Today Ofgem has published its latest supply market indicator. The SMI is a 12-month forward look at cost trends. It looks at the average annual bills for consumers and estimates the annual cost per customer faced by a typical large supplier to deliver gas and electricity.
The SMI is a forward looking view of cost trends for a typical large energy supplier – not one particular supplier. It is not a forecast, or a statement of how much profit an individual supplier has made, or is making.
Our goal is to make the relationship between the costs faced by energy suppliers and household consumer bills more transparent and accessible. This makes the market clearer for consumers.
The actual pre-tax profit earned by any large supplier will depend on a variety of factors. These include a supplier’s chosen hedging strategy, cost efficiency and actual consumption levels. These can be affected by weather, especially in gas. Suppliers also still have to pay taxes and fund debt payments from the margin they make. Reporting margins in this way is common across various sectors.
The latest indicators for November show that:
You can read the SMI analysis in full at Supply Market Indicator.
Since 2009 Ofgem has required the six largest energy suppliers to publish yearly statements on the actual costs, revenues and profits for their generation and supply businesses. See our latest review of the companies’ 2013 statements.
Our web page on supplier profits also has a series of graphs showing breakdowns of profit figures from 2009 to 2013.
Ofgem publishes the monthly SMI update on the last Thursday of each month. As the December update would fall on Christmas Day, the next update will be published on 29 January 2015.
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