Natural Gas ETF Rallies Nearly 20% from Low | ETF Trends

A natural gas ETF has bounced almost 20% from its 52-week low with trading volume ramping up on speculation the commodity will recover after dropping below $2 per 1,000 cubic feet for the first time in over a decade.

U.S. Natural Gas Fund (NYSEArca: UNG) rose nearly 5% on Thursday morning to trade just south of $17 a share. The $856 million ETF bottomed at $14.25 a share last month.

UNG is testing its 50-day simple moving average, a level it hasn’t traded above since last summer. The fund invests in futures contracts, so it won’t track the spot price for natural gas.

In a sign of bearish sentiment, UNG puts were “fairly active yesterday and the ETF has traded enormous volume in recent sessions,” said Paul Weisbruch at Street One Financial in a note Thursday.

“It is possible that longs are protecting recent gains or new entrants are potentially speculating on a near term pullback,” he wrote.

Meanwhile, hedge fund manager and natural gas investor John Arnold is winding down his Centaurus Energy Master Fund, according to reports this week.

Arnold shutters Centaurus as natural gas prices hover near 10-year lows, stifling returns, Bloomberg News reports.