Consumers at the Endpoint of Liberalisation: An Analysis of UK Gas Prices 2000-2005 Professor Philip Wright FEI The University of Sheffield 4ème Colloque.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 The Changing Fortunes of the EUs Energy Market Antony Froggatt.
Advertisements

3 CHAPTER Demand and Supply.
INTRA-INDUSTRY TRADE AND THE SCALE EFFECTS OF ECONOMIC INTEGRATION Elisa Riihimäki Statistics Finland, Business Structures September
© 2004 Dominion Dominion Proposal January 24, 2005.
ENTERPRISE AND INDUSTRY DIRECTORATE-GENERAL AD HOC GROUP: « COMPETITIVESS OF AND ACCESS TO COST EFFECTIVE ENERGY INPUTS TO ENERGY INTENSIVE INDUSTRIES.
The deregulation of British residential energy markets: time for a reassessment? Michael Harker ESRC Centre for Competition Policy and.
Travel and tourism intermediaries
Perfect Competition 12.
The UK Gas Market Presentation to Durham Centre for Doctoral Training in Energy 17th February 2011 Niall Trimble Managing Director.
Economics: Principles in Action
Chapter 15. Managing the Industrial Pricing Function BA B2B Marketing Lindell Phillip Chew.
The impact of risk in electricity markets on nuclear new build David Newbery Nuclear Industry Forum London 24 June 2008
PERFECT COMPETITION Economics – Course Companion
Qatar Business Optimism Survey Q Presented by Dun & Bradstreet Qatar Financial Centre (QFC) Authority.
Elasticity: Concept & Applications For Demand & Supply.
Making markets work for consumers Retail Competition in the UK Iain Osborne Director of Consumer Markets, Ofgem.
Increasing Returns and Economic Geography © Allen C. Goodman, 2002.
What kind of demands does a new real estate market growth make on real estate quality in Estonia? Ene Kolbre Angelika Kallakmaa-Kapsta Tallinn University.
Chapter Nine The Rise and Fall of Industries. 9 | 2 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Markets and Industries Industry – A group.
Business Portfolio Adding Value to Investors Luiz Fernando Rolla CFO October, 2008.
NBS Strategic Management Division 2004/5 1 SM352 Strategy External Analysis 3 Near Environment.
Goods Prices and Factor Prices: The Distributional Consequences of International Trade Nothing is accomplished until someone sells something. (popular.
Demand and Supply Analysis
© 2002 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 10 Foreign Exchange Futures.
Solutions to California’s Energy Crisis: Real-Time Pricing by Frank Wolak Chairman, Market Surveillance Committee March 17, 2001.
1 Introduction to Macroeconomics Chapter 20 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.
Foreign Exchange Chapter 11 Copyright © 2009 South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Chapter 8 The Impact of Economic Forces.
© 2004 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 10 Foreign Exchange Futures.
Retail Competition and Electricity Contracts Richard Green University of Hull and CEPR.
3 Demand and Supply Notes and teaching tips: 4, 6, 41, and 46.
ECP 6701 Competitive Strategies in Expanding Markets
Chapter 9 Foreign exchange markets Dr. Lakshmi Kalyanaraman 1.
Do Labor Unions Increase the Wages of Workers?. Union Membership Trend Since the mid-1950s, union membership has declined. It declined slowly as a share.
Sample Student Presentation Slides Strategic Management Case Analysis
1 Demand and Supply Analysis CHAPTER 3 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
FI3300 Corporation Finance Spring Semester 2010 Dr. Isabel Tkatch Assistant Professor of Finance 1.
6 Market structure and pricing
Various methods of calculating price for your product or service
Chapter 7 Profit Maximization and Competitive Market.
Futures Contract By: Ivan Štefek. Futures Contract In finance, a futures contract is a standardized contract, traded on a futures exchange, to buy or.
MONOPOLY © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley eBay, Google, and Microsoft are dominant players in the markets they serve. These firms are not like the firms.
Unit 2: Microeconomics: Understanding the Canadian Market Economy
Perfect Competition *MADE BY RACHEL STAND* :). I. Perfect Competition: A Model A. Basic Definitions 1. Perfect Competition: a model of the market based.
3 DEMAND AND SUPPLY.
Economics Vocabulary.
1 Energy Prices Presentation to Joint Committee on Transport and Communications 25 th February 2015.
MACRO – Aggregate Demand (AD). key macroeconomic concept Aggregate Demand The total demand (expenditure) for an economy’s goods and services at a given.
Monetary Macroeconomic Modeling Setting the stage.
Understanding Basic Economics
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc. 1-1 # The U.S. Business Environment 1.
MGT-519 STRATEGIC MARKETING AAMER SIDDIQI 1. LECTURE 22 2.
CHAPTER 5 Jeannette Suarez. Melissa Velazquez. Victor Feria. Rafael Medina. Kevin Sobalvarro. Ximena Lopez. Period 5. 3/25/11.
ECONOMICS Chapter 5 Section 3. Key Terms  subsidy: a government payment that supports a business or market  excise tax: a tax on the production or sale.
O PERATIONAL S TRATEGIES U NDERSTANDING O PERATIONAL O BJECTIVES “Sometimes you have to pay a high price for an opportunity.” Rupert Murdoch “Since the.
1 Chapter 3 Lecture DEMAND AND SUPPLY. 2 Market and Prices A market is any arrangement that enables buyers and sellers to get information and do business.
 Traditional economy :  Economic decisions are based on custom and historical precedent.
Chapter 25 Monopoly. 2 Learning Objectives  Identify situations that can give rise to monopoly  Describe the demand and marginal revenue conditions.
1 Japanese Production Systems to US Companies 2 October 2007.
Chapter 5.3: Changes in Supply. Slide 2 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc.Chapter 5, Section 3 Objectives 1.Explain how factors such as input costs create.
June 17, 2015 (Regina) June 18, 2015 (Saskatoon) SaskEnergy 2015 Rate Application.
Ratio Analysis…. Types of ratios…  Performance Ratios: Return on capital employed. (Income Statement and Balance Sheet) Gross profit margin (Income Statement)
Supply and Demand Intro to Business 1-4. Goals Describe supply and demand orally and with graphs Discuss how supply and demand affect products and services.
Unit 5 The External Environment: Competition Professor John Tribe
Chapter 11: Financial Markets Section 3: Buying and Selling Stocks pgs
Chapter 10 Product Issues in Channel Management.
Cost of Money Money can be obtained from debts or equity both of which has a cost Cost of debt = interest Cost of equity = dividends What is cost for.
The Marketing Mix – product and price
Chapter 10 Product Issues in Channel Management.
Consumer Law and Services of General Interest
Presentation transcript:

Consumers at the Endpoint of Liberalisation: An Analysis of UK Gas Prices Professor Philip Wright FEI The University of Sheffield 4ème Colloque International du réseau MONDER: LOUVERTURE A LA CONCURRENCE DANS LE SECTEUR DES INDUSTRIES DE RESEAUX : LES CONSOMMATEURS SONT-ILS SATISFAITS ?" Martigny, 8 au 11 janvier, 2006

UK GAS PRICES SINCE PRIVATISATION

KEYPOINTS ABOUT LONG-TERM PRICE TRENDS FOR BUSINESS AND HOUSEHOLD CONSUMERS Average industrial/commercial prices declined by over two thirds as UKCS overproduction caused a slump in prices during the mid-nineties But prices have been on a rising trend since 2000, also exhibiting more pronounced seasonal fluctuations Domestic prices declined gently by about 30% over 19 years(c.2% per annum), in other words at a rate that could easily have been mimicked under state ownership. They are also now on a rising trend.

Average Gas Price for Firm Delivery: BLACK Average Gas Price Received by Producers: BLUE Front Month Futures Prices: RED

KEYPOINT (1) ABOUT BUSINESS GAS PRICES SINCE 2000: DRIVEN BY WHOLESALE GAS COST BUT ONLY TO THE EXTENT ALLOWED BY COMPETITION Thus the margin available to cover transportation and supply costs has been squeezed If suppliers were paying the beach price cost for their gas (the average price received by producers) the average firm delivery final price might just about have covered their transportation cost, but not supply costs If they were paying a price linked to the futures price the situation has been worse - sometimes not even transportation costs could be covered Probably only the largest loads offered any prospect of profitability, indicating why e.g. BP exited the smaller end of the industrial and commercial market in October 2004

KEYPOINT(2) ABOUT BUSINESS GAS PRICES SINCE 2000: DIFFERENTIAL BETWEEN BEACH PRICE AND FUTURES PRICE IS THE PRICE OF LIBERALISATION Liberalisation has involved the phasing out of long-term beach contracts and their replacement by gas market indexed contracts for delivery to a notional National Balancing Point (next slide) And therefore accompanying risk management by way of forward and futures trading Winter futures prices have tended to rise dramatically, reflecting increasing uncertainties about winter supplies and, most recently, demand as well Liberalisation has therefore created a risk management premium represented by the red area in the preceding graph - which particularly affects business consumers

PRICE DIFFERENTIALS IN THE BUSINESS GAS MARKET: SMALLER SCALE CONSUMERS FACE HIGHER PRICES

GAS PRICES TO HOUSEHOLDS: FROM REGULATED PRICE REDUCTIONS TO FREE MARKET PRICE INCREASES

KEY QUESTIONS ABOUT FULLY LIBERALISED DOMESTIC GAS PRICES Were the real increases in prices after 2000 justified by: Increases in the wholesale cost of gas? Increases in transportation costs? Increases in supply costs? Deterred by competition?

COST COMPONENTS OF DOMESTIC GAS PRICES (1)

BETWEEN 2001 AND 2004 WHICH COST COMPONENT HAS HAD MOST INFLUENCE ON DOMESTIC GAS PRICES? Not wholesale price of gas until 2004? Not transportation costs which appear to vary little? Supply costs?

COST COMPONENTS OF DOMESTIC GAS PRICES (2): THE DATA

PRICES, SUPPLY COSTS AND THE CORPORATE STRATEGY OF BRITISH GAS It was not just the wholesale price of gas, whether this be measured by the beach price cost or the futures price, which has propelled domestic prices upwards. Discretionary supplier behaviour towards domestic consumers has also been important. Despite losing 819,000 gas customers between 2003 and 2004, the 2004 price rise which this is attributed to also helped British Gas to increase its operating margin on residential energy sales from 2.6% to 4.6%, thereby raising its profits on this segment of the market by 83% from £136 million to £249 million. By the same token, competition, as evidenced by switching, has been an ineffective deterrent.

OPPORTUNISTIC COMPETITION FOR DIFFERENT CONSUMER GROUPS: Highest minus Lowest Domestic Unit Prices by Customer Category

CONSUMERS AT THE ENDPOINT OF LIBERALISATION: CONCLUSIONS Business consumers and their suppliers are having to cope with gas cost price risk - to which they are more vulnerable than domestic consumers. Competition in this segment of the market has mitigated the risk for business consumers but also simultaneously damaged the ability of suppliers to operate profitably unless they are also successful traders. Domestic prices also reflect the fact that domestic consumers are having to finance price risk and help guarantee/underwrite profits for suppliers. Competition has not been a deterrent and has also been opportunistic with respect to different consumer groups.