The Scotsman

Milne Group collapse shakes building sector

◆ Emma Newlands looks at the potential major ripple effect of the Aberdeen-based housing giant going into administra­tion

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Stewart Milne Group was an “absolutely fantastic” place to work, says Allan Cunningham, who says he put “blood, sweat, and tears” into his 22-year career with the housebuild­er that saw him move hundreds of families – including his own – into its all-modcon properties.

But now the constructi­on veteran says he is “devastated” to find himself among the 200-plus staff being laid off by the company after it at the start of this week collapsed into administra­tion. The folding of one of the biggest names in its field in Scotland and the UK is also prompting fears from constructi­on experts that it could be the start of a domino effect of other sector firms toppling.

Administra­tor Teneo was appointed on Monday for the independen­t housebuild­er, which is headquarte­red in Aberdeen, and said it had grown since its formation in 1975 to operate nearly 40 housing developmen­ts across Scotland (including the Shawfair developmen­t on the outskirts of Edinburgh) and Northwest England. “We're not just building houses, we're building communitie­s and towns, as well many other fantastic neighbourh­oods, up and down the country,” it had claimed.

But Teneo said the "difficult" decision was made to place the group and six Scottish subsidiari­es into administra­tion after the repeated failure to sell the business or secure a "viable" restructur­e. And now tools have been downed at its sites, and 217 staff have been given the heave-ho.

Cunningham believes his likely redundancy pay-off isn’t adequate after a long and dedicated career with the group, having started at “the bottom” as a labourer, and working his way up the ladder to latterly serve as senior constructi­on manager for Stewart Milne Homes Scotland. “It's been a fantastic company to work for – it’s just a sad day,” he says of the group folding. “I bought a Stewart Milne home, I live in a Stewart

Milne home, I brought my kids up in a Stewart Milne home, one of [them] has bought a Stewart Milne home just up the street from me.”

As for housebuyer­s who had laid down their hard-earned cash to buy a Stewart Milne property but were yet to move in, he says they were likely to be making it their “forever home”. Scotland’s Wellbeing Economy Secretary Neil Gray has now held talks with Teneo, and says the latter is working to protect Stewart Milne homebuyers stuck in "limbo".

In terms of fears for the broader housebuild­ing industry, Jane Wood, chief executive of trade body Homes for Scotland, which represents the

We are worried the social and economic impact is not understood for housing Jane Wood, Homes for Scotland

bellwether sector that it says is worth £3.4 billion a year to the economy north of the Border, said she is “very worried” about more firms going bust.

She was quoted saying she is “greatly saddened” by Stewart Milne going into administra­tion. Asked if she is concerned more housebuild­ers could go the same way, she replied: “We are very worried about it and we are worried the social and economic impact is not understood for housing. It’s a force for good, it affects all of our lives. It’s a human right, at the end of the day.”

The Stewart Milne Group’s current predicamen­t marks a sharp contrast to a mere six months ago when it unveiled what it said were its “best results for almost a decade”, notching up pre-tax profits of £16.5 million in the year to

October 2022, up by £29.6m from the previous 12 months. It also said it had a “strong” £15.8m of year-end cash. However, it added that reduced spend on land in the prior two years, “as a direct result of Covid”, led to the number of units falling to 583 from 828, leading to turnover and operating profit being down £48.7m to £172.4m and by £1.4m to £7.1m respective­ly year on year.

And the firm has faced high mortgage, supply, and staff costs and low sentiment in the sector, with the headline S&P and Chartered Institute of Procuremen­t and Supply constructi­on purchasing managers’ index for November last month found to have decreased further to 45.5 from 45.6 in October, remaining in the sub-50 contractio­n mode. Several housebuild­ers have noted the challengin­g

backdrop, with Scotland’s Springfiel­d, for example, in September flagging the impact of “reduced homebuyer confidence”.

Also heartbroke­n by the folding of Stewart Milne Group is its eponymous founder, with the firm going on sale in 2022 on the back of his decision to retire, and put back on the market last year, but neither attempt coming to fruition despite interest, and following the sale of Stewart Milne Timber Systems to Fifebased Donaldson Group in 2021.

The businessma­n and former Aberdeen FC chairman said: “I am devastated by this totally unexpected outcome of the sale process and struggling to accept it, given the profound impact it will have on employees, sub-contractor­s, suppliers and customers. Stewart Milne Group was up for sale and, following significan­t interest, two bids were submitted.

“[Lloyds] bank has not accepted either bid and withdrawn its funding. I tried everything I could to find a way to achieve a better outcome for the business and the people who depend on it. I believe one of the bids could have delivered a comparable, financial return to administra­tion and, crucially, allowed the business to continue to operate, safeguardi­ng hundreds of jobs and protecting livelihood­s.”

Cunningham is full of praise for his former boss Milne, saying: “I’ve met him on numerous occasions… he built the company up from nothing. I’m feeling sad [about the firm’s collapse] – but I can guarantee that Stewart Milne will be feeling a lot sadder.”

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 ?? ?? ‘I am devastated by this totally unexpected outcome of the sale process, and struggling to accept it,’ says Stewart Milne Group’s eponymous founder
‘I am devastated by this totally unexpected outcome of the sale process, and struggling to accept it,’ says Stewart Milne Group’s eponymous founder
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