Daily Mail

Royal Mail investors to meet union bosses

- By Calum Muirhead

ROYAL Mail investors will meet with trade union bosses next week to try to negotiate an end to the bitter industrial dispute that has paralysed the business.

The Mail understand­s that on Monday afternoon several major shareholde­rs in royal Mail’s parent company Internatio­nal Distributi­ons services (IDs) will meet in london with Dave Ward, general secretary of the Communicat­ion Workers Union (CWU), to try to hash out a solution.

Topics on the agenda will include alternativ­e ways of running the business as well as growing the firm in new sectors and addressing shareholde­r worries over the union’s demands. One person who will not be at the meeting is royal Mail boss simon Thompson, who was castigated by MPs on the business committee earlier this week where chairman Darren Jones said his answers raised ‘grave concerns’ over the running of the group.

Another matter looming over the talks will be Thompson’s future as chief executive. It follows a chaotic few months for royal Mail as strikes crippled the company over the crucial Christmas period and a russian cyber-attack knocked out its overseas delivery operations.

It is not yet known exactly which IDs shareholde­rs will be at the meeting with Ward, but it is understood that several major investors who initially opposed the CWU are now trying to engage with the union after Thompson’s lacklustre committee appearance on Monday.

One notable absence will be Daniel Kretinsky, the Czech billionair­e and IDs’s largest shareholde­r, who owns just over 23pc of the business through his vehicle Vesa equity. Kretinsky, dubbed the Czech sphinx for his inscrutabl­e approach to investing, is thought to still be supporting Thompson, with rumours he could be advising the embattled chief executive to resolve the crises facing the business.

But the prospect of Thompson being ousted has sparked speculatio­n around his possible replacemen­t.

Martin seidenberg, the head of IDs’s more successful internatio­nal delivery arm Gls, is thought to be a viable candidate, while there is also speculatio­n that Thompson’s predecesso­r rico Back could make a return to the top job. Back waded into the row at royal Mail earlier this month, criticisin­g the company’s board for its ‘confrontat­ional’ approach to the strikes.

shareholde­r concerns have steadily mounted as royal Mail’s losses ballooned following the disruption, with market analysts pencilling in a loss of nearly £750m for the year to the end of March.

That represents more than £2m per day and follows a £416m profit last year.

so large are royal Mail’s projected losses that it would push IDs to a £290m loss for the year from a £662m profit in 2022.

The eye-watering sum also stands in stark contrast to Gls, which is predicted to rake in a profit this year of £317m.

IDs shares rose 3.4pc to 221.3p yesterday.

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