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European Energy Markets
16JUL

TTF back over EUR 50 on withdrawn cargo

2 min read
09:48UTC

TTF front-month rose 13% to EUR 50.10 on 9 July on QatarEnergy's withdrawn volume, easing to 49.99 on 10 July; unlike June's diplomacy premium, this break rests on physical supply.

EconomicAssessed
Key takeaway

Withdrawn Qatari cargo, not sentiment, is holding TTF above EUR 50 this time.

TTF front-month climbed from 44.13 EUR/MWh on Monday 6 July to 46.58, 49.02 and 50.10 by Thursday 9 July, a four-session gain of roughly 13%, before easing to 49.99 on Friday 10 July 12. The benchmark last held above EUR 50 before the 17 June slide, when it settled 41.12 on ban-binding day and never snapped back .

That earlier EUR 50 was a diplomacy premium on Iran-Israel escalation risk to Gulf tanker routes, and it drained in a single session once the US-Iran memorandum was signed , after the prompt had already broken its EUR 46 floor selling into the ban on 15 June . This EUR 50 rests on withdrawn cargo instead: QatarEnergy has removed expected volume, so the move lacks the diplomatic off-ramp that emptied the June ceiling.

The Friday flattening deserves honest weight. One carrier was hit, not the Ras Laffan terminal itself, and a sceptical desk will file this alongside the 1 July tanker-headline pop that faded within a session. The counter is concrete: a headline reprices sentiment, but al-Kaabi's ramp-halt and the force majeure running to August pull real volume from the forward curve. A floor built on withdrawn cargo holds better than one built on risk sentiment, though neither proves the level survives an escort convoy re-forming.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

TTF is the main price traders use to buy and sell natural gas in Europe, similar to how oil has a benchmark price like Brent. It jumped from EUR 44 to just over EUR 50 for every megawatt-hour of gas in four trading days. The jump matters because it goes beyond traders reacting to worrying headlines, which is what happened the last time the price briefly passed EUR 50 earlier this year. This time an actual gas supplier, QatarEnergy, has genuinely reduced how much gas it is shipping. Less real gas on the market tends to keep prices higher for longer than a scare that later proves unfounded.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

QatarEnergy's own withdrawal of Ras Laffan volume, rather than renewed Hormuz transit risk in general, is the physical driver behind the repricing: force majeure notices into August remove supply European buyers had priced in returning this summer.

A persistent Asia premium compounds the effect. The JKM-TTF spread has sat in the USD 1.4-2.4/MMBtu range through late June, below the roughly USD 2/MMBtu threshold that typically redirects spot cargoes toward Europe, meaning marginal LNG supply was already tilted toward Asian buyers before this week's withdrawal .

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Higher TTF settlements feed directly into CCGT-fired power costs across Germany and France, compounding the same-window rise in day-ahead electricity prices.

  • Risk

    If the rally proves durable rather than sentiment-driven, storage operators face a harder trade-off between paying up now and accepting a wider shortfall against the 80% November target.

First Reported In

Update #25 · Qatari LNG strike puts TTF back over EUR 50

Investing.com· 10 Jul 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
LNG spreads desk
LNG spreads desk
The JKM-TTF arb flipped to a TTF premium of roughly USD 0.6/MMBtu on 15 July, the first time this cycle Europe has outbid Asia, yet no Atlantic cargo has rerouted west. Until a cargo actually moves, the desk reads the Hormuz premium as unconfirmed and the EUR 55 print as vulnerable to a fast reversal.
United States
United States
Washington reimposed a blockade on Iranian ports and a 20% Strait of Hormuz cargo toll on 13 July, driving TTF's 9% two-session rally to EUR 54.995/MWh. The posture is again setting Europe's gas benchmark by sentiment rather than by any confirmed change in cargo flows.
EDF
EDF
EDF slipped the Bugey 3, Golfech 2 and Chooz 2 restarts to 19, 22 and 25 July, pushing all three past the 20 July Bugey heat exemption, after river-cooling limits on the Rhone, Garonne and Meuse forced the cuts. The same thermal ceiling has capped the fleet in every major heatwave since 2003, and this cycle is no exception.
German power desk
German power desk
German day-ahead power climbed from EUR 126 to EUR 156/MWh over 14-16 July as the heat dome held, flipping the clean spark spread positive for the first time since 14 July. Gas-for-power demand is now back in competition with mandate storage injection right as the injection margin itself is thinning.
EU carbon and storage regulators
EU carbon and storage regulators
EUA carbon broke EUR 81/tonne on 13 July as the ETS Market Stability Reserve's scheduled withdrawals met fresh fuel-switching demand from France's nuclear curtailment. Brussels' mandatory storage-fill rule kept German and French injection running regardless of the TTF swings, the mechanism working as designed four years after the 2022 shock.
Equinor
Equinor
Equinor returned its Asgard field from maintenance on 11 July, lifting Gassco's exit nominations to 319.8 mcm/day just as TTF round-tripped on Hormuz risk. The restart gave Norway spare pipeline capacity to help Europe absorb the gas rally without drawing down storage, reinforcing its role as the post-2022 swing supplier.