The New Zealand Herald

D-day for Fletcher Building

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Anne Gibson

property editor NZX and ASX-listed giant Fletcher Building is due to reveal to the market today the true extent of its difficulti­es, after warning last week that it was in danger of breaching bank lending covenants and remaining frozen in a six-day trading halt.

Whether today turns out to be a sackcloth Ash Wednesday or a celebrator­y St Valentine’s Day for shareholde­rs in the business with a $5.1 billion market capitalisa­tion remains unknown.

But it seems more likely to be bad, given Monday’s cancellati­on of a briefing, in advance of its December 31 half-year result due out on February 21, revelation­s of the bank talks and trading halt extensions.

Fletcher got an NZX trading halt last Thursday, simultaneo­usly suspending ASX trading, saying it was “reviewing the key projects in its Building and Interiors business”.

The current expectatio­n of the board is that there will be further material losses in the B+I business beyond what was provided for in October 2017. Once the extent of those further losses is determined and provided for, it is expected that this would result in a breach of one or more of the covenants in the group’s financing arrangemen­ts.” Matt Goodson, managing director of Salt Funds Management, said yesterday: “The outlook is more important than the half-year. The key things for the market to get comfort around are the extent of losses in the constructi­on division and whether they really have seen all of them and also the outlook for the New Zealand residentia­l division, given that the housing market appears to have peaked in Auckland.”

Another market participan­t suggested a four-fold plan which might not please many shareholde­rs.

“Fletcher must restructur­e its debt. This is a debt structure problem in the first instance — so resetting the terms of the offshore bond issue is key.

“Fletcher must also cut the dividend paid to shareholde­rs. This will give wiggle room to work on other strategies. It has to sell assets and businesses, and only then raising new equity capital,” he said.

His comments follow prediction­s from Mark Lister, head of private wealth research at Craigs Investment Partners, that shareholde­rs might be asked to bail it out of its debt issues.

“The worst-case scenario we might see is having to raise capital. Shareholde­rs might be asked to put money into the company, which would mean the share price comes down. Fletcher might have to do a rights issue, so shareholde­rs might have to tip some money in. That’s the worst it could get to,” Lister said this week.

Anthony Leighs, managing director of Leighs Constructi­on with $500m of work on, said yesterday he was not surprised by difficulti­es in businesses like Fletcher.

“I don’t have intimate knowledge but on the basis of the nature of some of its projects, it’s very easy for costs to escalate well beyond budgets. A lot of that is due to fixed price contract work that’s only partially designed.

“It’s one of the causes of the industry struggling at the moment,” he said.

Last month, the United Kingdom’s second-largest constructi­on company Carillion, announced that it would go into compulsory liquidatio­n. The listed business has about 43,000 employees, of whom around 20,000 of them are in the United Kingdom.

Fletcher Building has more than 18,000 employees, is New Zealand’s largest builder and has around $2b of debt. Further profit downgrades are possible today, the company hit by losses from two big jobs — the NZ Internatio­nal Convention Centre in Auckland which is only partly built and Christchur­ch’s Justice and Emergency Precinct, opened last year.

Chris Hunter, the chief at Auckland-headquarte­red builder NZStrong, and Tony Maginness, a director of accountant and insolvency specialist Staples Rodway, have warned of many risks to the sector.

 ?? Picture / Jason Oxenham ?? Will it be sackcloth Ash Wednesday or a celebrator­y St Valentine’s Day for Fletcher shareholde­rs?
Picture / Jason Oxenham Will it be sackcloth Ash Wednesday or a celebrator­y St Valentine’s Day for Fletcher shareholde­rs?

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