Only a few energy traders managed to maintain their turnovers and incomes last year, considering exponential increases have become a common trend in recent years.
In some cases, profits dropped by more than 100 times, whilst some companies went into the red and some turnovers reached one third of 2006 levels. How can this be explained and what will happen next?
Energy Holding, the biggest private electricity trader, last year posted 3.9m-euro net income, almost five times lower than in 2006, way below the company's forecast.
"The rising procurement prices and customer portfolio changes led to a profit decline at our company," says the representatives of Energy Holding, a trader with 328m-euro turnover in 2007, which in 2008 is seeing a steep market share decline, after it reached 11% in the first five months, from 19% at the beginning of the year.
Green Energy, an energy trader with turnover close to 50 million euros in 2006, 12.5 times higher than in 2005, and 2.5m-euro net income, last year derived 19.7m-euro turnover and losses worth 0.6 million euros.
Another trader that saw its income plunge last year is Energy Financing Team (EFT), a major company in the CEE region, which has been present in Romania for about two years. " (...) The rising prices of some commodities and market volatility boosted electricity prices to record levels.
This prompted EFG to curb its long-term acquisitions in Romania to almost zero (...). Secondly, the poor trend of the EUR/RON exchange rate that was registered during the year had a negative impact on income," said the representatives of EFT Romania, which derived 49m-euro turnover last year, up from the 32.8m-euro level posted in 2006.
Other companies such as Enol, Beny Alex, Grivco, Ennet or Ezpada, last year registered dramatic slumps in turnover or net gains.
Analysts say