Chief executive Stephen Stone says deal shows banks will stick with large housebuilders
Stephen Stone, chief executive of Crest Nicholson, said the rescue deal struck with its lenders this week was good news for rival housebuilders.
Following a debt-for-equity swap with its group of lenders (see below), the housebuilder is now 90% owned by a syndicate of over 30 banks that includes Lloyds Banking Group and HSBC. The remaining 10% will be owned by seven executive directors.
Stone said the deal demonstrated the supportive stance of banks towards volume housebuilders. 鈥淚t shows the only way lenders have to preserve value is to ride out the cycle. The fundamentals of the UK housing market are good and the supply/ demand imbalance will only be exacerbated going forward.鈥
Jan Crosby, a construction expert at financial services group KPMG, agreed. 鈥淭he outcome is further evidence of lenders鈥 unwillingness to pull the plug on volume housebuilders.鈥
Rival housebuilders Taylor Wimpey and Persimmon are both locked in talks with lenders in an attempt to get refinancing deals. Barratt has also struggled with huge debt.
Prior to the dealHBOS had an estimated 45% stake in the business. The company did not reveal the stake held by Lloyds Banking Group (formed via the acquisition of HBOS by Lloyds TSB) but it is understood to be in the region of 25% to 30%.
It is also understood that Sir Tom Hunter, who invested 拢50m via his West Coast Capital vehicle in a joint venture with HBOS to take Crest private in May 2007, has lost about 拢45m of his stake and no longer holds any equity or debt in the business.
A company statement said Hunter and HBOS had acknowledged their stakes had no value for the purposes of the debt-for-equity swap.
The deal in numbers
拢630尘 amount of debt written down (from 拢1.13bn to 拢500m)
44p what 拢1 of debt is now worth
拢40尘 new working capital facility
2012 year in which new debt matures
86% quantity of equity held by over 30 senior lenders
96% support for the new deal from lenders
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