What Happens to Real Effective Exchange Rate When Natural Gas Prices Collapse?
What happens when natural gas prices collapse below $2? Inflation relief, energy sector stress, and producer bankruptcy risk.
How Real Effective Exchange Rate Responds
Scenario Background
Henry Hub natural gas prices below $2/MMBtu represent deeply depressed levels for US gas producers. Break-even production costs for most US producers range from $2.50-$4.00/MMBtu, so sustained prices below $2 force producers to curtail output, reduce capital spending, or declare bankruptcy. This creates short-term oversupply pressure but eventually tightens supply through well shut-ins.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
Natural gas has traded between $1.50 and $14/MMBtu over the past 20 years. Major collapses: 2012 (shale oversupply, $1.90), 2015-2016 ($1.60), and 2024 ($1.60 amid warm winter and oversupply). Peaks: 2005 ($14, Katrina), 2008 ($13), 2022 ($9, Russia-Ukraine). Post-Ukraine, US natural gas has partially decoupled from European prices (which peaked at euro-equivalent of $70). The 2020 COVID crash briefly saw negative regional prices.
What to Watch For
- •Henry Hub below $2.00 sustained for 3+ months
- •Storage levels above 5-year max
- •Rig count declining materially
- •Natural gas producer bankruptcies
- •LNG export capacity running at maximum
Other Assets When Natural Gas Prices Collapse
Other Scenarios Affecting Real Effective Exchange Rate
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