Bangkok Post

Kier Group cuts 1,200 jobs, exits businesses

- LUCCA DE PAOLI ANDREW NOËL

LONDON: Kier Group Plc plans to cut 1,200 jobs, exit businesses and suspend dividends as the British engineerin­g company struggles to rein in debts piled up during a rapid expansion.

Chief executive Andrew Davies is pulling Kier out of homebuildi­ng and property maintenanc­e to focus on constructi­on of other buildings and infrastruc­ture such as roads and railways.

The job cuts represent over 13% of the current workforce, according to its most recent annual report.

Shares of Kier fell as much as 13% to their lowest since the firm’s 1996 initial public offering after the company issued new debt figures that deepened concerns over its balance sheet.

Davies, who took over in March, is trying to stop Kier suffering the same fate as industry rivals Carillion Plc and Interserve Plc, which collapsed after taking on projects that offered only thin profit margins and exposed them to heavy liabilitie­s in case of delays or unforeseen problems.

“The group’s debt is too high and it had a number of businesses that are incompatib­le with its new, simplified strategy. It also plans to exit facilities management and environmen­tal services,’’ he said on an investor call yesterday.

“At its core, Kier is a great company,” Davies said. “But we do need to administer self help.”

The firm’s troubles deal another blow to British stock-picker Neil Woodford, whose fund owns a 9.6% stake in Kier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The beleaguere­d fund manager sold part of his stake in the company earlier this month, as he seeks to provide more liquidity to meet investor redemption­s.

Kier’s stock has collapsed since a botched rights issue last year and after it was forced to revise its debt figure in March due to an accounting error. Earlier this month the firm issued a profit warning, blaming struggles at its utilities and highways businesses.

Shares of Kier had already plunged 87% over the past year before yesterday, valuing the company at £212 million ($267 million). Last year’s rights issue, which forced underwrite­rs to buy shares at a loss, raised £264 million for the firm.

Speculatio­n about the health of the company’s finances is having an “adverse effect on confidence,” and hurting its capital position, according to a statement Monday from the company, which maintained it has “liquidity headroom” to absorb the volatility.

“Kier aims to trim £55 million in costs from 2021. Around half of job cuts will come before the end of this month, while the other half will be completed by the end of the calendar year,’’ the company told analysts on the call.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand