Market Insight

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Mon, 29th Jun ’26

GAS

  • Traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has slowed following Friday’s flare-up (but not stopped).
  • As such, markets opened marginally higher, but are now treading water.
  • Prices remain confined within the comparatively tight range seen throughout the back end of last week.
  • Market participants are mostly adopting a wait-and-see approach, looking for greater clarity around potential peace negotiations, and whether Qatar will/can increase its export volumes.
  • At the same time, with each day/week/month that passes, pressure is building on Europe to restock gas inventories ahead of the Winter-26 heating season, with storage levels still notably below the seasonal norm (now at 48% versus the 5-year average of 60%).
  • For now, both the US and Iran have agreed to pause hostilities – again.
  • As far as we can tell, the most likely cause for Iran’s drone attack on a Singapore-flagged oil tanker on Friday was frustration – not at the US, but at Oman.
  • Oman’s decision to open a shipping corridor through the Strait of Hormuz is weakening Tehran’s leverage over the strategic waterway – so they opted to bomb a ship as it exited the Strait (that had used Oman’s corridor to achieve safe transit).
  • The US then retaliated by attacking multiple strategic targets across Iran.
  • Then, Iran retaliated by launching missile attacks toward US bases in Kuwait and Bahrain.
  • In reponse, the US attacked still more strategic targets across Iran yesterday.
  • As of this morning, the uneasy truce resumed, and it’s as you were.
  • On the FLEX side, traders continue to buy in the dips – we expect for markets to soften as the week progresses (as we don’t think it’s a coincidence that all parties seem prone to act when markets are closed at weekends!)
  • If you’re waiting on Trade Confirmations, please bear with us whilst our Trading Desk times market entries/buys in the dips.
  • Looking at the big picture, the gas market remains underpinned by strong supply-side fundamentals, with rising Norwegian flows and resilient system length (supply outstripping demand forecast).
  • Last week, I commented that even though traffic through the Strait of Hormuz was resuming, the smart money (Investment Funds) were likely to wait for a rise in Qatari LNG exports, and/or a significant rebound in European LNG imports before we see a further sell-off – as per the chart below detailing Investmenet Fund Net Position vs TTF (European gas benchmark), that sell-off remains pending.
  • UK gas Monthly Day-Ahead Averages for June so far have fallen to 109 p/therm (or 3.7 p/kwh exc. non-gas).

ELECTRICITY & CARBON

  • UK electricity prices have been significantly less volatile than gas prices since the US/Israeli offensive began back on 28th Feb – primarily due to summery conditions, solid renewables outputs (meaning lower gas-for-power generation).
  • Indeed, today’s UK electricity generation mix is bearish in nature – specifically, renewables are contributing 43%, thermal at 21% (gas and coal) and low carbon at 21% (nuclear and imports).
  • The chart below details UK electricity Season-Ahead and 2-Seasons-Ahead prices at Friday’s close.
  • By way of explanation, right now, Season-Ahead is Winter-26 and 2-Seasons-Ahead is Summer-27.
  • Notably, when compared to this time last year, 2-Seasons-Ahead is almost at parity (whilst Season-Ahead is significantly higher than this time last year) – reflecting an underlying sentiment amongst market particpants that markets will return to pre-war levels.
  • On the FLEX side, traders continue to buy in the dips – we expect for markets to soften as the week progresses (as we don’t think it’s a coincidence that all parties seem prone to act when markets are closed at weekends!)
  • If you’re waiting on Trade Confirmations, please bear with us whilst our Trading Desk times market entries/buys in the dips.
  • On the Carbon side of things, mid-price Dec-26 UKA delivery is at £56.42/tn (and the spot is at early 55s) mirroring softer gas prices.
  • There are also whispers that a potential broader EU policy shift may already be underway – favouring global competitiveness over the limitations of climate action.
  • UK electriity Monthly Day-Ahead Averages for June so far are holding steady at £93/mwh (or 9.3 p/kwh exc. non-energy).

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