
GLEG UK Energy Market Update 15-06-26…
June 15, 2026
Could Your Business Be Owed Money on Its Energy Bills?
June 19, 2026After several weeks of heightened volatility, energy markets moved sharply lower yesterday as traders responded to signs of easing tensions in the Middle East.
The move wasn’t driven by a change in underlying energy demand. Instead, markets spent the day removing some of the geopolitical risk premium that had been built into commodity prices following concerns over disruption to shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz.
Brent Crude Falls Back
Brent crude traded down by around 5% during yesterday’s session, moving back towards the low-$80s per barrel.
Much of the recent strength in oil markets had been driven by concerns that disruption in the Gulf could impact global oil supplies. Yesterday’s reports of progress towards a US-Iran peace framework and discussions around reopening key shipping routes encouraged traders to reassess those risks.
While oil remains significantly above levels seen earlier in the year, the move demonstrates how quickly geopolitical premiums can enter, and leave, commodity markets.
Gas Markets Follow Lower
European gas markets also weakened, with wholesale gas prices falling as supply concerns eased.
The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world’s most important energy transit routes, particularly for LNG cargoes destined for Europe and Asia. Any reduction in perceived disruption risk naturally feeds through into gas pricing.
For UK energy consumers, gas remains the single most important driver of wholesale electricity prices, meaning movements in gas markets continue to have a direct impact on power costs.
UK Power Prices Ease
As gas prices softened, UK power markets followed suit.
Wholesale power remains heavily influenced by gas-fired generation, which often sets the marginal cost of electricity production. Lower gas prices therefore tend to create downward pressure across power forward contracts.
The result was a weaker day across UK power markets, particularly on longer-dated products where some of the recent geopolitical premium was removed.
What Does This Mean for Energy Buyers?
Yesterday’s market action highlights an important distinction:
The recent rally was largely driven by supply risk rather than changing fundamentals.
While global energy demand has remained relatively stable, fears of disruption to oil and LNG flows pushed prices higher. The decline suggests traders now view those risks as less immediate.
For large energy users, this creates both opportunities and challenges.
Procurement opportunities may emerge if markets continue to retrace recent gains.
Volatility is likely to remain elevated while geopolitical negotiations continue.
Risk management remains critical, as sentiment can shift rapidly if events in the region change.
Our View
At GLEG, we see yesterday’s move as a significant unwinding of geopolitical risk premium rather than a structural change in market fundamentals.
The market is effectively repricing the likelihood of a major supply disruption. However, until there is greater certainty around shipping flows and regional stability, volatility is likely to remain a feature of energy markets.
For organisations with substantial energy exposure, maintaining a clear procurement strategy remains more important than attempting to predict short-term market movements.
As always, we’ll continue monitoring developments and helping our clients navigate an increasingly complex energy landscape.

