TTF front-month traded in a EUR 46-47/MWh range on Wednesday 28 May, with intraday prints at EUR 46.93 (up 0.75%) and EUR 46.02 (down 3.38% session-on-session). The one-month price change stands at +0.15%, confirming the market is range-trading between diplomatic signals rather than trending. The EUR 50 diplomatic ceiling established when a US-Iran deal headline knocked 8.1% off the benchmark remains intact despite more than 50 mcm/day of verified Norwegian outages.
The price action confirms Timera's framing : the strip is a Troll-restart long, not a supply-disruption trade. TTF failing to sustain EUR 47+ with 51 mcm/day of Norwegian capacity offline tells desks that the market is pricing restart, not sustained loss.
NBP settled at 112.3p/therm on 28 May, equivalent to roughly EUR 46.5/MWh at prevailing FX. That is effective parity with TTF. Historically NBP has traded at a persistent discount, reflecting the UK's superior regasification capacity through South Hook, Dragon LNG and Isle of Grain. At parity, UK regasification capacity no longer offers a discount to attract marginal cargoes. South Hook alone handles roughly 20% of UK gas supply; losing the NBP discount that routed cargoes there removes a buffer that Continental buyers have relied on since 2011. For LNG procurement desks, parity eliminates any routing-cost incentive to send flexible cargoes preferentially to UK terminals over Continental ones.
