UK government seeks to limit damage after Carillion
collapses
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[January 15, 2018]
By Kate Holton
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's Carillion <CLLN.L>
collapsed on Monday after its banks lost faith in the construction and
services company, forcing the government to step in to guarantee major
public works contracts.
In one of the biggest British corporate failures in recent years,
Carillion went into compulsory liquidation after costly contract delays
and a slump in new business left it swamped by debt and pensions
liabilities of around 1.5 billion pounds ($2.1 billion).
The demise of the 200-year-old business poses a headache for Theresa
May's government which had employed Carillion to work on 450 projects
including the building and maintenance of hospitals, prisons, defense
sites and a high-speed rail line.
The government's priority is to ensure that public services are not
disrupted, said David Lidington, the minister in charge of the Cabinet
Office which oversees the running of government.
Some contracts handled by Carillion would go to alternative providers,
he added. Lidington urged the company's staff to continue to work and
said the government would pay their salaries.
Although the government has promised to support workers and ensure
contracts are delivered, it has stopped short of bailing out the company
as it did with major banks during the financial crisis almost a decade
ago.
WEEKEND TALKS FAIL
Carillion owed around 900 million pounds to banks which include the
country's five biggest - RBS, Santander UK, Lloyds, HSBC and Barclays -
and it has a pension deficit of 580 million pounds.
"In recent days we have been unable to secure the funding to support our
business plan and it is therefore with the deepest regret that we have
arrived at this decision," Chairman Philip Green said.
"This is a very sad day for Carillion, for our colleagues, suppliers and
customers that we have been proud to serve over many years."
Employing 43,000 people around the world, including 20,000 in Britain,
Carillion has been fighting for survival since July when it revealed it
was losing cash on several projects and had written down the value of
its contract book by 845 million pounds.
With banks refusing to accept the group's latest attempt to restructure,
May's senior ministers met around the clock in recent days, under
pressure from the opposition Labour Party and unions not to use taxpayer
money to prop up the failing company.
Ministers, top bankers and company bosses scrambled to find a way to
save the company in last ditch talks over the weekend. But Carillion
announced its own "compulsory liquidation" just over an hour before the
London Stock Exchange opened on Monday.
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GOVERNMENT UNDER PRESSURE
Spun out of Tarmac nearly 20 years ago and having bought Alfred McAlpine in
2008, Carillion has worked on major construction projects including London's
Royal Opera House, the Suez Canal road tunnel and Toronto's Union Station.
In July last year, a week after its initial profit warning, it was named as one
of the contractors on Britain's new High Speed 2 rail line, a flagship project
that will better connect London with the north of England.
At its headquarters in Wolverhampton, central England, a handful of workers
could be seen holding meetings.
Shares in rival businesses such as G4S <GFS.L>, Interserve <IRV.L>, Balfour
Beatty <BALF.L> and Kier Group <KIE.L> advanced on hopes they would pick up some
additional work.
However, Balfour, which worked with Carillion on three British road projects,
said the collapse would probably cost it between 35 and 45 million pounds.
The company's collapse comes at a difficult time for May who is trying to
negotiate Britain's exit from the European Union.
The opposition Labour Party questioned why May's government continued to award
contracts to Carillion despite its profit warnings and questioned why Britain
had handed over so much of its public service work to private companies.
"This company issued three profit warnings in the last six months yet despite
those profit warnings the government continued to award government contracts to
this company," Labour's business spokeswoman Rebecca Long-Bailey told BBC TV.
"We're ... asking for a full investigation into the government conduct of this
matter."
Many of Britain's service providers have been hit in recent years after they
took on work during the financial crisis at low prices for long-running,
fixed-price contracts.
The contracts left little room for delay or failure and have led to problems for
groups including Capita, Mitie and Interserve.
"Taxpayers cannot be expected to bail out a private sector company," Lidington
said.
"All employees should keep coming to work, you will continue to get paid. Staff
that are engaged on public sector contracts still have important work to do."
(Reporting by Kate Holton; editing by Guy Faulconbridge/Keith Weir)
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