Commercial Property News

Banks are twisting Taylor Wimpey's arm

Pressure to reach agreement grows on Taylor Wimpey as interest charges on debts are set to spiral to £170million a year as banks increase the interest rates they will charge the firm as the price of breaching the loan to value covenant.

Taylor Wimpey has come under pressure from its banks to strike a deal to relax lending terms by next month, after failing to reach an agreement last week.

It is understood the housebuilder’s four lenders want a deal in place early into their fourth financial quarters, which run from October to December.

The pressure from Lloyds TSB, HSBC, Barclays and Royal Bank of Scotland comes despite the fact that Taylor Wimpey chief executive Pete Redfern claimed last week the company had until the end of the year to do a deal.

A source close to the talks between the housebuilder and its banks said Taylor Wimpey had aimed for an announcement to coincide with its interim results last Wednesday, but pulled back at the eleventh hour to carry out more due diligence.

He said: “They missed Wednesday but the banks want certainty on this next month. By that time they are approaching their year end and will want to get it wrapped up.”

Taylor Wimpey has said there is nothing blocking a deal and the source said lenders felt the same. He said: “They’re doing the mechanistic stuff and looking at how the numbers pull together. The lenders will be looking for detail on land writedowns and forward projections.”

Meanwhile, the terms of any deal are expected to take a heavy toll on Taylor Wimpey’s bottom line. The company’s interest charge this year on debt of £1.7billion is expected to be in the region of £115million.

According to the source a relaxation of covenants will add several percentage points to the repayment rate. The annual sum would be closer to £170million and the monthly charge would increase from about £9.6million to about £14million.

One City analyst said: “Given that its EBIT [earnings before interest and tax] this year will be £140million maximum, that doesn’t look good. But that’s the price you pay to secure your ongoing status.”

Another industry observer said the company would have to prolong its self-imposed exile from the land market to survive. They said: “It will spend so much time paying down its debt, there won’t be anything left to invest, even if it wanted to. It will be trading purely for the benefit of the banks.”

As part of the deal, Taylor Wimpey is also expected to have its annual land buying capped by the banks, in similar fashion to Barratt. The source said: “Only once its interest cover covenants return to an appropriate level will the cap be removed.”

It will also have to get the banks to sign off on any major land transactions.

Meanwhile, sources close to the talks between Crest Nicholson and its banks have suggested that a deal to relax its lending covenants is imminent. It is understood the £676million-turnover housebuilder handed a plan to its lenders last week to persuade them to relax the arrangements and the reaction was favourable.

Fri, 5th Sep 2008

Return to Previous Page

Latest Commercial Property News
Date Headline
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Next
Thu, 20th Nov 2008 Barclays back former David McLean finance chiefs to buy housing business from administrators.
Thu, 20th Nov 2008 St Modwen keeps within banking covenants
Thu, 20th Nov 2008 October mortgage lending 7% up on September
Thu, 20th Nov 2008 Heritable Bank collapse hits stars investment company's development at Aldgate East
Wed, 19th Nov 2008 Woolworths in talks about sale of the business for £1
Wed, 19th Nov 2008 British Land NAV drop gets steeper at 22% in H1 2008 resulting in a pre-tax loss of £1335 million
Wed, 19th Nov 2008 Sutton Harbour Holdings H1 profits down 50%
Tue, 18th Nov 2008 Enterprise Inns report FY profits down 12.6% to £263million
Tue, 18th Nov 2008 Wolseley cuts 2300 UK jobs and announces closure of over 200 UK branches
Tue, 18th Nov 2008 Boris Johnson and 60 Labour backbenchers call for restoration of empty rates relief
Mon, 17th Nov 2008 JP Morgan boosts morale with relocation deal to Canary Wharf
Mon, 17th Nov 2008 H&M fashion sales fall on like for like basis 3 months in a row.
Mon, 17th Nov 2008 Workspace knocked to £128.5million H1 loss as NAV falls 25.4%
Fri, 14th Nov 2008 Retail barometer John Lewis sales decline further
Fri, 14th Nov 2008 Edinburgh office sector boost from stockbroker expansion
Thu, 13th Nov 2008 GPE suffer NAV drop of 15.3% in H1 2008
Thu, 13th Nov 2008 UK Coal signs windpower deal with stake builder Peel Holdings
Thu, 13th Nov 2008 Capital & Regional reveal 8.7% drop in Mall Fund in one month
Thu, 13th Nov 2008 Boris approves further developments at Canary Wharf
Wed, 12th Nov 2008 Savills report Commercial Property construction falls to it's lowest ever level