BRUSSELS, Jan 27 (Reuters) – The Intercontinental Exchange ICE.N plans to launch a “parallel market” in London for Title Transfer Facility gas trading next month, it said on Friday, providing a way for market participants to avoid the European Union’s gas price cap.
ICE hosts trading on the TTF gas hub in Amsterdam and had previously warned it could move the market outside of the EU because of the bloc’s looming price cap on gas derivatives.
ICE said it would continue to operate the TTF market on its Amsterdam exchange – the most liquid gas futures market in Europe, which sets the region’s benchmark gas price – but alongside this, it was preparing to launch another market for TTF futures and options in London on Feb. 20.
The London market would not be subject to the 27-country bloc’s gas price cap, since Britain is no longer an EU member.
Trabue Bland, senior vice president of futures exchanges at ICE, said the second market would provide an “insurance option” for customers in case the EU price cap prevented them from trading or managing their risk exposure.
“ICE’s purpose is to create markets to allow our customers to manage their risk and we have a duty to our customers to provide solutions to the problems they face,” he said.
EU countries agreed on the gas price cap last year, to attempt to avoid a repeat of the record-high price spikes experienced in 2022 as Russian gas deliveries to Europe dwindled.
Starting from Feb. 15, the EU will cap TTF prices if the front-month contract spikes to above 180 euros ($196) per megawatt hour (MWh) for three days and is also 35 euros/MWh above a liquefied natural gas reference price.
European gas prices have fallen below 70 euros/MWh this year, more than halving since December amid warm weather and brimming EU storage tanks. Analysts have said the EU cap now appears less likely to be triggered, but that price spikes cannot be ruled out.
The long-debated EU cap split the bloc’s member countries, with Belgium and Poland among those calling for the measure to shield consumers from soaring energy bills, while sceptics including Germany and the Netherlands feared it could disrupt markets.
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