Physical gas for weekend and Monday delivery fell like a rock in Friday’s trading. Market points across the board were lower, in some cases by deep double digits, with the East and Northeast taking on the brunt of the selling.

A combination of a weak screen and little need for incremental three-day packages in light of normal weather patterns kept buyers on the bench. The overall average decline was about a quarter. Weather forecasts across the major power grids showed high pressure in play, which was expected to keep warm, humid weather away. At the close of futures trading, August natural gas was down 3.2 cents to $4.409 and September had skidded 3.1 cents to $4.389. August crude oil eased 10 cents to $105.74/bbl.

Forecaster WSI Corp. said the New England ISO could expect “high pressure build[ing] into the Northeast during the next two to three days. This should support generally fair and pleasant weather, though a pop-up shower or storm cannot be ruled out each day. High pressure will begin to slide away from the region during the end of the weekend into early next week. This may allow a warmer and more humid south-southwest flow to develop, which may continue the chance of an isolated shower or storm.”

WSI said traders could expect “seasonably warm temperatures, but comfortable humidity levels are expected during the next couple of days. Highs may range in the 70s to mid 80s, coolest along the coast due to a sea-breeze. Lows may cool into the 40s, 50s to near 60. However, it may trend back to the warmer and more humid side during Sunday into early next week with more widespread reading in the 80s to low 90s. Lows may range in the 50s, 60s to near 70.”

Gas for delivery to the Algonquin Citygates for the weekend and Monday was quoted at $3.02, down 74 cents, and packages into Iroquois Waddington were seen 43 cents lower at $4.22. Parcels at Tennessee Zone 6 200 L fell 55 cents to $3.29.

WSI also posted a similar outlook for the expansive PJM power grid. It said “high pressure will nose southward into the region during the end of the next couple of days, though a few isolated showers or storms cannot be ruled out. High pressure will begin to weaken and depart during the weekend into early next week. This will allow for a warmer and more humid south-southwest flow to develop, which may support an increasing chance of scattered showers and storms.”

Temperatures were also seen as seasonal, “but comfortable humidity levels are expected during the next day or so. Highs may range in the upper 70s to mid 80s, [and] temperatures and humidity levels should increase during the weekend into early next week. Highs may range in the mid 80s to mid 90s. Lows may range in the mid 60s to mid 70s.”

Boston’s Friday high of 73 degrees was seen increasing Saturday to 80 and reaching 86 on Monday. The seasonal high in Boston is 80, WSI said. New York City’s 80 high on Friday was seen rising to 82 on Saturday and reaching 83 on Monday, one degree off its seasonal norm. Baltimore’s 84 high on Friday was anticipated to hold for Saturday but rise to 86 on Monday. The normal late-June high in Baltimore is 87.

Gas bound for New York City on Transco Zone 6 tumbled 81 cents to $2.90, and deliveries on Tetco M-3 shed 77 cents to $2.92.

Across the Midwest into the producing regions, next-day gas also swooned by double digits. At the Joliet Hub, weekend and Monday packages fell 19 cents to $4.42, and at the Chicago Citygates parcels were seen at $4.42, down 22 cents. Gas on Alliance shed 17 cents to $4.42. At Northern Natural Ventura, weekend and Monday gas came in at $4.34, down 21 cents, and at Demarcation gas changed hands at $4.34, down 20 cents.

Some aren’t sure the soft futures and physical market has all that much to do with weather. “Bentek has just reported that production has hit a new high,” said a Rocky Mountain producer. “People that think production will drop are missing the boat. It’s not going to happen. You get pipeline maintenance, and gas plant maintenance and that kind of thing temporarily, but that’s the problem. Plus the price of coal isn’t all that great.”

He added that they had the bulk of their production hedged at $4.20, and “I’m in the camp that 30 cents either side of $4.50 is going to cover about 80% of prices for the rest of the year.”

According to market analysts, summer heat better show up soon if the market is going to have any chance of even recovering to earlier highs. “The [Thursday storage] report strongly suggested further production strength into record territory and a larger than expected shift away from gas usage and toward coal by the utilities. While we usually caution against reading too much into one weekly report, we will advise that [Thursday’s] larger than anticipated injection furthered a trend that extends about two months,” said Jim Ritterbusch of Ritterbusch and Associates.

“It would appear that some structural shifts are beginning to develop on both sides of the supply-usage balances that could ease supply concerns considerably, at least until a sustainable hot spell shows up within the forecasts. While current one- to two-week views are favoring some hot temps, the above-normal trends are largely limited to about the eastern third of the nation and are not packing enough punch to spur either speculative or commercial buying interest.

“Although July narrowed its discount against August futures by a slight margin, we viewed the pre-expiry plunge to below the $4.40 level as technically significant. [Thursday’s] July futures low of $4.35 now provides a new downside price parameter [target] for the August contract. By and large, the fundamental inputs of late combined with some significant chart deterioration are forcing us to temper our bullish inclinations. Any existing longs would be advised to employ any rebounds back to today’s highs of $4.60 as an opportunity to liquidate.”

Others also see a plethora of bearish factors in play. Teri Viswanath, who directs natural gas commodity strategy for BNP Paribas, said Friday morning that an abundance of bearish fundamentals is currently weighing down prices, despite the fact that near-term temperature outlooks appear warmer, which should increase the week-on-week demand for electric power.

“Warmer weather on the horizon has had little effect on price as two months’ worth of outsized storage weigh on market sentiment,” she said in a Friday note. “To be sure, nascent buying interest has rapidly abated over the past week as the circa 150 Bcf reduction in the y/y [storage] deficit has somewhat eased inventory concerns. With prices now trending toward the seasonal lows, it appears that evidence of a significant slowdown in weekly restocking is required to reinvigorate bargain shoppers.”

The bearish fundamentals have rattled into the technical arena. Market technicians now see the bears as being firmly in control. “Will the lows of the outgoing July contract mark the end of an ABC off the $4.891 high (August)? Or will the August contract be able to pick up right where the July contract left off?” said Brian LaRose, a market analyst with United ICAP.

“If the bears can maintain control, and we think they can, there is still room down to $4.302-4.242-4.198 (“a”=”c”), even $3.937-3.871-3.848 (1.618 “a”=”c”) before any chance of seasonal bottoming action,” he said in closing comments Thursday to clients.

In its Friday morning outlook, Natgasweather.com said longer term it is looking for pervasive warm temperatures. “High pressure has started to surge into the Midwest and Northeast and with it will come warmer temperatures. There have been discrepancies in national forecasts regarding how a chilly weather system moving into the northern Rockies influences weather conditions over the Midwest and Northeast next week. No worries; the ridge will do a fine job of stalling and deflecting it into southern Canada.

“That is not to say the Midwest won’t get a glancing blow with several degrees of cooling, but the more intense cold air will remain Canada. After this nuisance system quickly departs late next week, high pressure will rapidly expand and cover much of the U.S. with very warm to hot temperatures as widespread 90s cover many regions.”