What Happens to Japan / Nikkei (EWJ) When Natural Gas Spikes?
What happens when natural gas prices spike? Winter heating costs, electricity prices, fertilizer costs, and the cascading economic effects of America's most volatile commodity.
How Japan / Nikkei (EWJ) Responds
Scenario Background
Natural gas is the most volatile major commodity because its supply and demand are both highly inelastic in the short term and extremely weather-sensitive. Unlike oil, which can be easily stored and transported globally, natural gas storage is limited and pipeline infrastructure constrains supply response. A cold winter snap or a summer heat wave can cause prices to spike 50-100% in days.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
Natural gas spiked to $13/MMBtu in 2005 after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita damaged Gulf Coast production infrastructure. It hit $15 in 2008 during the energy price boom. The 2022 European energy crisis pushed US Henry Hub from $3 to $9 as LNG exports surged. The 2021 Texas freeze caused localized spot prices to exceed $200 for brief periods. More typically, gas oscillates between $2 and $5, with spikes above $6 considered extreme events that produce significant economic effects. Each major spike ...
What to Watch For
- •Storage below the 5-year average heading into November, winter spike risk elevated
- •Extended cold weather forecasts, the demand catalyst for gas spikes
- •LNG export capacity additions, increasing the link between US and global gas prices
- •Gas-to-coal switching economics, when gas gets expensive enough, power plants switch to coal
- •Gas producer supply response (rig count changes),the market's self-correcting mechanism
Other Assets When Natural Gas Spikes
Other Scenarios Affecting Japan / Nikkei (EWJ)
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