thanks to record high US production averaging 118.5 billion cubic feet per day last year, as Valley Morning Star highlights. Plus, the latest EIA inventory report showed a bigger than expected draw of 54 billion cubic feet, tightening stocks a bit.For you at home, this means stable heating bills for now, but watch for export ramps that could nudge prices up. Actionable tip: If youre budgeting energy costs or eyeing energy stocks like EQT or ExxonMobil, track EIA weekly storage reports and Hormuz updates they could signal shifts. Diversify if investing, as global volatility creates winners in US production.Thanks for joining me on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Subscribe, tune in tomorrow for more, and take care, friends.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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107
Natural Gas Dips to Three-Week Lows as Spring Weather Softens Heating Demand
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on natural gas prices, whats driving the market, and some smart tips to help you navigate it all.Right now, US natural gas futures are sitting around 2.94 to 2.96 dollars per million British thermal units, or MMBtu, according to Trading Economics and the St. Louis Fed data. Thats a slight uptick of about 0.42 percent from yesterday, but were still hovering near three-week lows after dipping to 2.87 earlier this week, as reported by Trading Economics. Henry Hub spot prices closed at 2.94 on March 23rd per FRED and YCharts, down from 3.04 the day before.Warmer weather is the big story here, easing demand for heating even with strong LNG exports holding steady at over 20 billion cubic feet per day, says Global LNG Hub. Production is rebounding to 110 billion cubic feet daily, and stockpiles are healthy, keeping pressure on prices. Economies.com notes a calm decline toward 2.81 support, with forecasts pointing to softer shoulder-season trading unless cold snaps return.Looking ahead, Dallas Fed executives see Henry Hub averaging 3.60 by year-end 2026, up from current levels. Over the past month, prices are up 4.5 percent but down 24 percent year-over-year.Heres your takeaway: If youre trading or hedging, watch weather models closely and consider locking in now before spring fundamentals fully kick in. Diversify with oil-linked plays if gas stays soft.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with a friend, and catch you next time for more Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker updates. Stay savvy out there.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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106
Natural Gas Dips Below $2.90: What Oversupply and Warmer Weather Mean for Your Energy Bills
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im Vanessa, your go-to guide for all things natural gas prices, and today were diving into the latest on natural gas trading, including where prices stand right now and what it means for you.First up, the big news: According to Sprague Energy, the April NYMEX natural gas futures contract closed at 2.891 dollars on Monday, March 23rd. It opened lower at 2.949 dollars, hit a high of 2.983 dollars early, but bearish vibes took over with easing Middle East tensions and warmer forecasts pushing it down to a low of 2.883 dollars before settling there. Thats a drop from Fridays close of 3.095 dollars, showing some real downward pressure.Why the slide? Traders are eyeing oversupply in the US, with the EIA storage report showing a 35 billion cubic feet injection last week, leaving stocks at 1,883 billion cubic feet, well above last year and the five-year average. Plus, analysts like Christopher Lewis at Daily Forex point to weakening demand ahead and key resistance at the 50-day EMA around 3.35 dollars, with potential drops to 2.80 dollars or even 2.50 dollars if oversupply persists. Globally, conflicts are shaking things up, but our LNG export limits are keeping US prices somewhat insulated, which could boost demand for data centers here.For you at home, heres your actionable takeaway: If youre budgeting for heating or energy costs, watch that 2.80 dollars support level. A break lower might mean cheaper bills soon, but lock in fixed rates now if youre worried about volatility from weather shifts or exports. Stay nimble, folks.Thanks for tuning in, besties. Subscribe, share with a friend tracking natural gas prices, and Ill catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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105
Natural Gas Dips on Storage Surplus While Traders Eye Spring Cooling Season Ahead
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. I'm Vanessa Clark, and today we're diving into what's happening in the natural gas market as we head into late March. Stick around because we've got some important updates that could affect your energy costs and investment decisions.Let's start with the numbers. As of Friday, March 20th, the April NYMEX Natural Gas futures contract closed at three dollars and nine and a half cents per million BTU, down one point one percent for the week. This follows a Thursday close of three dollars and sixteen and a half cents, so we've seen some downward pressure recently.Here's what's driving the market right now. Storage levels are playing a major role. The EIA Natural Gas Storage Report showed a thirty-five billion cubic foot injection for the week ended March 13th, and total working gas in storage is sitting at one thousand eight hundred and eighty-three billion cubic feet. That's ten point four percent above where we were this time last year. High storage levels typically put downward pressure on prices, which is exactly what we're seeing.Weather is also a huge factor. We're in a bearish weather pattern that's expected to last through at least mid-April. However, energy analysts are watching the South closely because in just a few weeks, we could see cooling degree day demand kick in around the Masters tournament timeframe. That's when air conditioning demand typically starts ramping up.Now, there's also some geopolitical noise in the background. We've had some volatility around Middle East tensions and recent Iranian developments, which briefly supported prices. But the fundamental story right now is really about that storage surplus and mild weather expectations keeping a lid on prices.If you're watching natural gas for investment or business purposes, technical analysts suggest there's potential support at two dollars and seventy-nine cents if prices continue lower. But many are watching for a potential bounce higher in the coming weeks once we get some technical confirmation.The bottom line is that natural gas remains under pressure from ample supplies and mild weather, but we're heading into a season where demand could pick up. That's why staying informed on storage data and weather patterns is critical right now.Thanks so much for listening to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Make sure you subscribe so you don't miss tomorrow's update on the market. I'll see you next time.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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104
Natural Gas Prices Caught Between Arctic Blasts and Global Tensions: Your 3.17 Dollar Snapshot
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and tips to help you stay ahead.Right now, the April NYMEX natural gas futures contract is hovering around 3.17 dollars per million British thermal units after closing at 3.166 dollars yesterday. Sprague Energy reports it rallied early on escalating tensions in Iran but pulled back after the EIA storage report showed a 35 billion cubic feet injection, right in line with expectations. Economies.com notes the price is holding weak below 3.45 dollars, with a bearish forecast eyeing potential drops to 2.82 dollars or even 2.62 dollars if momentum builds.But hold on, it's not all downside. A brutal late arctic blast, the St. Patricks Day Freeze, just spiked US prices 20 percent this week per Mansfield Energy, as demand surged from the cold snap. Geopolitical worries from attacks on Qatari LNG facilities are pushing Europeans toward US exports, adding upward pressure despite massive domestic supply, as DailyForex highlights. Barchart adds that global gas rallies are supporting nat gas amid the Iran conflict.For you at home, here's your takeaway: watch weather apps closely, since surprises like this freeze can flip the market fast. If youre hedging home heating bills or trading, consider locking in now around 3.20 dollars before volatility hits from any secondary cold front or Middle East news. Stay diversified and dont chase highs near 3.50 dollars without confirmation.Thats your daily update, pals. Thanks for tuning in, subscribe so you never miss a beat, and join me next time for more on natural gas prices and trends. Talk soon!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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103
Gas Prices Hold Steady at Home While Middle East Chaos Sends Global Markets Soaring
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on natural gas prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, the Henry Hub prompt month is holding steady near three dollars per MMBtu, with the April contract settling at three point zero seven on March eighteenth, according to the American Gas Association report. Intraday prices ticked up about twenty cents from Wednesday, thanks to global jitters, but strong US supply keeps things anchored. The twelve-month strip is at three point seven eight, down from earlier highs.Heres the big news shaking things up: geopolitical tensions are spiking demand for US LNG. Iranian missiles hit Qatars Ras Laffan hub, the worlds largest LNG facility handling twenty percent of global supply, per Rystad Energy. That sent European TTF prices jumping thirty-two percent to twenty-four point one nine per MMBtu, and Asias JKM up twenty-five percent. Qatar saw more infrastructure damage overnight, boosting US export hopes, as FX Empire notes.At home, production is climbing two point four percent year-over-year, storage is up two point six percent above the five-year average at one point nine trillion cubic feet, and LNG feedgas is near records, seventeen point four percent higher than last year. Demand rose nineteen percent last week from weather swings, but mild patterns limit big spikes. EIA forecasts Henry Hub averaging three point eight zero this year and three point nine zero in twenty twenty-seven.What does this mean for you? If youre trading or hedging energy costs, watch global LNG flows and storage builds as winter ends. Domestic plenty shields us from overseas chaos, so consider locking in now if prices nudge higher on export pulls.Thanks for joining me, pals. Subscribe, tune in tomorrow for more, and take care.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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102
Natural Gas Sinks Below $3 as Record US Production Floods the Market
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey there, I'm Vanessa Clark, and welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Today we're diving into what's happening in the natural gas market, and there's quite a bit to unpack.Let's start with where prices are sitting right now. Natural gas is trading around three dollars and five cents per million British thermal units, hovering near that crucial three dollar level that traders have been watching closely. Earlier this morning, we saw prices dip to their lowest point since early March, testing levels around two dollars and ninety-two cents. It's been a rocky ride for natural gas lately, and there's a pretty clear reason why.The market is dealing with a massive supply situation. According to energy analysts, the United States is producing record high amounts of natural gas, which is really putting pressure on prices. Even though Europe may be looking to buy more U.S. natural gas due to disruptions coming from the Middle East, that extra demand isn't enough to offset the sheer volume of supply flooding the market right now. So what does that mean for us? Well, as long as American production stays this high, significant price rallies are going to be tough to come by.Now, here's something important for those of you paying attention to storage levels. Analysts are forecasting that natural gas storage will rise by twenty-six billion cubic feet during the week ending March thirteenth. That injection would bring total storage to around one point eight seven four trillion cubic feet. Higher storage levels typically weigh on prices because it signals plenty of supply available, which is exactly what we're seeing play out.On the weather front, we've got mild conditions across much of the country, which means less demand for heating. The Energy Information Administration is predicting that March heating demand is on pace for the lowest levels since two thousand and sixteen. As we move into spring and approach the traditional April through October injection season, daily withdrawals from storage are expected to decline significantly.Looking at the technical picture, the trend remains bearish. Traders are watching several key support levels, particularly that two dollar seventy-six level, which has historically served as a major floor. If prices break decisively below that, we could see further downside ahead.Energy analysts are predicting we might see prices test below three dollars per million British thermal units over the next week or two, with potentially lower prices emerging over the next month to six weeks. However, the Energy Information Administration is projecting that Henry Hub prices will average three dollars and seventy-six cents for the full year twenty twenty-six.The bottom line here is that supply and production remain the dominant factors driving prices lower, while any significant rally would likely need to come from an unexpected crisis or supply disruption. For now, the path of least resistance remains downward.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and join us next time as we continue tracking what's moving the natural gas market.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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101
Natural Gas Holds the Three Dollar Line as Spring Storage Stays Balanced and Exports Climb
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on natural gas prices, futures action, storage updates, and what it all means for you.First up, the current trading price. According to Sprague Energy, the April NYMEX natural gas futures contract closed at three dollars and twenty-three cents on Monday, March sixteenth, down from the previous close after dipping to a low of two dollars and ninety-nine cents intraday. Thats holding steady around the three dollar level right now, despite some global tensions.On the news front, the EIA reports natural gas storage showed a thirty-eight billion cubic feet withdrawal last week, right in line with expectations, leaving totals at one thousand eight hundred forty-eight billion cubic feet, a bit above last year but slightly below the five-year average. Production is booming near record highs from spots like the Permian and Haynesville, which is keeping supplies ample even with milder weather easing heating demand.Globally, Middle East issues have spiked LNG prices in Europe and Asia, but the EIA says US prices should stay relatively unaffected, with Henry Hub spot forecasts averaging about three dollars and seventy-six cents this year. US LNG exports are ramping up, hitting records and supporting demand, plus data centers could add more pull going forward.Her takeaway for you: if youre hedging home heating costs or eyeing energy stocks, watch that three dollar floor, it looks solid with storage balanced and exports growing. Consider locking in now before summer demand kicks in.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with a friend, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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100
Natural Gas Finds Its Sweet Spot: Why Spring's Shoulder Season Is Keeping Prices Steady at Three Bucks
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. I'm Vanessa Clark, and today we're diving into what's happening with natural gas prices as we head into the spring season.So let's jump right in with where prices are trading today. As of this morning, April natural gas futures are sitting at three dollars and twelve cents per million BTU, down just a fraction of a cent. We've been seeing natural gas prices hovering in that three dollar range, with the benchmark Henry Hub spot price trading around three dollars and fifteen cents after climbing from about two dollars and eighty-nine cents earlier in the week.Now here's what's interesting. You might think with all the geopolitical tensions we're seeing in the Middle East right now, natural gas prices would be skyrocketing. But actually, traders are more focused on what's happening right here at home. We're in what analysts call the shoulder season, that sweet spot in spring where temperatures are too warm for heavy heating demand but not hot enough yet for summer cooling. That's putting real pressure on prices from a supply perspective.The biggest factor weighing on natural gas right now is warmer weather forecasts across the country. We've seen residential and commercial demand drop about twenty-seven percent this week alone as temperatures warm up. That's a significant decline, and it's keeping a lid on any price rallies you might otherwise expect to see.But here's where it gets balanced. Even though domestic demand is softening, we're seeing strong support from overseas. During the latest week, thirty-six LNG vessels carrying about one hundred thirty-three billion cubic feet departed U.S. export terminals. That export demand is really acting as a stabilizing force right now. Global LNG prices remain elevated due to supply disruptions tied to Middle East tensions, which gives U.S. exporters every incentive to keep shipping natural gas abroad.Looking at storage levels, we're getting closer to normal seasonal ranges. Working gas inventories came in at one thousand eight hundred forty-eight billion cubic feet after a withdrawal of thirty-eight billion cubic feet. That smaller-than-normal withdrawal is actually a positive sign that we're moving past any supply tightness concerns heading into the spring injection season.The forecast from analysts suggests this market is shifting from winter volatility toward early spring stability. We might see near-term pressure from warmer weather, but steady LNG exports and ongoing global supply uncertainty should continue providing support underneath these prices.Thanks so much for tuning in to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and come back tomorrow as we continue tracking these price movements for you. I'm Vanessa Clark, and we'll see you next time.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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99
Gas Prices Dip on Mild Weather While Global LNG Crisis Leaves US Markets Unfazed
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today were diving into the latest on natural gas prices, whats driving the market, and some smart tips to help you stay ahead.Right now, natural gas is trading around 3.45 dollars per million British thermal units, hovering just below that key barrier after some early bullish waves, according to Economies.coms fresh forecast. But its been a rollercoaster futures dipped about 3 percent today on milder March weather curbing demand, as Reuters reports, with prices sliding to around 3.15 dollars earlier per NYC Today updates. The overall trend looks bearish short-term, with potential drops to 3.02 dollars if it stays below 3.45 dollars, though a break above could push toward 3.75 dollars.Big news globally: Middle East tensions have shut down about 20 percent of LNG flows, slamming Europe and Asia with three-year price highs after Qatars Ras Laffan facility halted output and the Strait of Hormuz closed. But here in the US, were staying calm at 3.10 to 3.40 dollars because our export terminals are maxed out and production hit record highs last year, per the EIA. FXEmpire notes markets are range-bound, focused on fading winter and spring ahead sell rallies if you see them.Practical takeaway: If youre hedging energy costs for your home or business, lock in now before weather shifts or geopolitics spike volatility. Watch storage reports and Henry Hub closely they signal the next move.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe, share with a friend, and catch you next time for more natural gas updates. Stay savvy!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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98
Gas Prices Heat Up: Why Your April Bills Stay Cool Despite Global Chaos with Vanessa Clark
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im Vanessa, your go-to guide for all things natural gas, and today were diving into the latest on natural gas prices, market moves, and what it means for you.First up, the current trading price. According to Sprague Energy, the April NYMEX natural gas futures contract closed at 3.209 dollars on Wednesday, March 11th, up from the previous day after opening at 3.105 dollars and hitting a high of 3.216 dollars. Prices rallied on expectations of cooler seasonal temperatures ahead, keeping things steady around that 3 dollar mark despite all the global drama.The markets been haywire this year, as MarketMinute calls it. We saw a massive 29 percent drop in February after that wild Winter Storm Fern spiked prices to over 30 dollars at Henry Hub in late January. Now, geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, especially around the Strait of Hormuz choking off about 20 percent of global LNG flows, are adding upward pressure. But US prices are holding calm in the 3.10 to 3.40 dollars per MMBtu range because our production is at record highs over 120 billion cubic feet per day, and exports are maxed out.Keep an eye on todays EIA Natural Gas Storage Report at 10:30 AM, expecting a 37 BCF withdrawal, lighter than last years 62 BCF. Oil prices surging past 98 dollars a barrel on Brent are linked too, potentially boosting natural gas demand as industries switch fuels.Herere your actionable takeaways: If youre hedging for home heating or business, lock in now around these levels before any Strait disruptions pull more US gas overseas. Track EIA reports weekly and watch Middle East headlines theyre driving the volatility.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share with a buddy, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Stay warm!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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97
Natural Gas Heats Up: Hormuz Havoc Sends Prices Soaring as Asia Scrambles for Supply
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im Vanessa, and today were diving into the hottest updates on natural gas prices, whats driving the market, and tips to help you navigate this wild ride.Right now, natural gas is trading around 3.45 dollars per million British thermal units at the Henry Hub, showing some early bullish momentum after bouncing from lower levels near 3.05 dollars. Economies.com notes its fluctuating below the 3.45 dollar barrier with a bearish bias for today, expecting a range between 2.85 and 3.25 dollars. But FX Empire highlights a fresh upward push early Wednesday, fueled by Middle East tensions.The big story is the Strait of Hormuz closure, slamming global LNG supply. Wood Mackenzie reports its cut 1.5 million tonnes per week, spiking Asian spot prices above 20 dollars per million British thermal units. Qatar and UAE exports, mostly headed to Asia, are disrupted, hitting Japan, South Korea, Taiwan hardest. Demand might drop 4 to 5 million tonnes through Q3 if this lasts two months. Energy Intelligence says gas prices are soaring worldwide, with LNG cargoes rerouting to Asia.This ties into oil too, now at 90.96 dollars per Brent barrel per Fortune, down a bit today but up big yearly amid conflicts. Higher oil could boost natural gas demand as industries switch fuels.Practical takeaway: If youre budgeting energy costs, lock in fixed-rate plans now before spring demand shifts and war premiums fade. Watch for exhaustion near 3.50 dollars for potential shorts, as FX Empire suggests, but stay diversified.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with a friend, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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96
Energy Shockwaves: How Middle East Tensions Are Hitting Your Heating Bill and Gas Tank
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. I'm Vanessa Clark, and today we're diving into some significant energy market movements that are reshaping commodity prices across the board.As of today, natural gas prices are hovering around three dollars and forty-five cents per million BTU, and let me tell you, the story behind these numbers is pretty dramatic. We're in the middle of a major geopolitical situation in the Middle East that's sending shockwaves through global energy markets, and natural gas is right in the middle of it all.Here's what's happening. The conflict has already pushed crude oil prices up roughly fifty percent, and natural gas has followed suit. The TTF natural gas contract, which tracks European pricing, has jumped nearly one hundred percent since hostilities began. Even our domestic US natural gas contract is up about seventeen percent, which is significant. Compare that to oil jumping fifty percent, and you can see the global energy market is under serious stress right now.The real concern for traders like us is the risk of supply disruption and potentially supply destruction. We're looking at possible attacks on production facilities across the Gulf, and Qatar's Energy Minister recently stated that all Gulf exporters could potentially shut down production within days if the conflict escalates. That statement alone is enough to keep natural gas prices elevated.What does this mean for your wallet? Well, if you drive a car, you've probably noticed gas prices jumping. They've climbed to three dollars and forty-eight cents nationally, up sixteen percent just this week. The energy crisis is real, and it's affecting everything from your morning commute to your heating bills.For natural gas traders, the key levels to watch are three dollars and seventy-two cents on the upside, with potential targets reaching four dollars and twenty cents if volatility continues. Support sits around three dollars and twelve cents.The big question everyone's asking is whether this supply disruption will be temporary or longer lasting. That answer will determine whether we see natural gas prices stabilize or continue climbing. Keep your eyes on geopolitical developments in the Middle East because every headline could shift these markets.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Make sure you subscribe and join us tomorrow for the latest natural gas price updates and market analysis. I'm Vanessa Clark, and we'll see you next time.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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95
Gas Wars: How Middle East Tensions Are Heating Up Your Energy Bill at Home
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on natural gas prices, whats driving the market, and some smart tips to help you navigate it all.Right now, natural gas is trading around 3.161 per MMBtu, consolidating just below key resistance after showing signs of a bullish inverted head and shoulders pattern, according to FX Daily Report technical analysis. Thats up from recent lows, with April NYMEX futures closing at 3.003 on Thursday, boosted by a bigger-than-expected 132 billion cubic feet storage draw reported by the EIA, per Sprague Energy and Nasdaq updates.Geopolitical tensions are the big story. The US-Iran conflict and Strait of Hormuz closure have shut down Qatar LNG exports, tightening global supply and spiking European TTF gas prices by 50 to 60 percent to about 49 to 50 euros per MWh, as noted by IRU and AGA reports. US LNG feedgas demand hit record highs near 19 billion cubic feet per day, making America the go-to supplier for Europe and Asia. Production is strong at over 113 billion cubic feet daily, up from last year, but inventories are still a bit below five-year averages.Heres your actionable takeaway: If youre budgeting for home heating or energy costs, lock in fixed-rate plans now before global scrambles push US prices higher. Watch weather and LNG flows closely, as warmer spring trends could ease pressure, but conflicts keep upside risks alive.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with a friend, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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94
Natural Gas Dips Below the Comfort Zone: Storage Squeeze vs Spring Slump
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on natural gas prices, whats driving the market, and some smart tips to help you stay ahead.Right now, the front-month NYMEX natural gas is settling around 3 dollars per MMBtu after rising almost 3 percent to close at 3.0030, according to Dow Jones data. Sprague Energy reports the April futures contract closed at 2.917 on Wednesday, down a bit from earlier in the week, but bouncing back today thanks to fresh EIA storage numbers. Those showed a bigger-than-expected drop of 132 billion cubic feet in US inventories, beating forecasts of 124 billion, as noted by XTB. Thats tightening supply just as winter winds down, giving prices a lift despite warmer weather forecasts keeping a lid on demand.Economies.com says natural gas is under negative pressure, trading below 3.450 with closes near 3 dollars, and they forecast a bearish trend targeting 2.750 or even 2.640 support, with todays range between 2.750 and 3.210. FX Empire adds its hovering around that key 3 dollar level, psychologically big, with resistance at 3.20 and 3.50, and this shoulder season often means noisy, lower demand trading.Heres your takeaway: If youre trading or hedging, watch storage reports and weather closely. A surprise cold snap could spark a rally, but bearish forecasts suggest caution on longs. Diversify with related energies like oil, surging on global tensions, and consider locking in now if you need gas for home or business.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share with a buddy, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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93
Natural Gas at $2.85: Why Late Winter Pricing Matters for Your Heating Bill
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Welcome to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. I'm your host Vanessa Clark, and I'm so glad you're here. Today we're diving into what's happening in the natural gas market and why you should care about these price movements.So let's jump right in. As of today, natural gas is trading around two dollars and eighty-five cents per million British thermal units. Now I know that sounds technical, but here's what matters: this price represents where natural gas futures are settling on the major exchanges, and it gives us a real-time snapshot of market sentiment.What's driving prices right now? A few things are in play. First, we're heading into late winter, which means heating demand is still significant in many parts of the country, but we're approaching the shoulder season where that demand will start tapering off. That seasonal transition always creates interesting pricing dynamics.Second, production levels continue to be robust. The United States remains one of the world's largest natural gas producers, and that steady supply keeps a lid on prices from getting too extreme. Storage levels are also in decent shape heading into spring, which historically moderates price spikes.Looking at broader market conditions, energy traders are watching geopolitical tensions and global supply chains closely. Any disruption in international energy markets can ripple through domestic pricing. Additionally, the strength of the dollar affects how competitive American natural gas is on the global stage.For those of you wondering how to use this information, here's my actionable takeaway for today. If you heat your home with natural gas or use it for your business, current prices suggest moderate stability in the near term. This might be a good window to lock in pricing if you haven't already secured your heating costs for the remainder of the season.Keep in mind that natural gas prices can be volatile. They respond quickly to weather forecasts, production reports, and global events. That's why tracking these prices daily helps you stay informed about potential impacts on your energy bills.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Please subscribe and join me tomorrow as we break down the latest natural gas price movements and what they mean for you. Until next time, I'm Vanessa Clark. Take care.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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92
Natural Gas Jumps 17 Cents as Middle East Tensions Shake Global Energy Markets
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the hottest updates on natural gas prices, whats driving the market, and tips to help you stay ahead.Right now, the April 2026 natural gas contract is trading up at three dollars and three cents per million British thermal units, according to the latest NRG Market Update. Thats a solid jump of seventeen cents, with front-month futures even leaping six percent to three dollars and fourteen cents amid wild global swings, as Boereport notes. Spot prices are holding firm above three dollars after dipping to two dollars eighty-one, resisting bearish pressure per Economies.com, with a trading range today between two dollars seventy-five and three dollars twenty-one.The big story shaking everything up is the Middle East conflict. QatarEnergy halted LNG production after attacks on its facilities, disrupting one of the worlds top suppliers and sending European gas prices soaring nearly seventy percent, reports Energy Intelligence and the Canadian Press. Asian prices hit eight-month highs near thirteen dollars, and global markets are bracing for supply shocks, says Enverus Intelligence Research. US production is steady at one hundred eight billion cubic feet per day, but warmer weather and high storage are keeping things balanced here at home.Heres your actionable takeaway: If youre trading or hedging, watch that key three dollars forty-five level closely. A close above could spark bullish momentum, but below means more downside risk to two dollars sixty-four. Diversify your energy watchlist with these geopolitics in mind, and consider stable suppliers like Canada stepping up for Europe.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe now so you never miss a beat, and join me next time for more on natural gas prices, forecasts, and smart moves. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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91
Natural Gas Dips to Five-Month Lows as Winter Withdrawals Taper and Spring Warmth Looms
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today, were diving into the latest on natural gas prices, storage updates, and what it all means for your wallet and the market.The front-month March NYMEX natural gas futures contract closed at 2.866 dollars per MMBtu on Thursday, February 26th, according to Sprague Energy. Thats after opening lower at 2.828 and dipping to an intraday low of 2.801 before climbing back up. The Chronicle Journal reports Henry Hub spot prices are hovering around 3.13 dollars per MMBtu amid tight inventories. Todays trading shows some volatility, with futures testing levels near 2.77 to 2.85, as milder weather forecasts pressure prices toward five-month lows around 2.82, per CME Group and FXEmpire analysis.Big news from the EIA: they reported a 52 billion cubic feet withdrawal from storage for the week ended February 20th, smaller than the expected 41 billion cubic feet wait, actually above estimates but still leaving working gas at a low 2,018 billion cubic feet, down 0.3 percent from the five-year average. Thats winters final sting from those Arctic blasts, with production rebounding to 110 billion cubic feet per day but inventories lagging.Warmer temps ahead mean less heating demand, keeping prices range-bound between 2.75 and 3.25 dollars. High US production forecasts near record levels are bearish long-term, but watch for late cold snaps or export ramps from new LNG terminals like Golden Pass.Actionable takeaway: If youre budgeting home heating, lock in fixed rates now before spring refill season pushes costs up 12 percent year-over-year. Producers like EQT are thriving, so keep an eye on them for investment plays.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share with a buddy, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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90
Natural Gas Drops to August Lows as Warm Weather and Weak Demand Send Prices Down 35 Percent
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. I'm Vanessa Clark, and today we're diving into what's been happening in the natural gas market as we wrap up February.So here's what's going on right now. Natural gas futures have dropped to around two dollars and eighty-two cents per million BTU today, down about one and a half percent. We're approaching our lowest levels since August, and honestly, the market has been pretty rough lately. Over the past eight trading sessions, we've seen natural gas drop six out of those eight days. Month to date, we're down over thirty-five percent, which is significant.What's driving this downward pressure? A few key factors. First, the Energy Information Administration released their weekly storage report today, and it showed withdrawals were much smaller than normal. Utilities pulled just fifty-two billion cubic feet last week. Compare that to two hundred fifty-two billion cubic feet a year ago, and you can see why traders got nervous. That's well below the five-year average of one hundred sixty-eight billion cubic feet. When withdrawals are smaller, it signals that we're not burning through natural gas the way we should be for this time of year.Second, warm weather forecasts across the western United States are dampening heating demand significantly. With milder temperatures expected through the end of February and into March, demand for natural gas for heating is dropping. This is seasonal pressure, but it's hitting harder than normal right now.Third, production remains strong. Lower forty-eight output is averaging one hundred eight point seven billion cubic feet per day so far in February, actually up from January. So we have plenty of supply and declining demand. That's a recipe for falling prices.Now, where are traders watching for support? Technical analysts are eyeing the two dollar seventy-five level as key support. If prices break below that, the next target sits around two dollars and fifty cents. One analyst I looked at mentioned that the two dollar and eighty-five level has been seeing some activity too, so we could see support bounce around that area before we head lower.The big picture here is that the seasonal dynamics are working against natural gas right now. February is historically a weaker month for prices, and the mild weather patterns we're seeing are extending that weakness. Even though LNG exports remain strong at eighteen point seven billion cubic feet per day, it's not enough to offset the combination of smaller storage withdrawals and warm weather.For anyone watching this market, the key takeaway is that we're in a bearish trend with no clear sign of reversal yet. Traders are fading rallies when they happen, meaning they're selling on any upticks. Unless we get a dramatic weather event or something changes with supply dynamics, we're likely to see continued downward pressure in the coming weeks.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Make sure you subscribe and join us tomorrow for the latest updates on natural gas prices and what's moving the market. I'm Vanessa Clark, and we'll see you next time.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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89
Natural Gas Climbs to $2.96 But Mild Weather and Storage Surplus Keep Bears in Control
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and some smart tips to help you stay ahead.Let's start with the big news: the front-month March NYMEX natural gas futures contract rose one point eight five percent today, settling at two dollars and ninety-six cents per million British thermal units. That's according to Dow Jones Market Data. It snapped a two-day losing streak after dipping to a five-month low of two dollars and ninety-one cents yesterday, as Sprague Energy reports. Strong U.S. exports hit eighteen point seven billion cubic feet per day in February, giving prices a nice lift closer to three dollars, per FX Leaders.But hold on, the outlook stays bearish. Economies.com notes prices surrendered to negative indicators, fluctuating near two dollars and ninety-two cents and eyeing potential drops to two dollars and eighty-one cents or even two dollars and sixty-four cents. Mild weather forecasts across the U.S. are curbing demand, with above-average temps and steady production keeping a lid on gains. Plus, tomorrow's EIA storage report expects just a thirty-eight billion cubic feet withdrawal, way below last year's two hundred sixty-one billion.What does this mean for you? If you're budgeting home heating or eyeing energy stocks, lock in fixed-rate plans now before spring fills storage and eases prices further. Watch that EIA report Thursday morning, it could swing things. High exports mean opportunities for investors in LNG plays too.That's your daily natural gas update, packed with the fresh trading price and key trends. Thanks for tuning in, friends, hit subscribe so you never miss a beat, and join me next time for more. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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88
Gas Prices Thaw Below $3: Why Warmer Weather Has Traders Watching Support Levels
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on natural gas prices, whats driving the market, and some smart tips to help you stay ahead.Right now, the March NYMEX natural gas futures contract closed at 2.985 dollars on Monday, February 23rd, according to Sprague Energy. Thats down from recent highs, with the April contract at 2.921 dollars, as warmer weather forecasts ease heating demand across the US. Economies.com notes the price is testing key support around 3.000 dollars, with bearish waves pushing it lower despite some bullish signals from indicators like stochastic. Energy Intelligence reports US gas futures dipped below 3 dollars for the first time since mid-October, thanks to mild outlooks and storage levels about 2.8 percent below last year per the latest EIA report.Heres the big picture: After a wild January rally from cold snaps and record storage withdrawals of 360 billion cubic feet, production is rebounding to 109.7 billion cubic feet per day. LNG exports hit 20.2 billion cubic feet, near records, but thawing weather and high supply are capping gains. FXEmpire analysis highlights ongoing selling pressure as we roll into the low-demand spring season.For you listeners, heres your actionable takeaway: If youre trading or hedging, watch that 3.000-dollar support closely. A break below could target 2.850 dollars, per Economies.com, so consider protective stops. Homeowners, with prices soft, its a good time to lock in fixed-rate plans before any late cold snaps. Producers might eye bounces near 2.75 dollars for short-term buys, but stay cautious in this bearish setup.Thats your daily natural gas update, packed with the freshest info to keep you informed. Thanks for tuning in, friends, grab that subscribe button, and Ill catch you next time for more on natural gas price tracker trends. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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87
Storm Surge Sends Gas Prices Climbing While Permian Stays Frozen Out
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and some smart tips to help you stay ahead.Right now, the March NYMEX natural gas futures contract is trading around 3.07 to 3.09 dollars per million British thermal units, up a bit from Friday's close of 3.047. That's according to updates from NRG and Reuters, with prices climbing about 1.4 percent today on a powerful winter storm battering the Northeast. Think heavy snow, travel chaos, and spiking demand for heating and power, pushing power burn up to 34.7 billion cubic feet per day in spots like the Southeast and Northeast.Sprague Energy notes it opened higher this morning, buoyed by bullish weather forecasts, while LSEG reports production dipping slightly to 107.6 billion cubic feet per day against tighter supply-demand balances. LNG exports are near records at 18.6 billion cubic feet per day, helping set a price floor even as storage sits 5.6 percent below the five-year average. But watch the Permian Basin, where Waha Hub prices are stuck negative for a record 12th day due to pipeline jams.The big takeaway? This storm-driven pop shows how weather can swing natural gas prices fast, but strong exports to places like Europe and Asia are adding stability. For you at home or in business, hedge your usage now if you're locking in rates, keep an eye on your utility bills during cold snaps, and consider fixed-price contracts to dodge volatility. Analysts see bullish potential if it holds above 3.00, targeting up to 3.45.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with a friend, and catch you tomorrow for more natural gas news. Stay warm out there!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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86
Natural Gas Thaws Out: Why Your Heating Bill Might Finally Catch a Break
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey there, I'm Vanessa Clark, and welcome back to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Thanks so much for tuning in today. I'm really excited to catch you up on what's been happening in the natural gas market this week, and trust me, there's quite a story to tell.So let's jump right in with where natural gas is trading right now. As of today, we're sitting around the three dollar mark per million BTU, which is a significant cooldown from the absolute chaos we experienced just a few weeks ago. We're trading in that three to three point two dollar range, and honestly, it feels almost calm compared to what we've been through.Now, here's the thing everyone's still talking about. Back in January, we had what analysts are calling Winter Storm Fern, which absolutely paralyzed the natural gas market. Prices skyrocketed nearly seventy eight percent in a matter of weeks, jumping from around four dollars and twenty five cents all the way up to seven dollars and fifty eight cents per million BTU. That's the kind of move that makes headlines and affects your heating bill big time.What happened was the extreme cold triggered something called wellhead freeze-offs in major production areas like the Permian and Haynesville basins. Basically, water in the gas lines froze solid and blocked the flow of fuel. At the height of the storm, we lost about fifteen percent of total U.S. natural gas production. That's roughly fifty billion cubic feet per day that just vanished from the market. At the same time, people were pulling record amounts of natural gas from storage to heat their homes, creating this perfect storm of tight supply and surging demand.But there's more to the story than just weather. Analysts are pointing to a structural shift in how we use natural gas now. The massive power requirements for artificial intelligence data centers have created a constant baseline demand that doesn't fluctuate with the seasons like heating does. So when a supply crisis hits, the grid has less room to adjust, which amplifies the volatility.Now for the week ahead, here's what to watch. The EIA recently raised its forecast for U.S. natural gas production this year to just under one hundred ten billion cubic feet per day, up from one hundred eight point eight. That's bearish for prices, meaning more supply typically pushes prices down. We're also seeing higher production activity with natural gas rigs hitting two and a half year highs. Meanwhile, temperatures have actually warmed up recently, so heating demand is easing.If natural gas does rally from these current levels around three dollars, technical analysts expect resistance at three dollars and fifty cents and around the two hundred day moving average. Any rallies that show signs of weakness could be selling opportunities for traders.Here's the takeaway for you. We've moved from crisis mode to stabilization, but the market remains vulnerable to disruptions. Keep an eye on storage levels as we move toward spring and summer, because if we don't replenish storage properly, we could see another price spike down the road.Thanks so much for listening to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Make sure you subscribe and tune in tomorrow when we'll have fresh analysis on where these prices are heading next.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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85
Natural Gas Dips to Four-Month Low as Warm Weather Eases Heating Demand Across the Nation
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, including where it's trading right now and what it means for you.Right now, the March natural gas contract is hovering around 3.01 to 3.10 dollars per million British thermal units at the Henry Hub. It dipped yesterday to a four-month low near 2.92 before bouncing back a bit, closing at 3.011 according to Sprague Energy reports. Economies.com notes it's holding steady above that key 3.00 support level, with a bullish tilt if it builds momentum.What's driving this? Warmer weather across the Midwest and East Coast is easing heating demand, pushing prices down after big inventory withdrawals earlier. NRG's market update points out year-to-date demand is down 4.7 billion cubic feet per day from last year, even with storms like Fern, while supply is up. Tastylive highlights how rising temperatures could reverse those draws, with inventories now below the five-year average. Keep an eye on today's EIA storage report, expected to show a 150 billion cubic feet pull, lining up with the five-year norm.Looking ahead, the trading range could be 2.95 to 3.45, per Economies.com, with potential upside to 3.42 if bulls take control, or downside to 2.85 if support breaks. Longer term, forecasts like Longforecast see averages dipping into the low 3s through spring.Actionable tip: If you're budgeting for home heating or eyeing energy stocks, watch weather apps closely and consider locking in fixed rates now before any cold snap flips the script. Stay flexible, friends.Thanks for tuning in to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Subscribe, share with a buddy, and catch you next time for more updates!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Check out Vanessa Clark's Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Natural Gas Commidity Tracker podcast.For more info go to https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaihttps://www.quietplease.aiOr check out these deals https://amzn.to/3FkjUmwThis show includes AI-generated content.
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