The Oxford Institute for Energy Studies (OIES) published its June Comment putting EU storage on track to reach 70% by 1 November, not the mandated 80%, on a net European LNG shortfall of 2.1 bcm a month through October 1. OIES is the Oxford-based research body whose gas reviews are reference material for European trading desks. Its balance nets an 8.6 bcm Qatar-UAE loss against only 4.3 bcm replaced from other suppliers and 2.2 bcm shaved from non-EU and UK demand.
The Comment opens a wedge against the forward curve. TTF forwards average $14.72/MMBtu for 2026, below even the $13.50 OIES modelled in March for a rapid Qatari reopening, while OIES warns that above $20/MMBtu may be needed to choke enough demand to refill if Hormuz stays shut. The curve is pricing the optimistic leg of a distribution whose central case is materially worse, a roughly 40% gap below the level OIES says a closed strait requires.
Storage stood at 45.3% on 18 June, filling about 10% below the pace required for the 80% floor and continuing the under-pace trajectory that projected 67% in early June from a 40% reading 2. The mandates remain the only structural injector , with commercial arbitrage absent while the summer-winter strip holds inverted on the 58 mtpa of new global LNG capacity due in H2 . This is a relative-value asymmetry rather than a directional call: the prompt has priced relief that the back of the curve, carrying the risk the supply recovery cannot arrive before the window closes, has not.
