Natural Gas (NATGAS) is up 2.66% at Jul 8 04:30(ET), now at $3.283, with a 7-day up of 4.22%.

US natural gas futures rose to their highest level in over a week, driven by a combination of falling domestic production, stronger export demand, and geopolitical ripples in the global energy market. This upward momentum has allowed the commodity to break above a descending trendline that had capped prices since late June, attracting fresh technical buying interest from institutional market participants.
The primary catalyst on the supply side is a visible pullback in domestic dry gas production. Output in the Lower 48 states declined to around 109.4 billion cubic feet per day in early July, down from the June average of 110.0 billion cubic feet per day. This tightening of physical supply helped offset a previously bearish storage overhang, where domestic stockpiles had hovered more than six percent above the historical five-year average.
Simultaneously, demand expectations have received a dual boost. On the domestic front, speculative positioning was supported by recent intense heatwaves across the southern and western United States, which drove a massive surge in power burn as generators scrambled to meet air-conditioning needs. Although some weather models project a temporary moderation in temperatures for the eastern half of the country, long-range forecasts continue to point toward widespread, above-normal heat for the back half of July, maintaining expectations of tight near-term power sector demand.
On the export front, demand for liquefied natural gas has shown robust recovery. Daily flows to major domestic LNG export terminals climbed to an average of 18.1 billion cubic feet per day so far in July, up from 17.4 billion cubic feet per day in June.
Adding to the bullish sentiment is a sharp geopolitical risk premium stemming from international developments. A recent attack on a Qatari LNG carrier in the Strait of Hormuz drove European natural gas prices to a three-week high. Because European storage facilities remain well below their typical seasonal average for this time of year, disruption risks in the Persian Gulf have triggered concerns that European buyers will be forced to compete aggressively for Atlantic-basin cargoes, potentially pulling more US LNG volumes overseas and tightening the domestic market balance.
While structural headwinds—such as high overall inventory levels and projections of a strong El Niño pattern suppressing winter heating demand—remain key risks monitored by investors, the immediate combination of lower daily output, persistent midsummer heat, and heightened geopolitical risk has shifted the short-term balance firmly in favor of bulls.
Technically, Natural Gas (NATGAS) shows a MACD (12,26,9) value of -0.004, indicating a neutral signal. The RSI at 58.194 suggests neutral condition and the Williams %R at 27.835 suggests buy condition. Please monitor closely.

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