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Martin Tillier

Martin Tillier

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3 Reasons Natural Gas Is Heading A Lot Higher

Commodity pricing is a complex thing, with a whole host of things affecting the price at which buyers and sellers transact, but almost all of those things fall into one of three categories; the fundamental, the political and the technical. These three things are often in conflict, but when they all point to the same thing a major, sustained move is coming. That is the case right now with U.S. natural gas and the resulting move could easily push prices to levels not seen for years.

Supply & Demand Fundamentals

Commodity specific fundamental factors such as supply and demand are the most influential thing on price. The basic economic theory of pricing tells us that, but it also suggests that the market will automatically adjust to changing conditions. When demand outstrips supply, for example, prices rise which slows demand and the higher price makes additional marginal production profitable, increasing supply. Those two things rebalance the market and price returns to the mean. After a big drop in natural gas a couple of years ago the market is now in the process of rebalancing, but a few things suggest that the pace of that change is increasing and some overshoot now looks inevitable.

Firstly what was, until recently, a closed market is opening up. Exporting natural gas from the U.S. has never been a practical proposition, given that the country has always used more than it produced. A combination of high oil prices a few years ago and the fracking revolution changed all that though, and the move to export began. Building new liquefaction and export terminals takes time though and the first wave are now coming on line. According to the EIA America will have the capacity to export 40% of its production by 2020, up from zero just a short while ago.

(Click to enlarge) Related: U.S. Shale Spending Dwarfs Competition: Grows 10 Times Faster

The lack of export capacity as production increased has had a serious effect on North American prices, as the Federal Energy Commission graphic below shows. The price differential makes it obvious that if U.S. producers get access to overseas markets they will export, at least up to the point where the U.S. price catches up, and that is where politics comes in.

Politics

Second in direct influence is politics, both domestic and international. Changes to the legal and regulatory environment in producing countries as well as geopolitical concerns that have the potential to affect either side of the supply/demand equation can cause major moves in price.

One might expect that the Trump administration’s determination to open up Federal lands for drilling and reduce environmental protections associated with oil and gas production would be a negative for gas prices by increasing supply but the opposite is true. That may be the case for oil, but for natural gas greater pipeline capacity and faster, easier approval of export facilities will more than offset that.

Similarly the belief that less of a focus on greenhouse gas emissions and a coal-friendly administration will reverse the demand increases that there have been for gas over the last few years ignores some basic facts. The main drivers of that growth have been power plants that have switched to natural gas as their fuel. Those changes cannot be reversed in a hurry. Even if they could it would make no sense. The current administration is not going to force utilities to switch to coal fired stations but there is every chance that a future one would mandate closing them.

Technical Factors

Usually technical analysis is useful only to predict short term moves but sometimes a longer term trend can be clearly seen.

(Click to enlarge)

(Click to enlarge)  Related: Can Tesla’s Solar Roof Smash The Competition?

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The two charts above show U.S. natural gas futures prices for the last 6 months (top) and the last 3 years (bottom). As you can see in both cases the current price is in the bottom half of a clearly defined upward channel. Natural gas has been volatile recently, so technical analysis can only be relied upon so much, but the basic, long term trend is definitely bullish.

In short then all three major influences on natural gas are suggesting a move higher, and when that happens, even a natural contrarian such as me has to sit up and take notice. There will no doubt be some bumps on the road as that is the nature of markets, but over the next six months to a year a return to natural gas prices nudging at the $5 mark certainly looks on the cards.

By Martin Tillier of Oilprice.com

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  • GregS on May 12 2017 said:
    Australia just learned this lesson when they woke up one morning and found out they were exporting so much gas that there was not enough for domestic use.
    That being said, the price spikes will just drive more people to solar panels, so maybe it will be a good thing in the long run.
  • DK on May 12 2017 said:
    Yah Greg, I guess dem ole solar panels operate on cloudless days and keep you from freezing to death. Give em a try.
  • Douglas Houck on May 12 2017 said:
    Here is another cheery article about how the US Natural Gas industry is going to export a lot of LNG just because they have decided to build a bunch of LNG plants and have the capacity to produce more natural gas than the US market can absorb, and everything is going to be good.

    If the price of natural gas goes to $5 MMBtu it simply means that it can't compete against the current LNG Estimated Landing price is ~$5.50 as shown in the articles own graph. The US LNG industries have pitched a LNG price of $8 for future American LNG, which is still way overpriced on the world market.

    Something doesn't add up, but I'm probably missing something. :-)
  • James Rose on May 13 2017 said:
    Great article Martin. Just the clear thinking on Nat Gas I was looking for.
  • Tom Hewett on May 18 2017 said:
    No mention of rig count? It's already doubled in the past year. Supply is headed up, price pressure will follow
    .
  • RS on May 18 2017 said:
    I see a fairly balanced market.
    Increasing production.
    Increasing export.
    Narrowing the gap to 5 Yr Avg over the summer.
    Barring something crazy the prices will be around here inching towards higher pre winter.
    Only crazy thing that happens in with US E&P sector is more producers will overproduce even if they are going bankrupt.

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