
Royal Mail faces threat of watchdog censure in battle over prices
Royal Mail is facing action from the postal regulator after a complaint from DX, one of its rivals, that it had breached pricing regulations.
Postcomm is due to make a formal ruling in the next few weeks, but the regulator has already outlined concerns over a new service that operates in DX’s area.
As the dominant incumbent, Royal Mail is not allowed to lower its prices selectively because that impedes emerging competition. Instead, if it lowers prices it has to offer those prices to everyone. DX argued that it had circumvented this by creating a new service and arguing that this served a niche market, rather than a broad one.
Last year Royal Mail was fined GBP 1 million by Postcomm for failing to ensure that it did not gain an unfair commercial advantage over its competitors in the “access to the last mile” market.
The move came after complaints from three of Royal Mail’s competitors at the time – Express, the dairies business, TNT and UK Mail – who said that they had been hampered in getting uniformly priced access to the final-mile delivery, which is carried out by Royal Mail postmen.
Two years ago the regulator found that Royal Mail’s advertising had breached competition regulations.