Gazprom is preparing to offer to sell more gas to Europe at spot pricesAs opposed to, priced on an oil-based index. Well, like I said, it's a matter of specialist interest: but for the generalists, stick with it - there's a punchline.

One might imagine they are jumping horses from oil to gas just now because the oil price is so low. But unless they see it falling still further, you'd think they'd be even more keen to sell at an oil-indexed price, because the upside is that much greater ..? Certainly, gas prices look like being soft - or even softer - for a long time to come.
No, that's altogether the wrong line of reasoning. Signalling spot-gas indexation for continental* European buyers is an out-and-out white flag, a gesture unmistakeable in the gas world. And a concession as big as that would never have been made without sanction from the very top. As CU said yesterday, they aren't feeling too comfortable right now.
ND
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* They'd already conceded it for smallish volumes sold to Centrica in the UK, because (a) otherwise Centrica would readily have gone elsewhere, not an easy option for several continental players; and (b) it was for delivery in the UK, i.e. a wholesale deal, not a mainstream Russian export-pipeline gas sale
4 comments:
Spot pricing of course goes with spot availability. In the event of a severe European winter, things may look rather less rosy for customers than they do now.
No, it's indexed to spot pricing - in the pricing formula under a secure long-term contract. For the most part (excepting periods when they are at war with Ukraine, commercially or indeed militarily) Gazprom has been an ultra-reliable export supplier, more so than (say) the Dutch, who interrupt exports at the drop of a hat to prioritise suppliying Dutch customers
Of course, if spot gas becomes scarce, the spot price will spike up accordingly and this will be reflected in the price formula. However, experience shows that, taken over a long period, it tends to works out cheaper on average to buy spot (or spot-index) than to buy at fixed price (- you are paying the "hedger's premium") or indeed oil-indexed price
also, if (as a wholesale / large industrial buyer) you are 'exposed' to spot price spikes it incentivises you to cut demand during spikes, making your effective average even better against other forms of pricing, which won't spike to the same extent
(well, unless you buy indexed to electricity price ...)
Yes but all things come around, Nick.
not once you have settled for gas-gas indexation, James - the only reason for not doing this is irrational
anyone who really wants to buy on an oil index can easily do a financial swap (ditto any other desired pricing basis)
gas-gas is entirely neutral and allows everyone to go their own ways - gas-oil is at best an historical anomaly with inbuilt inefficiencies
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