Originally Posted by
wiggin
Which companies are those? Because as I understand it, spot prices being high in Europe have very little to do with the profits of the European companies that actually supply gas/electricity. They're paying those gas prices too since very little of the natural gas used in Europe is actually produced domestically (absent a smallish and diminishing Norwegian contribution). Even if you dropped the European energy distributors/gas suppliers profits to zero, you'd still have a pretty substantial price spike.
What I don't understand is why this is necessarily resulting in a massive price swing in retail gas/energy prices - I had thought it would be pretty standard practice for retail prices to be pegged to longer term (e.g. 6 month) contracts and/or use a price smoothing algorithm over the course of the year. Why retail consumers would be exposed to the spot market is beyond me. We saw some people running into this problem for the electricity spot market in Texas a year back during the cold snap, but that was pretty unusual because it exposed the retail consumer directly to the spot market without any limiters in place (even more unusual than the unwise option that some people took to avoid the fixed price contracts).