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European Energy Markets
13APR

TTF trades EUR 41.67 intraday, extending six-week low

3 min read
22:33UTC

The Dutch Title Transfer Facility front-month was trading at EUR 41.67/MWh intraday on 17 April with markets still open, a further 1.3% below the 15 April midday level, as ceasefire-optimism kept a single diplomatic variable in control of the screen.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

TTF at EUR 41.67 prices one diplomatic variable while the 22-29 April calendar carries three independent supply reductions.

TTF front-month was trading at EUR 41.67/MWh intraday on 17 April, down 1.3% from the 15 April midday print of EUR 42.26 and 11.8% below the 13 April close of EUR 47.27 1. The figure is an in-market-hours reading (markets remained open through publication); the daily settle will print at end of session. The contract has fallen 23.77% over the preceding month while still trading 17.80% higher year-on-year 2. The screen is extending a ceasefire-optimism bid that has held rather than reversed.

TTF is the Dutch Title Transfer Facility, the virtual trading hub whose front-month settlement on ICE Endex serves as the continental benchmark for every European utility procurement desk and industrial hedge book. The 17 April intraday print sits in the lower half of the post-Hormuz trading range without signalling a structural easing of the underlying supply position. What the price carries, and what it does not, matters more than the headline number.

The physical calendar behind the screen has not softened alongside it. Three independent supply reductions converge into the 22-29 April window: Equinor's Hammerfest LNG planned maintenance from 22 April, the EU Council's short-term Russian LNG contract ban from 25 April, and Germany still net-withdrawing from storage four days into April when it should have flipped to injection. Two of those three have no diplomatic off-ramp. A ceasefire that holds does not close Hammerfest or reverse the Reden cavern booking failure. A ceasefire that fails compounds all three.

Implied option volatility on the late-April contract does not reflect the physical state of the system, because two-thirds of the stack is non-diplomatic. Industrial hedgers sizing Q3 exposure off EUR 41.67 are short gamma into a calendar they have not priced. At the JKM (Japan Korea Marker, the Asian LNG spot benchmark) parity level currently prevailing, flexible Atlantic cargoes see no commercial reason to bias toward European terminals, so the marginal supply that would cushion any broken leg is not queued to arrive. Standard Chartered's EUR 80+ upper-bound scenario remains on the table if any of the three independent supply legs breaks before the ceasefire question is even resolved.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

TTF is the price benchmark that European gas companies use to buy and sell natural gas think of it like a stock index but for gas. When it falls, it suggests traders believe the supply situation is improving, often because they expect a conflict affecting deliveries to wind down. On 17 April, the price dropped because traders were optimistic about a ceasefire in the Middle East that has been blocking gas tanker routes. The problem is that several other reasons gas supply will be tight in late April have nothing to do with that ceasefire, and the price has not fully reflected them yet.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

TTF's ceasefire sensitivity is structurally asymmetric. The contract responds to diplomatic news because a Hormuz reopening is the one variable large enough to matter roughly 2 bcm per week of Qatari supply removed but the non-Hormuz constraints are inelastic to diplomacy. The gas storage levy abolition on 1 January 2026 removed the injection-cost insurance that previously kept forward-curve incentives aligned with physical storage build targets.

The JKM-TTF spread geometry means Atlantic flexible cargoes have no commercial reason to bias toward European terminals at current hub levels. The option market is therefore pricing only the diplomatic binary, not the independent supply constraints, creating a disconnect between screen-level signals and the physical injection economics that will become visible in the AGSI+ data inside two weeks.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If any of the three non-diplomatic supply constraints breaks in the 22-29 April window while the ceasefire premium is still embedded in TTF, the repricing would be rapid and unhedged for late-movers.

    Immediate · 0.82
  • Consequence

    Industrial procurement desks using EUR 41.67 as Q3 hedge anchor are implicitly running an uncovered diplomatic position.

    Short term · 0.75
  • Opportunity

    If the ceasefire holds and Hormuz traffic normalises, the EUR 41 print becomes a reasonable medium-term floor and long-dated injection contracts become viable at current economics.

    Medium term · 0.6
First Reported In

Update #3 · TTF holds six-week low as supply stack hardens

Trading Economics / ICE· 17 Apr 2026
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Different Perspectives
Amsterdam-Rotterdam gas trading desks
Amsterdam-Rotterdam gas trading desks
TTF failing to sustain EUR 47+ with 51 mcm/day of Norwegian capacity offline confirms EUR 50 as a diplomatic ceiling; the curve is a Troll-restart long, and EBN's EUR 233 million mandate budget cap is a known limit on price-insensitive prompt buying.
ARERA
ARERA
Italy's energy regulator is running mandatory storage injection that carries the EU aggregate trajectory alongside CRE and EBN, while Italian industrial consumers at Panigaglia face a simultaneously low-utilisation terminal and a EUR 2/MWh delivered-cost basis above TTF. The mandate funds security of supply at the expense of Italian competitiveness.
Shell
Shell
As a long-term Russian LNG contract holder, Shell faces a replacement procurement problem concentrated in Q3-Q4 2026 ahead of the 1 January 2027 double cliff; with terminal booking lead times running weeks, the real deadline is late November 2026 and no replacement supply has been publicly named.
CRE
CRE
France's 100% mandatory booking order funds injection regardless of the inverted strip, providing the EU aggregate cover that Germany's abolished levy cannot; the CRE order is renewed annually, making it a political risk rather than a structural guarantee. That dependency exposes the EU injection trajectory to French electoral cycles.
Bundesnetzagentur
Bundesnetzagentur
Germany's regulator holds the early-warning gas stage active with no statutory instrument to compel commercial injection, and Berlin confirmed on 20 May it will introduce no summer incentive scheme; Germany is the EU's only major unincentivised storage market after the levy lapsed on 1 January 2026. The mandate gap is carried by three other member states.
European Commission
European Commission
The Commission relaxed the mandatory fill target from 90% to 80% and published an ETS benchmark revision saving industry EUR 4 billion, choosing industrial competitiveness over both climate and storage ambition at the moment physical margins are tightest. Both decisions reduce policy pressure at the exact week the trajectory margin narrowed to 45 GWh/day.