Steve Morgan left Redrow in 2000 but returned five years ago to save the housebuilder he founded, now it鈥檚 posting record results

Steve Morgan

Coming to meet Redrow founder and chairman Steve Morgan at his Carden Hall mansion deep into the Cheshire footballer belt, you are left in little doubt that you have entered the world of the fabulously rich. Whether it鈥檚 the enormous wrought-iron gates, the mansion itself, or the quarter mile arrow-straight colonnade of lime trees before you reach it that does most to give that impression is hard to tell, but there鈥檚 no mistaking it.

Built a little over a decade ago, Morgan鈥檚 home sits in a glorious landscaped setting. But there鈥檚 something very Redrow about it: like the housebuilder鈥檚 鈥渘ew heritage collection鈥 homes, it鈥檚 a modern building clothed in old world charm. And like Garston-born Morgan鈥檚 business empire and his wealth - estimated by the Sunday Times at over 拢500m - the whole thing has been created from virtually nothing in pretty short order.

From his office, in what looks like a converted stable blocks building on the side of Carden Hall, there鈥檚 no doubting either his passions or his achievements. The walls are replete with pictures of players from the championship football club he owns, Wolverhampton Wanderers, and the likes of Liverpool footballer Steven Gerrard with his son as mascot at Anfield (he bought Wolves after an aborted bid to buy boyhood-love Liverpool in 2004).

The shelves hold multiple awards and a model of the diesel locomotive named after his new team; and the windows look out onto his personal mini five-a-side pitch and tennis court.
It鈥檚 been quite a year for 61-year old Morgan. Named in April as 好色先生TV鈥檚 personality of the year, with Redrow housebuilder of the year, this month also marks 40 years since he founded the 拢864m turnover company with a 拢5,000 loan from his dad.

More importantly, he says, 2014 marks five years since he marched back into Redrow after having left the firm in 2000, and he commenced the business turnaround he now says is his career鈥檚 biggest achievement. This return culminated in company record results revealed last month, and Morgan is happy to tell the story of how he managed it. But, as one of the last owner-managers still running listed construction businesses, the question is now how long he plans to stick around?

Turning things around

When we meet, Morgan鈥檚 right leg is in plaster following a recent routine operation to sort an old sporting injury, something that鈥檚 led him to do most of his business from his Cheshire home in the last month. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been entertaining,鈥 he grins in his broad Liverpudlian voice, 鈥渢elling the directors to come up and see me - it鈥檚 Mohamed coming to the mountain.鈥

It鈥檚 pretty clear to anyone that meets Morgan that he鈥檚 not a man to hold back. But he鈥檚 momentarily lost for words when asked to describe the Redrow that he returned to in 2009. 鈥淎 disaster,鈥 he finally splutters, 鈥淲ell, you wouldn鈥檛 be able to print it.鈥

He did, however, allow his company statement to print his 鈥渋ntense disappointment鈥 in the set of results Redrow issued shortly after he returned: a 拢141m loss for the year to June 2009 on revenue of just 拢301m, down over 50% on the 2008 number. Almost 60% of the firm鈥檚 1,321 jobs had been cut.

Of course Redrow wasn鈥檛 alone in being hit hard by the worst recession in 60 years. But Morgan is clear that managers had made 鈥淩edrow-specific mistakes鈥 which worsened the impact on the firm. 鈥淔irst of all, none of them saw it coming. They went out in 2006 and early 2007 and filled their boots up with land, all bought at the wrong price, all bought on the assumption that life was going to carry on for forever and a day the way it was, with high density schemes and over-optimistic selling rates, and guess what? The music stopped. Redrow were completely caught with their pants down.鈥

Then, Morgan says, Redrow compounded its error by cutting back too hard when the crash did come, meaning it stopped construction on half-built high-rise schemes that could never earn a penny until they were completed. How did it make these mistakes? 鈥淭here were a lot of accountants on the board. I don鈥檛 think they make great managers. In situations like that, accountants鈥 training is you cut your cost.鈥

Watching from the outside it had been a painful time. When Morgan exited his firm in 2000 he retained an 8% stake, netting a reported 拢115m. But the value of his holding fell as the firm suffered, and by the end of 2008 he was being approached by other shareholders requesting he step back in. Initially reluctant, he said he eventually changed his mind when he started to fear for the future of the firm.

Ever the canny operator, he clearly sensed an opportunity to buy back in at a good price and started building up his shareholding at the start of 2009, buying up anonymous 鈥渃ontracts for difference鈥 in order that he crept in under the radar. It was a deal with another large shareholder, Toscafund, that secured him control, and on 23 March he walked back into the firm he鈥檇 left nearly a decade previously.

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Morgan says he found a company virtually flat on its back, beaten by waves of redundancies and a lack of any sense of how to get back up.

鈥淢orale was dreadful. I remember going into the head office first day back, there were weeds coming out of the car park, the windows were filthy, they鈥檇 closed the canteen. The place was echoing. I鈥檇 never seen so many heads down in my life. The afternoon of my first day I had a team pulling the weeds out of the car park, sweeping up and I had an army of window cleaners cleaning the windows.鈥

His response, fuelled by a sense that there were opportunities in the market for the right product, was dramatic. 鈥淭hey鈥檇 closed five regions and therefore you had these super regions - the northern region managed everything from the Irish Sea to the north sea. It was just a nonsense.

鈥淭he first thing I did was actually reverse a lot of the cuts that had gone before me. I took the complete opposite view that we had to attack. We got busy again, opened sites up. Took people on. Built. Attacked. Incentivised the sales team. Brought some energy in.鈥

He says it had an immediate impact. 鈥淚t was amazing the lift in morale, where people had shed tears seeing their colleagues go out of the building, weeks and months before, when some of those same people walked back through the door again with their jobs. It had a phenomenal effect.鈥

After six months fighting fires, his first strategic move was a complete redesign of Redrow鈥檚 product. This move away from the high-density homes inspired by Labour鈥檚 PPG3 planning guidance, resulted in the New Heritage collection - modern homes with an interwar feel inspired by the arts and craft movement. He then fought a hard battle for the acceptance of council planners.

There鈥檚 no doubt Morgan is passionate about all this and that he put big demands on Redrow staff to make the turnaround happen. 鈥淚 got the design team in: 鈥楻ight we鈥檙e building shit product, let鈥檚 get New Heritage started. Come on.鈥 I was on their backs - 鈥榃here are the drawings, lads? Come on, work! Right guys, build. Build. Get building.鈥 And all of a sudden it was like, fucking hell, we鈥檙e busy, everyone was busy.鈥

Redrow turned the 2009 loss into a tiny 拢1m profit the following year, but the business was now pointing in the right direction. 鈥淭hat 15 months was the hardest I鈥檝e ever worked in my life. To get to a 拢1m was, I think, possibly the biggest achievement in my career,鈥 he says, also paying tribute to his staff. 鈥淎 lot of people worked their nuts off during that 15 months. It was a massive team effort.鈥

Hopes and fears

Redrow has made stellar progress since its 2009 low. It launched a London business soon after, with a totally different product again, which has in the last year started to reap dividends, contributing 拢124m of turnover. Like the rest of industry, Redrow has benefitted from Help to Buy and improvements to the planning system, with Morgan increasing turnover almost threefold since he joined, and ramping up the number of homes produced by the firm by 70% to over 3,500.

This rapid expansion, alongside that of other listed housebuilders, has presented it with big problems in securing materials and labour.

鈥淚 could take you to quite a number of our sites where plots are completely on stop because there鈥檚 no bricks. And that鈥檚 not good, because if you get a house two-thirds of the way up and then stop, you鈥檙e stopping everything. As a result of things like this scaffolding has become a problem, as there鈥檚 so much tied up in half-built homes,鈥 he says.

The first thing i did was reverse a lot of the cuts. I took the complete opposite view that we had to attack. We got busy again, opened sites up. Took people on. Built. Attacked

His bigger fear is about getting the necessary trained staff, with endless cycles of boom and bust hitting the sector hard. Redrow employs more than 80 apprentices, a figure which has increased by 14% in the past year, and Morgan is scathing about the lack of responsibility taken by some of his major competitors in terms of training the next generation, though he says the situation is improving. 鈥淲e need consistency, and we need training. Some of my peers in the industry have been dreadful. They know who they are. There鈥檚 two or three fairly major builders in the industry who pay scant regard for training, particularly for apprentices. There鈥檚 too much grey hair on the building sites.鈥

However, with recent housing sales figures showing the impact of Help to Buy has probably peaked, Morgan cautions that it will no longer be possible to grow volume by speeding up the number of sales per site per week - expansion will have to come through opening more sites. Morgan remains a huge critic of the 鈥渜uite frankly irresponsible鈥 planning system, in particular the conditions which prevent housebuilders starting on site even when approval in principle has been achieved. He blames this entirely for the industry鈥檚 inability to ramp up production more quickly. Woe betide anyone suggesting some developers are deliberately restraining growth in order to stay more profitable. 鈥淚t鈥檚 quite blatantly a nonsense,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 know everyone senior in the industry and there鈥檚 not a single one that thinks like that. When we get together we all have the same moan - it鈥檚 about planning.

鈥淭hey put in 60, 70, 80 planning conditions. And then you get some little bureaucratic - I was going to use another word - bureaucrat who comes along and says: 鈥業t鈥檚 more than my job鈥檚 worth to let you start on site until condition 4AA3/1 has been cleared.鈥 It鈥檚 just鈥︹ He gives up the sentence in exasperation, pulling at his hair in frustration. 鈥淭here鈥檚 so much lack of common sense.鈥

Despite his willingness to air his views in a pretty forthright manner, Morgan does not court the media, and says he doesn鈥檛 enjoy the limelight - declining to have photos taken for this interview, for example. But there is no doubt he is - and knows he is - one of the listed housebuilding sector鈥檚 last remaining big characters, an entrepreneur in a corporate world. The strictures of City reporting clearly chafe: asked about plans in the most recent results to grow turnover to 拢1.3bn, he responds grumpily: 鈥淵ou have to have forward looking statements these days under the latest bloody rules. If it was up to me I wouldn鈥檛 be saying it at all - I think it鈥檚 bullshit. I argued very strongly about putting the statement in. I was told under new accounting rules you have to do it. A load of bollocks. If you go out and say what you鈥檙e going to do all the time you leave yourself a hostage to fortune.鈥

And he senses there鈥檚 a responsibility with being an industry 鈥減ersonality鈥, even if a reluctant one. 鈥淚f I go back 15-20 years there were a lot of big personalities in the industry, people like Lawrie Barratt, Danny Horrocks, David Wilson. A lot of people who would stand up and say it as it is to politicians. In recent years a lot of people are very political, they鈥檙e afraid of upsetting politicians. But sometimes things need saying.

鈥淚鈥檝e probably got to the point now where I鈥檓 one of the guys who鈥檚 got a few grey hairs. It鈥檚 tended to be me that鈥檚 said things that needed saying. We鈥檙e a dying breed.鈥

And if he鈥檚 uncomfortable with his high profile, then he鈥檚 not about to let this concern stop him doing the job he evidently still relishes. 鈥淢y favourite time is going round the regional businesses - it鈥檚 not their favourite times, I think they dread me coming - but I love going round the sites with the local management teams, getting back to the roots. It鈥檚 in the blood.鈥

So at 61, having turned Redrow around, and with all his other interests to distract him, and - presumably - with all the financial security he could want, does he have any plans to step back from day to day control? Not a bit of it. 鈥淎sk me in 10 years鈥 time,鈥 he says, with a smile.

Steve Morgan on鈥

Politicians
Bloody politicians from successive governments. When was the last time we had a housing minister in the Cabinet? When was the last time they had more than 12 months in the job?

Taking Redrow private
That ship has sailed. I had a few people backing me but I couldn鈥檛 persuade them to make their backing unconditional. I鈥檝e had no end of them since saying they wish they鈥檇 gone unconditional. There鈥檚 no satisfaction in saying I told you so to them, but I told them so.

The market
I think the traffic lights are on green. All the major political parties are committed to more housing, and we鈥檝e got an improving economy all the time. Interest rates will go up, but I don鈥檛 see them shooting up.

好色先生TV Awards 2015

Steve Morgan was named Personality of the Year at the 2014 好色先生TV Awards in April. The entry process for next year鈥檚 awards - including categories for contractors, housebuilders, consultants and projects - will open later this month. Keep an eye on for details