But firms will continue to operate independently until competition questions settled

Barratt has officially taken ownership of Redrow鈥檚 shares, with the smaller housebuilder removed from listing on financial markets.

Yesterday evening, the pair announced that, 鈥渇ollowing the delivery of a copy of the Court Order to the Registrar of Companies鈥, the scheme had 鈥渂ecome effective鈥, with the entire share capital now owned by Barratt.

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Applications were made to the Financial Conduct Authority and the London Stock Exchange to suspend and cancel Redrow鈥檚 listing on the official list and the trading of Redrow shares on the main market.

The former was expected to happen this morning, the latter tomorrow (Friday) at 8am.

A request was also made to admit more than 450 million new Barratt shares to listing on the official list and to trading on the LSE鈥檚 main market, which is also expected to take place by 8am tomorrow.

However, the two businesses will continue to operate independently until the Competition and Markets Authority has formally accepted the undertakings proposed to address competition concerns that the regulator had previously raised.

This is due to an initial enforcement order served by the CMA to prevent the merger prejudicing its inquiry.

As a result, some actions will await the approval of the CMA, including changing the name of the company to Barratt Redrow, appointing Matthew Pratt to the combined group board along with non-executive directors Nicky Dulieu and Geeta Nanda.

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>>See also: 

The CMA yesterday issued a statement, It will publish the full text of its decision shortly.

The CMA had raised concern that the 拢2.5bn merger deal might disadvantage homebuyers in an area around Whitchurch, Shropshire, if a resulting loss of competition leads to higher house prices or lower quality homes. 

The 11-mile area contains four Barratt developments and a Redrow development.

Barratt and Redrow are offering undertakings to remedy this in an attempt to avoid a full-blown 鈥榩hase 2鈥 investigation.

The CMA has until 18 October 2024 to decide whether to accept Barratt and Redrow鈥檚 undertakings, with the possibility to extend this timeframe to 13 December 2024 if it considers there are special reasons for doing so.

The merger deal would mean Barratt, already UK鈥檚 largest housebuilder, increasing its turnover to more than 拢7bn (based on 2023 figures).