Exclusive: Delays to 拢30m London project for Citizen M emerge following contractor鈥檚 拢75m profit warning
A flagship London hotel that is running months behind schedule is one of scores of problem projects contributing to Balfour Beatty鈥檚 profit shortfalls, 黑洞社区 can reveal in the wake of the contractor鈥檚 latest 鈥渂ombshell鈥 拢75m profit warning.
This week Balfour Beatty issued its fifth profit warning in less than two years - sparking a 25% fall in its share price to its lowest level since 2003 - and announced the impending departure of executive chairman Steve Marshall, as well as the appointment of accountants KPMG to run the rule over contracts in its UK construction business.
City analysts described the profit warning as a 鈥渂ombshell鈥 and 鈥渁pocalyptic鈥 and said it was unlikely to be an end to the turmoil that has hit the UK鈥檚 largest contractor over the past two years .
The firm said the 拢75m profit shortfall was spread across its 拢2.8bn UK construction business, with 拢30m focused on the M&E business; 拢20m on large London area building projects; 拢15m on the regional construction business - all previous sources of profit shortfalls - and 拢10m on the major infrastructure projects business, which was flagged as a source of problems for the first time.
The contractor this week declined to identify its problem projects, but 黑洞社区 understands that one job is a hotel Balfour is building for Citizen M Hotels in central London (pictured above and below).
Main works on the 拢30m project, being built above the exit to Tower Hill tube station, were meant to be completed this autumn, but the project is months behind schedule after being beset by problems, with little of the main structure constructed other than the core.
The building, called Trinity Square, is designed by architect Sheppard Robson, and was meant to be Citizen M鈥檚 flagship hotel in London.
Balfour Beatty has refused to say how many problem projects have contributed to the latest profit shortfall, but management this week told analysts the 鈥渧ast majority鈥 of the profit adjustments were below 拢3m, meaning there are likely scores of contracts contributing to the overall 拢75m write-down.
The firm did say there were 25 problem projects in its M&E business alone and a 鈥渉andful鈥 in its major infrastructure business, and has previously said there are six problem jobs in its major building projects business, which were the source of a previous profit warning.
This week Citizen M declined to say when the Trinity Square project would now be completed, but in a statement, Balfour Beatty said: 鈥淐itizen M and Balfour Beatty are working closely together to resolve and mitigate some ongoing technical and commercial issues in relation to the Trinity Square Hotel project.
鈥淲e are looking to achieve the best outcome for both parties. A revised completion date for the project is part of those ongoing discussions.鈥
This week Balfour Beatty鈥檚 UK construction chief executive Nick Pollard told analysts that the problems with the 鈥渉andful鈥 of major infrastructure projects, the source of a 拢10m profit shortfall - the first time the business had been flagged as a source of problems - reflected 鈥渞ecent changes in scope and complexity on the project鈥 and 鈥渢echnical changes, by and large, which are emerging on some jobs that we鈥檙e currently engaged in鈥.
He said that on these jobs there were 鈥渁dditional works and additional costs鈥, adding: 鈥淭here鈥檚 an opportunity on some of those to turn that position round, but that will require a lot of hard work and it will require the agreement of additional revenue with our customers.鈥
鈥淭hat鈥檚 something we will be working on over the coming weeks and months and until such time as that revenue is clearly likely to be secured, the position we鈥檝e struck is the right one.鈥
Speaking more generally about the firm鈥檚 problem projects, Pollard said: 鈥淚n terms of the projects that are now on our list of problem projects, the issues are broadly similar.
鈥淭hey relate to operational issues in the field, a shortage of key resources or that under tender, a proposition that was originally conceived was ill-balanced or ill-judged in some way and therefore at the end of those projects has given us problems.鈥
Pollard added: 鈥淲hen you hit a bump in the road, when you hit a problem on one of those contracts and an end date slides or you have to do some additional work because you find something was done wrong in a previous phase of the project, then that incurs extra costs and unfortunately it is dumped on you.鈥
鈥淲e need to get to the back end of those legacy contracts and into the smooth water of more normal trading.鈥
Turmoil at Balfour Beatty
- 拢75m profit warning is the fifth in less than two years
- Profit shortfall spread across UK construction business, with infrastructure arm flagged as a source of problems for first time
- Executive chairman Steve Marshall to step down
- Firm appoints accountants KPMG to run rule over UK construction business
- Share price falls 25% on the news to lowest level since 2003, with market cap of 拢10bn turnover construction giant falling to 拢1.3bn, 拢700m less than what Carillion valued the firm at in the summer
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