|
|
|
|
|
by freeone3000
1935 days ago
|
|
It is, but then people couldn't pay -- and since they couldn't pay, neither can Griddy, since it ran cash-lean and didn't extract enough profit during low rate periods to cover this amount of delinquency. The $2.1B shortfall is being assessed equally among resellers, so Griddy acting like they're some victim instead of just another participant is a bit silly. You don't see Encor complaining about the shortfall makeup assessment, despite all of their customers being on fixed-rate. |
|
This strikes to me as a typical American solution to peoples crass financial ignorance: socialize the debts. Here is what happens next:
> If buyers are not able to cover their bills, Ercot will pay the generator and the charges will ultimately be spread out to other market participants, including other generators and traders, as permitted by regulations.