Natural Gas Markets: Henry Hub, LNG & Seasonality
Natural gas has become one of the world’s most important energy commodities, powering electricity generation, heating homes, and serving as feedstock for industrial processes. Yet natural gas markets operate very differently from oil — regional pricing, pipeline constraints, storage dynamics, and the rise of LNG create a complex trading landscape. This guide covers the essential concepts: major benchmarks like Henry Hub, TTF, and JKM; LNG’s role in globalizing trade; seasonality and storage; and the shale revolution’s transformation of US supply.
What Are Natural Gas Markets?
Natural gas markets are the systems through which natural gas is bought, sold, and delivered — from wellhead to end user. Unlike oil, which trades as a truly global commodity with prices converging worldwide, natural gas markets remain regionally segmented due to the high cost of transportation and infrastructure constraints.
Natural gas cannot be economically shipped like oil without specialized infrastructure. Pipeline networks dominate regional trade, while liquefied natural gas (LNG) enables intercontinental shipments — but at significant cost. This infrastructure dependence creates distinct regional markets with different pricing benchmarks.
The three major regional markets are:
- North America — Pipeline-connected, hub-based pricing at Henry Hub
- Europe — Increasingly hub-based at TTF, historically oil-indexed
- Asia-Pacific — LNG-dependent, assessed via JKM (Japan-Korea Marker)
Understanding how these markets connect — and where they diverge — is essential for trading commodity futures, analyzing energy company fundamentals, or evaluating the economics of power generation.
How Natural Gas Markets Work
Natural gas moves through a supply chain with distinct segments, each with its own market dynamics:
Production and Processing
Production extracts raw gas from underground reservoirs — either as “associated gas” found with crude oil or “non-associated gas” from dedicated gas fields. Raw gas contains impurities and heavier hydrocarbons that must be removed at processing plants, which separate methane (the primary component) from natural gas liquids (NGLs) like ethane, propane, and butane.
Transmission and Distribution
Transmission pipelines move large volumes of processed gas at high pressure across regions and countries. At major pipeline intersections, trading hubs emerge where buyers and sellers exchange gas. Distribution networks then deliver gas at lower pressure to end users — utilities, industrial facilities, and homes.
Storage
Storage facilities buffer seasonal demand swings by injecting gas during low-demand periods and withdrawing it during peak demand. Storage is critical because gas production is relatively constant, but demand is highly seasonal.
LNG Export and Import
Liquefaction terminals cool gas to -162°C (-260°F), reducing its volume by approximately 600 times for tanker transport. Regasification terminals at the destination convert LNG back to pipeline-ready gas. This infrastructure enables intercontinental trade but adds significant cost.
Units and Conversions
| Unit | Region | Approximate Conversion |
|---|---|---|
| $/MMBtu | US (Henry Hub) | Base unit |
| pence/therm | UK (NBP) | 1 therm = 0.1 MMBtu |
| EUR/MWh | Europe (TTF) | ~3.4 MMBtu per MWh (thermal) |
| Bcf/d | Volume flow | Billion cubic feet per day |
| mtpa | LNG capacity | Million tonnes per annum |
Natural Gas: The Transition Fuel
Natural gas is often called a “transition fuel” because it produces significantly lower carbon dioxide emissions than coal or oil when burned for electricity generation — roughly half the CO2 per unit of energy compared to coal. This makes gas-fired power plants attractive as grids shift away from coal while renewable capacity scales up.
While natural gas burns cleaner than coal at the point of combustion, lifecycle emissions depend heavily on methane leakage during production and transportation. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas, and high leakage rates can erode or eliminate the climate advantage over coal. Investors should monitor producer emissions intensity.
Gas-fired combined cycle gas turbines (CCGTs) also offer operational flexibility that coal plants cannot match — they can ramp up and down quickly to balance intermittent wind and solar generation. This load-following capability makes natural gas complementary to renewables in the near term.
Natural gas demand breaks down into three main categories:
- Power generation — The fastest-growing segment, especially CCGTs
- Residential and commercial heating — Seasonal, weather-dependent
- Industrial use — Feedstock for ammonia, methanol, and other chemicals; process heat
Henry Hub: The US Benchmark
Henry Hub is the primary pricing benchmark for natural gas in North America. Located near Erath, Louisiana, Henry Hub is a physical location where multiple interstate and intrastate pipelines interconnect — making it a natural trading point with deep liquidity.
Henry Hub serves as the delivery point for NYMEX natural gas futures, the world’s most actively traded gas contract. Prices at other US locations are quoted as differentials (basis) to Henry Hub — for example, “Waha minus $1.50” means $1.50 below Henry Hub.
The CME Group NYMEX Natural Gas futures contract specifications:
- Contract size: 10,000 MMBtu
- Price quotation: US dollars per MMBtu
- Contract months: Monthly contracts listed for over 12 years forward
- Delivery: Physical delivery at Sabine Pipe Line’s Henry Hub
- Trading hours: Nearly 24 hours on CME Globex
Historical Price Context
During Winter Storm Uri in February 2021, extreme cold across Texas and the central US caused unprecedented natural gas demand spikes while simultaneously freezing wellheads and pipelines. Henry Hub spot prices surged to approximately $23.86/MMBtu on February 17, 2021 — roughly 8 times the typical winter price.
Regional spot prices diverged even more dramatically. At some Texas hubs, prices briefly exceeded $200/MMBtu due to local supply constraints. This event illustrated both the importance of pipeline infrastructure and the risks of extreme weather to gas markets.
Henry Hub prices typically range between $2 and $6/MMBtu under normal conditions, with seasonal patterns showing winter premiums due to heating demand and summer bumps from power generation for air conditioning.
Global Natural Gas Benchmarks: NBP, TTF, and JKM
While Henry Hub dominates North American pricing, other regions have developed their own benchmarks. These are not interchangeable — they differ in delivery mechanism, currency, and what they actually measure.
NBP (National Balancing Point) — United Kingdom
The NBP is a virtual trading point within the UK’s National Transmission System. All gas in the UK system is deemed to flow through this notional point, creating a highly liquid market for trading. NBP was historically Europe’s primary benchmark but has been overtaken by TTF.
- Type: Virtual hub (not a physical location)
- Currency: Pence per therm
- Exchange: ICE Futures Europe
TTF (Title Transfer Facility) — Netherlands
The TTF has emerged as Europe’s primary natural gas benchmark, surpassing NBP in liquidity. It is a virtual trading point in the Dutch gas network, operated by Gasunie Transport Services.
- Type: Virtual hub
- Currency: Euro per megawatt-hour (EUR/MWh)
- Exchange: ICE Endex, EEX
- Significance: Reference price for most European gas contracts
JKM (Japan-Korea Marker) — Asia-Pacific
The JKM is fundamentally different from Henry Hub, NBP, or TTF — it is not a hub price but a price assessment published by S&P Global Platts for spot LNG cargoes delivered to Japan, South Korea, China, and Taiwan. It reflects the marginal cost of LNG in the world’s largest import region.
- Type: LNG cargo price assessment (not a hub)
- Currency: US dollars per MMBtu
- Publisher: S&P Global Platts
- Significance: Key reference for Asian LNG spot trades
| Benchmark | Region | Type | Currency | Primary Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Henry Hub | North America | Physical hub | $/MMBtu | NYMEX futures, US basis |
| NBP | United Kingdom | Virtual hub | p/therm | UK gas trading |
| TTF | Europe | Virtual hub | EUR/MWh | European benchmark |
| JKM | Asia-Pacific | LNG assessment | $/MMBtu | Asian LNG spot |
LNG Trade and Market Globalization
Liquefied natural gas (LNG) is transforming natural gas from a regional commodity into an increasingly global one. By cooling gas to -162°C (-260°F), liquefaction reduces its volume by approximately 600 times, making tanker transport economically viable.
The LNG Supply Chain
The LNG value chain consists of three capital-intensive segments:
- Liquefaction — Gas is purified, cooled, and liquefied at export terminals (cost: $500-1,000+ per tonne of annual capacity)
- Shipping — Specialized LNG carriers transport cargoes (modern vessels carry 170,000-180,000 cubic meters)
- Regasification — Import terminals convert LNG back to pipeline-ready gas
Major Exporters and Importers
As of 2024, the United States is the world’s largest LNG exporter, surpassing Australia and Qatar. US LNG export capacity has grown dramatically since the first lower-48 exports began in 2016.
- United States — ~11.9 Bcf/d LNG exports (2024), largest global exporter
- Australia — Major Asia-Pacific supplier
- Qatar — Expanding North Field capacity
- Russia — Yamal LNG, Arctic projects
Major importers include Japan, South Korea, China, and European countries (especially post-2022 as Europe diversified away from Russian pipeline gas).
LNG Pricing: Oil-Indexed vs Hub-Indexed
LNG contracts use different pricing mechanisms:
- Oil-indexed — Traditional Asian contracts link LNG prices to crude oil (e.g., 14.5% of JCC), providing price stability but disconnecting gas from supply/demand fundamentals
- Hub-indexed — Newer contracts reference Henry Hub or TTF, better reflecting gas market conditions
- Spot — Growing share of LNG trades at prevailing spot assessments like JKM
The LNG spot market has grown from roughly 5% of global LNG trade in the early 2000s to over 30% today. This increased spot liquidity enables arbitrage between regions and is gradually linking previously isolated markets — though significant price differentials persist due to shipping costs and infrastructure constraints.
Gas Storage and Seasonality
Natural gas demand is highly seasonal — winter heating drives peak consumption in the northern hemisphere, while summer air conditioning creates secondary demand for gas-fired power generation. Storage facilities bridge the gap between relatively constant production and variable demand.
Storage Types
- Depleted reservoirs — Former oil/gas fields, largest capacity, moderate deliverability
- Salt caverns — Solution-mined cavities, highest deliverability, used for peak shaving
- Aquifers — Porous rock formations, regional availability varies
Working Gas vs Base Gas
Storage capacity has two components:
- Base gas (cushion gas) — Permanently in storage to maintain pressure; not available for withdrawal
- Working gas — The volume that can actually be injected and withdrawn; what storage reports measure
Deliverability — how fast gas can be withdrawn — matters as much as total volume. Salt caverns offer high deliverability for meeting sudden demand spikes, while depleted reservoirs provide bulk seasonal storage.
The EIA Storage Report
The EIA Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report, released every Thursday at 10:30 AM Eastern, is one of the most market-moving data releases in commodity markets. Traders compare the reported injection or withdrawal against expectations — surprises can move Henry Hub prices by 5% or more within minutes.
The storage year follows a predictable cycle:
- Injection season (April – October): Utilities and marketers build inventory for winter
- Withdrawal season (November – March): Heating demand draws down storage
Regional Basis and Pipeline Constraints
While Henry Hub is the benchmark, actual prices at other locations differ based on basis — the price differential reflecting transportation costs, local supply/demand, and pipeline capacity constraints.
Basis Differentials
Basis is typically quoted as a differential to Henry Hub:
- Positive basis: Location price > Henry Hub (demand exceeds local supply, import constrained)
- Negative basis: Location price < Henry Hub (supply exceeds takeaway capacity)
The Waha hub in West Texas has experienced episodes of negative natural gas prices — producers paying buyers to take gas. This occurs when Permian Basin associated gas production (gas produced alongside oil) exceeds pipeline takeaway capacity. In spring 2024, Waha basis fell below -$3/MMBtu.
Negative prices reflect the cost of curtailing oil production (which would reduce associated gas output) versus accepting negative gas prices to keep oil flowing. This is a pipeline constraint problem, not a demand problem.
New England Winter Premiums
New England exemplifies infrastructure constraints in the opposite direction. Despite proximity to Marcellus shale production, limited pipeline capacity into the region causes winter prices to spike well above Henry Hub when heating demand peaks. The Algonquin Citygate has traded at premiums exceeding $20/MMBtu above Henry Hub during cold snaps.
These basis differentials create trading opportunities and are essential context for understanding why “natural gas prices” can mean very different things depending on location.
The Shale Revolution and US Gas Supply
The combination of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) unlocked vast natural gas resources in tight shale formations, fundamentally reshaping US and global gas markets.
Key Shale Formations
- Marcellus Shale (Appalachian Basin) — Largest US gas-producing formation, supplies the Northeast
- Permian Basin (West Texas/New Mexico) — Primarily oil-focused but produces significant associated gas
- Haynesville Shale (Louisiana/Texas) — Deep, high-pressure formation near Gulf Coast LNG export terminals
- Eagle Ford (South Texas) — Mixed oil and gas, declining from peak
From Importer to Exporter
The shale revolution transformed the US energy position:
- 2005-2008: US planning LNG import terminals to meet projected shortages
- 2008-2016: Shale production surge; import terminals converted to export
- 2017: US becomes net natural gas exporter for first time since 1957
- 2024: US is world’s largest LNG exporter
Shale wells exhibit steep decline curves — production can fall 60-70% in the first year. Maintaining production levels requires continuous drilling of new wells. If drilling activity slows (due to low prices or capital discipline), production declines can materialize quickly. This creates different supply dynamics than conventional fields with gradual, predictable decline rates.
Gas Futures and Forward Curves
Natural gas futures enable producers, utilities, and traders to manage price risk and express views on future supply/demand balances. The forward curve — prices for delivery in each future month — reveals market expectations about seasonality and supply/demand evolution.
Seasonality in Forward Curves
Unlike many commodities, natural gas forward curves typically show pronounced seasonality:
- Winter months (January, February): Premium pricing reflecting heating demand
- Shoulder months (April, May, October): Lower prices during mild weather
- Summer months (July, August): Moderate prices; power generation demand
This seasonality means contango and backwardation must be interpreted carefully in gas markets — a forward curve that rises from summer to winter is normal, not necessarily indicative of oversupply. For detailed coverage of contango, backwardation, and futures pricing theory, see our dedicated article.
TTF and ICE Futures
European gas trades primarily on ICE Endex TTF futures, with contract specifications mirroring the hub’s virtual delivery mechanism. Asian markets increasingly use JKM-linked derivatives, though liquidity remains lower than Henry Hub or TTF.
Henry Hub vs TTF vs JKM: Regional Benchmark Comparison
Understanding the differences between regional benchmarks is essential for analyzing global gas trade and LNG arbitrage opportunities.
Henry Hub (US)
- Physical delivery point in Louisiana
- Priced in $/MMBtu
- Deepest liquidity globally
- Reflects domestic US supply/demand
- Insulated from global shocks by LNG export capacity limits
TTF (Europe)
- Virtual trading point in Netherlands
- Priced in EUR/MWh
- Europe’s primary benchmark
- Sensitive to Russian supply, LNG imports, storage
- High volatility during supply disruptions
JKM (Asia-Pacific)
- Price assessment, not a trading hub
- Priced in $/MMBtu
- Reflects Asian spot LNG prices
- Historically highest-priced market
- Growing liquidity as spot share increases
Price Divergence: The 2022 Energy Crisis
Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, European gas prices spiked dramatically as the continent scrambled to replace Russian pipeline gas. TTF prices exceeded EUR 300/MWh in August 2022 — equivalent to roughly $90-100/MMBtu depending on exchange rates.
Meanwhile, Henry Hub remained around $8-9/MMBtu — elevated by historical standards but an order of magnitude below European prices. This differential reflected US LNG export capacity constraints and the cost/time required to redirect global LNG cargoes to Europe.
JKM also spiked as Asian buyers competed with Europe for spot LNG cargoes, demonstrating how LNG trade connects — but does not equalize — regional markets.
These price differentials create arbitrage opportunities for LNG traders but also illustrate the limits of global gas market integration. Shipping costs, regasification capacity, and contract structures prevent full price convergence.
Common Misconceptions About Natural Gas Prices
Several persistent myths can lead to analytical errors when evaluating natural gas markets:
Myth 1: There Is One Global Natural Gas Price
Reality: Unlike oil, natural gas prices vary significantly by region. Henry Hub, TTF, and JKM can diverge by 5x or more during supply disruptions. Infrastructure constraints, not just supply/demand, determine prices.
Myth 2: Gas Prices Always Follow Oil Prices
Reality: While Asian LNG contracts have historically been oil-indexed, hub-based pricing (Henry Hub, TTF) reflects gas-specific fundamentals. Since the shale revolution, US gas prices have largely decoupled from oil. The correlation varies by region and contract type.
Myth 3: Henry Hub Sets Global Prices
Reality: Henry Hub is the most liquid gas benchmark but only directly determines North American prices. TTF drives European pricing; JKM reflects Asian LNG. US LNG exports create a linkage, but transportation costs and capacity constraints limit price transmission.
Myth 4: High Storage Levels Always Mean Lower Prices
Reality: Storage levels matter, but so do season, expected weather, deliverability constraints, regional basis, and LNG export demand. High storage entering winter is bearish; high storage in spring may simply reflect successful injection-season builds. Context is everything.
Myth 5: LNG Is Just Gas Shipped by Boat
Reality: Liquefaction, shipping, and regasification add $3-6/MMBtu to delivered costs depending on distance. LNG requires specialized infrastructure and long lead times. The process changes market dynamics — LNG enables arbitrage but creates its own constraints and pricing considerations.
Limitations of Gas Price Modeling
Forecasting natural gas prices is notoriously difficult. Even sophisticated models struggle with the complexity of gas markets.
Natural gas prices exhibit high volatility and fat tails — extreme events occur more frequently than normal distributions predict. Models calibrated to average conditions consistently underestimate the probability and magnitude of price spikes during supply disruptions or extreme weather.
Factors That Confound Models
- Weather unpredictability — Forecasts beyond 10-14 days are unreliable; heating/cooling demand drives short-term prices
- Geopolitical events — Pipeline disruptions, sanctions, and conflicts are inherently unpredictable (e.g., Russia-Ukraine)
- Infrastructure constraints — Pipeline bottlenecks, LNG terminal outages, and storage limitations create non-linear price responses
- Policy changes — LNG export permits, carbon pricing, methane regulations, and energy transition policies alter supply/demand
- Associated gas dynamics — Oil prices affect gas supply when associated gas is significant (Permian)
Prudent analysis treats gas price forecasts as scenarios rather than predictions, stress-testing assumptions against a range of supply, demand, and infrastructure outcomes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Natural gas market data and examples are illustrative and may not reflect current conditions. Prices, production figures, and market structures change over time. Always conduct your own research and consult qualified professionals before making trading or investment decisions.