European Energy Exchange Anticipates Growth to Endure in 2019
The bourse is profiting from an upturn in wholesale power prices after years of declines, triggered by strong global fuel demand and political intervention in the related EU carbon market to squeeze supply and prop up prices to spur emissions reductions
April 30, 2019. By News Bureau
The European Energy Exchange (EEX) has announced that it anticipates higher gas, carbon emissions and freight product trading volumes in 2019, having accomplished record volumes last year.
The exchange, a subsidiary of Deutsche Boerse, strategies to develop in its present regions, enter new locations and add products, Chief Executive Peter Reitz believed in a webcast from the company's Leipzig headquarters on Tuesday.
"The positive volume development in our power and natural gas markets in the first quarter of 2019 shows that we are on track for further growth," he supposed.
Traded volumes of flagship power futures increased 40 percent year-on-year in the first three months to 1,031 terawatt hours (TWh), equal to more than twice Germany's annual power consumption alone.
The bourse is profiting from an upturn in wholesale power prices after years of declines, triggered by strong global fuel demand and political intervention in the related EU carbon market to squeeze supply and prop up prices to spur emissions reductions.
Tighter financial market regulation is also pushing power market participants towards exchanges and away from over-the-counter trading.
The EEX platforms now serve more than 600 participants trading in energy, freight, metals and agricultural products.
Forays into North America and Asia have allowed global price arbitrage as well as clearing and registry services across all time zones.
Sales revenue in 2018 rose by 19 percent to an all-time high of 267.7 million euros ($300.15 million), while earnings before tax grew by 24 percent to 66.7 million euros, finance chief Iris Weidinger said.
In the CO2 markets, EEX runs primary market auctions for all EU countries except Britain and is widening its role in the secondary market for existing certificates.
It will launch a liquefied natural gas (LNG) contract on May 21, hoping to attract interest from key market participants who have entered the Asian spot markets in recent years. Closer to home it will expand power futures trading into Serbia, Bulgaria and Slovenia from June
Reitz said EEX's market share was set to rise in Italian, Spanish and French power, while it had launched trucking freight futures on the Nodal Exchange, a U.S. subsidiary, in March.
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