Saturday, 12 July 2014

It Would Not Happen In Ireland. (Caution Urged)

How Royal Mail was sold on the cheap?
Press.tv 12/7/2014



A committee of MPs has run its ruler over the numbers and reached a conclusion on the Royal Mail sale – “the department underestimated the market value.” In other words, a cheque that should have been written out to the taxpayer disappeared in the post.
For a business secretary, Vince Cable, who has railed against casino capitalism, allowing a quick buck to be made at public expense is embarrassing. For a government defined by the claim that the community cannot afford the social protections of the past, the charge of showering investors with free money is shaming. This much is easy to say. But to avoid a rerun the next time a public asset is sold, the important question is why it happened. Was it simply bad luck – a reflection of the reality that share prices can go down as well as up? Or is there something awry with the way that the state sets about selling?
Every bubble demonstrates that the market can misvalue firms, yet trying to price one in isolation from the herd is very tough. For anyone – whether a corporation or a department of state – flogging shares for which there is no established price involves a leap in the dark. This known unknown provides Mr Cable's best defence against the charge, levelled by official privatisation historian David Parker, that the Royal Mail sale represents the worst sell-off for the taxpayer in history.
So was it mere misfortune? No. Whitehall could have sold a small slither of shares in the first instance so that a market price was established before it sold a bigger stake, but it wanted to offload a majority fast. While it is true that the day-one lift in value was sometimes higher during the notoriously under-priced sales of the Tell Sid years, back then subscribers bought shares in tranches, so some were purchased at higher prices later. The total windfall – up to £2.5bn, Professor Parker reckons – thus worked out proportionately bigger this time.
The stampede to sale reflects many things, including Whitehall's general itch to get things finished, and its obsession with flattering the deficit figures. But there are more specific biases too. Royal Mail shares are held through the government's “shareholder executive,” a team of officials largely seconded from the sort of City institutions which do well out of privatisations. Having been bent on selling the Mail for years, the executive turned to Lazard, UBS and Goldman for advice about the price. They all said that investors could be put off by anything exceeding the £3.30 eventually charged. Well, one is tempted to say, they would, wouldn't they? Sadly, a British state that long ago gave up on the very possibility of public enterprise remains wide-eyed about the City.
MOS/HSN

Sinn Féin Mountmellick – Serving The Community


A UK report has criticized the British government's privatization of the Royal Mail, saying taxpayers lost one billion pounds (USD 1.7 billion) in the sell-off.



The Business Select Committee report which was published on Friday revealed that taxpayers missed out on ‘significant value’ when the government privatized the Royal Mail.
The British government privatized the country's postal service last October, when it sold 60 percent of its holding at 330 pence a share. The price, however, rose as high as 618 pence per share and currently costs around 473 pence.
The committee said that a number of priority investors bought the shares "cheaply and sold quickly” at a profit and called for the government to release a list of the preferred investors and information on which investors sold their shares of Royal Mail.
Furthermore, the committee voiced concerns over the sale of some of the Royal Mail’s assets, including three sites in London, saying the government ignored recommendations by the country’s National Audit Office (NAO).
“What is more disturbing is that the government ignored established NAO recommendations either to remove such assets from the privatization process or to insert clawback provisions on the future sale of the properties,” the committee said.
This is the second report criticizing the government's privatization of the Royal Mail. In April, NAO released a report saying the government pressed ahead with plans to sell-off Royal Mail at a price of 330 pence a share even though there had been warnings that it was undervalued. Prior to the sell-off, banks had estimated that the government could receive up to 867 pence per share.
CAH/AB


Sinn Féin Mountmellick – Serving The Community

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