LNG: Less Demand From China Should Help Europe’s Refilling

Apr-08 00:41

European natural gas prices fell early in the session but then trended higher. After falling to EUR 33.51 they reached a peak of EUR 38.62 before moderating to EUR 35.87 to be down 1.5%. The recovery was helped by EU President von der Leyen saying that the bloc will negotiate with the US on a trade deal.

  • Tariffs on China’s imports from the US should help with Europe’s refilling over the summer, which has been a material concern, as cargoes are redirected. European storage was at around 34% full last week, below the 5-year seasonal average of 45%, according to Bloomberg, and it needs to be at 90% by November 1. Contract prices trend higher until October 2025, still discouraging refilling but the spread has narrowed significantly from earlier in the year.
  • Unplanned outages remain a risk to markets. Norway’s Gassco has just announced 5.1mcm/d from today will be unexpectedly unavailable.
  • Bloomberg notes that European gas is in oversold territory based on the 14-day RSI.
  • US gas rose to a high of $4.03 before trending lower to finish down 5.6% to $3.73. Concerns that US tariffs and subsequent trade war will weigh on growth and thus energy demand have pressured prices and they are now down 12.5% in April.
  • Forecasts by Vaisala for cooler weather across the eastern US and Great Lakes in mid-April as well as lower temperatures in the Pacific and Northwest regions could see an increase in power demand though.
  • US lower-48 gas production rose 5.1% y/y on Monday and demand +10% y/y.

Historical bullets

CANADA: BoC Seen Cutting Another 25bps Next Week

Mar-07 21:31
  • The Bank of Canada is expected to cut its overnight rate target another 25bp on Wednesday to 2.75%, with BoC-dated OIS showing it mostly priced but analysts not as clear cut with 19 of 27 forecasting a cut vs 8 looking for no change.
  • It’s quite likely that a pause would have been seriously considered if going on recent trends alone, and even Friday’s labour report with disappointing jobs growth saw the unemployment rate surprisingly hold at 6.6% as it remains below November’s cycle high of 6.9%.
  • Instead, a 25bp cut is seen as a prudent step to the mid-point of the BoC’s estimated neutral range of 2.25-3.25% amidst penal US trade policies under the second Trump administration. Tariffs have been threatened, deployed and then pared in a revolving cycle but the uncertainty is damaging. The latest in this ever-changing backdrop, Trump has said the US may do reciprocal tariffs on Canada as early as today (Friday) or Monday. It’s estimated that 38% of Canadian exports to the US are USMCA-compliant, a latest area of focus from Trump, although RBC estimate this could be over 90% relatively quickly.
  • Governor Macklem in January talked on stepping up outreach activities with businesses and households and we watch for any guidance on how these real-time conditions might be developing.

US TSYS: Late SOFR/Treasury Option Roundup

Mar-07 21:22

Option desks reported heavy SOFR and Treasury option position unwinds and two-way vol trades Friday, underlying futures near late session lows after Chairman Powell stated the Fed can take its time before considering any further changes to interest rates as inflation is still above target and policy uncertainty out of Washington remains high. Projected rate cuts through mid-2025 cooled significantly vs. morning levels (*) as follows: Mar'25 at -1bp (-2.7bp), May'25 at -9.4bp (-13bp), Jun'25 at -26.3bp (-31.1bp), Jul'25 at -37bp (-42.2bp). Dec'25 had priced in three 25bp cuts this morning now show -69.1bp.

  • SOFR Options:
    • +10,000 SFRU5 95.50/95.62/95.75 put flys 2.0 ref 96.17
    • over -100,000 SFRU5 96.25 calls, 24.0 vs. 96.26 to -.255/0.50%
    • -5,000 SFRZ5 96.50/96.87/97.00/97.25 call condors, 6.0 ref 96.385
    • +5,000 0QJ5 96.00/96.12/96.25/96.37 put condor, 3.0 ref 96.505
    • 36,000 SFRN5 96.06/96.25 2x1 put spds ref 96.265
    • 11,000 SFRM5 95.62/95.68 put spds ref 96.00 to -.005
    • 9,000 SFRH5 95.68/95.75 1x2 call spds ref 95.725
    • 2,000 SFRU5 96.50/97.00 call spds ref 96.25
    • 5,500 SFRH5 95.75/95.81 call spds
    • 3,000 SFRQ5 95.75 puts ref 96.245
    • 2,000 0QK5 95.50/95.75/95.87/96.12 put condors ref 96.485
    • 1,500 SFRZ5 95.50/95.75 put spds
  • Treasury Options:
    • +20,000 TYJ5 112 calls, 9
    • Block, +9,000 Monday wkly 10Y 111 call, 4
    • -9,000 TYJ5 110 puts, 10
    • 5,000 TYJ5 112 calls, 19 ref 111-01 to -06 (total volume over 40.8k)
    • 3,500 FVJ5 107.25/109 strangles, 16 ref 107-30.25
    • +7,500 TYJ5 110 puts, 13-14
    • -10,000 TYJ5 110/112.5 strangles, 23, appr 6.98% implied vol
    • +10,000 TYJ5 110.5 straddles, 117-119 vs. 111-03/0.32% (implied appr 6.67-.87
    • 5,000 USK5 122/126 call spds ref 117-22
    • 3,000 TYJ5 110/112 strangles, 29 ref 111-05.5
    • 50,000 FVJ5 108.25/108.75 call spds 10 ref 108-00.75
    • over 5,000 TYJ5 109/110 put spds ref 110-30 to 111-00
    • 2,000 TYK5 111/112/113.5 broken call flys ref 111-00.5
    • 2,500 TYJ5 108.5/109.5 put spds ref 110-28
    • 4,500 wk1 TY 110/110.5 2x1 put spds, 6 ref 110-29 (exp today)
    • 1,750 FVK5 109.25/110.25/111.25 call flys ref 107-27.5
    • over 7,000 wk2 TY 112/113 call spds ref 111-01 to 110-28.5

US TSY FUTURES: BLOCK: Late 2Y/10Y Ultra Flattener

Mar-07 21:18

Late Flattener Block, posted at 1604:32ET, appr DV01 $375,000

  • -9,419 TUM5 103-15.25, sell through 103-15.5 post time bid vs.
  • +4,166 UXYM5 113-18.5, post time bid