ICE TTF drops €2.69 to €44.79/MWh as Iran signals Hormuz deal
By Harvey Rowlinson, Founder and Director, Purely Energy
Published 28 May 2026
Europe's benchmark gas contract dropped sharply on Thursday after Iran confirmed receipt of a draft US framework that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping.
The TTF front-month contract fell €2.69 to €44.79/MWh on ICE before partially recovering to €45.28/MWh by 12 GMT, a move of roughly 5% within a single session. For UK buyers, TTF is the primary pricing reference for NBP forward gas, so the swing feeds directly into the contracts your broker is quoting this week.
The trigger was a report from Iranian state television that Tehran has received a draft memorandum of understanding with the United States covering the restoration of commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz to pre-war levels. The Strait handles a significant share of global liquefied natural gas (LNG) flows; any confirmed reopening would ease the supply-tightness premium that has been embedded in European forward curves since tensions escalated.
What this means for UK gas and power buyers
The chart below shows NBP day-ahead gas over recent months, providing the UK reference price against which today's TTF move will be read.
Wholesale market chart
NBP day-ahead gas
Last 7 days, settlement data
117.8p/therm
−2.6% over 7 days
Why this window: Last 7 days — 5.0% range, 2.6% net move lower. Tight window picked so the week's price action is visible.
A 5% single-session decline in TTF pulls NBP front-month pricing in the same direction. If you are in an active renewal window for a fixed-price contract, this move widens the range of outcomes you are pricing against. Buyers who deferred renewals expecting a softening have partial validation today, but a draft framework is not a signed agreement.
Contracts and reference points to monitor over the next 48 hours:
- TTF front-month (currently recovering around €45.28/MWh after the session low of €44.79/MWh)
- NBP day-ahead and front-month, which typically track TTF moves with a short lag
- Season-ahead UK gas (Winter 2025-26 and Summer 2026 strips)
- UK baseload power forwards, which reprice on gas given the marginal generation mix
- LNG spot freight and cargo diversion data out of the Gulf region
For flex-contract customers on a gas index, the move is already working through your bill. For fixed-contract buyers approaching an out-of-contract date, a confirmed Hormuz agreement could extend the current downward pressure; a collapse of talks would reverse it quickly.
The key uncertainty is whether the draft framework converts into a signed, verified agreement. Iran and the US have exchanged preliminary language before without reaching a durable settlement. National Grid ESO's near-term gas demand outlook and European storage injection rates will also shape how far TTF can fall before structural floor support reasserts itself. Watch for any official US or Iranian government confirmation of the framework's terms before treating today's price level as a new baseline.
How we produced this article
This article was AI-drafted from public market reporting by Harvey Rowlinson on 28 May 2026. It is scheduled for its next review on 28 May 2027.
Sources
- Europe's benchmark gas contract declines due to optimism about the reopening of Hormuz., Reuters (accessed 28 May 2026)
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