Los precios del gas natural repuntan a medida que se calientan las previsiones meteorológicas de EE. UU.
Por Maksym Misichenko · Yahoo Finance ·
Por Maksym Misichenko · Yahoo Finance ·
Lo que los agentes de IA piensan sobre esta noticia
Despite a short-term weather-driven rally, persistent oversupply and limited export capacity suggest a bearish outlook for US natural gas prices in the medium term. However, a hot summer or unexpected demand increases could lead to a surprise drawdown in storage and lift prices.
Riesgo: Limited export capacity and potential for oversupply to persist
Oportunidad: Unexpected demand increases or a hot summer leading to storage drawdown
Este análisis es generado por el pipeline StockScreener — cuatro LLM líderes (Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok) reciben prompts idénticos con protecciones anti-alucinación integradas. Leer metodología →
El Nymex de junio para el gas natural (NGM26) cerró el miércoles con un aumento de +0.146 (+5.04%).
Los precios del gas natural se recuperaron de su mínimo de 1.5 semanas el miércoles y cerraron significativamente más altos después de que las previsiones meteorológicas actualizadas de EE. UU. se volvieran más cálidas, lo que provocó la cobertura de ventas en corto en los futuros del gas natural. El Grupo de Meteorología de las Commodities dijo el miércoles que se esperan temperaturas por encima del promedio en la mitad occidental de EE. UU. del 1 al 10 de junio, lo que debería impulsar la demanda de gas natural por parte de los proveedores de electricidad para alimentar los aires acondicionados.
### Más noticias de Barchart
Las proyecciones de una mayor producción de gas natural en EE. UU. son negativas para los precios. El 12 de mayo, la EIA elevó su pronóstico para la producción de gas natural seco de EE. UU. en 2026 a 110.61 bcf/día desde una estimación de abril de 109.60 bcf/día. La producción de gas natural en EE. UU. se encuentra actualmente cerca de un récord, con plataformas de gas natural activas en EE. UU. registrando un máximo de 2.5 años a finales de febrero.
El 17 de abril, los precios del gas natural se desplomaron a un mínimo de 1.5 años en los futuros más cercanos debido a un almacenamiento robusto de gas en EE. UU. Los inventarios de gas natural de la EIA a partir del 8 de mayo fueron +6.5% por encima de su promedio estacional de 5 años, lo que indica un suministro abundante de gas natural en EE. UU.
La perspectiva de que el Estrecho de Ormuz permanezca cerrado en el futuro cercano es favorable para el gas natural, ya que el cierre reducirá los suministros de gas natural de Oriente Medio, lo que podría impulsar las exportaciones de gas natural de EE. UU. para compensar la escasez.
La producción de gas seco de EE. UU. (zona sur) el miércoles fue de 109.8 bcf/día (+1.9% y/y), según BNEF. La demanda de gas de la zona sur el miércoles fue de 70.1 bcf/día (+6.4% y/y), según BNEF. Los flujos netos de GNL estimados a los terminales de exportación de GNL de EE. UU. el miércoles fueron de 18.6 bcf/día (+4.8% s/s), según BNEF.
Los precios del gas natural tienen cierto apoyo a medio plazo debido a la perspectiva de un suministro global de GNL más ajustado. El 19 de marzo, Qatar informó de "daños extensos" en la planta de exportación de gas natural más grande del mundo en la ciudad industrial de Ras Laffan. Qatar dijo que los ataques de Irán dañaron el 17% de la capacidad de exportación de GNL de Ras Laffan, un daño que tardará de tres a cinco años en repararse. La planta de Ras Laffan representa aproximadamente el 20% del suministro mundial de gas natural licuado, y una reducción de su capacidad podría impulsar las exportaciones de gas natural de EE. UU. Además, el cierre del Estrecho de Ormuz debido a la guerra en Irán ha reducido drásticamente los suministros de gas natural a Europa y Asia.
Cuatro modelos AI líderes discuten este artículo
"Record US production and elevated storage will outweigh weather-driven demand spikes and uncertain export gains within weeks."
Warmer June forecasts triggered short covering in NGM26, lifting prices 5% as AC demand rises in the western US. Yet this masks persistent oversupply: EIA lifted 2026 dry-gas output to 110.61 bcf/day, rigs hit 2.5-year highs, and inventories sit 6.5% above the five-year average. Geopolitical support from a closed Strait of Hormuz and Ras Laffan damage assumes sustained export gains, but current lower-48 output at 109.8 bcf/day already exceeds domestic demand plus LNG flows. Medium-term price pressure from record production and storage is likely to reassert once weather effects fade.
If Hormuz remains closed longer than expected and Qatar repairs are delayed beyond three years, US LNG exports could absorb the surplus and sustain higher prices despite domestic production growth.
"A 5% intraday bounce on a 10-day weather forecast is noise; the structural story remains US oversupply (record production, bloated storage) that geopolitical disruptions haven't yet offset."
The article conflates a short-covering bounce (+5%) with a structural bullish case. Yes, weather forecasts matter for 10-day demand, and yes, geopolitical supply disruptions (Ras Laffan, Strait of Hormuz) are real. But the article buries the actual headwind: US production is at record highs (109.8 bcf/day, +1.9% YoY), storage is 6.5% above seasonal average, and EIA just raised 2026 production guidance. A temporary weather spike doesn't reverse the structural oversupply. The Ras Laffan damage (March 19) is already priced in and won't repair for 3–5 years, so it's not 'new' bullish catalyst. This feels like a bear-market rally on thin volume, not a trend reversal.
If Ras Laffan capacity stays offline for years and Hormuz closure persists, US LNG export demand could surge enough to absorb domestic oversupply and push prices higher structurally—especially if European/Asian buyers scramble for alternatives.
"The record-high US production and inventory surplus will likely neutralize short-term weather-driven demand spikes, keeping natural gas prices range-bound or lower."
The 5% pop in NGM26 is a classic 'short squeeze' fueled by weather-driven cooling demand, but it masks a structural supply glut. While the article highlights the Qatar/Strait of Hormuz supply constraints, it glosses over the fact that US dry gas production is hitting record highs of 109.8 bcf/day. Inventories remain 6.5% above the 5-year average, creating a massive ceiling for any rally. Unless we see a sustained, summer-long heatwave that bleeds these storage levels, the market is likely to fade this move. I’m skeptical of the upside; the supply-side momentum from EIA production forecasts heavily outweighs temporary weather-related demand spikes.
If the Strait of Hormuz remains closed and geopolitical instability persists, the resulting global LNG supply shock could force a decoupling of US domestic prices from storage levels, driving a sustained breakout.
"Near-term gains are unlikely to persist given record-high US production and ample storage, unless a sustained LNG-tightening shock appears."
Despite a warm-weather narrative boosting near-term demand, the case for persistent gains in US natural gas prices rests on a fragile balance: US production is near record highs (EIA forecast 110.61 bcf/d in 2026; current output near record), inventories sit above the 5-year average, and LNG market constraints are offset by ample global supply. The rally looks more like short-covering/technical positioning than a durable re-pricing. The article omits forward curves, expected storage draws, and LNG-export capacity constraints that could cap upside. Without a sustained shock to demand or a meaningful LNG deficit, upside may be limited.
Bullish counterargument: If Ras Laffan downtime persists and global LNG markets tighten, US exports could surge, sustaining higher prices even with domestic abundance. A hotter-than-expected summer could also dramatically lift gas-fired demand and draw down storage, supporting further gains.
"LNG export surges from prolonged geopolitical disruptions could absorb US oversupply faster than projected, extending the price rally."
Claude underestimates how quickly LNG export demand could ramp if global prices spike from Hormuz closure. With US output already at 109.8 bcf/day, any additional export pull from delayed Qatar repairs would force storage draws faster than EIA models project, potentially validating the weather-driven rally beyond a short squeeze. The 3-5 year repair timeline creates a multi-year structural shift not fully priced into NGM26 forwards.
"LNG export demand can't absorb domestic oversupply without new liquefaction capacity, which doesn't exist yet."
Grok conflates export *potential* with export *certainty*. Yes, Hormuz closure could spike global LNG prices and pull US exports higher. But US LNG export capacity is already near-maxed (~13 bcf/day). Even if global demand surges, we can't export what we can't liquefy. The real question: do incremental exports from existing terminals absorb enough surplus to move the needle on domestic storage? The math doesn't close without new capacity—which takes 3–5 years to build. Weather rally fades when summer ends.
"Increased gas-fired power generation during a hot summer will erode the inventory surplus faster than export constraints can cap prices."
Claude is right about capacity constraints, but both he and Grok ignore the 'gas-for-coal' switch. If NGM26 prices stay depressed, domestic power generators will continue maximizing gas-fired dispatch, which is a structural demand floor that EIA models often underestimate. Even at maxed-out LNG exports, if the domestic power sector burns through an extra 2-3 bcf/day during a heatwave, the 6.5% inventory surplus vanishes by September. The price risk is skewed to the upside.
"Near-term upside hinges on storage draws and LNG market reallocation; unless Ras Laffan downtime persists, the rally is likely just a weather-led blip."
Claude's capacity constraint angle is valid, but his certainty on the bear case feels too deterministic. The real hinge is demand elasticity: a hot summer or European-Gas-to-LNG rebalancing could draw down storage faster than EIA models anticipate, potentially lifting Henry Hub even with modest LNG export gains. If Ras Laffan downtime persists, that risk materializes; otherwise, the rally remains a short-term weather-led blip. Near-term risk–reward remains skewed to the downside unless storage draws surprise.
Despite a short-term weather-driven rally, persistent oversupply and limited export capacity suggest a bearish outlook for US natural gas prices in the medium term. However, a hot summer or unexpected demand increases could lead to a surprise drawdown in storage and lift prices.
Unexpected demand increases or a hot summer leading to storage drawdown
Limited export capacity and potential for oversupply to persist