Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Energy Markets
26MAY

TTF closes at EUR 42.39 after Hormuz swing

3 min read
12:01UTC

Dutch front-month gas settled EUR 4.12 above its 17 April seven-week low, pricing one variable against a three-variable supply calendar.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

TTF at 42.39 prices Hormuz signal noise, not the Hammerfest and Russian-ban removals this week.

TTF front-month settled at EUR 42.39/MWh on 22 April, recovering EUR 4.12 from a 17 April intraday low of EUR 38.27 1. The low printed after Donald Trump declared on Truth Social that the strait of Hormuz was 'completely open and ready for business', a declaration Iran repudiated by re-closing the strait on 18 April. The 14 loaded LNG cargoes that had been waiting to transit on 17 April have not moved.

The curve has repriced that signal almost entirely. What it has not priced is the compound arrival of two deterministic supply removals landing this week. Equinor shut Hammerfest LNG the same morning for a minimum 80 days of maintenance , and Friday's EU short-term Russian LNG framework change lands this week. Neither sits in the EUR 4.12 range; the market is treating Hormuz as the only active variable.

The composition of the 42.39 print is single-variable price action against a three-variable supply calendar. A clean Hammerfest 10 July return, a Hormuz reopening releasing the 14 queued cargoes, or an Arc7-mediated backfill of Russian volumes would each reduce the stack to a sequence and validate the current print. Absent those, the forward curve is priced on one assumption the market knows it is making.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

TTF is the main European gas price benchmark, similar to a stock index for gas. After US President Trump incorrectly said the Strait of Hormuz was open for shipping on 17 April, the price dropped sharply. Iran's own re-closure of the strait on 18 April drove prices back up to EUR 42.39 by 22 April. Two further supply problems arriving this week, a major Norwegian gas plant shutting for maintenance and a new EU ban on Russian gas contracts, have not yet fed through to the price.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

TTF's single-variable pricing reflects a structural feature of European gas markets: the benchmark trades on narrative momentum faster than on cargo-level data. The 17 April low of EUR 38.27 was driven by a single social media post from the US President, not by any confirmed cargo transit.

Market microstructure, with extended trading hours now running 10-21 hours daily per Bloomberg, amplifies signal noise by giving momentum traders more session time to react to unverified geopolitical statements.

The deeper structural cause is that Europe's gas curve has no effective futures-market mechanism to separate geopolitical risk from physical supply. The forward curve prices both simultaneously, which means a credible diplomatic statement compresses the risk premium regardless of whether molecules have actually moved.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If Hammerfest and the Russian short-term ban are not priced in within the next two trading sessions, a catch-up repricing of EUR 5-10/MWh is structurally plausible as compliance teams update forward positions from 25 April.

    Immediate · 0.72
  • Opportunity

    A sustained Asian demand weakness persisting through June would provide Europe a cargo-routing window that the current spread geometry does not offer, potentially allowing Atlantic cargoes to redirect without a material TTF premium.

    Short term · 0.55
  • Risk

    The EUR 80/MWh Standard Chartered ceiling remains a live scenario if all three removals (Hormuz, Hammerfest, Russian ban) remain unresolved at the 1 June injection season peak.

    Medium term · 0.6
First Reported In

Update #4 · AccelerateEU skips gas; three removals land

World Pipelines· 22 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Cefic and European industrial gas offtakers
Cefic and European industrial gas offtakers
Chemical manufacturers running at 62-68% utilisation face mandate-funded storage that secures volume at above-commercial prices without reducing gas costs. A EUR 35bn refill bill, if confirmed, flows back through regulated network tariffs, adding directly to industrial energy costs already named by BASF and INEOS as structural.
OIES and energy research institutions
OIES and energy research institutions
Bruegel and OIES have not published a revised refill cost model at EUR 47-51 TTF with sub-0.4 pp/day pace. The EUR 35bn mid-range is drifting into use as the operative sub-80% November consensus, and the 11 June ACER workshop is the next venue where EU-level storage instrument advocacy can surface.
Equinor upstream gas
Equinor upstream gas
The Troll A compressor fault removed 34.6 mcm/day, stacked on Hammerfest, yet TTF fell 8.1% on Iran news the same day. Norwegian supply disruptions carry no price premium while Hormuz dominates; Equinor's 31 May Troll restart is a first estimate and the 2025 Hammerfest compressor fault of the same class slipped 24 days.
German Economy Ministry and Bundesnetzagentur
German Economy Ministry and Bundesnetzagentur
Berlin confirmed on 20 May it will not introduce a summer injection-incentive scheme, leaving Germany as the EU's only major unincentivised market after the storage levy lapsed on 1 January 2026. Commercial injectors apparently used the 18 May EUR 50 spike to lock winter supply cost rather than book against a structurally negative strip.
CRE and French gas operators
CRE and French gas operators
CRE's 100% mandatory booking order funds French injection regardless of the inverted strip, providing the EU aggregate cover that masks Germany's gap. The French position is insulated from TTF price moves but exposed to CRE's annual renewal cycle, a political risk rather than a commercial one.
Amsterdam-Rotterdam gas trading desks
Amsterdam-Rotterdam gas trading desks
TTF's 8.1% crash on a deal headline despite 50-plus mcm/day of verified Norwegian outages settled the EUR 50 question: it is a diplomatic ceiling, not a floor, and the short EUR 50-strike summer position keeps paying until Iran resolves. EBN's price-insensitive mandate buying tightens the prompt but the EUR 233m budget cap is a known position risk.