industry

Octopus says it chose to ditch profit to keep energy bills down


Octopus Energy said it has decided against making its first ever annual profit after ploughing £150m into attempting to keep customers’ gas and electricity bills down.

The energy supplier said it would have made a slim annual profit of £9m but instead decided to invest in protecting customers from the worst of the energy price increases caused by a sharp rise in wholesale gas costs linked to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The decision resulted in a £141m operating loss for the last financial year, to the end of April 2022.

Octopus finance chief Stuart Jackson said its executives had made a “conscious decision” to “shield customers from the significant rise in wholesale costs”.

Separately, Octopus said the bailout of collapsed energy supplier Bulb will cost the taxpayer £260m – far less than the £6.5bn estimated in November.

Octopus calculated that the government racked up costs of £1.46bn while the firm was in special administration, but has made gains of £1.2bn in recent months largely due to a sharp fall in wholesale energy costs as well as the undisclosed price paid by Octopus to buy the firm.

This upturn contrasts with the £6.5bn cost estimated by the Office for Budget Responsibility in November and the £4.5bn set aside by the UK government the following month.

The finances of Britain’s energy suppliers have come under scrutiny after rocketing gas prices pushed 29 firms to collapse, costing consumers £2.7bn, excluding the cost of Bulb.

Rivals have questioned the record of new entrants to the market such as Octopus and Bulb as neither company have ever made a profit.

Readers Also Like:  Uttar Pradesh signs MoU with Tata Technologies to upgrade 150 state-run ITIs to prepare youth for industry 4.0

However, Octopus founder and chief executive Greg Jackson hassought to distance his firm from Bulb and other failed suppliers, noting that the company has raised capital from a string of reputable international investors.

Stuart Jackson said that although the firm’s in-house software meant “we should be able to generate profit above what the industry might see, on average, this is not the right time through the crisis to be realising that”.

Jackson said the group’s investors, which include the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and a fund started by former US vice-president Al Gore, have a “long-term” attitude. The group did not pay out a dividend.

Octopus Energy Group, which also includes the firm’s technology arm Kraken, reported annual revenues more than doubling to £4.2bn. Its retail business now has 3.4 million customers after adding 1.3 million over the year, including 580,000 taken on from Avro Energy after it went bust.

Octopus said it recently submitted a claim to energy regulator Ofgem to increase the amount it is owed in the cost of taking on Avro’s customers through the supplier of last resort process by 10% to £760m, paid for through all consumers’ bills.

After the acquisition of Bulb, Octopus will have 4.9 million customers, making it the third-largest UK energy supplier behind British Gas and E.ON.



READ SOURCE

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.