plan for collapse of Thames Water

Soldato
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2. Thames Water is already demanding huge subsidies on top of a 40% hike in prices, so it’s a choice between that money being used the fix the problems or it going overseas to investors.
That isnt really the choice, the choice is the price hikes before investors will put more money in to the firm. They arent restarting dividends or anything like that.
 
Associate
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That old money making methodology, privatise profits and nationalise debt.

It would be interesting, considering all the recent talk of China, to know how many things in the UK the Chinese State has money 'invested' in.

From the Independent:

The biggest single shareholder is the Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, which holds around 32% of the shares. Another pension fund, the UK-based Universities Superannuation Scheme, holds another 20%.
Around 10% of the shares are owned by a subsidiary of the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund, which is owned by the Abu Dhabi Government, and China’s sovereign wealth fund owns a little under 9%.
Other investors include the British Columbia Investment Management Corporation (8.7%), Hermes GPE (8.7%), Queensland Investment Corporation (5.4%), Aquila GP Inc (5%), and Stichting Pensioenfonds Zorg en Welzijn (2.2%).


Who in the UK even cares if all the above lose money.
 
Soldato
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7th Level of Hell...
Dont know, maybe data availability of the metrics they were comparing?

Scotland isn't a gleaming example of successful nationalised running either

That wasn't the avenue I was going down. The very fact that there was one nation missing made it stand out more.


True but it would be interesting to compare it to leakage per mile or km of pipe given the differences in population density and how far it is spread out. Leakage per km is possibly a good metric as well.


In either respect - its not as if Scotland is running dry any time soon, at least compared to the rest of the UK (lets see how well this comment ages :cry:)
 
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Caporegime
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I really, really hope this explodes. Like proper, riots in the streets, burning of no.10, the lot. Bout time we sent a message to those idiots that our basic human needs aren't someone else's profit.
 
Soldato
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The regulator is in a bind I think.

To secure more investment there needs to be returns as you say. Otherwise why would anyone invest. Returns ultimately come from profit and from customer bills.

And investment pressure is up because of the things that need to be fixed. These aren't sudden things, but a slow evolution of issues over many decades resulting from growth and changes in standards and customer/environmental expectations. This would need to be done whether funded privately or via Government ownership.

At the moment, the regulator will be trying to ensure that the shareholder returns are the lowest possible whilst still keeping the company investable. Until/unless the regime changes, that's all they can do.
Collapse is the most likely scenario and entirely for political reasons shareholders want a 40% rise in bills which OFWAT says is unreasonable which results in a stalemate which means nationalisation is the inevitable result as that means everyone pays to bail out Thames via taxes instead of water bill payers as no govt based in london wants the heat from that.
 
Soldato
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1. Why pay? Let Thames Water collapse and take back control via primary legislation. If that scares investors off future privatisation projects then good.
You can't just take it. There are many costs involved, even under special administration. If Thames collapses, there won't be any money there to pay for it.
It'll come out of your taxes.

2. Thames Water is already demanding huge subsidies on top of a 40% hike in prices, so it’s a choice between that money being used the fix the problems or it going overseas to investors.
I don't know the full details, but there are some kind of legal requirements that mean those investors must be paid a certain level of return. This is part of the bind.
The other is a combination of regulator-imposed limits on what can be spent on repairs, maintenance and Capex.

2. It wasn’t dire performance that led to privatisation, it was ideology.
The UK had already been prosecuted by the European court because our water quality had fallen so far below standard. We were going to get hit a second time if we didn't get get everything fixed up to minimum standard, but the cost of that was massive (something like £430 billion in today's money) and the only viable funding was private investment. There was an ideology spiel that came with it, about competition, innovation, etc and some of those improvements have indeed come about. But primarily it was about finding the money to get out of the doghouse.

Most obviously would stopping shareholders dictating how a private company provides a public service of critical infrastructure.
Given how much of a **** show of incompetence and underfunding the industry was in the 60s and 70s, you'd soon have people very willing to pay for a better service.
All you'd do by renationalising is give people another reason to complain about government incompetence.

Above all services on which people depend to live should not be run for profit.
It isn't run like that.
It has, however, been asset-stripped and mortgaged by previous owners (RWE and Macquarrie), and shafted by a clueless and toothless regulator.
 
Associate
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Pretty interesting posts here.

Reading all these posts, my opinion the water company is on the verge of collapse.

I know one investor is not willing to inject any cash.

People need to be prepared for 1) 100% to 200% increase in bills 2) government takeover.
Those are the options on the table.
 
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Soldato
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Collapse is the most likely scenario and entirely for political reasons shareholders want a 40% rise in bills which OFWAT says is unreasonable which results in a stalemate which means nationalisation is the inevitable result as that means everyone pays to bail out Thames via taxes instead of water bill payers as no govt based in london wants the heat from that.
I dont think anything will happen quite yet. I think Ofwat will publish the five year determinations at the end of the year, it won't meet the financing levels Thames wants, and Thames will then likely appeal to the CMA for a redetermination which takes another year or so. The outcome then is anyone's guess.

It has, however, been asset-stripped and mortgaged by previous owners (RWE and Macquarrie), and shafted by a clueless and toothless regulator.
The Thames issue was mostly the result of a bad investor (Macquerie) and specific poor regulation 15 years ago which didn't stop what they were doing.

But as a wider point I think the problem at the regulator has been two fold. Firstly they've been so focussed on stopping bill rises that they have failed to allow the level of investment the industry wants, over quite a long time frame. Second, the service failures that have started to result from this action have led the regulator to tighten the belt on investors even more, rather than allowing more funding, and this is starting to squeeze the investors to a level where they aren't making comparable market returns. This has led to further underinvestment behaviour to make up the difference.

The regulator needs to allow more investment and higher but more stable returns, take away the ability to asset strip and force the sector into more improvement. This will need bills to go up. There is an argument already that water is too cheap, and that its low cost doesn't incentivise any customer side efficiency behaviours. This is compounded by a lack of metering so half teh country doesn't pay for what they use.

a lot of structural issues to fix here. But nevertheless, under a private ownership model, investors need to make a return to invest in this vision. Without that, no investment, no achieving of the long term goals of the sector which require billions in funding, and we have the stagnant too-ing and fro-ing we currently have between investors, regulators and the media.
 
Associate
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Given how much of a **** show of incompetence and underfunding the industry was in the 60s and 70s, you'd soon have people very willing to pay for a better service.
All you'd do by renationalising is give people another reason to complain about government incompetence.


It isn't run like that.
It has, however, been asset-stripped and mortgaged by previous owners (RWE and Macquarrie), and shafted by a clueless and toothless regulator.
So either way it's Government incompetence

If the only two options are

1. incompetent government overseeing us all getting shafted with higher bills and taxpayer money needed to be spent

2, incompetent government overseeing us all getting shafted with higher bills and taxpayer money needed to be spent while a few private companies cream off a profit.


I'll go with number one.
 
Associate
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You don't think they'll both happen concurrently?

Well you can never say never as strange things have happened. I do believe that the country is run by private individuals and no longer controlled by governments.

For example the Chinese state has hacked UK voters records, they have hacked NHS records yet we are still trading with them.

As long as some private elites are making money our national security is at risk.
Water companies are a public good and should never be given into private hands.
 
Soldato
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The brass neck of that statement is galling.

Private company delivers terrible service.
Locally to us allowed 200 tankers of human waste to fester in the hot sun without adequate safety measures
Also locally to us, allowed rain to wash excess human waste out of treatment facility into populated areas.
Given carte blanche to pollute waterways.
Allows E-coli to flourish in a nation's capital's river.
Puts shareholders first.

Wrings hands and warns about rising prices.

In what dystopian version of reality is this considered acceptable?

edit







So Macquarie plundered their share, ditched the dog in 2017 and stuffed a bunch of Investment Vehicles with the burden. Since then the investment companies have seen little to no return, and are understandably getting upset.

Meanwhile, millions of people suffer as a result of Macquarie's actions and they'll never be held accountable.
It should be illegal to do this, loading up a company with debt like that. There should be no way out of being held accountable for these sort of practices, nothing not even bankruptcy.

Its ******* despicable.
 
Soldato
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Well this story is progressing at a rate of knots as the day goes on.


We've gone from:

"Shareholders won't release money until bills go up" -> "Boss admits bills need to rise by 40%" -> "Nationalisation Possible"

Give it a few hours and Thames Water will be nationalised at this rate. Win.
Because that nob will get a huge payout if we nationalise.

I don't think shareholders should be rewarded.
Can we let them go bust then nationalise it in a way they don't make bank?
 
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