Key Takeaways: U.S. natural gas futures slid to $3.22 as above-average storage levels and adequate supply overwhelmed weather-driven demand hopes.
Key Takeaways: U.S. natural gas futures slid to $3.22 as above-average storage levels and adequate supply overwhelmed weather-driven demand hopes.

U.S. natural gas futures fell 1.3% to settle at $3.22 per million British thermal units on Wednesday, as ample domestic supply and storage levels well above the five-year average suppressed any weather-driven rally attempts.
The divergence from the broader energy complex was stark. Brent crude surged 6.69% to $79.12 a barrel, and West Texas Intermediate rose 5.92% to $74.61, after the collapse of a U.S.-Iran ceasefire reignited supply concerns in the Middle East. Natural gas, however, moved lower, weighed down by domestic fundamentals that have insulated the fuel from the geopolitical premium driving oil.
Storage levels stood at roughly 3.2 trillion cubic feet as of the most recent EIA report, about 12% above the five-year average for this time of year. The surplus has persisted even as seasonal heat arrived across parts of the southern U.S., because mild temperatures in the Midwest and Northeast limited overall cooling demand. The EIA's weekly storage update, due Thursday, is expected to show another above-average injection, according to a Bloomberg survey of analysts.
The last time natural gas traded above $4 was in late May, when a brief heat wave across Texas pushed cooling demand higher. Prices have since retreated more than 20% as the weather pattern normalized and production from the Permian Basin and Appalachia remained steady at around 105 billion cubic feet per day, according to S&P Global Commodity Insights data. The current price of $3.22 is roughly in line with where futures traded in early June, before a brief spike that proved unsustainable.
On the supply side, dry gas production has averaged 104.5 billion cubic feet per day through the first half of 2026, up about 2% from the same period last year, driven by efficiency gains in the Permian and Haynesville shales. The steady output has kept storage injections running above the five-year pace even as the number of active drilling rigs has declined, reflecting improved well productivity rather than new capacity additions.
The disconnect between crude and natural gas highlights how different supply dynamics shape each market. While oil prices now reflect a risk premium tied to potential disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz — through which about 20% of global crude flows — natural gas remains a domestically driven market in the U.S., with ample pipeline capacity and storage acting as a ceiling on prices. The Henry Hub benchmark has traded in a range of roughly $2.80 to $4.20 over the past 12 months, with the upper end of that band tested only during periods of extreme weather.
For natural gas to stage a sustained rally, traders would need to see either a prolonged heat wave that draws down storage inventories or a supply disruption from freeze-offs during winter. Neither scenario is currently reflected in forward curves, with futures for the balance of summer trading around $3.10 to $3.30. The market is also watching for any shifts in LNG export demand, as U.S. terminals continue to operate near capacity, sending roughly 13 billion cubic feet per day to overseas buyers, according to the EIA.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.