Natural gas stock Woodside edges up after Turkey BOTAS LNG deal puts Louisiana project in focus
30 December 2025
1 min read

Natural gas stock Woodside edges up after Turkey BOTAS LNG deal puts Louisiana project in focus

NEW YORK, December 30, 2025, 04:30 ET — Premarket

  • Woodside’s U.S.-listed shares were higher after the company signed a binding LNG supply agreement with Turkey’s BOTAS.
  • The long-dated contract adds customer visibility as a global wave of new LNG supply nears the market.
  • Traders are watching for more contract wins and any updates on project costs and timelines.

Woodside Energy Group’s U.S.-listed shares (WDS) last traded at $15.52, up about 1%, after the Australian natural gas producer signed a binding agreement to supply Turkey’s state-owned BOTAS with about 5.8 billion cubic metres of liquefied natural gas (LNG) over up to nine years starting in 2030. “This supply agreement … represents a strategic milestone,” Woodside executive Mark Abbotsford said. 1

The deal matters because long-term LNG contracts can underpin project financing and smooth revenue expectations. In plain terms, buyers commit to take cargoes over years, which can make big export projects easier to fund and value.

It also lands as investors brace for a crowded LNG market later this decade. The International Energy Agency expects new LNG export capacity to rise by about 300 billion cubic metres a year between 2025 and 2030 — a roughly 50% jump — and says supply is set to outpace demand growth, a backdrop that can squeeze margins for producers. 2

For Woodside, the BOTAS agreement adds another anchor customer tied to its U.S. growth plans and broadens its reach into a market that sits between Europe and Asia. That geographic optionality can matter when LNG prices swing across regions.

Investors will focus on how much of Woodside’s future volumes are locked in under long-term arrangements versus left exposed to spot markets, where prices can be more volatile. Spot cargoes can boost earnings in tight markets, but they cut both ways when supply is abundant.

Contract structure will also be in the spotlight. LNG deals often reference Henry Hub — the main U.S. natural gas benchmark — plus a fixed fee for liquefaction, the process of chilling gas into a liquid so it can be shipped overseas.

Competitive pressure is rising across the U.S. Gulf Coast, where multiple export projects are chasing the same pool of long-term buyers. Woodside’s closest listed comparables include U.S. LNG heavyweight Cheniere Energy and fast-growing exporters bringing new capacity online.

The next leg for the stock will likely depend less on a single contract headline and more on execution. Traders tend to punish LNG projects when costs climb or schedules slip, even when demand looks firm on paper.

Macro signals can still swamp single-stock stories in the short run. Natural gas prices, winter weather expectations and shipping spreads feed directly into how investors price the LNG cycle, especially heading into year-end positioning.

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