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Royal Mail profits sharply higher | Royal Mail profits sharply higher |
(20 minutes later) | |
Royal Mail doubled its profits to £177m in the first half of 2008/09 from a year ago, helped by cost cuts, but it is delivering fewer letters. | |
The average daily postbag is now 79 million items. This is five million fewer letters than two years ago. | The average daily postbag is now 79 million items. This is five million fewer letters than two years ago. |
The postal group is facing competition from commercial rivals, who handle one in three of every letter posted. | |
Royal Mail also said stock market falls had pushed the group's pension deficit from £2.9bn in March this year to £4bn. | |
Hard times | |
Chairman Allan Leighton said the results showed that progress was being made in tough economic circumstances. | |
"This strong performance has been delivered against a backdrop of falling mail volumes, increased competition, an unsatisfactory regulatory regime and the challenge of meeting the heavy demands of our pension scheme," he said. | |
Cost cuts and improved efficiency have contributed to rising profits and the group will soon have closed nearly 2,500 post offices. | |
Royal Mail wants "fairer" regulation, arguing that it is difficult to change prices and introduce new products and services in the competitive business mail market. | |
A government decision on the future of the Post Office Card Account - which is expected soon - is of "critical importance" to its future, it said. | |
Universal problems | |
Royal Mail's 350-year monopoly ended at the start of 2006, when other licensed operators were given the right to collect and deliver mail. | |
While it has lost business in the lucrative bulk mail collection and sorting market, it is still obliged to deliver letters to and from anywhere in the UK at a uniform tariff. | |
This Universal Service, as it is called, continues to be loss-making, the group said. | |
It noted that there were "huge challenges to be overcome to secure the future of the Universal Service". |