(Bloomberg) — European natural gas slumped to the lowest in over two months as traders weigh growing winter stockpiles and await more guidance from governments on potential price interventions.
Most Read from Bloomberg
Biden Says Putin Threats Real, Could Spark Nuclear ‘Armageddon’
Stock Traders Hit Sell Button on Hawkish Fed Bets: Markets Wrap
Biden Should Hit Saudi Arabia Where It Really Hurts
Kremlin Lets State Media Tell Some Truths About Putin’s Stalling War
Musk's Twitter Takeover Hits Snag Over Debt-Financing Issue
Benchmark futures lost 17% for the week, more than halving from August highs. Yet, overall energy costs for European consumers are still above historic norms, and leaders from the region continue to seek ways to ease the crisis and avoid blackouts during colder months.
The European Union’s executive arm is planning to prepare several different plans for how to cap prices by a summit later this month. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Friday urged the bloc to cooperate with Asian nations to bring down gas costs, although he declined to elaborate on possible mechanisms.
Read also: EU Gets Wake-Up Call as Energy Costs Threaten Solidarity
Meanwhile, gas storage levels on the continent are now about 90%, higher than last year. Coupled with ample supplies of liquefied natural gas and lower consumption by industries, that’s helped calm nerves for now.
“Demand destruction, additional LNG imports have normalized EU storage levels heading into the winter,” Morgan Stanley said in a note.
Dutch front-month gas, a European benchmark, plunged 11% on Friday to 156.21 euros a megawatt-hour, the lowest since July 21. The UK equivalent dropped 12%, also posting a weekly loss.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Friday said options that could be proposed to EU leaders include negotiating a corridor for “decent prices” with reliable suppliers, a measure to curb costs within the market overall and a way to limit the influence of gas in electricity prices.
Yet, industry is concerned that price interventions may hinder both further demand destruction and supplies to Europe, at a time when it needs to replace flows that would ordinarily come from Russia.
Prices are currently being set by the demand side, according to the European Federation of Energy Traders. “Prices rise to a level where consumers self-interrupt, switch to alternative fuels, or invest in other energy saving measures,” it said. “Without this signal, consumption will be higher, and the shortfall will need to be resolved another way, e.g. mandatory curtailments.”
For now, LNG flows to Europe remain strong after prices surged well above rates in Asia, helping to divert cargoes and fill the gaps left by dwindling pipeline shipments from Russia.
See also: Surging LNG Is Partial, Pricey Solution to Europe Gas Plight
Still, some nations that used to rely heavily on energy ties with Moscow may struggle this winter. That includes the biggest economy, Germany, which is already preparing for a 20% cut in gas usage this heating season. Even so, “rationing might only be avoided by hair’s breadth, both this year and next,” according to Deutsche Bank.
Next winter might be even tougher as the LNG market will get tighter, according to Morgan Stanley, which boosted price forecasts for the super-chilled fuel for the second half of 2023 and 2024. “We see a rising deficit next year,” it said.
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
The Massive Gas Field That Europe Can’t Use
Even After $100 Billion, Self-Driving Cars Are Going Nowhere
Hackers Target Eager Homebuyers With a Dumb Scam That Keeps Working
‘I Am Energy’: Inside the Bang Billionaire’s Reeling Empire
©2022 Bloomberg L.P.
(Bloomberg) — Trouble for banks stuck with unwanted buyout financing is an opportunity for investors in the $187 billion distressed debt market, according to Canyon Partners Chief Investment Officer Todd Lemkin. Most Read from BloombergBiden Says Putin Threats Real, Could Spark Nuclear ‘Armageddon’Stock Traders Hit Sell Button on Hawkish Fed Bets: Markets WrapBiden Should Hit Saudi Arabia Where It Really HurtsKremlin Lets State Media Tell Some Truths About Putin’s Stalling WarMusk's Twitter Tak
Mexico's growth is projected to slow in the next few quarters, despite the country's fiscal and monetary policy putting it in a good position to navigate global turmoil, the International Monetary Fund said in a statement Friday. Impacts from the coronavirus pandemic and a turbulent global environment could exacerbate long-standing inequality and low growth in Mexico, the IMF said after a mission to the country. Mexico's interest rate hikes, combined with its neutral fiscal stance in 2022 and 2023, are the appropriate policy steps to disinflate the economy, the IMF said.
U.S. stocks nosedived on Friday as solid job growth and a drop in the unemployment rate last month boosted the chances of more jumbo-sized interest rate hikes, while a revenue warning from Advanced Micro Devices hit chipmakers. The Labor Department's closely watched employment report showed nonfarm payrolls increased by 263,000 jobs last month after rising 315,000 in August.
BUFFALO, N.Y. (Reuters) -New York Federal Reserve President John Williams said on Friday the U.S. central bank has more work to do to lower inflation and rebalance economic activity in a more sustainable way, and he warned that the unemployment rate will most likely rise as part of that process. "We need to get interest rates up further and basically get interest rates above where inflation is," and that could lead the central bank towards a target rate of around 4.5%, Williams said at a gathering held at SUNY Buffalo State in Buffalo, New York. Doing so will better balance supply with demand "in a way that brings down inflation quickly."
The Biden administration plans to bring down sanctions on Venezuela to allow Chevron Corp (NYSE: CVX) to restart oil pumping there. The potential resumption of oil pumping, the Wall Street Journal reported, is expected to reopen U.S. and European markets to oil exports from Venezuela. In return for the sanctions relief, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro would resume talks with the country’s opposition to discuss ways to hold free and fair presidential elections in 2024. The report noted that t
(Bloomberg) — The European Union’s executive arm is planning to urgently prepare several different options for how to cap the price of natural gas as it tries to alleviate an energy crisis, but EU diplomats warned the bloc’s timetable may be unrealistic. Most Read from BloombergBiden Says Putin Threats Real, Could Spark Nuclear ‘Armageddon’Stock Traders Hit Sell Button on Hawkish Fed Bets: Markets WrapBiden Should Hit Saudi Arabia Where It Really HurtsKremlin Lets State Media Tell Some Truths A
OSLO (Reuters) -Norway's Telenor on Friday said it had agreed to sell a 30% stake in its Norwegian fibre broadband unit for 10.8 billion crowns ($1.0 billion) to a consortium led by U.S. investment company KKR and pension firm Oslo Pensjonsforsikring. Around 30% of Telenor's proceeds will be used for share buybacks, the group said in a statement. Telenor's shares, which had been trading at 10-year lows amid sluggish growth and inflation eroding its margins, rose 4.4% in early trade.
Vice Mayor Scott Jablow and first-time candidate Samaire Armstrong offered different visions of the city's future in a debate Thursday night.
European Union rules to regulate crypto assets will curb the market share of non-euro denominated stablecoins from 2024, potentially limiting EU competitiveness, industry representatives have said. Ambassadors for the 27 EU states on Wednesday gave their approval to a deal on the new Markets in Crypto Assets Regulation (MiCA) thrashed out in June with the European Parliament. The ambassadors also published a full text of the deal, revealing details such as that stablecoins not denominated in the euro will be limited to 1 million transactions and 200 million euros ($196 million) in transaction value when marketed in the euro zone.
Yahoo Finance Live anchors discuss Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari’s latest remarks on fighting inflation.
The suspect in custody for his alleged role in the kidnapping and deaths of the Merced County family was previously arrested in 2005.
Russians opposed to the war in Ukraine or fearful of being sent to fight there have fled to Kazakhstan in their hundreds of thousands, but many are finding new problems on arrival. And the scale of the exodus has given rise to concerns from some Kazakhs who see the incoming Russians as a potential economic burden and even a security risk. Kamar Karimova, a university professor in Kazakhstan's biggest city Almaty, had to move out of a rented apartment within a day when her landlord abruptly raised the monthly rent by 42% to 340,000 tenge ($723).
On Friday, New York Mayor Eric Adams declared a state of emergency and announced an executive order to suspend land use requirements to help the city cope with the influx of people.
Bleacher Report named the Ravens' biggest early-season disappointment in 2022
(Bloomberg) — Zinc and aluminum climbed after the London Metal Exchange said it will restrict new deliveries of the metals from Russia’s Ural Mining & Metallurgical Co. and one of its subsidiaries.Most Read from BloombergTrump Says US Agency Packed Top-Secret Documents. These Emails Suggest Otherwise.Nord Stream Leaks Caused by Detonations in Sign of SabotageSecretive Chip Startup May Help Huawei Circumvent US SanctionsKremlin Lets State Media Tell Some Truths About Putin’s Stalling WarStocks S
Wine production in France this year should reach 44.6 million hectolitres, 18% above last year's frost-ravaged output, the farm ministry said on Friday as harvesting that started early due to dry summer conditions draws to a close. This was above the ministry's forecast of 44.0 million hectolitres in September and 4% above the five-year average. A hectolitre is 100 litres, or about 133 standard wine bottles.
Starbucks (NASDAQ: SBUX) is facing some challenging headwinds right now. Down 27% year to date, shares of Starbucks have performed slightly worse than the S&P 500's 23% slump. Last month, Starbucks held a biennial Investor Day where it announced many ambitious targets.
(Bloomberg) — The slowdown in dealmaking that’s crimping fees for the world’s biggest banks is here to stay, according to Citigroup Inc.’s top mergers and acquisitions adviser in Europe.Most Read from BloombergBiden Says Putin Threats Real, Could Spark Nuclear ‘Armageddon’Kremlin Lets State Media Tell Some Truths About Putin’s Stalling WarMusk's Twitter Takeover Hits Snag Over Debt-Financing IssueNord Stream Leaks Caused by Detonations in Sign of SabotageTrump Says US Agency Packed Top-Secret D
The Stark County OhioMeansJobs Center offers free resources to help with career planning, job training and other employment services.
Indian car makers have proposed cutting to 30% the tax rate on imported cars as part of a trade deal with Britain, sources told Reuters, an unprecedented move that could ease access to one of the world's most protected automobile markets. It is the first time Indian car makers have backed such cuts, caving to pressure from a government that wants them to give up their protectionist position and lower entry barriers, sources with direct knowledge of the matter said. Lobby group the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM) has written to the government backing phased cuts to 30% over five years, following a grace period of five years with none, three sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity.