LNG: JERA Needs 16m Mtpa of Long-Term LNG Deals for 2030s: CEO

Jun-27 14:47

Japan's largest power generator, JERA, plans to secure around 16m mtpa of long-term LNG supply contracts in the 2030s to replace expiring agreements, according to CEO Yukio Kani, cited by Platts.

  • Speaking at a June 27 press conference in Tokyo, Kani noted that current long-term contracts total 25m–26m mtpa, with around 4m mtpa set to expire by 2030 and more throughout the 2030s.
  • JERA, which handled 35m mt of LNG in fiscal 2024–25 (April–March), sees this as a critical procurement challenge if **electricity demand remains stable or grows.
  • The company has already secured 5.5m mtpa from the USGC, but Kani emphasised the need for continuous renewal of contracts to ensure energy security.
  • JERA’s strategy reflects Japan’s broader concern over future LNG supply tightness, amid growing global demand and the uncertainty of the energy transition.

Historical bullets

US TSY FUTURES: TU Blocked

May-28 14:45

Latest block trade lodged at 10:28:05 NY/15:28:05 London:

  • TUU5 5K lots blocked at 103-18.75, looks like a seller.
  • DV01 ~201K.

US DATA: Richmond Fed Surveys Point To Slightly Better Activity In May (1/2)

May-28 14:44

The Richmond Fed's regional manufacturing and services surveys for May showed improved activity, as expected - but remained in negative territory.

  • Unlike some other regional Fed reports, there is limited anecdotal "evidence" or commentary for what is driving these survey results, but the figures are consistent with other "soft" data that the worst of the tariff fears may have subsided but sentiment remains weak.
  • Further obscuring the read-through is the survey dates, which (based on the survey methodology) will have been conducted between April 24 and May 21, so it straddles both sides of the US-China trade war climbdown on May 12.
  • The headline manufacturing composite index rose to -9 (in line with consensus) from -13, improving after two large monthly declines. The three components of the composite ticked higher: new orders ticked only slightly higher, to -14 from -15, shipments to -10 from -17, and employment to -2 from -5. Expectations, while still (unusually) negative for the 3rd consecutive month, saw a drastic improvement, rising 31 points to -6.
  • The services readings similarly largely improved in some aspects but were still weak. The local business conditions index jumped 12 points to -18 (no consensus), with the 6-month outlook up 11 points to -18.
  • Both marked the 3rd consecutive negative reading, and the report notes that regional service sector activity overall slowed in May, with the revenues index falling 4 points to -11, and employment fell 8 points to 0 (albeit demand, and expected future employment, revenues and demand, rose).
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GILTS: Session Lows In Futures Hold

May-28 14:41

Prior session lows in gilt futures hold during a retest (90.99 in U5), before a bounce back to 91.10 as wider core bonds stabilise, cross-market cues still dominate.