Natural-gas prices fell to a one-month low as a glut leftover from winter continued to grow more quickly than expected. The U.S. Energy Information Administration said natural-gas stockpiles grew by 71 billion cubic feet last week, compared to the 68 bcf expected by 18 forecasters surveyed by The Wall Street Journal. The report is a widely watched measure of supply and demand. A larger-than-expected addition to storage likely indicates larger supply or smaller demand than expected, and losses mounted after the data’s release. Futures for June delivery settled down 2.9 cents, or 1.5%, to $1.963 a million British thermal units. The June contract had been at $1.965/mmBtu before the EIA’s data release. The June contract expired at settlement. The more actively traded July contract settled down 3 cents, or 1.4%, at $2.151. The addition to storage wasn’t that far off from expectations, but stockpiles are so high with gas […]