Royal Mail stake to be sold to private foreign firm in £3bn deal

Extracts from BBC NEWS Friday, 18 February, 2005, 00:01 GMT

also see (SEE 16 December 2008)

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Royal Mail loses postal monopoly

The Royal Mail’s 350-year monopoly is to end at the start of 2006, 15 months earlier than previously planned.

The UK’s postal service market will be fully liberalised from 1 January 2006, regulator Postcomm announced, following three months of consultation.

From that date, any licensed operator will be able to deliver mail to business and residential customers.
Royal Mail, which controls 99% of the market, welcomed the news but the main postal union said it was “ill-advised”.

The Communication Workers Union (CWU) warned the decision will place “the country’s cherished universal service in jeopardy”.

The CWU also criticised what it said was a “competition at all costs” ethos which it says will put the Post Office at a serious competitive disadvantage to its European rivals.

They really need-n’t have worried as it looks like (16 December 2008) The Prince of Darkness has agreed to sell it, or part of it off to the Europeans. H’mm wonder who and how long someone has been working on this behind the scenes.
Someone must have been floating this in the European Market place, wonder who…….

(SEE 16 December 2008)

My personal view is “If its that bad WHY DOES SOMEONE WANT TO BUY IT ” nothing to do with bad Management then !!!!

However, the Royal Mail and consumer watchdog Postwatch have welcomed the decision (Just a minute aren’t Postwatch supposed to look after The Royal Mail for US – or perhaps not look who controls them BERR its the Prince of Darkness again).

“We’re ready,” said Royal Mail chief executive Adam Crozier.

“We recognise that the regulator is getting on with his job, and welcome faster competition as long as it comes without unfair restrictions on Royal Mail.”

“Royal Mail must have the freedom and flexibility to set the right prices, based on real costs,” Mr Crozier added.

“If that happens, I think the new competitive environment will succeed. Competitors are already targeting profitable business mail. We need to compete with them on price as well as service if we are to keep the universal service in business.”

In the new market, Royal Mail will still be required to provide a universal postal service for first and second class mail of one delivery and one collection each working day at a uniform price throughout the UK.

‘More choice’

Consumer body Postwatch chairman Peter Carr welcomed the announcement.

He said: “Ultimately this will lead to more choice, and hopefully a better service.”

However, he said there were still issues to be addressed, such as cost of access to the Royal Mail “pipeline” for letters.

Until now, competition in the £4.5bn market has been restricted to 30% of the value of the letters market and to companies handling bulk mail in batches of 4000 letters or more.

Full market opening means that licensed operators can collect and deliver any mail, from single letters to bulk mailings.

They can set up collection boxes, provide collections and deliveries between businesses, offer tracked mail services or mail deliveries at a guaranteed time.

Operator codes

Postcomm will shortly publish arrangements for the new multi-operator market.

These will include a code of practice to ensure mail companies co-operate on issues such as the forwarding of mail and handling mail that is returned to sender and a separate code to safeguard the integrity of the mail.

At present, Royal Mail alone is exempt from VAT, which means it has a significant price advantage over rival firms, and Postcomm said “competition issues” would be addressed.

But the CWU union fears the change is too much too soon.

It says the regulator has moved in a way that is “completely out of step with the carefully managed approach” set out in European legislation.

“In so doing, Postcomm has placed significant extra pressures on the Royal Mail Group at a time when it is undergoing far-reaching internal and external changes,” said CWU deputy general secretary Dave Ward.

“The upshot will be to place very real pressures on Royal Mail’s ability to meet its universal service obligations.”

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/business/4274335.stm

In November 2007, the Daily Telegraph reported[5] that he (Mr Crozier) had received a 26% pay increase in base pay, taking out £1,256,000 in 2007.

His achievements in this year included
Shrinking the workforce by 45,000.
Closing 4,600 post offices.
With another 2,500 to follow.
The goal of this reduction in workforce and in retail outlets was to increase profitability of the corporation.
Which had made a profit of £537m in 2004/5.
Dropping to around £300 million in 2005/6.
Dropping to £233 million in 2006/7.
To the point where the corporation was running a £10 million/annum trading deficit in 2007).

Good record – must be due a knighthood (Prediction)

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