Natural-gas futures fell sharply on Thursday after the Energy Information Administration reported a bigger-than-expected 43-billion-cubic-feet increase in U.S. inventories for the week ended April 26. Analysts polled by Platts had forecast a climb between 28 billion cubic feet and 32 billion.
Total stocks now stand at 1.777 trillion cubic feet, down 795 billion cubic feet from the year-ago level and 118 billion cubic feet below the five-year average, the government said.
June natural gas /quotes/zigman/2294278 NGM13 -6.33% dropped 30 cents to end at $4.03 per million British thermal units. It traded at $4.29 shortly before the data
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what what the next report will look like after this late spring winter storm
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Posted by Char on May 29, 2025 at 14:42 — 4 Comments
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