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European Energy Markets
26MAY

TTF settles EUR 46.44 inside tight weekly range

3 min read
12:01UTC

TTF held EUR 43.4 to 47.4/MWh across the week to 4 May, settling EUR 46.44 on Monday. Month-to-date down 7.27%, year-on-year up 40.53%; the France-Germany power spread held at EUR 55.75.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

TTF held a EUR 4 weekly range while the France-Germany May-26 power spread stayed at EUR 55.75/MWh.

TTF front-month closed at EUR 46.44/MWh on the Monday 4 May session, inside a weekly range of EUR 43.4 to 47.4/MWh per ICE data 1. Month-to-date the contract is down 7.27%; year-on-year it is up 40.53%. The France May-26 power contract traded at EUR 21.80/MWh versus Germany May-26 at EUR 77.55/MWh; the EUR 55.75 spread first flagged on 28 April held through 4 May with no compression.

A tight weekly range is what European desks expect when the supply book is settled. The settled read holds across two prior anchors: the EUR 41.67/MWh six-week low on 17 April and the recovery after Iran's re-closure of Hormuz . The weekly range across 30 April to 4 May sits inside both of those reference points, and that compression is what makes the divergence with the storage-pace data sharp rather than incremental.

France's nuclear-led baseload prints at EUR 21.80/MWh while Germany's gas-and-renewables mix prints at EUR 77.55/MWh, and the EUR 55.75 spread has held without compression for nearly a week. That persistence indicates the spread is structural rather than a one-session dislocation; it tracks the underlying generation mix and the gas-to-power transmission channel rather than near-term wind or temperature noise. The TTF range and the power spread together describe a market reading aggregate supply as resolved and the bilateral generation-mix gap as durable.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

France and Germany are connected by high-voltage electricity cables. France generates a lot of cheap nuclear power, but the cables between the two countries can only carry a limited amount. As a result, electricity in France is much cheaper than in Germany right now, France's May contract is around 21 euros per megawatt-hour, Germany's is 77 euros. The 55-euro gap has held steady all week. This gap matters because it shows how fragmented the European electricity market is: cheap power in one country cannot automatically offset expensive power in a neighbouring one, and German industry pays far more for electricity than French industry does.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    German gas-to-power generation bidding at EUR 70-80/MWh marginal cost into the balancing market sustains gas demand from power generation through May, reducing the volume available for storage injection and putting indirect upward pressure on TTF spot.

  • Opportunity

    If the Aurora forecast of spread compression by late May proves correct, German solar hours lengthening from May, gas-to-power demand falls and frees up TTF supply for storage injection, narrowing the pace gap from the power-generation side.

First Reported In

Update #7 · Storage pace 0.21 vs 0.257; floor not yet met

Trading Economics / ICE· 4 May 2026
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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.