『Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark』のカバーアート

Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark

Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark

著者: Inception Point Ai
無料で聴く

今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Check out Vanessa Clark's Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipai

This is your Natural Gas Commidity Tracker podcast.



For more info go to

https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipai

https://www.quietplease.ai

Or check out these deals
https://amzn.to/3FkjUmwCopyright 2025 Inception Point Ai
社会科学
エピソード
  • Natural Gas Heats Up: Why Your Energy Bill Just Got More Expensive and What Comes Next
    2026/04/10
    https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipai

    This is your Natural Gas podcast.

    Hey everyone, welcome back to the Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today, we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and what it means for your wallet and investments.

    Right now, natural gas futures are trading around 3.79 to 3.82 dollars per MMBtu, marking an 11 percent jump in recent sessions according to Trading Economics. That's a solid rebound from earlier dips, where prices fell over 5 percent to 2.71 dollars on Wednesday and about 4 percent to 3.30 dollars on Tuesday. Production remains steady near 108 billion cubic feet per day, with comfortable storage levels keeping things balanced, but this recent surge has pushed prices to an 18-week high—the highest since June.

    Geopolitical tensions are a big factor too. Middle East uncertainties, including shipping disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz and ongoing talks between Israel, Lebanon, and even US Vice President JD Vance with Iran reps, are rippling through energy markets. Global oil prices rebounded sharply—Brent crude up 1.2 percent to 95.92 dollars a barrel, Nymex crude climbing 3.7 percent to 87 dollars—which often pulls natural gas along. Over the past four weeks, nat gas is up 2.39 percent, and a whopping 17 percent in the last year.

    For traders, keep an eye on leveraged ETFs like ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Natural Gas at around 33 dollars or the short version near 33 dollars—they're volatile with recent swings of 1 to 2 percent. If you're heating your home or running a business, this uptick could mean higher bills soon, but watch for any ceasefire progress that might ease supply fears.

    Actionable tip: If you're investing, consider diversifying with nat gas ETFs during these swings, but set stop-losses around 3.50 dollars support. Stay tuned for tomorrow's update—prices can flip fast.

    Thanks for joining me on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker. Subscribe, share with a friend, and tune in next time for more!

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Check out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipai
    For some deals, check out
    https://amzn.to/4hSgB4r

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    続きを読む 一部表示
    3 分
  • Natural Gas Dips to November Lows as Mild Weather and Storage Surplus Keep Prices Sliding
    2026/04/09
    https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipai

    This is your Natural Gas podcast.

    Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, what's driving the market, and what it means for you.

    Right now, as of this morning, natural gas is trading around 2.77 dollars per million British thermal units on the NYMEX Henry Hub futures. That's down about 0.32 percent today, hovering near those multi-month lows we've been talking about. Just yesterday, prices dipped to 2.71, the lowest since November 2024, according to Trading Economics reports. Over the past four weeks, we've seen a sharp 13 percent drop, and year-over-year, it's down nearly 29 percent.

    What's behind this slide? Mild spring weather is keeping demand soft—no big heating needs, and forecasts stay warmer than normal through late April, per market analysts. That means bigger storage builds, now about 5 percent above normal. Plus, cheaper LNG prices in Europe are making US exports less competitive, easing pressure on our supplies, as noted by Interactive Brokers insights.

    Geopolitics is in the mix too—tensions with Iran and Strait of Hormuz issues haven't spiked prices much since our export terminals are maxed out anyway. Looking ahead, the EIA trimmed its 2026 forecast to 3.67 dollars per MMBtu, expecting near-average storage. But global LNG demand is growing fast, tying us more to world markets and potentially lifting price floors long-term, according to CoBank analysis.

    For traders and everyday users, keep an eye on weather shifts and storage reports—they could swing things quick. If you're hedging or planning energy budgets, this dip might be a buying window before summer demand heats up.

    Thanks for tuning in, friends—hit subscribe, share with a buddy, and catch you next time on Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker!

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Check out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipai
    For some deals, check out
    https://amzn.to/4hSgB4r

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    続きを読む 一部表示
    3 分
  • Natural Gas Treads Water as Mild Weather and Storage Surplus Keep Bulls at Bay
    2026/04/08
    https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipai

    This is your Natural Gas podcast.

    Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on natural gas prices, fresh market moves, and what it all means for your energy watchlist.

    Right now, as of this morning, natural gas at Henry Hub is hovering around $2.75 to $2.84 per MMBtu, after a rebound yesterday. Trading Economics reports US futures climbed over 2% to $2.87 on Tuesday, thanks to a dip in daily output—production dropped about 3 billion cubic feet per day to a two-week low of 108.9 bcfd, mostly in Louisiana and Arkansas. But don't get too excited; prices are still scraping near their lowest since September 2025, pressured by mild spring weather that's keeping demand soft and letting utilities pump more gas into storage.

    Sprague Energy notes the May NYMEX contract closed at $2.811 on Monday, April 6th, up from the prior session but after hitting an intraday low of $2.80. The EIA's latest storage report showed a 36 Bcf injection last week, right in line with expectations, with totals at 1,865 Bcf—5.4% above last year and 3% over the five-year average. Barchart adds that May Nymex futures rose 2.10% Tuesday, recovering from a recent low, though bearish vibes persist with inventories high and LNG exports steady around 18 bcfd amid elevated crude prices.

    Technical signals are mixed: Investing.com shows moving averages leaning sell, but indicators flashing strong buy with RSI at 39.9 and some overbought momentum. Energy Intelligence highlights global ripples too—like a Qatari LNG outage pushing EU prices up—while tastylive points to range-bound action as oil stays high near $114.

    Key takeaway? Watch for cooler forecasts or production cuts to spark a real bounce—could test resistance at $2.81 to $3.00. Stay nimble, folks; volatility's medium with daily swings around 0.5-1%.

    Thanks for tuning in to Daily Natural Gas Price Tracker—subscribe, share with your trader buddies, and catch you next time for more updates!

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Check out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipai
    For some deals, check out
    https://amzn.to/4hSgB4r

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    続きを読む 一部表示
    3 分
まだレビューはありません