The Daily Telegraph

Government urged to aid Carillion

Administra­tors are put ‘on standby’ if no deal can be reached as its share price slumps to an all-time low

- By Hannah Boland and Ayesha Javed

CALLS were mounting for the Government to step in to prop up stricken outsourcer Carillion last night amid fears the company is teetering on the edge of administra­tion.

Shares in the outsourcer plunged 28.9pc to an all-time low of 14.2p yesterday, leaving its £1.5bn debts dwarfing its market value of just £61m.

Separate government department­s are hashing out contingenc­y plans in case Carillion collapses, in the latest sign ministers are losing confidence in whether the company can come to an agreement with banks, such as a debt for equity swap.

The Ministry of Justice, for example, is pulling together proposals to take back prison contracts from Carillion into public ownership.

A spokesman for 10 Downing Street said last night: “Of course the Government will make contingenc­y plans for many different situations. We are monitoring the situation closely and are in regular contact with the management team there. The Government remains supportive of Carillion’s ongoing discussion­s with their stakeholde­rs.”

Carillion is a key government contractor, working across department­s on projects including the HS2 rail link. It employs around 20,000 people across the UK. Senior Cabinet ministers, including Business Secretary Greg Clark, Transport Minister Jo Johnson and Justice Minister Rory Stewart, were updated on the situation earlier this week, while last night rumours swirled that Pricewater­housecoope­rs had been called in to advise Cabinet Office on contingenc­y plans.

The outsourcer’s troubles began last summer, after its share price plunged almost 90pc on a shock profit warning, but concerns have spiralled recently amid suggestion­s it needs £300m of funding by the end of this month.

Carillion presented a business plan to banks including Barclays, HSBC and Santander on Wednesday, hoping to agree a refinancin­g deal. However, it is understood that the banks said the status quo at Carillion was no longer sustainabl­e, rejecting the initial plan and calling for the Government to step in given it is a major source of cash flow for it. In a bid to save the company from falling into administra­tion and to protect its pensioners, a crunch meeting was held between Carillion, the Government and pension bodies, including the Pension Regulator and Pension Protection Fund, yesterday.

The Daily Telegraph understand­s that a conference call with its lenders was then held after the meeting.

“Following a presentati­on of our business plan to lenders on Wednesday, conversati­ons with financial creditors and other key stakeholde­rs are continuing. Suggestion­s that the plan has been rejected or that talks have terminated are incorrect,” Carillion said in a statement yesterday.

“It is too early to predict the outcome of these discussion­s but Carillion expects that any such agreement is likely to involve the raising of new capital and the conversion of existing financial indebtedne­ss to equity which would result in significan­t dilution to existing shareholde­rs.”

However, Sky News reported that accountanc­y firm EY has been put on standby to oversee an administra­tion if it is unable to secure a rescue deal.

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