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Welsh rugby makes a huge economic contribution shows new report

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The true significance of Welsh rugby goes far beyond the WRU’s balance sheet shows a new analysis for Prof Jones-Evans

Wales fans responded to the players

The annual economic impact of Welsh rugby is up to £430m annually.(Image: Huw Evans Picture Agency Ltd)

Welsh rugby, from the professional to the community game, has an annual economic value of up to £430m, new research shows. The economic analysis, conducted by Professor Dylan Jones-Evans, is part of the work from a group led by Rob Regan, which argues for maintaining four professional regions.

The WRU is seeking to reduce the number to three, alongside greater investment in the development of the game. If reduced to three they would each receive annual funding from the union of £7.5m with £28m into the wide rugby pathway over five years.

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READ MORE: The economic impact of Welsh rugby is huge and it needs to be cherishedREAD MORE: Wales needs to deliver more than 10,000 a year to hit government target

An EGM of union clubs on April 13, which includes a motion to dismiss the union’s chairman, Richard Collier-Keywood, is being seen as a de facto referendum on the four-to-three strategy.

The group’s Alternative Strategy for Welsh Rugby report calls for maintaining the four existing regions with equitable central funding – around £6m (not player budgets) – from the WRU.

While subject to legal action from Swansea Council, which has also submitted a case to the Competition and Markets Authority, an acquisition of Cardiff from the WRU by current owners of the Ospreys Y11 Sport and Media, would be a way of getting to three. This is because Y11 has not committed to maintaining ownership of the Ospreys beyond 2027.

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What is not clear is whether other investors, although leader of Swansea Council Rob Stewart is engaged with a number of potential parties, could come in to take over the Ospreys and if remaining at three, then bid against the Scarlets for the west Wales franchise from the WRU.

The WRU and Y11 have extended their exclusivity period to conclude a deal – which was previous 60-days – by a further 30-days. In business acquisition deals it not uncommon for parties to extend exclusivity periods.

Professor Jones-Evans’s analysis is based not only on the direct economic impact of the WRU itself and the four professional regions, but also the wider social impact of the community game.

Prof Jones-Evans said: “The available data indicate that Welsh rugby provides a direct annual economic impact of at least £225m and up to £250m through the professional game and matchday activity alone. When a cautious estimate for the grassroots game is included, this amount increases to between £240m and £270m.

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“Furthermore, if the broader social and wellbeing benefits of the community game are considered, the total national value of Welsh rugby could plausibly range from £370m to £430m annually.”

The report says that the community game is the foundation from which the professional game, the national brand, and the match day economy derive their long-term value. Its full social return on investment is estimated at £130m–£160m annually. However, the report says that the WRU currently provides just £4.6m of its own funds (or less than 5p in every pound of revenue) to sustain it.

Prof Jones-Evans said: “The true significance of Welsh rugby goes far beyond the WRU’s balance sheet.” He added: “International matches at the Principality Stadium generate one of Wales’s strongest visitor economies, with each major home international contributing approximately £10.5m to £11m in matchday economic impact at current prices.

“This results in an annual visitor economy of about £63m to £66m from six major fixtures. Of course, this does not include income from other events hosted at the stadium, such as concerts.”

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Prof Jones-Evans added: “Crucially, much of this is new money entering Wales, with about 35% of visitors coming from outside Wales, and their spending accounts for around 70% of total economic output.”

While not a tangible asset, the WRU also has an equity stake in the Six Nations. After professional advisory fees – and a failure to meet commercial targets for the competition, which would have seen a further £10m -the union received around £40m when 14% of the tournament was acquired by CVC Capital Partners in 2021. With the union having drawn down the final phased payment from CVC, it is now facing a dilution impact of around £3m per year.

Prof Dylan Jones-Evans’s analysis highlights that the remaining stake could have a value, depending on commercial interest, of between £2.6bn and £4bn. However, there is no indication that Six Nations Rugby – the commercial company set up by the respective governing bodies -is looking to sell further equity, which would require all the unions to agree. Any further equity sell off would create a further dilution of profit share from the tournament for the WRU.

Prof Jones-Evans said the game in Wales is at a crossroads and requires strong governance and support from a wide range of stakeholders to ensure its social and economic relevance in Wales – as well as its global brand reputation -is not only protected, but built upon.

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He said: “The evidence in this document shows that the consequences of failure extend beyond the rugby community. They impact the Cardiff visitor economy, the regional economies of south and west Wales, the grassroots infrastructure that supports Welsh civic and community life, and a national brand whose value relies on competitive credibility, which is currently declining.

“The question this analysis poses to those with decision-making authority -the WRU board, the Welsh Government, the Senedd, and the Welsh Affairs Committee – is not whether the evidence exists – it does.

“The question is whether the governance structures currently in place are adequate to protect an asset of this scale and irreversibility, and if not, what intervention is proportionate. This document does not answer that question, but it does establish, as clearly as the available evidence allows, why it must be asked – and answered -urgently.”

The alternative plan from Mr Regan, a former chief operating officer of Principality Building Society and Hodge Bank, and founder of tech venture Enigma Glen Melford-Colegate, argues that central alignment and cost control can, in principle, be pursued without removing a region. They are being advised and supported by a group of more than 50 business and rugby related figures.

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While they have held meetings with both WRU chief executive Abi Tierney and chair Mr Collier-Keywood, they believe the union didn’t undertake a robust analysis on why four – with money still being able to be invested in the development of the game – couldn’t be maintained before backing a reduction to three strategy.

They said that spending identified for the pathway – although a breakdown of funding has not yet been made public – should be challenged, including holding off any plans for new national campus, saying that existing university, college, local authority and partner facilities are used instead.

However, the report does not position the four region case as an “unconditional entitlement.” It adds: “The safer position is to support a defined stabilisation window, for example 24 months, during which four regions are retained only alongside hard disclosure, reporting, and delivery triggers.”

These triggers should include agreed budget-control compliance at each region and publication of ownership and capital structure summaries.”

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It adds: “If those conditions are missed on a repeated or material basis, the response should not be denial or rhetorical escalation. The response should be automatic reappraisal of the operating model. This strengthens the four region case by making it conditional on delivery rather than dependent on assertion.”

The alternative plan also recommends a separation of the community game from the professional. They also explore whether community clubs could benefit financially from adopting community interest or charitable status, including from business rate reductions.

While the WRU has been successful, particularly under previous regimes, in securing grant funding from the public sector – most notably from the Welsh Government for capital projects including Principality Stadium screens and a new pitch -the alternative strategy says more funding could be secured.

It highlights the example of the Football Association of Wales, which is around three times smaller than the WRU in terms of revenue, in securing investment to support the growth of the grassroots game from public sources. The report calls for a “ring-fenced professional operating perimeter, separate reporting lines for community and pathway investment, and transparent treatment of transfers between the two.”

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It also says that the regions and WRU should pursue shared medical, sports science, analytics, procurement, legal, and back-office services where duplication adds cost, but provides little strategic advantage.

This approach has been looked at in the past by the WRU, with mixed cost-saving results. Its One Wales strategy also identifies shared services between the union and the regions – although, with the current uncertainty, that has yet to be fully explored.

The alternative report says: “This is a governance and operating-efficiency recommendation, not a claim that every function should be centralised. Financial monitoring should identify stress earlier and favour collaborative restructuring over reactive crisis management. The administration and ownership shock at Cardiff in April 2025 illustrates why earlier visibility of financial pressure matters.

“The strongest version of the four region argument is therefore not that Wales should preserve four teams on sentiment alone. It is that Welsh rugby should preserve four teams only within a system capable of earning that outcome through transparency, pathway yield, financial discipline, stronger women’s development, better grassroots renewal, and better fan conversion.”

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Commodity Radar: Explained: Why gold’s safe-haven appeal is weakening and how to ride the volatility

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Commodity Radar: Explained: Why gold’s safe-haven appeal is weakening and how to ride the volatility
Gold traded higher on Tuesday amid positive global cues, rising by over Rs 1,200 per 10 grams intraday to hit the day’s high of Rs 1,40,482 on the MCX. Gold’s safe-haven appeal has taken a hit since the onset of the Iran–Israel/US war, contrary to expectations of a bull rally during a time of crisis.

April gold futures slipped below the Rs 1,40,000 mark on Monday on the MCX. The metal has sharply corrected from its all-time peak of Rs 1,93,096, falling by Rs 56,800 or about 29%.

Meanwhile, COMEX gold is hovering around the $4,420.10 per ounce mark. With the war now in its fourth week, spot gold is down 15%, while it has fallen 22% from its January record high, according to a Reuters report.

The rupee’s continued weakness has also failed to support bullion prices, despite the INR hitting new lifetime lows almost daily.

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Trivedi said its volatility against the US dollar amplifies moves in MCX gold, and even minor global price shifts translate into sharper domestic swings, increasing intraday and weekly volatility.


Commenting on the current trends, Jateen Trivedi, Vice President and Research Analyst at LKP Securities, said gold has witnessed a sharp corrective decline after recent highs, breaking below key short-term supports and entering a volatile phase. The market is now reacting to mixed geopolitical signals — initial escalation between the US–Israel, and Iran followed by unconfirmed de-escalation talks — creating sharp two-way moves, he said.
In his view, gold is currently caught between supportive factors such as geopolitical risk premiums and negative factors like de-escalation talks reducing safe-haven demand, along with inflation concerns keeping rate cuts uncertain. “This creates a high-volatility, non-directional environment,” he added.Annualized Actual Volatility (AAV), which measures gold’s volatility on the MCX, has risen 43% over the past five trading sessions.

Trivedi suggested the following near-term strategy for traders based on gold’s current price performance:

1) Key support & resistance

Prices have broken down from the Rs 1,60,000+ zone and are now trading near Rs 1,39,000, indicating a clear short-term downtrend with panic unwinding. Immediate resistance is seen at Rs 1,42,500, while major resistance is at Rs 1,45,000. Immediate support is placed at Rs 1,38,000, with major support at Rs 1,37,500.

The current structure suggests range-bound volatility after the breakdown, rather than an immediate trend reversal, he opined.

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2) Momentum indicator

The RSI is near 29, entering oversold territory. This indicates selling exhaustion may emerge, but does not confirm a reversal — it only increases the probability of sharp pullback rallies. Prices have moved to the lower band with expansion, indicating strong volatility and trend acceleration. Such moves are typically followed by short-term mean reversion or sideways consolidation.

3) Technically speaking

EMA 8: Sharp downward slope, acting as immediate resistance

EMA 21: Also turning down, confirming a bearish structure

Prices trading well below both EMAs signal trend weakness and a sell-on-rise bias.

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4) MACD

The MACD is in negative territory with a widening histogram, indicating strong bearish momentum. There are no signs of a reversal yet, but oversold conditions may trigger short-covering.

Gold trading strategy

Gold is likely to remain highly volatile within this band as markets react to conflicting geopolitical updates and macro signals.

The expected trading range is Rs 1,37,500 – Rs 1,42,500.

Selling pressure is expected in the Rs 1,42,000 – Rs 1,42,500 range.

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Short covering or buying support is likely to emerge at Rs 1,37,500 – Rs 1,38,000.

He suggested that traders adopt a range-bound approach rather than aggressive directional bets, and maintain strict risk management, given headline-driven volatility.

(Disclaimer: The recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own and do not represent the views of The Economic Times.)

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Pacific Energy contracted for Kwinana hydrogen testbed project

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Pacific Energy contracted for Kwinana hydrogen testbed project

Pacific Energy has been contracted for work on the second stage of the Kwinana Energy Transformation Hub as the multi-user hydrogen technology testbed project progresses.

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Zevero raises $7m to expand AI carbon data platform across Europe and Asia

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Zevero raises $7m to expand AI carbon data platform across Europe and Asia

Climate tech firm Zevero has secured $7 million in new funding as global demand for robust carbon data and ESG reporting continues to accelerate.

The latest investment, which brings the company’s total funding to $14 million, includes backing from Spiral Capital, Gazelle Capital and Deep 30. It follows a period of rapid expansion, with Zevero reporting 400% year-on-year growth in annual recurring revenue and a doubling of its customer base.

The company has also strengthened its offering through the recent acquisition of sustainability advisory firm Inhabit, enabling it to move beyond emissions tracking into active decarbonisation support for clients.

Zevero’s platform uses artificial intelligence to automate the collection and calculation of emissions data across Scope 1, 2 and 3 — the three key categories used to measure an organisation’s carbon footprint.

By building a continuous, reusable dataset, the platform allows companies to integrate sustainability metrics into core business functions such as product design, procurement and investment planning, rather than treating them as standalone reporting exercises.

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Chief executive Shigeo Taniuchi said the shift reflects a broader transformation in how organisations approach sustainability.

“Businesses are increasingly being asked to manage sustainability the way they manage finance,” he said. “Yet many are still treating it as an annual project rather than a continuous system. Our goal is to make climate data actionable, reliable and embedded in decision-making.”

The funding comes amid tightening global regulatory requirements around climate disclosure. Frameworks such as the UK Sustainability Reporting Standards and Japan’s SSBJ standards are pushing companies to apply the same level of rigour to environmental reporting as they do to financial accounts.

This shift is increasing demand for platforms capable of delivering auditable, real-time data, particularly as supply chain transparency and carbon border adjustment mechanisms (CBAM) begin to affect international trade.

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George Wade, co-founder and chief commercial officer, said carbon data is rapidly becoming a strategic input rather than a compliance obligation.

“Organisations don’t just need software to collect the data, they need guidance to turn it into something the business can act on,” he said.

The new funding will be used to accelerate product development and support Zevero’s international expansion, particularly across Asia-Pacific and continental Europe, where regulatory and commercial pressures are intensifying.

The company is already working with major organisations including Asahi Group and the Tokyo Metropolitan Government, as well as a growing number of clients in manufacturing, FMCG and consumer sectors.

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Investors say the company’s combination of technology and embedded expertise gives it a strong position in a market that is becoming increasingly crowded but also more critical to business operations.

Spiral Capital’s Tomokazu Okuno said the platform addresses one of the most pressing challenges facing organisations today, gaining visibility into emissions and acting on that insight.

The investment highlights a broader trend in climate technology, where funding is increasingly flowing towards solutions that deliver measurable operational value rather than purely compliance-focused tools.

As businesses navigate the transition to a low-carbon economy, the ability to track, verify and act on emissions data is becoming a core capability.

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For Zevero, the next phase will be scaling its platform globally while maintaining the balance between automation and expert insight, a combination it believes is essential to turning climate data into meaningful action.

With regulatory demands rising and investor scrutiny intensifying, platforms that can bridge the gap between reporting and real-world impact are likely to play a central role in the next stage of the sustainability transition.


Jamie Young

Jamie Young

Jamie is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, bringing over a decade of experience in UK SME business reporting.
Jamie holds a degree in Business Administration and regularly participates in industry conferences and workshops.

When not reporting on the latest business developments, Jamie is passionate about mentoring up-and-coming journalists and entrepreneurs to inspire the next generation of business leaders.

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China Telecom Corporation Limited 2025 Q4 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (OTCMKTS:CHJHF) 2026-03-24

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

This article was written by

Seeking Alpha’s transcripts team is responsible for the development of all of our transcript-related projects. We currently publish thousands of quarterly earnings calls per quarter on our site and are continuing to grow and expand our coverage. The purpose of this profile is to allow us to share with our readers new transcript-related developments. Thanks, SA Transcripts Team

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Eurozone growth slows sharply as Middle East war drives costs higher

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The economic impact of Welsh rugby is huge and it needs to be cherished

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Professor Dylan Jones-Evans has undertaken an analysis as part of an alternative strategy for the future of the game in Wales

Welsh rugby's future should become clearer in the coming days

Welsh rugbyy.(Image: 2025 Getty Images)

Welsh rugby is far more than a sport – it is a national economic asset, but for far too long, the debate around Welsh rugby has been framed as if it were simply about results on the pitch, boardroom rows, or the latest financial crisis at the Welsh Rugby Union.

But the evidence now makes clear that this is much bigger than that, and Welsh rugby is not just a sporting institution; it is one of Wales’s most significant national economic assets.

Recently, Rob Regan, who is currently working on an alternative strategy for Welsh rugby, asked me to examine its economic impact on the nation. While most of the data was available, some had to be extrapolated from other sources because various organisations here in Wales had not conducted the necessary research. Nevertheless, the overall results are striking, and for the first time, we now possess information on this important subject.

READ MORE: We need a plan to revive and renew struggling universities in Wales

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Author avatarDylan Jones-Evans

The available data indicate that Welsh rugby provides a direct annual economic impact of at least £225m and up to £250m through the professional game and matchday activity alone. When a cautious estimate for the grassroots game is included, this amount increases to between £240m and £270m. Furthermore, if the broader social and well-being benefits of the community game are considered, the total national value of Welsh rugby could plausibly range from £370m to £430m annually.

That matters because it shifts the conversation, as it is no longer solely about whether Welsh rugby is managed well enough to win matches, but about whether a nationally significant asset is being adequately protected.

At the core of the direct economic case is the professional game. The Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) had a turnover of £106.1m in 2024-25, while the broader regional professional game is estimated to add another £40m to £60m annually. Together, this creates a direct professional rugby economy of approximately £150 million each year.

But the true significance of Welsh rugby goes far beyond the WRU’s balance sheet. International matches at the Principality Stadium generate one of Wales’s strongest visitor economies, with each major home international contributing approximately £10.5m to £11m in matchday economic impact at current prices. This results in an annual visitor economy of about £63m to £66m from six major fixtures. Of course, this does not include income from other events hosted at the stadium, such as concerts.

Crucially, much of this is new money entering Wales, with about 35% of visitors coming from outside Wales, and their spending accounts for around 70% of total economic output. It is also worth noting that the WRU is apparently holding a more recent report on the stadium’s impact from last year and has yet to publish it, so this estimate could be revised once it finally does.

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That is why the stadium is so important, as the Principality is not just a venue but a key gateway for outside money into the Welsh economy. Data indicates it supports around one in ten tourism jobs in Cardiff and also sustains hospitality, retail, and broader city-centre activity. Building a replacement stadium to similar standards today would probably cost close to or over £1 billion, making it effectively irreplaceable.

Then there is the issue that few public discussions have properly addressed, which is Welsh rugby’s “hidden” asset base. The WRU’s share of the retained commercial interest in Six Nations Rugby Limited is estimated to be worth between £500m and £570m.

That value does not appear transparently in the way most people understand a balance sheet, but it is real in economic terms. It originates from the CVC deal in 2021, which implied a valuation of about £2.55bn for Six Nations Rugby, with later estimates suggesting the competition might now be worth between £3.5bn and £4bn. On that basis, the WRU’s effective economic interest is substantial.

The Wales rugby brand is valued at around £109m in 2023, but that figure should probably now be seen as a ceiling rather than a current valuation, due to Wales’s decline on the field over the past three years. This also indicates that the worth of Welsh rugby’s commercial assets is not assured but relies on maintaining competitiveness, public trust, and a healthy development pipeline.

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And that is where the findings become most uncomfortable, as despite all the large numbers associated with Welsh rugby, community rugby remains underfunded. The grassroots game is described as the foundation upon which the professional game, the national team, the brand, and the matchday economy all ultimately depend.

Yet the WRU directly allocates only £3.3m of its own funds to community clubs and affiliated organisations, around 3% of annual revenue. Even when the wider community rugby department is included, spending remains modest compared with the economic and social value grassroots rugby appears to generate.

That imbalance lies at the heart of the argument, and the report emphasises that Welsh rugby’s governance issues are inseparable from its economic challenges. They are one and the same problem. If the community game continues to weaken, the pathway becomes narrower. A narrower pathway leads to poorer national performance, which in turn results in declining audiences, weakened brand value, and reduced commercial worth of Welsh rugby’s stake in the Six Nations.

Hence, the key conclusion is unavoidable. Welsh rugby is not just a sport facing significant difficulties, but a vital national asset under pressure, with its economic value encompassing the visitor economy, regional development, the community club network, and Wales’s international profile. Once these assets diminish, many of them cannot be easily restored.

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The question, therefore, is no longer whether Welsh rugby has economic significance, as the evidence shows it does, but whether the current structures and management can protect something so vital to Wales before further damage occurs.

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Gold Pressured by Liquidity Selling, Inflation Fears

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Stocks Little Changed After Fed Decision

“The Middle East war continues to trigger a broad macroeconomic shock across global markets, forcing investors to reprice inflation, rates, growth, and liquidity conditions simultaneously,” analysts at Saxo Bank said. “Gold is being sold because it remains one of the few liquid assets still showing gains over the past year.”

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CIO Notebook: Fed Holds Steady As Inflation Fears Grow

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CIO Notebook: Fed Holds Steady As Inflation Fears Grow

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Home heating oil businesses struggle to navigate volatile market

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Home heating oil businesses struggle to navigate volatile market

LONDONDERRY, NH – Home heating oil firms are facing mounting cost pressures as rising crude and diesel prices tied to Middle East tensions squeeze margins and disrupt operations across New England.

The recent spike follows a cold winter that boosted demand for heating oil, leaving both consumers and suppliers exposed to higher costs. Businesses say they are trying to avoid passing those increases on to customers, even as expenses climb sharply.

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We had to lower our prices to be able to get the phones to start ringing more. People are holding off on auto deliveries because the prices are so high, and we can’t blame them on that,” said Andrew Chesney, owner of Southern New Hampshire Energy. 

Heating oil providers say volatility in energy markets is complicating planning, as rising crude prices coincide with surging diesel costs needed to fuel delivery fleets.

Chesney said a month ago it cost around $8,000 to fill up one of their delivery trucks with diesel, and today it’s between $12,000 and $15,000. Between filling up four trucks and getting all the necessary oil and fuel, it costs Southern New Hampshire Energy around $50,000 a day. 

RISING GAS PRICES FROM IRAN CONFLICT PUT GOP ON DEFENSE AFTER PREVIOUS BIDEN ATTACKS

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Graphic of fuel costs for delivery truck

The cost of filling up a delivery truck jumped thousands over the past month.  (Kailey Schuyler / Fox News)

“We’re trying to cut corners where we can to save the people money, but it’s hard to also on our end. We’re not making a huge profit at all,” said Chesney. 

TRUMP ADMIN OFFICIAL SAYS THERE’S A ‘VERY GOOD CHANCE’ GAS PRICES WILL BE BACK TO NORMAL BY SUMMER

Some companies are implementing new policies to manage rising costs. In Massachusetts, Atlantic Oil Company posted a disclaimer on their website saying: “Due to recent and ongoing events in the Middle East, we have currently suspended any deliveries below 125 gallons. We have also added a surcharge of $40 for any orders that take less than the 125 gallon minimum.”

Atlantic Oil company sets limit on oil delivery amid Middle East conflict

Atlantic Oil company sets limit on oil delivery amid Middle East conflict (Kailey Schuyler / Fox News)

“I have people come in, long-time customers saying, ‘you know, I can’t really pay for this,’ and we try to help them. We say, ‘you know, we could, take some payment now,’ because in the summer you won’t need to pay for your oil, typically,” said Ted Triandafilou, General Manager of Atlantic Oil Company.

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Triandafilou said his company is experiencing a similar jump in diesel costs.

“Depending on the size of the truck, we have multiple trucks of different sizes. So it could be over. As of now, it’s over $12,000 to fill the truck up as it may have been, you know, $5,000-$6,000 about a month ago.”

Both operators said daily price swings are adding to uncertainty.

“We really don’t know where it’s going to go from here and prices are increasing and decreasing anywhere from 10 cents to 25 cents a day right now with everything going on in the world,” said Chesney. 

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“Prices change daily just like gas prices typically do, and a lot of time, I’ve seen … the prices go up in the morning – let’s say, jump 20, 30 cents, crazy numbers – and then slowly during the day, they’ll drop back down, but by the close of the market, they’re back up again,” said Triandafilou. “It’s getting to the point where I don’t even bother displaying the price outside because I’d just be running out and changing it again.”

According to AAA, the average cost for a gallon of diesel on March 20 was $5.15, approaching the record average of $5.80 in 2022.

“The last time we saw diesel prices this high was in 2022 after Russia invaded Ukraine,” said AAA spokesperson Mark Schieldrop. “The current situation is a little bit different because we’re seeing significant impacts on production. We are also seeing all those cargo flows out of the Strait of Hormuz being impacted. So, there are some long-term impacts here.”

Schieldrop said that the record could be broken if the conflict continues. Even if the conflict ended today, the prices wouldn’t drop tomorrow. 

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“It is true that prices shoot up like a rocket and then tend to drift down like a feather,” said Schieldrop. “It’s going to take a sustained period of time, and many analysts believe that the impact could be lasting for more than a year, even if the conflict ends in the short term.”

OIL, GAS PRICES JUMP AS TRUMP FLIRTS WITH STRIKING IRANIAN OIL INFRASTRUCTURE

Schieldrop says it can be tough to cut corners on gasoline prices to save money. 

“We urge folks to try to drive less. That’s a tough bargain for folks who have to drive, but stacking your trips, trying to drive more economically,” said Schieldrop. “Easing up on the gas pedal, drive a little slower, follow the speed limit, and you can increase your fuel economy pretty dramatically.”

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For homeowners, demand may ease in the coming months as warmer weather reduces heating needs. But for businesses, the seasonal slowdown brings its own challenges.

Heating oil cost set at $4.89 on March 20

Southern New Hampshire Energy heating oil cost seen at $4.89 on March 20.  (Kailey Schuyler / Fox News)

“We’re actually coming into our slower season. So everyone’s going to be holding off on getting home heating oil till winter,” said Chesney. 

“So it’s going to start slowing down for our employees, and we’re going to go through a struggle ourselves running a business and keeping things going till the prices lower down.”

 CLICK HERE TO GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO

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Companies like Southern New Hampshire Energy are relying on other services, including plumbing, heating and cooling, to offset seasonal declines in fuel demand.

“Support local. We’re a family-owned and operated company. We’re not a corporate company, so we structure our business on family. And we’re just a small business trying to make our way through life right now,” said Chesney. 

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Royal Mail staff claim mail hidden to meet delivery targets amid ongoing delays

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Royal Mail has blamed strike action for helping send it slumping to a full-year loss of more than £1 billion.

Postal workers across the UK have accused Royal Mail of encouraging practices designed to make delivery performance appear stronger than it is, as the company faces mounting scrutiny over persistent delays.

Employees speaking anonymously said managers routinely instructed them to “take the mail for a ride”, a phrase used to describe removing undelivered letters from view during inspections so delivery rounds appear complete.

The allegations come ahead of a parliamentary session where Royal Mail executives are due to be questioned by MPs over the deterioration in service levels, which has affected millions of customers.

Workers from multiple delivery offices told the BBC that when they raised concerns about workload, particularly the growing volume of parcels compared with letters, they were often told to prioritise parcels and temporarily remove letters from sight.

In some cases, undelivered mail was reportedly placed into trolleys and moved elsewhere in the depot during inspections, before being returned for delivery the following day.

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One worker described the practice as “embarrassing and deceitful”, adding that it allowed managers to claim rounds had been completed even when letters had not been delivered.

Others said the approach was used to avoid scrutiny from senior management and external inspectors, effectively masking operational shortfalls.

Royal Mail has a legal obligation to deliver first-class mail six days a week, but recent performance has fallen significantly short of regulatory targets.

In the 2024–25 financial year, the company delivered just 77% of first-class mail on time, against a target of 93%. Second-class performance also missed its benchmark, reaching 92.5% compared with a 98.5% target.

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The regulator Ofcom has already fined Royal Mail £37 million in recent years and warned that further penalties are likely if service levels do not improve.

Royal Mail has strongly rejected the allegations, stating that the claims “do not reflect how our delivery operations work”.

A spokesperson said the company would investigate any specific cases raised and insisted that the vast majority of mail, around 92%, is delivered on time. It added that where local issues arise, efforts are made to restore normal service quickly.

However, the Communication Workers’ Union (CWU) said the problems stem from deeper structural issues, including low pay, staffing shortages and what it described as a “toxic managerial culture”.

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The union warned that recruitment and retention challenges have left many delivery offices understaffed, placing unsustainable pressure on workers and contributing to declining service standards.

The ongoing delays are having tangible consequences for the public, with reports of missed hospital appointments, delayed legal documents and disrupted personal communications.

Workers say morale has deteriorated sharply, with many reporting stress, sickness absence and a sense that workloads are “impossible” to complete.

In areas where Royal Mail has piloted a new delivery model, including reduced frequency for second-class mail, staff told the BBC conditions had not improved, with some suggesting the system had worsened operational pressures.

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Royal Mail, however, maintains that the pilot has increased delivery reliability, claiming the proportion of addresses receiving mail each day has risen from around 92% to 97%.

The dispute highlights the wider challenges facing the UK’s postal system, as traditional letter volumes decline and parcel deliveries, driven by e-commerce, become the dominant part of the business.

Royal Mail has argued that delivery rules must evolve to reflect this shift, including reducing the frequency of second-class deliveries to improve efficiency and financial sustainability.

For now, the allegations of hidden mail add a new layer of controversy to an already embattled service, with MPs expected to press for answers on both operational practices and the long-term future of the UK’s universal postal obligation.

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Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

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