Natural Gas - Futures (NATGAS-F) is up 2.06% at Jun 24 06:35(ET), now at $3.213, with a 7-day up of 2.06%.

US natural gas futures advanced as market participants repositioned ahead of the upcoming weekly Energy Information Administration storage report. The recovery followed a previous-session pullback driven by localized cooler weather in the Mid-Atlantic. Anticipation of a relatively small storage injection for the week ending June 19 provided near-term support. Analysts expect a build that falls well short of both the five-year average and last year's large injection for the same week, signaling a gradual narrowing of the existing domestic storage surplus and a tightening market balance.
Underlying physical demand remains robust, driven by expectations of lingering summer heat across major consuming regions heading into early July. This persistent warmth is projected to keep power sector utilization elevated as utilities burn more natural gas to meet air-conditioning loads. Simultaneously, natural gas feedgas flows to US liquefied natural gas export terminals have shown signs of recovery, climbing to over 17 Bcf/d. The resumption of stronger export demand helps offset regional demand fluctuations and helps absorb excess domestic dry gas production, which has hovered around 109.7 Bcf/d.
On a structural level, the North American natural gas market continues to find medium-term support from international supply constraints. Significant geopolitical disruptions in the Middle East, including extensive damage to Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG export terminal and maritime transit issues in the Strait of Hormuz, have severely curtailed global LNG availability. These international bottlenecks have reinforced expectations for sustained, long-term foreign demand for US natural gas exports, keeping global price premiums elevated and limiting the downside risk for domestic futures despite comfortable current stockpiles.

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