December 19, 2025
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Portfolio management in a multi-fuel world

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Energy portfolio management was once a relatively linear exercise. Power desks optimised generation and hedging within electricity markets. Gas desks focused on supply contracts, storage, and seasonal spreads. Oil exposure was managed separately, often as a macro or logistics consideration. Correlations were imperfect, time horizons were distinct, and diversification across fuels offered genuine risk reduction. That framework has broken down.

In a multi-fuel energy system, portfolio management is no longer about optimising positions within isolated markets. It is about managing exposure to a single, interconnected risk landscape expressed through different instruments. Electricity, gas, and oil now behave less like separate assets and more like different lenses through which the same systemic stress is revealed. Portfolio risk is therefore defined by interaction, not aggregation.

The most significant shift is the collapse of assumed independence. Power prices increasingly embed gas risk through marginal pricing. Gas prices embed oil and logistics risk through LNG competition and freight. Oil prices embed geopolitical and macro risk that spills across the entire energy complex. During periods of stress, correlations converge toward one, precisely when diversification is most needed. A portfolio that appears balanced in calm conditions can become dangerously concentrated when volatility emerges.

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For power-heavy portfolios, gas exposure is no longer optional. Even assets with no direct fuel linkage, such as renewables or hydro, are priced relative to gas-set margins during scarcity. Power hedges that ignore gas dynamics risk underestimating downside exposure when renewable output falters or infrastructure binds. Effective portfolio management therefore requires explicit gas positioning, whether through fuel hedges, spark-spread structures, or optionality that captures marginal pricing dynamics.

Gas portfolios face a similar challenge in reverse. Power demand has become one of the most volatile and unpredictable components of gas consumption. Renewable variability, cross-border power flows, and carbon pricing all influence when and how much gas is burned for electricity. Gas positions that assume stable demand profiles are exposed to sudden swings driven by power-market conditions. Integrating power-market signals into gas portfolio decisions is no longer a refinement; it is a necessity.

Oil exposure, though often indirect, completes the triangle. Freight costs, refinery margins, and geopolitical risk premia influence both gas availability and power prices. Portfolios that ignore oil-linked logistics risk may appear insulated until shipping tightens or refinery outages alter regional energy costs. In such moments, oil ceases to be a background variable and becomes a catalyst for cross-fuel repricing.

South-East Europe adds an additional layer of complexity. Portfolios in the region are inherently cross-border, shaped by interconnectors, transit flows, and differing market designs. A position that is hedged domestically may remain exposed regionally if neighbouring markets tighten. Portfolio management therefore extends beyond fuel integration to geographic integration. Managing risk requires understanding not just what assets are held, but where stress is likely to surface first.

Time horizons have also compressed. Short-term volatility increasingly affects long-dated positions as markets reprice systemic risk. A brief disruption can reshape quarterly and annual curves if it exposes structural constraints. Portfolio managers must therefore monitor prompt-market signals continuously, using them as indicators of longer-term repricing risk rather than treating them as transient noise.

The practical implication is a shift from static hedging to dynamic risk management. Portfolios must be stress-tested across fuels, regions, and scenarios, focusing on how shocks propagate rather than on isolated price movements. Optionality, flexibility, and liquidity become as important as price levels. The goal is not to eliminate volatility, which is impossible in a coupled system, but to survive it without forced liquidation or structural loss.

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