Natural Gas - Futures (NATGAS-F) is down 2.01% at Jul 6 00:10(ET), now at $3.172, with a 7-day up of 0.25%.

US natural gas futures faced downward pressure as the market responded to a combination of bearish domestic storage data, highly resilient supply, and shifting weather models that together offset the impact of seasonal summer heat.
The primary catalyst driving negative sentiment remains the aftermath of the U.S. Energy Information Administration's weekly inventory report. The data revealed a larger-than-expected injection of 87 billion cubic feet into underground storage, notably surpassing market expectations. This heavy build pushed total domestic stockpiles to more than six percent above the five-year historical average, reassuring market participants of comfortable supply buffers and capping immediate upside potential for prices.
This inventory build is heavily sustained by resilient domestic production. Dry natural gas output in the Lower 48 states has remained exceptionally strong, averaging near 110 to 111.7 billion cubic feet per day. High levels of associated gas production—driven by robust crude oil drilling activity in major basins like the Permian—have kept the domestic market well-supplied and reinforced the persistent storage overhang.
On the demand side, recent updates to short-term meteorological models contributed to the price decline. Weather forecasters adjusted their near-term outlooks to show cooling and moderating temperatures across the eastern two-thirds of the United States. This expected drop in cooling degree days is projected to curb electricity demand for air conditioning, stripping out the weather-driven demand premium that had previously supported prices.
Simultaneously, broader energy complex weakness, highlighted by sliding global crude oil prices, exerted a sympathetic downward drag on natural gas contracts. This combination of a looser near-term supply-demand balance and broader macroeconomic energy weakness ultimately prompted long liquidations and speculative selling by institutional investors, leading to a breakdown below key technical support levels. While long-term structural demand tailwinds from data centers and expanding export terminals continue to build, the current oversupplied spot market and softer mid-July weather outlook keep near-term pricing expectations firmly anchored.

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