- US natural gas futures rose for a fifth straight session, settling up 0.3% at $2.697/mmbtu on Nymex, erasing earlier losses driven by mild weather forecasts and above-average domestic stockpiles.
- The gains came not from US-specific supply dynamics but from financial contagion: rising oil prices and European natural gas prices from Iran war uncertainty triggered basket inflows into broad energy products, pulling US gas higher alongside them.
- US LNG export terminals are already running near maximum capacity at ~19.9 bcf/day, meaning US gas is relatively insulated from the overseas supply shock in the short run — but financially linked to global energy sentiment regardless.
- Lower-48 dry gas production hit ~110.5 bcf/day Tuesday (+2.5% year-over-year), while total demand came in at ~71.1 bcf/day (+5.1% y/y), with exports to Mexico at ~7.3 bcf/day and gas flows to LNG terminals at ~19.9 bcf/day.
What Happened?
US natural gas futures extended their winning streak to five sessions Tuesday, settling at $2.697/mmbtu despite bearish domestic fundamentals — warmer-than-average temperatures forecast across the Midwest through April 25 and above-average storage levels that would normally weigh on prices. The driver was purely financial: as oil pushed toward $100 a barrel and European natural gas prices rose on uncertainty around US-Iran talks, algorithmic and macro trading flows moved into energy baskets broadly, lifting US gas in tandem. The flip from intraday losses to gains illustrated how completely global geopolitical sentiment is now overriding domestic supply-demand signals in energy markets.
Why It Matters?
The five-day rally in US natural gas is a case study in how the Iran war is distorting energy markets well beyond its direct impact zone. American gas is physically insulated from the Hormuz crisis in the near term — US LNG terminals can’t export more than their current ~19.9 bcf/day capacity regardless of global demand — but the financial linkage through energy ETFs, commodity baskets, and macro positioning means that overseas supply shocks still move US prices. For consumers and businesses that hedge energy costs, this dynamic matters: US gas bills can rise because of a war happening 7,000 miles away, even when domestic supply is abundant. It’s another channel through which the Iran war is transmitting inflationary pressure into the US economy beyond the obvious gasoline price story.
What’s Next?
The trajectory of US natural gas prices from here depends heavily on two variables: whether Iran peace talks produce a ceasefire that takes pressure off global LNG prices, and whether US weather patterns shift in a way that actually generates meaningful domestic demand. With Midwest temperatures running above average through late April, the seasonal heating demand that sometimes supports spring gas prices is absent. If the Iran war drags on and European gas remains elevated, financial inflows may continue to provide a floor under US prices even with soft domestic fundamentals — but a genuine Middle East resolution could quickly reverse those gains and expose the bearish domestic supply picture underneath.
Source: Bloomberg















