Former Costain and Tarmac bosses land non-exec roles
黑洞社区 products supplier SIG has appointed two industry heavyweights to its board.
Former Costain and Tarmac chief executives Alan Lovell and Cyrille Ragoucy have been appointed to the firm鈥檚 board as non-executive directors.
At the time Carillion chairman Philip Green said: 鈥淎lan has very relevant experience of the challenges currently faced by Carillion and I look forward to his contribution as we move forward with our disposal and cost saving programmes while continuing our discussions with our lenders and other stakeholders to explore further ways of strengthening Carillion鈥檚 balance sheet.鈥
Lovell spent five years at the then-stricken Costain, first as chief financial officer and then chief executive.
The 64-year-old鈥檚 decision to restructure the business and focus on construction and engineering 鈥 pulling the plug on its US mining and property investments 鈥 as well as bring in new overseas investors is widely considered to have helped save the firm from going under before he handed over the reins to future National Infrastructure Commission chair Sir John Armitt in 1997.
Ragoucy spent three years at the helm of Tarmac starting in the position in December 2012 when the firm was known as Lafarge Tarmac.
Meanwhile, SIG confirmed it had replaced Deloitte as its external auditor less than a week after the Financial Reporting Council announced it was looking into the auditing of the construction products supplier鈥檚 books.
In the trading update SIG confirmed Ernst & Young will replace Deloitte as its external auditor with immediate effect.
In its update SIG said it was pushing back the release of its interim results to 21 September 鈥渢o accommodate the work required around the change in auditor and to facilitate a robust and effective audit transition鈥.
The group said revenue was down 3.1% for the first half of 2018 across its UK and Ireland business, versus a 1.5% for the same period last year.
SIG Distribution saw a revenue drop off of 2.7%, while the group鈥檚 Exteriors鈥 revenue fell away by 7.1%.
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