Big Vinny K wrote: ↑Sun Aug 06, 2023 8:27 pm
Hi Paul
The price cap does not apply to fixed price deals only because it’s fixed !!
In all seriousness it works pretty much in the same way as interest rates as in it’s determined by market conditions and the forecast for future prices.
And like Banks the utility companies will add in their own bit of margin within that price to take into account any unexpected circumstances (heads I win / tails you lose type stuff).
Unlike interest rates the thing that is impacting the fixed rate gas and electricity tariffs at the moment is the lack of any competition. There’s very few decent fixed rate deals out there so when the odd company offers them there’s no need to make it the great deals or lead the aggregator and comparison tables as was happening only a couple of years ago. The whole market has shrunk anyway because of the companies that went bust.
In terms of the original OP my advice would be for the sake of the difference between variable and fixed I would personally not be fixing at the moment. I know some people like the assurance of being able to budget and know how much their monthly bill is going to be (and after the last couple of years with good reason) but the fixed deals out there are just not very good and every forecast that exists in the market are for a downward trend in wholesale prices.
But each to his own and you need to do what’s right for you.
Hi Big V K, as you say the price cap doesn't apply to fixed price deals. However, it's necessary to state that because if (and, yes, it is "if") a future price cap is lower than the fixed price deal a customer signs up to they will not benefit from the price cap. (Whereas there are price caps for gas and power, there are no price caps for interest rates. Thus it is probably a good idea, though perhaps I am tending to be overcautious, to make sure everyone is clear about how fixed price gas/power deals differ from fixed rate mortgage deals).
Ofgem sets the gas/power price cap. Yes, Ofgem determines them from market conditions, but not from forecasts of future prices, rather from the forward prices that gas/power suppliers could have bought and locked in their future gas/power supplies during the period when Ofgem determines what the price cap will be. Ofgem also determines how much gas/power suppliers can include in their price cap for the other costs they face, including the "social costs" of somewhere around 50 gas/power suppliers defaulting on their obligations and going bust.
Gas/power supply is a tough business, just like banking it requires companies with healthy balance sheets, with the financial strength to hedge the risks they present in the wholesale markets and the energy risk management knowledge and expertise to get through the "ups and downs" of the market. The 50 or so energy suppliers that have gone bust, mostly in 2018 and 2021, did so because they didn't have the knowledge of the finances to exist in the market. It was a disasterous mistake by Ofgem (and the energy minister in the Coalition government) to allow these companies into the energy supply business. These "bankruptcy waiting to happen" companies didn't bring "competition" to the market, they just brought us all the added cost of the consequences of their failure - adding more than £100 to all our gas/power bills. Competition needs no more than 10 knowledgeable and skilled companies - and a little bit of stability, rather than the wild helter-skelter ride we've all been on these past 3 years.
My advice, for what it's worth, is to make sure your home is as well insulated as you can possibly make it. We can all seek to reduce our use of gas and power and achieve savings based on using less, it's a much more certain way of managing our expenses than wondering whether we can find a good fixed unit rate or whether variable (and capped) unit rates will be overall a lower cost.