Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Energy Markets
1JUN

TTF holds EUR 43-47 through Hormuz week

4 min read
08:52UTC

TTF front-month settled at EUR 44.84/MWh on 7 May and traded at EUR 44.21/MWh on 8 May, holding the EUR 43-47/MWh band through Project Freedom's collapse and Iran's new permit system.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

The benchmark has priced Hormuz-closed as equilibrium; reopening would be a downside surprise.

TTF (Title Transfer Facility) front-month settled at EUR 44.84/MWh on 7 May and traded at EUR 44.21/MWh at 06:36 GMT on 8 May, ICE Endex data via oilpriceapi shows. The benchmark held inside the EUR 43-47/MWh band through the launch of US Operation Project Freedom on 4 May , Trump's pause two days later on 6 May, and Iran's announcement of a new Persian Gulf Strait Authority permit system on 7 May.

TTF is the Dutch virtual gas trading hub operated by Gasunie Transport Services and the European wholesale natural gas benchmark. The 1.48% rise on the Project Freedom launch was not given back when the operation paused; the announcement of an Iranian permit system banning Israel-linked vessels and charging fees on non-hostile state ships did not produce a fresh move either.

The corollary follows from what the band has absorbed without breaking. The market has priced the Hormuz-closed equilibrium as the equilibrium, not the wartime exception, which inverts the usual risk asymmetry: a confirmed reopening becomes a downside surprise for sellers, not upside relief for buyers. Anything short of a confirmed reopening, including operational pauses and unilateral Iranian permit theatre, sits inside the price already.

The JKM (Japan Korea Marker) sat in the low-USD 18s/MMBtu against TTF near USD 15.7/MMBtu, a JKM-TTF spread of roughly USD 2.90-3.30/MMBtu. That keeps flexible Atlantic LNG cargoes routing east, with European buyers below the cargo-diversion breakeven by USD 0.95-1.25/MMBtu. The same band that held last week has now absorbed two further escalations without re-pricing the route.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

TTF is the main European gas benchmark, named after a Dutch virtual trading hub. ICE Endex publishes TTF prices daily, and European utilities, industrial buyers, and traders use it as the reference for gas contracts across the continent. Think of it like a pump price for wholesale gas. This week, two big events happened that you might expect to have moved the price: the US launched and then quickly abandoned a military mission to open the Strait of Hormuz (the main route for Middle Eastern gas tankers), and Iran announced it would charge fees and screen ships that want to use the strait. Neither moved the price. TTF has traded in the EUR 43-47 range since late April, absorbing Iranian Hormuz restrictions that began 18 April without re-pricing on each new development. The price had already moved to reflect a closed-strait baseline weeks before Project Freedom launched. For the price to fall, something would need to genuinely reopen the strait in a sustained way. An operation that ran for two days and was paused on 6 May, plus a permit-fee announcement, are not that.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The market's equilibrium-at-EUR-44 pricing reflects three structural features acting in combination. First, the JKM-TTF spread at USD 2.90-3.30/MMBtu maintains Asian demand as the dominant pull on flexible Atlantic LNG cargoes, removing the marginal source that would move TTF.

Second, EU gas storage is filling rather than drawing, meaning the physical shortage that would create an emergency spot bid has not materialised in the near-term data. Third, the Hormuz permit architecture Iran announced, email-based transit permits, vessel screening, fee structure, gives buyers a procedural route to compliance that avoids the all-or-nothing supply disruption that would force an aggressive spot re-pricing.

These three factors are individually reversible. A JKM collapse on Chinese demand weakness, a storage-pace failure confirmed on 12 May, or an Iranian enforcement action that closes the permit route would each independently break the EUR 43-47 band. All three would need to hold simultaneously for the EUR 44 floor to remain intact through June.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    TTF's EUR 43-47 band stability through Project Freedom and Iran permit news removes the forward-curve signal that would incentivise European utilities to bid aggressively for spot LNG cargoes now rather than waiting for winter.

    Short term · 0.78
  • Consequence

    A confirmed, sustained Hormuz reopening that collapses JKM-TTF spread to USD 1/MMBtu or below would produce a downside TTF move of EUR 4-7/MWh as sellers who are long the 'closed-is-permanent' position exit simultaneously.

    Medium term · 0.62
  • Opportunity

    Iranian permit compliance infrastructure, email-based per-vessel authorisation via Persian Gulf Strait Authority, creates a procedural path for non-Israel-linked LNG operators to resume Hormuz transits without triggering the all-or-nothing closure scenario the market has priced.

    Immediate · 0.55
First Reported In

Update #8 · Storage 34.3 as 12 May test nears; Hammerfest silent

oilpriceapi.com (relaying ICE Endex data)· 8 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp gas trading desks
Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp gas trading desks
TTF failing to sustain EUR 47-plus with 51 mcm/day of Norwegian supply offline confirms EUR 50 as a diplomatic ceiling rather than a physical floor; the curve is priced as a Troll-restart long, not a storage-deficit short. Winter Cal-26 long versus summer TTF short is the structural position FNB Gas's broken-mechanism verdict supports.
European Commission and DG Energy
European Commission and DG Energy
The Commission lowered the mandatory fill target from 90% to 80% and published the 11 May ETS benchmark revision saving industry EUR 4 billion, choosing industrial competitiveness over storage ambition at the moment physical injection margins narrowed. Berlin's confirmation of no summer injection scheme came with no Commission counter-instrument.
Hungarian and Slovak industrial offtakers
Hungarian and Slovak industrial offtakers
Hungary and Slovakia pay a EUR 2-plus delivered-gas premium over TTF benchmark prices regardless of ACER's improved pipeline-congestion reading, and both are litigating the 17 June EU pipeline ban at the CJEU (ID:3229). A post-17 June tightening of TurkStream supply would widen that basis further.
EBN and Dutch state
EBN and Dutch state
The Dutch state trebled EBN's mandate from 25 to 80 TWh, leaving EBN the sole active Dutch injector after the January auctions drew zero commercial bookings (ID:3637). The EUR 233m state budget cap is the binding cost ceiling; above-market injection at EBN is a fiscal transfer, not a market outcome.
CRE and French gas operators
CRE and French gas operators
France's 100% mandatory CRE booking order is carrying French injection regardless of the inverted strip, providing EU aggregate cover that Germany's abolished levy cannot supply. The order renews annually on CRE decision, making it a political risk rather than a structural guarantee.
FNB Gas and German TSOs
FNB Gas and German TSOs
FNB Gas formally declared the market-based storage-refill framework broken on 27 May, citing zero-clearing January auctions, ten days after Berlin ruled out any summer injection scheme. The intervention sets the institutional predicate for reintroducing a storage levy; the Gasspeicherumlage precedent (2022-25) confirms the administrative path is open.