Tag Archives: NDAQ

European Gas Prices Surge on Nord Stream Shut Down

European energy prices surged after Russia shut down natural-gas flows through a major pipeline, threatening to add to economic woes for businesses and households across the continent.

Natural-gas futures in northwest Europe, which reflect the cost of fuel in the wholesale market, jumped more than 30% in early trading Monday. They remain below the all-time high recorded in late August.

State-controlled Gazprom PJSC extended a halt to flows through Nord Stream late Friday. Moscow blamed the suspension on technical problems. European governments described it as an economic attack in retaliation for their support of Ukraine.

Over the weekend, governments in Sweden and Finland offered billions of dollars of guarantees to utilities to prevent a meltdown in energy trading. Officials fear the loss of imports through Nord Stream could lead to a further leap in power prices and saddle utilities with cash payments to energy trading exchanges that they may struggle to meet. A wave of failed payments could undermine financial stability, officials said.

“This has had the ingredients for a kind of a Lehman Brothers of energy industry,” Finland’s Economic Affairs Minister

Mika Lintilä

said Sunday. 

Swedish and Finnish government officials worked through the weekend on programs designed to make sure electricity producers can meet exchange payments known as margin calls. Stockholm is home to

Nasdaq

Clearing AB, a subsidiary of

Nasdaq Inc.

that processes most derivative trades in the Nordic power market, which includes Finland and the Baltic countries.

Under the Swedish plan, the government would provide guarantees to eligible companies, which could then use the guarantees to borrow from banks and pay the exchange clearinghouse. The Swedish government would have license to extend up to 250 billion kroner, or $23 billion, in guarantees, said a finance-ministry official.

The Finnish government plans to offer 10 billion euros, or $10 billion, in guarantees. 

Nasdaq Clearing spokesman David Augustsson said the measures would help the power market act in an orderly manner Monday. “This is an extreme time of uncertainty and the addition of government liquidity guarantees will add an extra layer of stability,” he said.

Last week, European Energy Exchange AG, the main European venue for power trading outside the Nordics, said Germany and other European Union members should help companies fund margin payments. A spokesperson didn’t respond to requests for comment on Sunday.

Russia’s state-controlled Gazprom PJSC extended a halt to flows through the Nord Stream pipeline late Friday.



Photo:

HANNIBAL HANSCHKE/REUTERS

Armed with the guarantees, utilities and other energy companies would find banks more willing to lend money to cover margin payments, the Swedish official said. The Swedish parliament will vote on the program Monday and it would take effect the same day if approved. One concern is that the clearinghouse itself might default, the official said.

“This threatens our financial stability. If we don’t act soon it could lead to serious disruptions in the Nordics and Baltics,“ Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson said Saturday at a news conference outlining the plan. “In the worst-case scenario we could fall into a financial crisis,” Ms. Andersson added.

When utilities agree to deliver gas or power, they lock in prices by selling futures contracts. Exchanges charge one payment, known as initial margin, when trades are placed to collect collateral. They then call for or return money each day depending on whether the position gains or loses value.

As prices rise, utilities’ short positions shed value and the companies pay the exchange. They recoup the money when they deliver gas or power, but the difference in timing has led to massive outflows of cash that some firms have struggled to fund. At times a vicious cycle has emerged in which extreme price moves boost margin calls, prompting companies to bail out of trades and sparking more volatility.

“No one’s got the money to pay to trade,” said Justin Colley, an analyst at Argus Media. “Putting up these margin payments every day is just causing problems for everyone—not just the small companies, but also the big companies, the national utilities.”

The guarantees could add to the mounting cost for governments of aiding households and businesses through a historic rise in energy prices largely caused by Moscow’s move to cut gas exports. On Sunday, Germany unveiled its third energy relief package this year, worth €65 billion, to shield consumers.

European energy ministers are due to hold an emergency meeting Friday to discuss options for dealing with skyrocketing electricity prices, such as a possible price cap for non-gas sources of power generation.

They will also consider energy companies’ cash concerns. The Czech Republic, which holds the EU’s rotating presidency, is expected to put forward several options for ministers to consider, including the temporary suspension of power derivatives markets and a European credit line for energy market participants, an EU diplomat said.

European gas and power prices have been wildly volatile. They shot to records in late August before slumping last week after the European Union said it would change the structure of the power market to bring down prices for consumers and businesses. Nordic and Baltic prices have been especially turbulent, in part because a drought curbed hydropower generation in Norway.

Tom Marzec-Manser, gas analyst at ICIS, said he expected gas and electricity prices to rise again Monday in response to Gazprom’s shut-off. “Meeting demand, whatever that might turn out to be, is going to be that much harder,” he said.

To a certain extent, energy markets were already girding for Russia to completely cut off gas supplies. Gazprom had reduced Nord Stream flows to 20% capacity in the weeks before the shutdown.

Some factors could act to bring prices down after an initial leap, traders and analysts said—including the action taken by Nordic governments. Weather forecasts suggest there might be greater power generation from wind farms, reducing demand for gas. 

Uniper,

one of the two biggest buyers of Russian gas in Europe until recently, said last week it had fully drawn down a €9 billion credit line from German state lender KfW. The company said it had asked to borrow an extra €4 billion to make margin payments and buy gas to make up for lost deliveries from Gazprom.

—Kim Mackrael contributed to this article.

Write to Joe Wallace at joe.wallace@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Nasdaq to Spin Out Market for Pre-IPO Shares in Deal With Banks

Nasdaq Inc. is teaming up with a group of banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley to spin out its marketplace for shares of private companies.

The deal could help drive more transactions to Nasdaq Private Market, the New York-based exchange operator’s trading platform for shares of companies that haven’t yet had an initial public offering.

Trading in pre-IPO shares has heated up in recent years as startups have waited longer to go public. Employees of such companies often seek to cash out of their shares, while investors may want to get in on a fast-growing technology startup.

Under the deal, Nasdaq Private Market will be moved into a separate, stand-alone company that will receive investments from a group of banks. The group includes Citigroup Inc., Goldman, Morgan Stanley and SVB Financial Group , owner of Silicon Valley Bank. The companies announced the deal Tuesday after it was first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

Terms of the transaction weren’t disclosed. Nasdaq said it would remain the joint venture’s largest shareholder.

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GameStop, Microsoft, AMC: What to Watch When the Stock Market Opens Today

Here’s what we’re watching ahead of Wednesday’s opening bell.

U.S. stock futures slipped, as investors awaited a bumper day of major earnings reports and a meeting of the Federal Reserve.

S&P 500 futures were down 1.1%, while futures tied to the technology-heavy Nasdaq-100 edged down 0.7%. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures fell 1.1%.

What’s Coming Up

Earnings updates expected:

Tesla,

TSLA -0.71%

Apple

AAPL -0.22%

and

Facebook

FB -2.39%

are due after the close. The electric-car maker is expected to record its first full-year profit.

The Federal Reserve releases a policy statement at 2 p.m. and Chairman Jerome Powell holds a press conference at 2:30 p.m.

Market Movers to Watch

And then there’s GameStop. Its stock popped again ahead of the bell, soaring 73% in wildly volatile trading. CNBC reported that Melvin Capital, a hedge fund that has posted big losses so far this year in part because of a wager against the videogame retailer’s stock, had closed out its short position on Tuesday afternoon. The report caused a stir on the online platform Reddit—popular among day traders waging a battle against hedge-fund short-sellers—where some members wrote that it was an attempt to pull

GameStop

GME 109.79%

‘s share price back down. And

Elon Musk

weighed in on the stock again last night with a tweet, “Gamestonk!!“

The show must go on: Another heavily shorted stock, movie-theater operator

AMC Entertainment Holdings,

AMC 133.87%

saw its shares vault more than 350% higher premarket.

—Headphone maker

Koss

KOSS 72.20%

has also joined the party, and its shares jumped 109% premarket.

Bed Bath & Beyond

BBBY 28.21%

resumed its upward trajectory, up 20% ahead of the bell. Online traders point to an early 2020 change in management and the fact that the company is buying back shares as signs that the share price will continue to increase.

Microsoft

MSFT 1.44%

shares are up 2.1% premarket. The software giant’s profit and sales jumped, propelled by pandemic-fueled demand for videogaming and accelerated adoption of its cloud-computing services.

Boeing

BA -4.46%

shares fell 3.3% premarket after the plane maker reported its biggest-ever annual loss and took a huge financial hit on its new 777X jetliner, reflecting the pandemic’s worsening toll.

Abbott Laboratories

ABT 1.12%

shares added 1.5% premarket after it logged hearty profit growth in the latest quarter as a surge in demand for its Covid-19 diagnostics services contributed to higher revenue.

Starbucks

SBUX -5.30%

slipped 3% premarket after the coffee chain reported that sales fell during the holiday quarter but showed signs of recovery, particularly in China. Its operating chief

Roz Brewer

is leaving to become CEO of

Walgreens

WBA 6.21%

Boots Alliance, where she’ll be the only Black woman leading a Fortune 500 company. Walgreens shares climbed 5%.

A Walgreens store in Tomball, Texas, Jan. 16, 2021.



Photo:

Jeff Lautenberger for The Wall Street Journal

AT&T

T -1.11%

shares slipped 1.3% premarket after it reported a fourth-quarter loss as it booked a $15.5 billion charge on its pay-TV business.

—Chip maker

Texas Instruments

TXN -2.81%

‘s shares slipped 1.7% premarket even though quarterly results and outlook both topped Wall Street estimates after Tuesday’s close.

Market Fact

Retail order flows have reached 20% of the U.S. stock market’s total, according to

UBS

research, twice what they were in 2010.

Chart of the Day

GameStop shares have become a favorite of online traders who are seeking to make money from buying options.

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Copyright ©2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8



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