Daily Dispatch

No constructi­on joy in 2018

- SISEKO NJOBENI

Some of the country’s major constructi­on companies could barely keep their heads above water as weak market conditions persisted in 2018.

As the year draws to a close, there is no end in sight for the troubles that have affected some of the big players in the sector, with pressure on margins and lower order books.

No joy came during 2018 for the long-suffering shareholde­rs of Aveng, Group Five and Basil Read.

Group Five has been preoccupie­d with mopping up the mess that is left of its oncepromis­ing contract to build the $410m (R5.9bn) independen­t gas- and oil-fired combined-cycle power plant contract in Kpone in Ghana. For the 2018 financial year, the loss on the project was R1.3bn.

Perhaps the biggest news in the sector was German familyowne­d investment holding firm Aton’s bid to acquire Murray & Roberts (M & R) for R17 a share. M & R rejected the offer, claiming it undervalue­d its share. The privately owned Aton is still circling M & R and its mandatory offer to M & R shareholde­rs stands.

M & R maintains the Aton offer undervalue­s the stock, saying a fair value price range is between R20 and R22 a share. M & R has said that its shareholde­rs are not required to take any action in relation to Aton’s mandatory offer at this stage.

On the other hand, Aton – which is M & R’s largest shareholde­r – thwarted M & R’s attempt to buy struggling constructi­on firm Aveng, in a R1bn transactio­n that would have thrown Aveng a lifeline.

According to M & R, the transactio­n with Aveng was compelling.

“The proposed combinatio­n of Murray & Roberts’ oil & gas and undergroun­d mining platforms with Aveng’s McConnell Dowell [infrastruc­ture] and Moolmans [mining] businesses was compelling and would have establishe­d Murray & Roberts as a significan­t multinatio­nal engineerin­g and constructi­on group,” M & R CEO Henry Laas and financial director Daniël Grobler wrote in the company’s 2018 annual report.

When the German firm pulled the plug on the deal, it was back to square one for Aveng. With the deal under water, Aveng must now pull itself up by its bootstraps.

In 2018, Aveng took a number of steps to get out of distress. Steps taken include a R493m rights issue, early redemption of a R2bn convertibl­e bond and renegotiat­ion of bank debt reduced gross debt/equity from 127% to 40%.

It also disposed of noncore property assets and Aveng Rail. It is in the process of disposing of the steel and other manufactur­ing businesses.

This will allow the company, which in 2018 reduced debt from R3.3bn to R1.8bn, to focus on engineerin­g, constructi­on and maintenanc­e contractor McConnell Dowell and surface mining contractor Moolmans, in line with the company’s long-term strategy to be an internatio­nal infrastruc­ture and resource company with a footprint in developing and fast-growing regions.

Then there is WBHO which brushed aside the difficult conditions and performed well in SA, the rest of Africa and Australia. In the year ended June 30, WBHO’s revenue increased by 10% to R35bn, while its order book was a healthy R49bn. As of June 30, Group Five’s order book stood at R11.2bn.

WBHO chair Mike Wylie said SA’s economic and political outlook remained uncertain in the short to medium-term.

“The economy still has a number of obstacles to overcome which will no doubt take time. Until such time as government is able to expedite its public infrastruc­ture spend programme, we anticipate that some fall-out may take place within the local constructi­on industry,” Wylie said.

WBHO said the South African constructi­on sector had taken a turn for the worse in 2018. It says stiff competitio­n for work has resulted in keen bidding, lower margins and increased prevalence of loss-making projects.

In SA, gross fixed capital formation contracted as capital spending by the private sector and government decreased.

“Fixed investment spending continued to be hampered by the constraine­d fiscal space, policy uncertaint­y – in the mining sector in particular – and very weak civil constructi­on confidence,” it said.

Stephen Meintjes of Momentum Securities said the constructi­on sector would only recover if private sector and government spending improved.

“The government must also restore confidence in terms of policies, especially in relation to land reform. It is a pity that by the time the industry recovers a lot of capacity will have been destroyed. It is going to take a lot of time to attract skills that have been lost. There is huge demand for engineers in other parts of the world,” Meintjes said.

 ?? Picture: SIVENATHI GOSA ?? NOTHING TO BUILD ON: Constructi­on firms continued to struggle in 2018 amid lack of private sector and government investment.
Picture: SIVENATHI GOSA NOTHING TO BUILD ON: Constructi­on firms continued to struggle in 2018 amid lack of private sector and government investment.

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