Today: 23 June 2026
Natural Gas Price Today Slips Near $2.67 as Storage Cushion Blunts LNG Demand Boost
21 April 2026
2 mins read

Natural Gas Price Today Slips Near $2.67 as Storage Cushion Blunts LNG Demand Boost

NEW YORK, April 21, 2026, 06:43 EDT

  • U.S. natural gas futures hovered close to $2.67 per million British thermal units, following a Monday close at $2.689.
  • Storage is still running higher than usual for this point in the year, which keeps a lid on the effect of colder weather showing up in forecasts.
  • LNG exports continue to offer some support, though U.S. terminals don’t have much room left to take in additional gas.

U.S. natural gas slipped in early trading Tuesday, trimming a portion of its gains from the past four sessions. Traders digested cooler weather projections but kept an eye on robust storage levels. Front-month futures hovered near $2.67 per million British thermal units—down from $2.689 at the last close. The price, measured in mmBtu, reflects a standard heat content in the gas market.

This shift stands out right now, with the market deep in the spring “shoulder season”—mild temperatures are dampening both heating and cooling demand. Each adjustment to late-April and early-May forecasts is having a bigger impact than usual, yet it hasn’t been sufficient to push prices out of the low-$2 territory.

Natural gas notched a fourth consecutive advance Monday, lifted by chillier outlooks that boosted near-term heating demand expectations. The May Nymex contract tacked on 1.5 cents, or 0.56%, in the session, according to Barchart. Commodity Weather Group flagged colder-than-normal readings for the West between April 25-29, then shifting to the eastern U.S. from April 30 through May 4.

Storage remains the ceiling here. As of April 10, the U.S. Energy Information Administration reported 1,970 billion cubic feet of working gas in storage, a weekly build of 59 Bcf. That’s now 108 Bcf over the five-year average.

The EIA’s April outlook had a soft tone on U.S. prices. Inventories wrapped up the November through March withdrawal period sitting roughly 3% above the five-year average, the agency said. Looking ahead, EIA expects injections will come in higher than usual, projecting end-October stocks at 4,015 Bcf—about 6% above the five-year mark.

The export story still favors bulls, though it’s a bit messy. According to the EIA, U.S. LNG plants in March pushed out nearly 18 Bcf a day—basically matching the record from December 2025. That’s pretty much maxed out; LNG, the chilled and liquefied kind, ships by tanker. With plants running hot, the agency noted there’s not much room left to bump up export volumes.

Signals in the cash market aren’t lining up. “Relatively weak physical gas pricing in Texas” and an expected boost in Permian supply are shaping the current landscape, according to EBW Analytics Group’s Eli Rubin, as cited by Natural Gas Intelligence. On Monday, NGI noted, the May Nymex contract closed at $2.689—the fourth consecutive session in the green. naturalgasintel.com

Signals are mixed across peer markets. Brent crude edged lower Tuesday, with traders weighing prospects for U.S.-Iran negotiations. Over in Europe, gas stayed jumpy, caught between Hormuz shipping threats and LNG tanker shifts—highlighting that U.S. Henry Hub prices can stay walled off from global jitters when export terminals are maxed out.

Weather remains the wild card for bears. If temperatures plunge into early May, or if heat ramps up demand from the power sector sooner than expected, shorts might get squeezed and prices could snap back toward Monday’s highs. On the flip side, if forecasts stay mild, oil-driven gas production holds up, and storage swells again, the front-month contract stays under the gun.

Natural gas holds up, showing support but little sign of panic. LNG demand’s there, sure, but it’s storage numbers driving the narrative.

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the founder and CEO of TS2 Space, a satellite communications company serving customers around the world. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he has more than two decades of experience in telecommunications, satellite services and technology ventures. He writes about satellite communications, space technology, artificial intelligence and the stock market, with a particular focus on technology companies, semiconductors, emerging industries and the trends shaping global innovation.

Stock Market Today

  • Tech Sell-Off Pulls S&P 500 Lower as Chip Stocks Tumble Globally
    June 23, 2026, 10:53 AM EDT. The S&P 500 fell 0.8% amid a tech sector sell-off intensified by plunging memory chip stocks, including SK Hynix (-12%), Micron (-11%), and Sandisk (-12%). The Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.2%, pressured by Alphabet's decline. Asian markets also suffered, with South Korea's Kospi down nearly 10% and Japan's Nikkei 225 falling 3.55%. Defensive stocks like Walmart, P&G, and Johnson & Johnson, plus IBM (up 4% after JPMorgan upgrade), limited losses in U.S. markets. Semiconductor ETFs VanEck SMH and State Street XLK plunged 6% and 3%, respectively. Market watchers, including Morgan Stanley's Andrew Slimmon, attribute sharp sell-offs to crowded AI momentum trades as investors adjust positions.

Latest articles

Oriental Rise Soars on Reverse Split, Nasdaq Issue Remains

Oriental Rise Soars on Reverse Split, Nasdaq Issue Remains

23 June 2026
Oriental Rise shares jumped as much as 93% after a 1-for-4 reverse split took effect, aiming to meet Nasdaq’s $1 minimum bid rule following an April delisting notice, but the stock later gave back much of its spike as the move only changes share count and price, not the company’s declining revenue or listing risk.
Oil Price Today: Brent Drops Below $95 as U.S.-Iran Talks Test the Market’s Biggest Risk
Previous Story

Oil Price Today: Brent Drops Below $95 as U.S.-Iran Talks Test the Market’s Biggest Risk

Amazon to Invest Up to $25 Billion More in Anthropic as Claude Maker Commits $100 Billion to AWS
Next Story

Amazon to Invest Up to $25 Billion More in Anthropic as Claude Maker Commits $100 Billion to AWS

Go toTop