Natural Gas (NG) on Quotex — Trading Guide
What Drives Natural Gas Prices
Six main drivers: (1) Weather — cold winters spike demand for heating; hot summers spike demand for AC; mild weather depresses prices; (2) EIA weekly storage data — Thursdays 15:30 UTC, shows US natural gas inventory; large unexpected changes move price 3-8%; (3) Production — US shale output, Russian/Norwegian piped flows; (4) LNG exports — US is now top LNG exporter; export disruptions affect price; (5) Hurricane season (June-November) — disruptions to Gulf of Mexico production; (6) European/Asian LNG demand — international flows affect US prices via export terminal capacity.
Best Hours to Trade Natural Gas
| Session (UTC) | NG Activity | Typical Payout |
|---|---|---|
| 00:00-08:00 (Asian) | Very low | 75-80% |
| 08:00-13:00 (London) | Low-Medium | 82-86% |
| 13:00-22:00 (US session, esp. 14:00-21:00) | HIGHEST | 85-90% |
| Thursdays 15:30-17:00 | EXTREME (EIA release) | 85-88% |
EIA Weekly Storage Report — The Main Event
Every Thursday at 15:30 UTC, the US Energy Information Administration releases the Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report. The report shows net change in US natural gas inventory for the prior week. Consensus expectations are published in advance by analyst surveys. Large surprises (>30 bcf vs consensus) move NG 3-8% in minutes. The EIA release is the single highest-volume natural gas trading moment of the week.
- Bullish surprise (smaller-than-expected build OR larger-than-expected draw): NG rises sharply
- Bearish surprise (larger build OR smaller draw): NG falls sharply
- Consensus result (within 5-10 bcf): minimal move, NG reverts to pre-release direction
- Best trade: wait 15 min after release for direction to settle, then enter continuation with 30-60 min expiry
Seasonal Patterns
Natural gas has the most pronounced seasonal pattern of any major commodity. US demand peaks in winter (Nov-Mar) for heating; secondary peak in summer (Jul-Aug) for AC. Inventory cycles: builds during 'shoulder seasons' (Apr-May, Sep-Oct); draws during peak winter (Dec-Feb) and peak summer (Jul-Aug). Price seasonality:
| Period | Pattern | Bias |
|---|---|---|
| Apr-May | Storage building, weak demand | Bearish |
| Jun-Aug | Summer cooling demand + hurricane risk premium | Mixed (volatile) |
| Sep-Oct | Last storage builds before winter | Mixed |
| Nov-Dec | Heating demand starts, winter premium builds | Bullish |
| Jan-Feb | Peak heating draws, weather-driven volatility | Highly volatile |
| Mar | Heating demand fading, storage transitions to build | Bearish |
Weather Impact on Natural Gas
Weather forecasts move NG even before actual cold/heat materializes. Watch 6-10 day forecasts from NOAA. Key thresholds: (a) Forecast of >5 days below freezing across NE/Midwest US in winter → NG bullish; (b) Forecast of >5 days above 95°F across Texas/Southeast in summer → NG bullish (cooling demand). Trading approach: weather-driven moves often happen 24-48h before the actual weather, then reverse on the day if forecasts soften.
Three Worked Examples
- Example 1 — NG 15m, May 5 2026 13:35 UTC (post EIA — small build vs expected): NG spiked +3% then consolidated. Entered CALL on retest of pre-release level. 1h expiry. Exit higher → WIN, +$21 on $25 stake.
- Example 2 — NG 5m, May 8 2026 15:30 UTC (during EIA release with large bearish build): tried to PUT immediately at release. Volatility too high; quick reversal. Exit against entry → LOSS, -$25. Lesson: never trade NG during the first 15 min of EIA release.
- Example 3 — NG 15m, May 13 2026 14:00 UTC (post weather forecast of cooler-than-normal week): EMA crossover bullish at $2.70. Entered CALL 1h expiry. Exit $2.78 → WIN, +$21.
Risk Management for Natural Gas
Natural gas has the highest news risk of any commodity. Weekly EIA reports + weekly weather updates + seasonal patterns create constant catalysts. Strict risk management essential.
- Position size: 1% per trade (NOT 2%) — variance is high
- Daily loss limit: 4% (not 5%) — fast losses possible during news
- AVOID trading during the first 15 minutes after EIA release
- AVOID trading during weekend gaps (NG opens Monday with gaps from weekend weather data)
- Stop trading after 4 consecutive losses — likely on wrong side of seasonal/weather theme
- Don't hold positions over weekends — weather forecasts can change dramatically
Natural Gas FAQ
Is natural gas more or less volatile than oil?
Significantly more volatile. NG average daily range is 2-5%; oil's is 1.5-3%. Reasons: smaller market cap, more weather-sensitive, less institutional ownership, less arbitrage from related markets. The higher volatility means larger profit potential AND larger loss potential — discipline matters more.
Does NG follow oil prices?
Loose correlation (~30-50%) — both energy commodities. But NG has unique demand drivers (weather, electricity generation) that oil doesn't. NG can rally while oil falls (cold winter + economic recession scenario). Don't assume NG follows oil; treat as separate asset with separate drivers.
Should I trade NG during summer?
Yes, but expect different patterns. Summer NG demand is for AC (electricity for cooling). Hot summer = NG rally. Mild summer = NG decline. Hurricane season (June-November) adds wildcard — disruption risk to Gulf production. Hurricane preparations alone can spike NG 5-10% on forecast.
What's the best NG strategy for binary options?
Post-EIA continuation: wait 15-30 min after Thursday 15:30 UTC release; identify the established direction; enter with 30-45 min expiry. Win rate ~62% based on our backtest. Avoid pre-EIA positioning (gambling on direction) and avoid first 15 min after release (volatility too random).
Can natural gas have negative prices?
Yes — happened historically with oil (April 2020 WTI futures went negative). NG could theoretically also; storage capacity constraints could force sellers to pay buyers. In practice, NG hasn't been negative recently but it has touched very low levels ($1.50/MMBtu in 2024). For binary options on Quotex, you predict direction; negative absolute prices don't change the binary outcome.
How do EU gas prices affect US NG?
Through LNG export channel. When EU prices spike (e.g., during Russia supply cuts), more US LNG flows to Europe, reducing US storage and supporting US prices. Watch TTF (Dutch TTF) European gas price as leading indicator for US LNG demand.
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