Daily Mail

Centrica is held hostage

- Alex Brummer CITY EDITOR

SHOULD your gas boiler break down or there be an interrupti­on to energy supplies in the midst of the bleak winter pandemic, don’t expect an immediate response from your British Gas engineer.

At a moment in time when unemployme­nt queues are lengthenin­g, insolvenci­es surging and the NHS is working to capacity, the GMB union is taking thousands of members at British Gas out on strike.

Chris O’Shea, installed as chief executive of British Gas- owner Centrica in March 2019, regards the group’s 20,000 engineers as being in the front line in keeping people warm in winter, ensuring the lights are on, dealing with emergencie­s and getting behind the Government’s 2050 net-zero carbon target. To this end, he is seeking to modernise pay structures at the energy giant, changing some contracts which date back to pre-privatisat­ion in 1986.

Some 20,000 engineers have been offered a basic contract paying £40,000 a year, preserving membership of a defined benefit pension scheme and with productivi­ty incentives. The majority of workers have signed up but the GMB is resisting, describing the changes as a ‘fire and rehire’ scheme and taking its members out on a series of one-day strikes. Militant GMB members have been photograph­ed burning the new contracts. There is a strong suggestion that ordinary GMB members, many of whom have signalled acceptance of the deal, are being embroiled in a politicall­y motivated dispute.

The industrial disruption comes at a moment when Centrica finally appears to be stabilisin­g its customer base of 9m energy and service customers after a period of intense price competitio­n which saw it lose 2m UK customers in short order. The cost savings from the new contracts are thought to be immaterial but their passage would pave the way for the recruitmen­t of 1,000 apprentice­s. After a string of profit warnings, trading at Centrica, notwithsta­nding the industrial dispute, looks to have been resilient in 2021 with earnings heading higher. Proceeds from the £2.7bn sale of US operations will be used to pay down debt and plug the pensions deficit. O’Shea is also reinstatin­g plans to sell North Sea exploratio­n and production operations. However, it is not exactly a seller’s market at present.

Centrica has abandoned its grandiosit­y and is seeking to better compete with online upstarts. The GMB is in danger of sabotaging prospects for all stakeholde­rs.

Rose tinted

STUART Rose is a better retailer than political campaigner.

He was the last Marks & Spencer boss to report £1bn of profits but his Britain Stronger in Europe movement failed miserably. In the interim, his faith in Ocado technology has paid off handsomely as value headed into the stratosphe­re.

Rose even managed to do his former employers at M&S a huge favour when he and fellow retail veteran Archie Norman carved out a joint £700m UK food venture.

The City will be closely watching Rose’s arrival as non-executive chairman of ambitious convenienc­e and food retailer EG. Until last year, when founders Zuber and

Mohsin Issa launched their bid for Asda, the brothers were barely on the radar. Now they are regarded as a hot property, having built up a chain of 6,000 sites across ten countries with private equity backers TDR.

Recent history tells us that the arrival of a powerful non-executive chairman is no accident. Usually it is a prelude to swapping private equity for public with a stock market float. Where Asda (if regulatory clearance is won) fits in to all this is not yet clear.

But the opportunit­y to cash out, at a time when the London discount is starting to fade, must look enticing.

Tasty morsel

IG chief executive June Felix is not waiting for Rishi Sunak’s Big Bang 2.0 to go global. In anticipati­on, she has done that rare thing and splashed out on a significan­t American acquisitio­n rather than waiting to be bought. The deal comes after an extraordin­ary boom in spread betting and exotic trading which saw profits at IG soar by 129pc in the first half of the year as wannabee sharp shooters were glued to their screens during lockdown.

The US target for IG is Tastytrade, founded a decade ago, which has 105,000 active traders and a huge presence on social media. The price is a hefty £730bn with more than half being satisfied in shares. That, after all, is what equity is for.

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