TTF front-month gas, Europe's benchmark hub price, settled around EUR 50.00/MWh on Thursday 9 July, eased to EUR 48.80 on Friday 10 July, then firmed to EUR 50.50 by Monday 13 July, a 3.49% gain on the session, per Trading Economics 1. The move round-tripped the benchmark back over EUR 50 after a mid-week dip, and it came stronger than it left.
Nothing in the French power story pushed it. The bid came from renewed US-Iran military tension over Strait of Hormuz LNG shipping, the same risk channel that drove TTF's 13% climb to EUR 50.10 a week earlier when QatarEnergy withdrew Ras Laffan supply on 9 July and extended its Asian force majeure into August 2. the strait carries a fifth of global oil and a meaningful slice of LNG through a 33km chokepoint, so any escalation there reprices European gas regardless of what the continent's own storage is doing.
That split matters for anyone trading the gas-power relationship. French curtailment lifted power on a domestic weather event; TTF lifted on a Gulf chokepoint four thousand miles away. The two legs ran on separate clocks in the same week, which means a Hormuz de-escalation could unwind the gas premium quickly without touching the French power story at all.
