Macquarie lifts profit outlook as US deep freeze drives gas demand

Macquarie lifts profit outlook as US deep freeze drives gas demand

Australian group is one of the biggest traders of natural gas and electric power in the US

Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be  Macquarie Group has emerged as a beneficiary of the deep freeze that led to blackouts and soaring energy prices in Texas and the central US last week, forecasting a A$300m boost to profits on a surge in demand for its natural gas shipping business. The Australian company is one of the biggest traders of natural gas and electric power in the US, transmitting gas on about 80 per cent of major pipelines across the country. Access to pipelines has proved valuable as frigid conditions have stymied gas production and sparked a scramble to obtain fuel for home furnaces and power generation. Macquarie on Monday said it expects full-year profit to rise 5-10 per cent in the year ending in March from the previous 12 months as a result of the “extreme winter weather conditions”. Record low temperatures and snowstorms sweeping south from Canada plunged millions of Texans into darkness last week, claiming at least 23 lives and pushing up wholesale power prices 10,000 per cent. The financial fallout extended from big energy companies to households stung by high energy bills. On Sunday, with concerns about defaults growing, the Public Utility Commission of Texas ordered the state grid operator to use discretion on deadlines for settlements, collateral obligations and payments for the wholesale electricity market, where a record $50bn of transactions took place last week. The commission also temporarily barred utilities from shutting off electricity for customers who have not paid their bills and required electricity retailers to defer payments for customers who request it. Recommended Electric power Blackouts spread beyond Texas as frigid weather knocks out power plants Macquarie along with BP, Royal Dutch Shell and French utility EDF, is among the big energy traders that give electricity retailers access to the Texas wholesale market. Macquarie also has an investment in Griddy Energy, a retailer whose floating-rate customers received skyrocketing electric bills if their power stayed on last week. The market mayhem has had a big impact on energy companies. Atmos Energy, a Dallas-based utility company, disclosed that it made $2.5bn-$3.5bn of natural gas purchases in Colorado, Kansas and Texas in the week to February 19 as it “experienced unforeseeable and unprecedented market pricing for gas costs”. Comstock Resources, a gas producer owned by Jerry Jones, the billionaire owner of the Dallas Cowboys American football team, drew fire last week when its chief financial officer said the surging gas price was “like hitting the jackpot”. At one gas trading hub in Oklahoma, prices rose from around $3 per million British thermal units to nearly $1,000 per MBtu. Macquarie is the second-largest natural gas marketer in North America, shipping over 10bn cubic feet a day, according to Natural Gas Intelligence. The cold weather significantly increased short-term client demand for its services to maintain supplies of gas and power, Macquarie said. It declined to comment on its pricing policies during the winter storms. Morgan Stanley said the weather had produced stronger commodity trading conditions in Macquarie’s Commodities and Global Markets division. The Australian group’s upgrade to forecast earnings came two weeks after it guided that 2021 full-year after-tax profit would be “slightly down” on the A$2.73bn (US$2.15bn) it reported in 2020. Shares in Macquarie rose as much as 4.3 per cent on Monday morning in Sydney.

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