US Natgas Prices Drop Further

2026-03-09 20:19 By Felipe Alarcon 1 min. read

US natural gas futures fell over 4% to below $3.05 per MMBtu on Monday as the prospect of a swift de-escalation in the Middle East eased the risk premium across the energy complex.

While international benchmarks remained elevated due to the QatarEnergy force majeure, the Henry Hub was pressured by President Donald Trump suggesting the Iranian conflict is nearing completion and that traffic in the Strait of Hormuz is resuming.

This shift in sentiment accelerated a sell-off driven by unseasonably warm weather forecasts and record domestic production levels.

Furthermore, ongoing infrastructure outages at the Freeport LNG terminal in Texas continue to trap supply within the domestic market, limiting the influence of global scarcity on local prices.

Despite a significant weekly storage withdrawal, the combination of high supply and reduced export capacity means that domestic natural gas has largely decoupled from the price volatility seen in crude oil.



News Stream
US Natgas Prices Drop Further
US natural gas futures fell over 4% to below $3.05 per MMBtu on Monday as the prospect of a swift de-escalation in the Middle East eased the risk premium across the energy complex. While international benchmarks remained elevated due to the QatarEnergy force majeure, the Henry Hub was pressured by President Donald Trump suggesting the Iranian conflict is nearing completion and that traffic in the Strait of Hormuz is resuming. This shift in sentiment accelerated a sell-off driven by unseasonably warm weather forecasts and record domestic production levels. Furthermore, ongoing infrastructure outages at the Freeport LNG terminal in Texas continue to trap supply within the domestic market, limiting the influence of global scarcity on local prices. Despite a significant weekly storage withdrawal, the combination of high supply and reduced export capacity means that domestic natural gas has largely decoupled from the price volatility seen in crude oil.
2026-03-09
US Natgas Prices Ease on Monday
US natural gas futures slipped to around $3.12 per MMBtu due to rising domestic supply and softer export demand. Gas flows to the nine main US LNG export terminals averaged about 18.1 bcfd so far in March, down from a record 18.7 bcfd in February, partly due to an outage at Freeport LNG’s Texas facility caused by a feedgas issue. Global energy markets remain volatile after QatarEnergy halted LNG production and declared force majeure during the conflict involving Iran, removing roughly 20% of global LNG supply and driving international gas prices higher. However, US prices have risen much less because the country already produces enough gas for domestic needs and LNG export capacity is near its limit. Weather is also capping demand, with forecasts calling for warmer-than-normal conditions across the US through late March, reducing heating needs. Meanwhile, gas production in the Lower 48 states has increased to about 110 bcfd so far in March.
2026-03-09
Natural gas Hits 4-week High
Natural gas increased to 3.41 USD/MMBtu, the highest since February 2026. Over the past 4 weeks, Natural gas gained 8.52%, and in the last 12 months, it decreased 24.18%.
2026-03-09