U.S. natural gas prices are trading near $3.10–$3.14 per MMBtu in mid-June 2026 amid elevated storage levels and robust domestic supply. The latest EIA weekly report showed a larger-than-expected 108 Bcf injection for the week ending June 5, lifting inventories to 2,686 Bcf—6% above the five-year average—while the agency raised its 2026 dry gas production forecast to 111 Bcf/d, driven by higher associated output from the Permian. Warmer-than-normal temperatures through late June are expected to lift power-sector demand for cooling, though scheduled maintenance has trimmed LNG feedgas flows. The next storage print on June 18 and any shifts in weather models represent the primary near-term catalysts that could influence price volatility around current levels.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedWhat will Natural Gas (NG) hit Week of June 15 2026?
↑ $3.80
51%
↑ $3.70
51%
↑ $3.60
50%
↑ $3.50
51%
↑ $3.40
50%
↑ $3.30
50%
↑ $3.20
51%
↓ $3.10
50%
↓ $3.00
50%
↓ $2.90
51%
↓ $2.80
50%
↓ $2.70
51%
↓ $2.60
50%
↓ $2.50
1%
$513 Vol.
↑ $3.80
51%
↑ $3.70
51%
↑ $3.60
50%
↑ $3.50
51%
↑ $3.40
50%
↑ $3.30
50%
↑ $3.20
51%
↓ $3.10
50%
↓ $3.00
50%
↓ $2.90
51%
↓ $2.80
50%
↓ $2.70
51%
↓ $2.60
50%
↓ $2.50
1%
Prices will be used exactly as published by Pyth, without rounding.
If the Active Month contract does not trade at all during the listed time frame, this market will resolve to "No".
Only prices achieved during an applicable trading session of the specified timeframe's business days will be considered. The trading session for a given business day typically begins at 6:00 PM ET on the prior calendar date. Under the standard schedule, trading is open from 6:00:00 PM ET Sunday through 5:00:00 PM ET Friday, with a daily break from 5:00:00 PM ET to 6:00:00 PM ET, except where modified by holiday or special-session hours.
The active month changes at the start of the second trading session prior to that contract's last trading session, at which point the next listed contract becomes the active month (i.e., for the final three trading sessions of the nearest listed contract, the contract for the next month is the active month).
Per CME contract specifications for Natural Gas (NG) futures, the last trading day is defined as the third last business day of the month preceding the contract's delivery month.
For example, if the last business day of the month preceding the contract's delivery month is a Thursday, the last trading session is the session for the prior Tuesday, and the next listed contract becomes the active month at the start of the trading session for the Friday of the previous week (6:00 PM ET on Thursday), assuming a standard trading calendar.
If the relevant Pyth data is unavailable due to a system outage, data failure, or other technical disruption that prevents verification of the required 1-minute candle data, the official daily high/low price published for the Active Month Natural Gas (NG) futures contract by CME Group may be used to determine whether the listed price was reached during the applicable trading session.
In the event of a contract specification change, feed change, or similar structural modification affecting the underlying market during the listed time frame, this market will resolve based on adjusted prices as displayed on Pyth.
The resolution source for this market is Pyth — specifically, the Active Month Natural Gas futures "High" and "Low" prices available at https://pythdata.app/explore?search=NGD, with the chart settings configured for 1-minute candles. Historical 1-minute candles may be accessed by appending a Unix timestamp (seconds) to the Pyth chart URL using the "t=" parameter.
Market Opened: Jun 12, 2026, 6:01 PM ET
Resolution Source
https://pythdata.app/explore?search=NGDResolver
0x65070BE91...Prices will be used exactly as published by Pyth, without rounding.
If the Active Month contract does not trade at all during the listed time frame, this market will resolve to "No".
Only prices achieved during an applicable trading session of the specified timeframe's business days will be considered. The trading session for a given business day typically begins at 6:00 PM ET on the prior calendar date. Under the standard schedule, trading is open from 6:00:00 PM ET Sunday through 5:00:00 PM ET Friday, with a daily break from 5:00:00 PM ET to 6:00:00 PM ET, except where modified by holiday or special-session hours.
The active month changes at the start of the second trading session prior to that contract's last trading session, at which point the next listed contract becomes the active month (i.e., for the final three trading sessions of the nearest listed contract, the contract for the next month is the active month).
Per CME contract specifications for Natural Gas (NG) futures, the last trading day is defined as the third last business day of the month preceding the contract's delivery month.
For example, if the last business day of the month preceding the contract's delivery month is a Thursday, the last trading session is the session for the prior Tuesday, and the next listed contract becomes the active month at the start of the trading session for the Friday of the previous week (6:00 PM ET on Thursday), assuming a standard trading calendar.
If the relevant Pyth data is unavailable due to a system outage, data failure, or other technical disruption that prevents verification of the required 1-minute candle data, the official daily high/low price published for the Active Month Natural Gas (NG) futures contract by CME Group may be used to determine whether the listed price was reached during the applicable trading session.
In the event of a contract specification change, feed change, or similar structural modification affecting the underlying market during the listed time frame, this market will resolve based on adjusted prices as displayed on Pyth.
The resolution source for this market is Pyth — specifically, the Active Month Natural Gas futures "High" and "Low" prices available at https://pythdata.app/explore?search=NGD, with the chart settings configured for 1-minute candles. Historical 1-minute candles may be accessed by appending a Unix timestamp (seconds) to the Pyth chart URL using the "t=" parameter.
Resolution Source
https://pythdata.app/explore?search=NGDResolver
0x65070BE91...U.S. natural gas prices are trading near $3.10–$3.14 per MMBtu in mid-June 2026 amid elevated storage levels and robust domestic supply. The latest EIA weekly report showed a larger-than-expected 108 Bcf injection for the week ending June 5, lifting inventories to 2,686 Bcf—6% above the five-year average—while the agency raised its 2026 dry gas production forecast to 111 Bcf/d, driven by higher associated output from the Permian. Warmer-than-normal temperatures through late June are expected to lift power-sector demand for cooling, though scheduled maintenance has trimmed LNG feedgas flows. The next storage print on June 18 and any shifts in weather models represent the primary near-term catalysts that could influence price volatility around current levels.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated



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