Natural gas markets are ending the Christmas Eve session with a familiar late-December personality: thin holiday liquidity on the surface, but big structural forces underneath. On the U.S. side, Henry Hub futures have been whipsawing—first pressured by warmer forecasts, then pulled higher by near-record LNG export demand and a wave of short-covering. In Europe, benchmark gas prices eased as traders weighed a potentially less-severe cold spell against stable Norwegian supply and an LNG system that still looks well-stocked heading into January. Meanwhile, geopolitical and infrastructure headlines—from a halt in Iranian gas flows to Iraq to fresh LNG dealmaking and Russia’s push to field ice-class LNG tankers—are keeping the global gas chessboard busy even as much of the world clocks out for the holidays. [1]
Natural gas price today: Henry Hub steadies in the mid-$4s after a sharp bounce
U.S. natural gas futures jumped during Tuesday’s session, with the NYMEX front-month contract rising about 4% to around $4.105 per mmBtu in early trading, as record-level flows into LNG export terminals helped overpower bearish warmth in near-term weather models. Reuters-reported market data pointed to LNG feedgas (natural gas delivered to liquefaction plants) running near record levels—one of the most important demand pillars for U.S. gas right now. [2]
By Wednesday (Dec. 24), broader pricing indicators showed U.S. natural gas still trading in the mid-$4 per mmBtu range, reflecting a market that’s trying to reconcile three competing truths at once: (1) LNG exports are strong, (2) U.S. output is massive, and (3) winter weather risk can change the narrative in a single model run. [3]
One clean way to see the drama: Tuesday’s settlement delivered a big “relief rally” after prior weakness, with the front month rising 11.17% to settle at $4.4080 (Dow Jones “Data Talk”). [4]
The main driver: record LNG feedgas flows keep demand tight even when forecasts run warm
The standout headline on Dec. 24 is still the same one traders have been repeating all month: LNG export demand is acting like a structural bid under U.S. gas.
Reuters reporting published today cited:
- Average flows to the eight large U.S. LNG export plants at about 18.5 bcfd so far this month (above November’s prior monthly record).
- Daily LNG feedgas tracking near 18.6 bcfd, supported by higher intake at major facilities including Cameron (Louisiana), Freeport (Texas), and Venture Global’s Calcasieu Pass (Louisiana). [5]
At the same time, LSEG projections cited by Reuters showed Lower 48 demand (including exports) expected to rise from about 127.9 bcfd this week to 136.0 bcfd over the next two weeks—a reminder that “demand” now includes a large export engine, not just domestic heating and power burn. [6]
Supply is huge too: record U.S. output keeps the market from running away
The counterweight to the LNG story is supply—and it’s not subtle. Reuters-cited LSEG data put Lower 48 output at roughly 111.1 bcfd in December, a record monthly level and above November’s record pace. That kind of production is why the market can rally hard for a day (or two) and still feel heavy the moment weather turns mild. [7]
On the upstream activity front, Baker Hughes’ latest count—released early due to the holiday—showed U.S. drillers added rigs for the first time in three weeks. Total oil and gas rigs rose to 545, with gas rigs steady at 127 and the overall count still down year-over-year. [8]
EIA storage: the next major catalyst is delayed by the holiday schedule
For U.S. traders, the weekly storage print often acts like a “reality check” on all the weather and flow narratives. The most recent EIA weekly data showed:
- Net withdrawals of 167 Bcf for the week ending Dec. 12
- Working gas in storage at 3,579 Bcf [9]
But the next key report timing is unusually important this week: the EIA’s official holiday schedule shows the weekly storage report release associated with Christmas Day is shifted to Monday, Dec. 29, 2025 at 12:00 p.m. ET (instead of the standard Thursday 10:30 a.m. ET). [10]
That delay can amplify volatility, because positioning builds for longer without the “inventory verdict” traders usually get on schedule.
Europe natural gas today: TTF eases as supply stays healthy and cold risk looks less extreme
European gas markets were softer in holiday-thinned trading as forecasters hinted that a cold spell might fade faster than previously expected. Reuters-reported pricing showed:
- Dutch TTF front-month down to about €27.36/MWh
- UK front-month lower as well, with broader sentiment helped by stable supply [11]
On fundamentals, the same Reuters report highlighted several stabilizers:
- Norwegian pipeline nominations around 343.5 million cubic meters/day (slightly higher day-on-day)
- EU storage last reported around 66.89% full
- A likely holiday slowdown in LNG arrivals, but expectations that January cargo availability remains comfortable [12]
Independent market trackers also continued to show EU benchmark prices near the high-€20s/MWh range on Dec. 24, consistent with the “ample supply, moderated fear premium” tone in Europe’s gas curve. [13]
Middle East shock: Iraq says Iranian gas supplies were halted, knocking out power
Away from price screens, one of the most consequential regional gas headlines is Iraq’s sudden loss of Iranian supply. Iraq’s electricity ministry said gas flows from Iran were halted, and the disruption caused the loss of roughly 4,000–4,500 megawatts from Iraq’s power system. [14]
For global gas markets, the immediate impact is localized (Iraq’s power balance and fuel-switching), but the strategic implication is broader: persistent pipeline instability in key regions tends to keep LNG demand “option value” alive—buyers stay willing to pay for flexibility when security of supply is uncertain.
Global LNG headlines: new supply deals and Russia’s ice-class tanker push
Even on Christmas Eve, LNG deal flow didn’t stop.
Petronas–CNOOC supply agreement: Malaysia’s Petronas said it will supply 1 million metric tons per annum of LNG to China’s CNOOC (via its Singapore trading arm). The companies did not disclose the tenure, but the deal builds on existing cooperation; Petronas also referenced prior LNG agreements with CNOOC and other long-term arrangements signed recently. [15]
Russia’s Arctic LNG logistics: Reuters also reported that tanker group Sovcomflot received the first Russian-built Arc7 ice-class LNG tanker from the Zvezda shipyard, with plans for two more deliveries in 2026. The vessel is expected to support Arctic LNG logistics—an area complicated by sanctions and the specialized nature of ice-capable LNG shipping. [16]
These headlines matter because LNG is increasingly constrained not just by liquefaction capacity, but by contracting, shipping availability, and the political friction that determines who can buy what—and how reliably.
U.S. energy policy angle: offshore wind pause raises the “gas backstop” question again
Reuters also noted that the Trump administration suspended leases for five large offshore wind projects under construction off the U.S. East Coast, citing national security concerns. In pure grid math, fewer renewables coming online (or later than planned) generally increases reliance on dispatchable generation—often natural gas—to meet reliability needs. [17]
That doesn’t automatically mean an immediate gas demand spike (timelines and operational details matter), but it reinforces why many traders now treat gas as the “default balancing fuel” in U.S. power markets.
What to watch next: the catalysts that could move natural gas into year-end
Heading into the final week of 2025, the market’s short list is clear:
The EIA storage report on Dec. 29: a delayed release can trigger sharper-than-usual moves if the withdrawal is meaningfully above or below expectations. [18]
LNG feedgas continuity: the market has been leaning on LNG demand as support. Any unplanned terminal disruptions—or, conversely, another step-up in feedgas—can shift sentiment quickly. [19]
Weather model drift into early January: forecasts were described as mostly warmer-than-normal into early January in the latest Reuters-reported commentary, but winter markets are notorious for flipping when model confidence changes. [20]
Europe’s storage trajectory: EU inventories remain a core “stress gauge,” and prices will stay sensitive to how quickly storage draws accelerate versus how steady Norwegian flows and LNG arrivals remain. [21]
Geopolitical supply reliability: Iraq’s supply interruption is a reminder that gas markets are not just about molecules—they’re about routes, contracts, and politics. [22]
References
1. www.hellenicshippingnews.com, 2. www.hellenicshippingnews.com, 3. tradingeconomics.com, 4. www.morningstar.com, 5. www.hellenicshippingnews.com, 6. www.hellenicshippingnews.com, 7. www.hellenicshippingnews.com, 8. www.reuters.com, 9. www.eia.gov, 10. ir.eia.gov, 11. www.hellenicshippingnews.com, 12. www.hellenicshippingnews.com, 13. tradingeconomics.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.hellenicshippingnews.com, 18. ir.eia.gov, 19. www.hellenicshippingnews.com, 20. www.hellenicshippingnews.com, 21. www.hellenicshippingnews.com, 22. www.reuters.com


