# [WARNING] US, Thailand Pursue Long-Term LNG Deal After Qatar, Hormuz Shocks

*Wednesday, May 27, 2026 at 3:04 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-27T15:04:22.719Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, energy, LNG, natural-gas, Asia, United-States, Thailand, Strait-of-Hormuz
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/8322.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: The US and Thailand are in talks over a new long-term LNG supply agreement, explicitly linked to concerns about damage to Qatari infrastructure and instability in the Strait of Hormuz. This signals Asian buyers are accelerating diversification from Middle East supply, supporting a structural risk premium in US LNG-linked benchmarks and Asian LNG prices.

## Detail

1) What happened:
Reuters reports that the United States and Thailand are negotiating a new long-term LNG supply agreement, framed around energy security worries stemming from damage in Qatar and heightened risk in the Strait of Hormuz. Thailand is an important Southeast Asian LNG buyer; a long-term US-linked contract would represent a strategic shift away from reliance on Middle Eastern barrels and cargoes transiting Hormuz.

2) Supply/demand impact:
While this is not an immediate physical disruption, it has clear forward implications for trade flows and pricing. A multi-million ton per annum (mtpa) long-term SPA from US Gulf/US export projects to Thailand would:
- Lock in additional baseload demand for US LNG over 10–20 years.
- Incrementally reduce flexible spot demand from Thailand in the Middle East, tightening spot availability in Asia when Middle Eastern volumes are constrained.
Given the backdrop of earlier damage to Qatari infrastructure and uncertainty over sustained throughput via Hormuz, this move signals that Asian utilities are baking in a persistent supply risk from the Gulf.

3) Affected assets and direction:
- JKM (Asian LNG benchmark): upward bias on medium/long-dated contracts, as more Asian demand shifts to secure long-term cover, reducing future spot liquidity.
- US LNG-linked names and benchmarks (Henry Hub with widened spreads, US Gulf LNG tolling economics, listed US LNG exporters): positive, as structural demand for US cargoes is reinforced.
- Middle East LNG risk premium: Qatari project and shipping risk already elevated; these talks validate that risk in the eyes of buyers, supporting a modest premium on non-US LNG.
- Regional Thai power/utilities equities: potentially mildly supportive over time due to improved security of supply, though near-term effect is limited.

4) Historical precedent:
After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, European buyers rushed into long-term US LNG deals, structurally lifting US export utilization and widening TTF/Henry Hub spreads. A similar, though smaller, dynamic appears underway in Asia regarding Gulf-origin LNG.

5) Duration:
Impact is structural rather than transient. As the agreement is finalized and volumes booked against US projects, expect a sustained support to US LNG export demand and a modest, persistent risk premium in Asian LNG benchmarks reflecting reduced confidence in Middle East/Hormuz security.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** JKM LNG, Henry Hub, US Gulf Coast LNG netbacks, Shares of US LNG exporters, Asian utility equities (Thailand-focused), Qatar LNG-linked CDS/spreads
