Natural Gas Prices - How Low Can They Go?

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I did this research using AI when I asked the question: 

Can natural gas producers afford to extract gas if price is below 4? 

Whether natural gas producers can afford to extract gas below $4/MMBtu depends on: 

  • Breakeven Price: Most dry gas wells need $2.70-$3.20/MMBtu to be profitable. Some areas, like parts of the Marcellus Shale, can be profitable below $2/MMBtu. NGLs (Natural Gas Liquids): Wells producing wet gas with NGLs have lower breakeven points because NGLs are valuable, like Marcellus wet at $1.77/MMBtu versus dry at $2.43/MMBtu. Associated Gas: In oil-rich regions like the Permian Basin, gas is a byproduct, and extraction is tied to profitable oil production, regardless of gas prices alone. 
  • Existing vs. New Wells: Existing wells have lower breakeven points as initial capital is spent. 
  • Technology: Advances reduce costs, improving profitability at lower prices. 


In essence, some producers can afford it, especially in low-cost basins or when associated gas or NGLs contribute to profitability, while others, particularly those focused on dry gas wells or with higher costs, may struggle. 

According to the chart of the August contract, as long as natural gas remains below $3.40, we do not really know where the low-ball threshold is. 

In November 2024, the contract traded as low as $2.97 before buyers showed up. 

That turned out to be a spectacular rally up to $5.26 this past March. 

So, I believe we are close to a bottom, which is why I am writing this daily. 

For more insight, let’s look at UNG, the ETF for Natural Gas.  

 

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Have you seen the chart of Utilities XLU

It is trading at all-time highs. 

There is a growing demand for electricity from data centers, EVs and onshore manufacturing. YET 

Energy prices are weak. Utility companies are often regulated, allowing them to pass on certain costs, including fuel costs, to consumers. 

This pricing power can help them maintain profitability even when facing fluctuations in energy prices.  

For a while. 

The UNG chart shows an island bottom (circled). So while we look at the underlying futures price that does not have the same technical pattern, we pay attention. 

Last Friday the price cleared the July 6-month calendar range high (blue arrow). 

Monday, the gap lower negated that strength. 

However, until or unless UNG breaks below the island bottom low, dips do not scare me. 

In fact, we will be watching for a move over Monday’s high as a reliable indication, natural gas is overdone to the downside. 

One last note from the weekend Daily and IWM. 

“We now have a year of resistance at both calendar ranges.  

The longer the resistance, the more powerful it is once it clears.” 

It has yet to clear. 


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Disclaimer: The information provided by us is for educational and informational purposes. This information is based on our trading experience and beliefs. The information on this website is not ...

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Jake L. Monroe 1 month ago Member's comment
Under $13 for sure
Alexis Renault 1 month ago Member's comment
Why?
Jake L. Monroe 1 month ago Member's comment
We are in drilling override mode. Drill‑and‑development costs can now be fully deducted in the year incurred (called intangible drilling costs), even for companies subject to the 15 % Corporate Alternative Minimum Tax
George Lipton 1 month ago Member's comment
Yes. Effectively, some drillers may zero out federal tax liability on new wells—estimated to save the industry over $1 billion across a decade.
Duanne Johnson 1 month ago Member's comment
thx… what about the heat dome across the country? Also just plain oversold imo.