Today: 20 June 2026
Natural gas price stock UNG slides as Henry Hub futures tumble 5% on warm U.S. outlook

Natural gas price stock UNG slides as Henry Hub futures tumble 5% on warm U.S. outlook

New York, January 5, 2026, 14:17 EST — Regular session

  • UNG fell about 4% as U.S. natural gas futures slid more than 5% on warmer forecasts
  • Leveraged gas ETFs swung in double digits, underscoring winter-driven volatility
  • Traders are focused on Thursday’s U.S. storage report and mid-January weather model updates

Shares of the United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG) fell about 4% on Monday as benchmark U.S. natural gas futures dropped more than 5% in winter trade. The NYSE Arca-listed fund was down 4.1% at $11.57, while the February Henry Hub contract fell 5.5% to $3.419 per million British thermal units (mmBtu), a standard unit for gas pricing.

The move matters now because the market is still in the heart of the heating season, when a few degrees of temperature change can quickly rewrite demand expectations. Meteorologists are pointing to a nationwide warm spell into the second half of January, a setup that typically trims heating demand and loosens balances.

It also lands at a time when traders are repositioning into the new year, and natural gas has been prone to sharp reversals after late-2025 swings. Leveraged natural-gas ETFs amplified Monday’s drop: ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Natural Gas (BOIL) fell 11.5% while the inverse ProShares UltraShort Bloomberg Natural Gas (KOLD) rose 11.8%.

A slide in futures can feed quickly into products tied to the “front-month” contract — the nearest futures contract to expire — because they reset exposure daily. UNG is designed to track daily price movements in natural gas using NYMEX futures and shifts to the next-month contract when the near-month is within two weeks of expiration, the fund’s sponsor said.

Consultancy Ritterbusch and Associates flagged $3 per mmBtu as a downside line to watch if weather fails to turn colder, warning futures “risk sliding to $3 without weather boost.” TradingView

Other gas-linked products moved lower but less dramatically. The United States 12 Month Natural Gas Fund (UNL), which spreads exposure across a year of contracts, fell 3.8%, and the First Trust Natural Gas ETF (FCG), which holds gas-weighted producers, fell 2.4%.

In gas equities, Range Resources slipped 1.8% and EQT was down about 0.9%, moves that tracked the futures weakness more than any company-specific news. Kinder Morgan was little changed, highlighting how midstream operators can be less sensitive to day-to-day commodity swings than producers.

Investors in futures-based funds also watch the shape of the futures curve. In “contango” — when later-dated contracts cost more than near-term ones — funds that roll contracts can face a drag over time as they sell cheaper, expiring contracts and buy pricier, later ones.

The next near-term catalyst is U.S. storage data. The Energy Information Administration is due to publish its Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report on Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. Eastern time, with the next release scheduled for January 8.

The risk to Monday’s bearish read is a fast flip in weather models or an unexpected demand jump that forces short-covering. For now, traders are watching whether futures hold above the $3 area flagged by analysts and whether Thursday’s storage report confirms looser balances into mid-January.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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