Investors eye social housing contractors after Lloyds Development Capital buys Midlands firm

In an increasingly jittery market, 拢100m may seem a lot to shell out for a construction company.

In fact, the figure is a conservative estimate of what private equity investor Lloyds Development Capital (LDC) paid for 拢140m-turnover Midlands social housing firm Bullock.

The company was sold hours ahead of changes to capital gains tax laws on 6 April, which meant the owners escaped an 18% charge on the proceeds.

HBOS, which funded a 拢42尘 management buyout of Bullock in September 2005, didn鈥檛 do too badly either. If the price was, as some people claim, closer to 拢120m, it trebled its money in under three years.

Although deals have been shelved elsewhere, it is evidently not such an uncertain time in social housing. HBOS still has stakes in four social housing contractors (see box, right) and says it is 鈥減ositive about the prospects for the sector鈥.

Indeed, social housing鈥檚 popularity in private equity circles matches that of oil, gas, renewables, metals and minerals, helped by the 拢44.2bn Decent Homes programme and the target of 70,000 new social housing units a year by 2011.

Jan Crosby, head of construction mergers and acquisitions at KPMG, says: 鈥淐rucially, the government-driven spend will continue beyond the lifecycle of typical private equity involvement of several years, which will make a sale easier at the end.

鈥淥n a micro level you have companies with contracts that span a number of years. These two factors mean social housing is a good bet compared with pure contracting, which is riskier and has lower margins.鈥

Although many housing associations are charities, at heart they鈥檙e commercial organisations.

City Observer

Ray Stenton, investment director at LDC, agrees that the more reliable revenue stream of social housing is a huge plus, but says there may be slim pickings after the Bullock deal. He says: 鈥淚 suspect most of the interesting assets have changed hands now, although there are still a number of smaller players.鈥

With the increased emphasis on partnerships and framework deals 鈥渟maller players may find they need to be larger鈥, says Stenton. 鈥淭hey may also have problems in taking the business to the next level. Private equity can facilitate that.鈥

Mike Foster, an analyst at KBC Peel Hunt, says private equity investment will widen the scope of social housing contractors. 鈥淭hey will expand into areas like the eco market and property development,鈥 he says. 鈥淕alliford Try is one company that increasingly sees its social housing business as a real skill area with growth potential rather than a fallback.鈥

KPMG鈥檚 Crosby suggests firms may also move into aligned sectors such as education, defence housing, care homes and university accommodation.

And what of the ethical dilemma of private equity groups profiting from not-for-profit housing associations? One City observer says there isn鈥檛 one. 鈥淎lthough many housing associations are charities, at their heart they鈥檙e commercial organisations that are quick to repossess if necessary.鈥

Either way, the deals will make interesting reading for big firms like 拢396m-turnover Connaught and 拢305m-turnover Mears.

As one observer notes: 鈥淒espite current liquidity issues you can bet private equity investors are running the rule over social housing contractors as we speak.鈥

Who owns what

Lloyds Development Capital
Bullock Construction: turnover 拢140m
Herbert T Forrest: 拢40尘

HBOS
Keepmoat: 拢533尘
Apollo Group: 拢257m (20.5% stake)
Tulloch Homes: 拢150m (40% stake)
Catesby: 拢42尘

Topics