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Bonus Article from MarketBeat Media
The Cold Snap Lit a Fire Under Natural Gas—3 Trades to Watch
Authored by Chris Markoch. Date Posted: 1/27/2026.

Key Takeaways
- Natural gas stocks are gaining momentum as winter storms, data center demand, and tight U.S. supply push prices higher.
- UNG and BOIL offer tactical ways for traders to capitalize on short-term natural gas volatility during extreme weather.
- Generac provides indirect exposure to cold-weather demand as power outages increase interest in backup generation.
Late January brought snow, ice and single-digit to sub-zero temperatures across much of the United States. Ahead of that, several energy stocks—particularly those tied to natural gas—rallied sharply.
Here’s the part of the story that may matter most to traders: U.S. natural gas output sits near decade lows while demand (even before the recent storms) continues to rise.
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One driver is data centers. While there is optimism around nuclear for the future, natural gas remains the practical solution today. That has led some traders to target two ETFs as tactical tools to express short-term bullishness.
But that’s not the only way to warm a portfolio during frigid weather. Winter storms can cause power outages, which often boosts interest in a company that typically shines during hurricane season.
Each of these names could still have upside. Traders looking to play the cold snap may want to consider these three options.
UNG Offers Direct Exposure to Short-Term Natural Gas Moves
The United States Natural Gas Fund (NYSEARCA: UNG) gives traders direct exposure to movements in the spot price of natural gas via near-dated futures contracts. With production near decade lows and demand rising from power generation and data centers, UNG is a common way for nimble traders to express a short-term bullish view during extreme winter weather.
The UNG ETF is up nearly 20% in 2026 as many investors bet on a tightening supply-demand balance. Cold weather can further squeeze supply and support prices.
However, UNG remains well below its peaks from 2022–2023 following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The fund fell sharply afterward and has been a difficult trade for much of the last three years; it is down more than 61% over the past five years.
BOIL Offers 2x Leveraged Exposure to Natural Gas Futures
The ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Natural Gas ETF (NYSEARCA: BOIL) provides 2x leveraged exposure to daily natural gas futures returns. That leverage can make BOIL attractive during rapid price surges driven by cold weather, infrastructure constraints or sudden demand spikes.
For aggressive traders, BOIL can amplify gains over short periods. For example, the BOIL ETF is up nearly 38% year-to-date—roughly double UNG’s gain.
But the same leverage that magnifies upside also intensifies losses. Over the last five years, BOIL has fallen about 99%, nearly double UNG’s decline. That makes timing and active position management critical: BOIL is best suited to experienced traders seeking to capitalize on short-lived momentum, not buy-and-hold investors.
Generac: A Power Outage Play That Isn’t Just for Hurricane Season
Generac Holdings Inc. (NYSE: GNRC) isn’t a natural gas producer, but winter storms can still make it a compelling trade. Extreme weather raises the risk of power outages, driving demand for backup generators from residential and commercial customers.
Many of Generac’s units run on natural gas, positioning the company to benefit from increased interest in gas-fired backup power as grid reliability is questioned. While Generac is often associated with hurricane season, severe winter storms can produce similar demand spikes. If outages persist or grid stress increases, Generac could attract renewed investor attention.
GNRC is up more than 22% in 2026, yet it still trades about 16.7% below the consensus price target, and analysts’ targets are rising. The stock looks pricey on a trailing basis at roughly 31x earnings but is more reasonable on a forward P/E of about 20x.
Why These Trades Require Careful Timing
What goes up can come down just as quickly. Both BOIL and UNG are tied directly to natural gas futures, one of the market’s most volatile commodity exposures. Leverage, daily resets and futures roll costs can erode returns if prices move sideways or reverse.
Weather-driven rallies can fade fast if forecasts change or supply rebounds. Generac faces different risks, including a drop in demand if outages are limited or the weather normalizes. Investors should treat these trades as short-term opportunities and use position sizing, stop-losses or hedges rather than relying on them as long-term core holdings.
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