What Does “Market Competitive” Really Mean?
Every supplier claims their offer is “market competitive.” For mid-market CFOs, that phrase is meaningless unless tested. Market competitive means one thing: your contract sits within verified benchmarks against actual market conditions. Anything less is just marketing.
Why Benchmarks Matter
Energy pricing isn’t transparent. Suppliers build in margin, risk premiums, and contract-specific charges. Without a benchmark, you have no way to know whether an offer reflects fair market conditions. With one, you can see exactly where margin hides — and negotiate from strength.
What Counts as Market Competitive
- Price: Within the range of recent market transactions for your load profile and term.
- Structure: Appropriate use of fixed, index, or hybrid based on your risk tolerance.
- Terms: Absence of one-sided clauses that shift risk to you.
Key Takeaways
- “Market competitive” is meaningless without a benchmark.
- Benchmarks cover price, structure, and terms — not just cents per kWh.
- Defensible decisions require evidence, not supplier assurances.
See a case study on hidden margin or review our quarterly market outlook. For procurement fundamentals, revisit choosing a supplier. To understand our benchmarking process, see How It Works.
Clarity Over Claims
Market claims are noise. Benchmarks are evidence. Benchmark your next offer and see if it really is competitive.
