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Company profits - Covid vs Now
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Delbhoy
- Posts: 68
- Joined: 05 May 2013, 23:10
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
the last bit of postslipettes post about amazon is something that makes my teeth itch . we see 2/3 amazon vans buzzing about our delivery and carrying small pkts while we go to a block of flats with about 6 cases of juice that they lumber on us from them.
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Gingerbread Fred
- Posts: 38
- Joined: 08 Apr 2021, 12:51
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
So your gripe with Amazon is the work they send your way?
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menditsa
- Posts: 371
- Joined: 22 Jun 2024, 08:06
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
100% yesGingerbread Fred wrote: ↑28 Mar 2026, 08:52
So your gripe with Amazon is the work they send your way?
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Delbhoy
- Posts: 68
- Joined: 05 May 2013, 23:10
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
yes it is what about it ?Gingerbread Fred wrote: ↑28 Mar 2026, 08:52So your gripe with Amazon is the work they send your way?
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ted_e_bear
- Posts: 3933
- Joined: 03 Sep 2012, 19:37
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
Yeah I know what you mean, it's annoying, it's because it's more cost effective for them to dump it on us like the other tricky calls where they can't just pull up and doorstep stuff.
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Mr Rush
- Posts: 3064
- Joined: 05 Aug 2011, 14:27
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
You know fine well that, as a bypass network, Amazon is cynically benefitting itself at the expense of the universal service provider. The briefing the CWU sent to MPs last month specifically cites the issue of Amazon dumping unprofitable work onto us.Gingerbread Fred wrote: ↑28 Mar 2026, 08:52So your gripe with Amazon is the work they send your way?
The machine stops.
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scotchy1962
- EX ROYAL MAIL
- Posts: 852
- Joined: 25 Mar 2020, 16:55
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
When i left RM i went to a company that reads gas/electric meters, in the area i was covering the company they read the meters for had very few meters and every single one of them were all the worst access or payers, i worked out that the only accounts they could get were the crap passed on by the companies who had the majority of accounts.Mr Rush wrote: ↑28 Mar 2026, 19:00You know fine well that, as a bypass network, Amazon is cynically benefitting itself at the expense of the universal service provider. The briefing the CWU sent to MPs last month specifically cites the issue of Amazon dumping unprofitable work onto us.Gingerbread Fred wrote: ↑28 Mar 2026, 08:52So your gripe with Amazon is the work they send your way?
So it works in all industries not just RM, someone has to do the crap jobs and all they do is pass it on.
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TopperGas
- Posts: 3282
- Joined: 13 Feb 2021, 22:46
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
Do RM really have any obligations under the USO to deliver Amazon's parcels or is it just a business decision to deliver them?Mr Rush wrote: ↑28 Mar 2026, 19:00You know fine well that, as a bypass network, Amazon is cynically benefitting itself at the expense of the universal service provider. The briefing the CWU sent to MPs last month specifically cites the issue of Amazon dumping unprofitable work onto us.Gingerbread Fred wrote: ↑28 Mar 2026, 08:52So your gripe with Amazon is the work they send your way?
If RM ever stop delivering them then it would lead to mass redundancies at RM.
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Kenfandango
- Posts: 690
- Joined: 19 Oct 2021, 16:40
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
Amazon, Evri, DPD etc compete with Royal Mail for these contracts. Then for 3 out of 12 months Royal Mail takes their surplus off them to deliver for considerably less than they'd have made if they lowered the price of the contract in the first place.
I heard (about 2 years ago now so this may have changed) that we charge Amazon £1 a parcel, any size, that we'll deliver when they're understaffed/overwhelmed (the Royal Mail motto!) Then we get told to prioritise these over something that's making the company £3
I heard (about 2 years ago now so this may have changed) that we charge Amazon £1 a parcel, any size, that we'll deliver when they're understaffed/overwhelmed (the Royal Mail motto!) Then we get told to prioritise these over something that's making the company £3
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ted_e_bear
- Posts: 3933
- Joined: 03 Sep 2012, 19:37
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
So would you say we'd actually be better off without this work as it sounds as though we're delivering it for a loss and effectively subsidising Amazon ?Kenfandango wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 12:28Amazon, Evri, DPD etc compete with Royal Mail for these contracts. Then for 3 out of 12 months Royal Mail takes their surplus off them to deliver for considerably less than they'd have made if they lowered the price of the contract in the first place.
I heard (about 2 years ago now so this may have changed) that we charge Amazon £1 a parcel, any size, that we'll deliver when they're understaffed/overwhelmed (the Royal Mail motto!) Then we get told to prioritise these over something that's making the company £3
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derekm
- Posts: 334
- Joined: 16 Dec 2010, 22:17
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
It wouldn’t surprise me if we were subsidising Amazon. They seem to be on top of their game making a lot of money so why not use us and any other company as long as it’s benefiting them.ted_e_bear wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 12:49So would you say we'd actually be better off without this work as it sounds as though we're delivering it for a loss and effectively subsidising Amazon ?Kenfandango wrote: ↑29 Mar 2026, 12:28Amazon, Evri, DPD etc compete with Royal Mail for these contracts. Then for 3 out of 12 months Royal Mail takes their surplus off them to deliver for considerably less than they'd have made if they lowered the price of the contract in the first place.
I heard (about 2 years ago now so this may have changed) that we charge Amazon £1 a parcel, any size, that we'll deliver when they're understaffed/overwhelmed (the Royal Mail motto!) Then we get told to prioritise these over something that's making the company £3
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Hyrrokkin
- Posts: 850
- Joined: 24 Nov 2021, 18:17
- Gender: Male
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Delbhoy
- Posts: 68
- Joined: 05 May 2013, 23:10
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
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TopperGas
- Posts: 3282
- Joined: 13 Feb 2021, 22:46
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
However it was funded he's not going to want to spend £3B without hoping to get a good return, otherwise he could have just spent the money somewhere else in Europe.
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yellowbelly
- Posts: 3626
- Joined: 23 Jun 2015, 15:51
- Gender: Male
Re: Company profits - Covid vs Now
Debt wasn't put onto RM's books according to the big man's testimony in Parliament, the debt sits higher up in the group:
Daniel Křetínský: I really appreciate the question because I have the
opportunity to state very clearly that there is no financial debt at Royal
Mail at all—Royal Mail does not have any financial debt. It has a revolving
banking facility which is unused and is there in case of shrinking working
capital—but there is no financial debt at Royal Mail, and Royal Mail is not
providing any upstream guarantees for our acquisition. There is strictly no
negative impact. On the contrary, there is a positive impact now and in
future. It was one of the requests of the Secretary of State at the time,
Jonathan Reynolds, to capitalise the receivables or intercompany loan that
IDS historically had vis-à-vis Royal Mail. Following the acquisitions, there
was an equity injection into Royal Mail by a capitalisation of that inter-
company loan of more than £700 million, and there has been no additional
burden put on Royal Mail. I am really grateful for the question, because I
wanted the opportunity to clear this up.