1/8 Forward curves for πͺπΊ gas prices (TTF) show falling prices but levels remain double πΊπΈ benchmark (Henry Hub) until 2031.
Thus the 'Doomsday crowd' forecasts de-industrialization of πͺπΊ.
I am positioned the other way.
Chart via @GeorgZachmann
#gas #gasprices #EnergyCrisis
2/8 The first counter argument is that this is somewhat more a return to the past with TTF generally trading way above Henry Hub.
Chart via @MiguelGilTertre
3/8 In this context I also recommend to read the Substack article from @adam_tooze from September 2022. In essence he refutes the 'cheap Russian gas hypothesis' for π©πͺ and focuses on the relevance of energy efficiency.
adamtooze.substack.com/p/chartbook-15β¦
4/8 I believe the forward curve is useful only in short-term forecast and its effect is limited longer term. More noise than signal.
There is a good academic paper from 2009 on this topic on oil.
onhttps://eaber.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/IEEJ_Yanagisawa_2009.pdf
5/8 The same arguments can be applied to gas forward curves. Summary on the reasoning from the academic paper is below:
6/8 So again I would argue that the 'Doomsday crowd' is way too sure of πͺπΊ demise.
We know that the πͺπΊ is going into overdrive to wean itself of fossil fuels in general and π·πΊ gas/oil/coal in particular.
See also my threads from April 7th, 10th and 15th on the topic.
7/8 You can argue that πͺπΊ plans will not work. The answer to this will probably be a lot clearer by 2025.
In the meantime I suggest to follow a few analysts who have what I would call a better more nuanced understanding of Europe such as @JacobShap or @Geo_papic .
8/8 I remain long π©πͺ Industrials who are heavy gas users. See thread dated Jan 2nd 2023.
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