The sell-off of the Royal Mail – an “ode to privatisation” – has been an “extraordinary success”, says Fraser Nelson in The Daily Telegraph. It was hugely over-subscribed and in the end around 690,000 investors were allocated shares worth £750.
The decision that those who applied for more than £10,000 of shares would get nothing was a “brilliant idea” that embodies popular capitalism. Protests are now almost “inaudible” – a reminder that the “British public is moving to the right just when [Ed] Miliband is moving to the left”.
Labour leader Ed Miliband has been “royally trumped” by the sell-off, which was aimed “squarely” at what he calls the “squeezed middle”, agrees Matthew d’Ancona in The Sunday Telegraph.
The great popular privatisations of the 1980s were driven by Margaret Thatcher’s ambition to create more shareholders in Britain than there were trade union members. “It is at the heart of the Conservative ethos that homeowners and shareholders” are better off without interference from the state.
It is precisely in this context that David Cameron and George Osborne view their Help to Buy scheme, even if it is a “profound paradox: state intervention to reduce dependency on the state”.
I’m all in favour of privatisation, says Ross Clark in The Times. “We have seen one state-owned operation after another turned into a sparkling business after being freed from political management.”
But it is clear that the government has done all it can “to remove the ugly bits while leaving the juicy bits”. It has shifted £37.5bn of pension liabilities to the Treasury, backed by a pension fund worth £9bn less than this, and allowed the Royal Mail to retain ownership of prime land in London, although the company has said it doesn’t need it for its operations.
Even Thatcher never came up with the idea of “forcing taxpayers to hold on to the pension liabilities of the nationalised industries she privatised”.
There has been much whingeing about taxpayers being short-changed, and it is clear that the Royal Mail was “priced to go” from the start, says Mike Ingram in the Daily Mail. But it is “actually very tricky to value companies for the very long term”.
Royal Mail had no share price as a reference point and very little track-record. Three years ago, it was making a loss. If the government had been greedy, it might have “torpedoed the deal”.
As for the popular narrative that shares have largely ended up in the hands of speculators, institutional investors are usually earmarked for the lion’s share of an initial public offering (IPO) because they tend to be long-term holders of equity and a stable shareholder base is important. It may make for “dull press”, but on balance the sell-off probably wasn’t a “rip off”.