Natural Gas Price Forecast: NG=F at $4.42 on LNG Record, Targeting $4.70 Winter Test

Natural Gas Price Forecast: NG=F at $4.42 on LNG Record, Targeting $4.70 Winter Test

Record 18.6 Bcf/d LNG and Henry Hub at $4.42 keep NG=F in a $3.80–$4.80 band into early 2026 | That's TradingNEWS

TradingNEWS Archive 12/23/2025 9:00:04 PM
Commodities NATURAL GAS NG=F

Natural Gas (NG=F) Spikes Back Above $4.40 Into Christmas Week

Front-month Natural Gas (NG=F) has ripped higher into the Christmas week, with January futures around $4.37–$4.43 per MMBtu and intraday gains of about 10–12%. NGI’s MidDay Alert shows January up $0.409 to roughly $4.374, while another live board prints Natural Gas at $4.425, up $0.460 or about 11.6%. The move comes after several sessions of choppy trade where warm weather and weak cash markets drove prices under $4.00 before aggressive short-covering reversed the slide. The latest leg higher followed a clean break above the $4.218 resistance area that had capped prices and forced shorts to cover in thin holiday liquidity, pushing NG=F back into the upper part of its recent range.

Volatility Profile: From $10 Winter Spikes to a $2.50–$5.00 Trading Channel

The NGI Henry Hub chart over the past year shows a textbook high-beta Natural Gas (NG=F) tape. Prices spiked near $10/MMBtu in early 2025 during a winter squeeze, then collapsed into a $2.50–$4.00 band through most of the summer. Into November, futures punched back above $5.00 before easing again in December as warmth erased part of the weather premium. Day-to-day NGI commentary over the last week tracks the same pattern in micro: late-December warmth “sidelines bulls” and pushes futures lower, oversold conditions trigger rebounds, a bearish storage miss sparks another selloff, then bulls “probe the upside” as the market attempts to correct an overshoot below $4.00. The current surge above $4.30 is just the latest in a series of fast squeezes layered onto a broader $3.00–$5.00 channel.

Weather Shift: Late-December Cold Adds Risk Premium but January Still Looks Soft

The FXEmpire analysis pins the latest rally on a shift in weather expectations rather than a structural demand shock. Fresh model runs added colder late-December air for the U.S. East Coast, raising heating degree days and undercutting the narrative of “historic warmth” that had dominated mid-month. In a thin, holiday-driven market, that was enough to ignite short-covering and a momentum push in Natural Gas (NG=F). However, the same forecast set keeps January relatively mild. The article is explicit: this is not a full-blown Arctic outbreak; it is an incremental cold tilt on top of a still-warm base case. That means weather is a catalyst, not a guarantee. Without a deeper or longer cold pattern, the demand uplift will struggle to fully offset record production, which is why every cold-headline rally so far has faced selling whenever runs revert to warmer trends.

Record LNG Feedgas at 18.6 Bcf/d Creates a Structural Floor for Natural Gas

LNG now provides the hard floor under Natural Gas (NG=F). The FXEmpire piece reports LNG feedgas at a record 18.6 Bcf/d as Cameron, Freeport and Calcasieu all pulled harder on the grid, surpassing November’s 18.2 Bcf/d peak. At the same time, U.S. gas remains meaningfully cheaper than global benchmarks: TTF around $9.47 and JKM near $9.59 per MMBtu versus Henry Hub near $4.40. That spread keeps U.S. cargoes highly competitive and ensures that any surplus molecule with pipeline access flows to export terminals rather than collapsing domestic prices. Truthout’s data gives the structural scale: roughly a quarter of U.S. gas output is now exported through LNG or pipelines, and the eight LNG export terminals consume more gas than all 73 million U.S. households that use gas directly. In practical terms, LNG has turned Henry Hub into a global price point; NG=F is now tied to the world gas balance, not just U.S. weather.

Trump LNG Policy: Exports, Household Bills and the Domestic Gas Balance

Truthout’s reporting links this structural LNG pull directly to policy under President Trump. After taking office, Trump reversed the Biden-era pause on new LNG permits and ordered the Department of Energy to fast-track export approvals as part of an “energy dominance” agenda. That decision locked in the expansion path for LNG, amplifying export demand into a market already transformed by the fracking boom. The result is clear in the numbers: U.S. households paid about $12 billion more for Natural Gas in the first nine months of 2025 than a year earlier, roughly $124 extra per family, even though the U.S. is the world’s top methane producer. Trump campaigned on halving energy bills but aggressively backed an export model that links domestic prices to global scarcity. LNG terminals now consume more gas than all residential users, so when Natural Gas (NG=F) pushes above $4.00 on a winter scare plus export strength, households feel it directly in their bills. That policy-driven export bid is a lasting bullish anchor for Henry Hub, but it also creates future political risk if prices revisit $7–$9 in a tight winter.

Production at 111.1 Bcf/d and Storage Only 0.8% Below the Five-Year Average

Against that bullish export story, the supply data in your material is blunt. The FXEmpire analysis notes Lower-48 dry gas output hitting a record 111.1 Bcf/d in December. That level of production, on its own, can swamp demand unless weather or LNG over-deliver. On storage, last week’s EIA report showed a 172 Bcf withdrawal. Decent for December, but not a structural break. Even after that draw, inventories sit only about 0.8% below the five-year average, a rounding error rather than a crisis deficit. NGI’s hub charts underline the same reality. Waha in West Texas has suffered deep negative pricing episodes across the year when Permian associated gas overwhelms takeaway capacity. Northeast hubs show violent winter spikes but also rapid collapses when mild weather and strong production collide. These patterns confirm a core point: Natural Gas (NG=F) is rallying into a fundamentally well-supplied system. Without persistent cold or new constraints, high output and near-normal storage will keep any weather- and LNG-driven rally honest.

Power Demand, AI Data Centers and the Role of Gas-Fired Capacity

The Clearway Energy upgrade you supplied adds another structural leg to Natural Gas (NG=F) demand. After its 613-MW solar acquisition from Deriva Energy, Clearway will operate roughly 12.7 GW of capacity, including 9.9 GW of wind, solar and storage and 2.8 GW of dispatchable gas generation. Market commentary around Clearway’s valuation stresses why that 2.8-GW gas fleet matters: capacity markets in regions like PJM and California have tightened sharply as grids scramble to serve data centers and AI loads while replacing coal. Dispatchable gas units now earn premium capacity prices because they stabilize a system dominated by intermittent renewables. The same theme appears in Oilprice’s broader coverage of U.S. energy policy and auto standards: even as vehicle rules are rolled back to favor gasoline cars, power systems still lean on gas plants to balance growing electrification. For Natural Gas (NG=F), this means that AI-driven power growth and reliability requirements can slowly raise the structural demand floor, even if weather and storage drive the short-term noise.

Technical Setup: Key Levels at $4.218, $4.45 and $4.67 on NG=F

From the FXEmpire chart work, the current technical structure on Natural Gas (NG=F) is very clear. The first key level was $4.218; Tuesday’s surge punched convincingly through that resistance, triggering buy stops and converting it into short-term support. The next reference is the 50-day moving average near $4.452. Price is now testing that zone after printing around $4.370 on the January contract and $4.425 on cash quotes. A decisive daily close above roughly $4.45 would open the door to the next resistance cluster near $4.668, where the 200-day moving average aligns with a 50% retracement level. That $4.65–$4.70 band is the obvious upside technical target for this leg. On the downside, recent lows around the high-$3s and the round $4.00 mark form the first support block. As long as NG=F holds $4.00 on closing basis, the tape can be framed as a corrective pullback in an emerging winter up-swing rather than a failed breakout. A break back under roughly $3.80 would flip the setup back to a bear-control narrative driven by supply and warmth.

 

Short-Term Natural Gas (NG=F) Forecast and 1–3 Month Price Target Range

Using only the numbers in your material, the short-term forecast for Natural Gas (NG=F) is tilted bullish but not unlimited. LNG feedgas at 18.6 Bcf/d, TTF and JKM near $9.50, and the Trump-driven export build-out all argue that sub-$3 prices are off the table unless global gas collapses. At the same time, record 111.1 Bcf/d production and storage just 0.8% below the five-year average cap the upside unless weather turns significantly harsher. With that balance, a reasonable 1–3 month target band is a center of gravity around $4.25–$4.50, with a bullish extension zone into $4.65–$4.80 if the market can clear the $4.45 pivot and test the $4.668 resistance discussed in the FXEmpire piece. On the downside, any warm-weather and storage-driven flush is likely to find demand between roughly $3.80 and $4.00, where domestic buyers, LNG-linked flows and short-term traders all see value relative to global benchmarks. In other words, your data supports a volatile, export-anchored range rather than a one-way trend.

Investment Stance on Natural Gas (NG=F): Short-Term Bullish, Medium-Term HOLD

Combining price action, fundamentals, policy and technicals from the articles you provided leads to a clear stance. Short term, the break above $4.218, the test of $4.45, record LNG feedgas, and still-supportive global spreads justify a bullish bias on Natural Gas (NG=F) as long as futures hold the $4.00 area. A push toward the $4.65–$4.70 resistance band is a realistic upside objective if late-December cold verifies and LNG flows stay near record highs. Medium term, the picture turns more balanced. Output at 111.1 Bcf/d, near-normal storage, and the risk of renewed warmth argue against assuming a sustained move far above $5.00 without fresh shocks. Trump’s LNG and fossil-fuel policies support a higher structural floor but also create political overhang if household bills keep rising. Based strictly on your data, the clean label is this: short-term stance on NG=F is bullish, but on a 6–12 month horizon the contract is a disciplined HOLD rather than an outright long or short, with the market likely oscillating between roughly $3.80 and $4.80 around weather, exports and policy headlines.

That's TradingNEWS