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Qatar's Ras Laffan natural gas facility, which supplies approximately 20% of global LNG, was attacked. US LNG companies must be thrilled.
The pricing logic for natural gas is shifting. The US controls marginal supply—once Qatar faces problems, the market naturally turns to the US.
US and Greek LNG shipowners capture pricing power and liquidity premiums, while importers like Europe, Japan, and China bear the cost increases.
This isn't about energy shortage—it's about pricing power shifting.
And the impact won't stop at energy itself; it will continue transmitting: LNG → electricity prices → computing power costs.
Semiconductor wafer fabs will reshape their site selection for new capacity in the medium term.
Because enterprises prioritize power stability and energy security over price alone.
So where do you think the most stable LNG supply comes from?