Daily Mail

US vultures swoop on British builder

Retirement homes firm McCarthy & Stone backs £630m bid

- By James Salmon

BRITAIN’S biggest builder of retirement homes could fall into the hands of an overseas private equity firm, sparking concerns over the treatment of thousands of elderly residents.

After pulling out of the race to buy Asda, American buyout firm Lone Star is closing in on a deal for McCarthy & Stone for £630m.

The offer of £1.15 a share is a premium of 39pc on Thursday’s price of 83p, and the stock rose again – by 39.5pc or 32.8p to 115.8p – yesterday.

Bosses at the Bournemout­h builder recommend investors back the bid, which is the latest attempt by a foreign investor to capitalise on the bombed- out share price of British companies.

If it goes ahead, it will herald a big pay day for New York firm Anchorage Capital Group, and blue-chip British firms including Royal London, Aberdeen Standard Life Investment­s and M&G.

Anchorage, the biggest shareholde­r with 17.1pc, would scoop around £ 107m. McCarthy & Stone chief executive John Tonkiss

is in line for £680,000 for his 0.11pc stake. Its chairman, Paul Lester, said it was a ‘compelling and attractive opportunit­y’.

Lone Star Europe president Donald Quintin said it ‘represents an attractive opportunit­y in a market underpinne­d by clear fundamenta­ls: a rapidly ageing population and a structural undersuppl­y of suitable housing for older people’.

But not everyone was so enthusiast­ic. The builder has a chequered track record and has been accused repeatedly of overchargi­ng residents.

Baroness Altmann, former pensions minister, who also served as director general of private equityback­ed over-50s group Saga, was concerned for residents, given that private equity firms have been criticised for debt-fuelled takeovers, cutting costs and service, and increasing charges before selling the business on.

Escapen said: ‘It’s important to make sure any company selling retirement homes does not leave those buying them and their families with properties they cannot sell because of excessive charges. Charges need to be fair and transparen­t. In the past the biggest problems have arisen when compaEscap­ee taken over with large levels of debt – that has often led to poor value for customers.’

McCarthy & Stone mainly sells flats in developmen­ts around the country. These include assisted living for the over-70s, and flats for people over 55. Around 20,000 older people live in these homes, paying a service fee.

A source close to the deal insisted it was not loaded with debt, and that service charges would not be ramped up.

McCarthy & Stone only returned to the stock market in a £ 1bn float five years ago, a remarkable comeback after it almost collapsed during the financial crisis. It was taken off the market in 2006 in a £1.1bn bid by a consortium led by HBOS, a deal brokered by Peter Cummings, the disgraced former head of corporate lending at HBOS, who would later be banned from the industry for life.

In the 2008 crisis, its lenders took control. Lloyds, which owned HBOS, was left with 25pc which it sold to private equity firm TPG and Goldman Sachs.

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