March natural gas futures on Friday continued to retreat from Wednesday’s short-covering run-up, leading market watchers to believe that the 52.4-cent jaunt well above $5 was more about the February contract’s termination than it was about current fundamentals.

The front-month contract finished the week back below $5 at $4.943, down 6.8 cents from Thursday and 5.5 cents lower than the previous week’s close.

With the latest polar vortex now firmly in the rearview mirror, physical gas prices also continued to recede at a majority of points across the country, except in New England and the Midwest, where much below normal temperatures still linger.

Algonquin Citygates saw one of the biggest increases, adding 77 cents to average $11.34 on Friday for gas to be delivered over the weekend and on Monday. In the Midwest, Chicago Citygate picked up 52 cents to average $6.96, while Consumers Energy added 32 cents to $7.12.

Out of the woods for the most part in terms of extreme cold, locations south of New England continued to decline. Tennessee Zone 4 Marcellus dropped $1.08 to average $2.08, while Transco Zone 6 NY declined by 60 cents to average $5.75.

Most Rockies and California points came off by a dime to 20 cents, and along the Gulf Coast, the Henry Hub was coming nearly inline with front-month futures. On Friday for weekend and Monday delivery, the Henry Hub fell 28 cents to average $5.01, within a stone’s throw of the March contract’s $4.943 close.

Futures endured a wild ride for the week after spiking 52.4 cents on Wednesday and then immediately dropping 52.2 cents over Thursday and Friday. After closing Thursday’s regular session at $5.011, the prompt-month contract sank below $5 in overnight trading. During Friday’s regular session, March futures traded a wide range between $4.721 and $4.995.

Taking a closer look at the rollercoaster ride that natural gas futures went on during the latter half of the week, analysts warned that volatility, a staple in gas futures during the 1990s and early 2000s, is making a return.

“The natural gas market is continuing to see profit taking focused in the nearby March futures contract, making it look as though the prior strength was more about the February contract expiration than about the colder than normal temperatures that have been draining storage,” said Tim Evans, an analyst with Citi Futures Perspective in New York. “And while recent forecasts have altered the temperature outlook to some extent, with a bit more cold next week and a bit less in the week to follow, we continue to see enough heating demand to produce above-average storage injections over the next few weeks.”

Evans added that this tightening of the market on a seasonally adjusted basis should continue to reduce downside price risk and add to upside potential. “The trade this week has clearly demonstrated the kind of volatility that is possible here and we wouldn’t rule out a renewed spike to the upside, with a rebound in the March contract back above the $5.00 mark about all it would take to kick that off, in our view.”

David Thompson, executive vice president of Washington, DC-based Powerhouse, told NGI Friday that it was only a matter of time before volatility returned. “For too long, people had lost their fear of natural gas volatility and grown too accustomed to a quiet market. People should never forget that natural gas can do what it can do when you get weather and you’ve converted to a natural gas economy. Look at how much more of a percentage of homes are heated with natural gas now.

“Good old fashioned fundamentals are back. With the amount of gas we’ve burned through in the last month has really opened up some valid discussions that we haven’t had to consider in quite some time. How much will we have in storage at the end of all this and how much will we have to replace to get back up to a satisfactory level when we start considering winter? And oh by the way, what happens if we have a hot summer in between. The amount of gas that has come out is truly staggering.”

Production freeze-offs are still occurring, according to Genscape. For the entire Lower 48 states, freeze-offs collectively offset production by 1.31 Bcf on Friday, although other regions did not have freeze-offs and had production above the Jan. 20 baseline (see related story).

Freeze-offs are another part of the equation, Thompson said. “We all know through the shale plays that we have huge gas reservoirs, but when you are talking about getting [storage] down to levels that potentially could threaten the operational integrity of the pipeline and storage systems, that’s another story. You can’t withdraw to zero. You can’t get close to zero even because you need to have pressure in the caverns and obviously in the pipeline system. What we have now is extreme cold using up a lot of gas, but that extended cold is also causing freeze-offs in production that might be used to replace gas volumes, so we’re certainly living in interesting times.”

Thompson added that he believes the current dynamic is that physical gas prices are leading futures around, and the wide swings in physical prices could lead to an interesting February bidweek. “When you look at the number of gas customers who have been interrupted this month, which spills over into other energy markets, it is surprising,” Thompson said. “I suspect the level of interruptible customers has been at record numbers, so the question is how long does that last for? In the past interruptibles might have been a relatively short time phenomenon. Will this be longer than previous historical episodes?”

End-of-season storage levels continue to be a hot topic amongst market watchers (see Daily GPI, Jan. 24).

“Current storage of 2,193 Bcf is 258 Bcf (11%) below normal and 632 Bcf (22%) lower y/y,” according to analysts at Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. “Assuming a near record draw next week (285 Bcf) and normal draws during February and March, storage ends Q1 at 1.2 Tcf. If temps are 10% colder than normal, storage hits ~1 Tcf…the lowest in over 10 years. Meaningfully lower than 1 Tcf requires 15+% colder than normal.”

Barclay’s Analyst Shiyang Wang has similar concerns for storage, especially considering the current level of freeze-offs. “Given the six-15 day weather forecast, little [freeze-off] recovery could be expected unless normal or warmer weather occurs in the second half of February. Although there are only two months left for this winter season, storage withdrawals could still see large variations depending on weather trends. March alone, for instance, could swing from a small injection to a withdrawal greater than 380 Bcf.

“All eyes remain on the weather forecast for the rest of the season, which can swing drastically from one day to another. Given the current weather forecasts for the first half of February, we highlight downside risks to our end-of-season storage forecast of 1.4 Tcf.”