Jeez, media and now a guy on TV saying petrol going drop in price by 10 cents to 18 cents
Either they have no idea or Z going to go broke.
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Jeez, media and now a guy on TV saying petrol going drop in price by 10 cents to 18 cents
Either they have no idea or Z going to go broke.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/...ectid=12291391
Would love to see Z goes broke.. bloody fuel is always more expensive than others
I find the lack of recognition of the government tax around 40% of the cost of fuel, to be both ignorant and confronting. Govt taxes were out of scope for the review so not surprisingly they weren’t mentioned (careful manipulation of scope). The result beats up the industry without acknowledging which party is doing the gouging. The government is the real reason for high fuel prices, not the companies. This is bad for shareholders.
Terms of reference of this fuel price enquiry were deliberately obtuse resulting in blatant obfuscation. The results are carefully crafted so as to be deliberately disingenuous.
Justice Mahon if he were alive today might even call this "an orchestrated litany of lies"
We're now operating in an environment where the Govt are happy to make political capital with scant regard for treating companies equitably.
ZEL in 2019, who's the Govt's next whipping boy for 2020 ?
Another piece of "brilliantly targeted" social welfare. People worth $10m+ get it too.
Mike Bennetts on national t.v. news last night said words to the effect of, we only make 3.5 cents per liter of fuel.
We've been looking forward to more transparency, (this registered loudly on my B.S. metre) and have ordered the new billboards already at a cost of $2m. (New bigger billboards to enable the display of premium fuel prices).
Separately, the Govt recently threatened legislation if the big three don't build more resiliency into the jet fuel supply at Auckland airport and ZEL's share of expanded capacity has been talked about as $9m.
So there's $11m in capex required right there just to satisfy new regulatory requirements and if we assume a notional 9% expected return on capital that wipes $1m per annum of future earnings straight away and that's even before the effects of increased competition start making themselves felt !
I got to thinking, the Govt is hoping extra competition results in fuel price decreases of 18-32 cents per liter, (as reported yesterday). Mid point of that is 25 cents per liter.
Heck, if its just one tenth of that, that's 2.5 cents per liter and seeing as they only make 3.5 cents per liter after all costs, crikey the effect on profitability could be quite dramatic to say the least !