After two years of wading through mud and leeches, there are finally some signs that solid ground is in sight.avid Rogers assesses the evidence

The news that broke on Monday 5 July was typical of what鈥檚 happening in the industry right now. The government announced that it was lopping 700 schools off the 好色先生TV Schools for the Future programme. The Homes and Communities Agency鈥檚 budget was cut as well - though not as badly as initially feared. And Experian said in July that activity would contract over the next three months, albeit at a slower rate.

Gloomy stuff indeed, but there were shafts of light elsewhere. The Office for National Statistics revealed on Friday that construction output had jumped 6.6% from Q1 to Q2, the biggest rise since 1963. Although this was in part due to firms catching up on projects affected by the winter鈥檚 bad weather, it鈥檚 a positive sign.

And while last week the Ministry of Justice withdrew its application for a 1,500-capacity prison in Essex, Skanska was closing in on a 拢100m prison deal, order books at Morgan Sindall and electrical contractor T Clarke were up, construction activity was on the rise for the fourth month in a row, ISG was trading strongly and results at Travis Perkins, the builders鈥 merchant and a bellwether firm, were above expectations.

The week before, Taylor Wimpey said the average selling price of its houses had risen 拢14,000 in the first half of 2010, a jump of 9% compared to the same period in 2009.

The messages are certainly mixed, but despite the BSF blow - and a big blow it was - something resembling confidence is returning to parts of the industry. It鈥檚 still early days, of course, but for the first time in a long time the mood is not quite so bleak.

This is the backdrop to 好色先生TV鈥檚 annual ranking of the top 150 contractors and housebuilders this year.

鈥淎 lot has happened this year,鈥 says Andrew Wyllie, Costain鈥檚 chief executive.

鈥淭he general consensus is that the economy has turned a corner after a pretty challenging couple of years. There is more optimism than pessimism. As an industry, we went a long way down.鈥

Tony Williams, who runs specialist advice firm 好色先生TV Value, is also feeling a bit more chipper. 鈥淭he gloomiest period was last spring when world stock markets were on their knees. It was terrible.鈥

Now the UK has crawled out of recession, Williams says the industry can look forward with some genuine hope. 鈥淭he building industry is naturally optimistic,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut modest economic growth is forecast this year and next. I鈥檒l take that. It鈥檚 a hell of a lot better than this time last year. I鈥檓 not saying we鈥檙e out of the woods yet, but we鈥檙e further out than a year ago.鈥

Last year鈥檚 turnover figures have held up well for the top 20 firms. The biggest, Balfour Beatty, now has nearly 拢1bn more in revenues than it did in 2008, while the company in 20th place, ISG, has a turnover of 拢1.05bn compared with the 拢1.09bn recorded by Enterprise in the same spot a year before. In a billion-turnover business, in a recession, being off by 拢40,000 is by no means a slump.

But before we get carried away, let鈥檚 remember that according to the Construction Products Association, output fell by 12% last year, the sharpest drop since 1974, and there is plenty of evidence of the effect it has had on much of the industry. So any returning confidence must be labelled 鈥渇ragile鈥.

鈥淟ast year was catastrophic in the sense of declining volume,鈥 says Williams. 鈥淎 few things, like BSF, were ticking along but otherwise it was a desperate year. This year鈥檚 figures should be worse because there is always a lag. But even though activity will go down again, it won鈥檛 feel as bad because there is a less of an edge-of-a-cliff feel.鈥

Housebuilders are the most noticeable sufferers. In 2008, the highest ranked was Barratt with turnover of 拢3.6bn; a year later the figure was 拢2.3bn.

Housebuilders have also been affected by the fact that many contractors have tried to anticipate the threat of falling turnover by bidding for smaller contracts, particularly in the housing sector. One main side effect of the recession is that bigger and bigger firms are chasing smaller and smaller contracts: one small firm told 好色先生TV it was amazed to find that one of its recent rivals for a 拢1m house in west London was a contractor whose turnover last year was far above 拢1bn.

This trend, says Kevin Cammack, an analyst with Cenkos Securities, has benefits for both contractors and clients. 鈥淭he big boys are looking at 拢4m or 拢5m contracts to generate turnover,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey are more attractive to clients because they believe they are safer dealing with a Balfour Beatty than a local builder. One underlying issue for clients is the financial strength of the builder and ability to attract the supply chain.鈥

Cammack believes tender opportunities and orders will pick up next year but won鈥檛 turn into contracts until 2012. In the meantime there are signs, he says, that private sector work and big commercial projects in London are starting to come back - the sort of stuff that could plug the hole left by BSF. 鈥淭here are elements of infrastructure that are still good and there is waste water, water and energy,鈥 he adds. 鈥淲ork driven by regulation is difficult to end.鈥

Consolidation in the marketplace is probably inevitable as firms are bought out of receivership or taken over by rivals that have been less affected by the recession. Costain鈥檚 Wyllie says: 鈥淎s projects become increasingly large you need horsepower to deliver them, both human and financial.鈥

Others predict a more radical shake-up. Alastair Stewart, an analyst with Investec Securities, says the recession will affect those firms that don鈥檛 really have much to distinguish them from the competition, apart from the fact that they鈥檝e always existed. 鈥淯ndoubtedly there will be more consolidation,鈥 he says. 鈥淪maller guys will fizzle out and the guys who will stay will be the specialists, those with the technical ability. There are a number out there like this who are really good at what they do.鈥

Cammack says savvy contractors have made the failings of others work for them. 鈥淥ne of the best ways to give yourself a growth boost is to inherit contracts from failed firms. Clients are usually desperate to get someone to finish the job off and firms can renegotiate the profit margin.鈥

McLaren Construction, a business that has thrived in the recession, is a good example.

It picked up the 拢68m City of Westminster college project from failed Hertfordshire contractor William Verry last year, and Kevin Taylor, its chairman, said in February that he had an 拢18m war chest to buy businesses that were struggling in the recession.

Philip Pringle, McLaren鈥檚 group managing director, says 2010 turnover will be up 11% to 拢145m and the aim is to hit 拢180m next year. This will be helped, he says, by a gradual easing in the downturn. 鈥淚 think there鈥檚 more improvement this year. I鈥檇 give it five out of 10 last year, now it鈥檚 more like 6.5.鈥

There will be more cuts in this autumn鈥檚 Comprehensive Spending Review but Noble Francis, economics director at the Construction Products Association, predicts that activity will rise 1% next year and in 2012. He admits, though, that this could be revised 鈥渋f the government puts in sharper cuts than anticipated鈥.

Still, perhaps UK construction is finding its true level. Peak activity in the boom hit 拢111bn in 2007 and this year it is forecast to be 拢95bn. 鈥淲e鈥檝e had a very good run for the past seven years,鈥 says Williams. 鈥淢aybe around 拢100bn is a more normal figure.鈥

How five firms are staying afloat

The realist: Keltbray

拢108尘 Turnover
拢5.77尘 Pre-tax profit

This demolition firm is one of London and the South-east鈥檚 key specialist contractors. Brendan Kerr, its managing director, says the market is tough. 鈥淲e always knew 2010 was going to be worse than last year and it鈥檚 every bit as bad as we predicted.鈥 Keltbray鈥檚 work on jobs such as the Pinnacle and Shard is coming to an end and as part of a diversification strategy it has moved into rail - but is at the mercy of cuts in Network Rail鈥檚 budget.

Kerr is seeing some uplift in the commercial market and is fielding calls from clients in the industrial sector too. He has marked the beginning of next year as the time when he finds out if this improvement is a true or false dawn.

He is also adjusting to the post-boom years. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we will ever see what we saw three years ago. To be honest, we don鈥檛 want that back. Everything was out of control.鈥

The hedger: Costain

拢1.06产苍 Turnover
拢18.1尘 Pre-tax profit

In the past few years Costain has been refocusing its business around markets such as waste, nuclear power, water and road maintenance. Andrew Wyllie, its chief executive, thinks these are safer bets than most. He says: 鈥淲e鈥檝e been deliberately targeting those customers whose spends will take place because of regulation, legislation or strategic needs.鈥

After the recession, Wyllie predicts that a premier league of eight or fewer contractors will emerge. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e seeing is our biggest customers wanting more for less. It鈥檚 up to us as an industry to step up to the challenge. We have to provide expertise, innovative solutions and be on time and on budget.鈥

The pragmatist: Redrow

拢301.8尘 Turnover
拢140.8尘 Pre-tax loss

Steve Morgan is best known outside the industry as the man who tried to buy Liverpool football club before the now hugely unpopular Americans Tom Hicks and George Gillett nabbed it. Within the industry, he made the headlines by returning to the firm he created last March just in time to announce the worst set of results in the company鈥檚 history.

Morgan seems to be making good his determination not to repeat that result. Interim pre-tax losses have been narrowed 81% to just 拢8.7m - even so, Morgan says the market will remain challenging for the remainder of 2010.

He has rolled out a new kind of family house, the New Heritage Collection, of which he says: 鈥淐ustomer response has been extremely positive and both sales rates and pricing
are encouraging.鈥

Like his peers, his b锚te noires remain the planning process, which still continues to glue up starts, and mortgage availability. 鈥淯ntil the dual issues are resolved, the housebuilding industry has little hope of making real inroads into the country鈥檚 chronic shortage of housing,鈥 he says.

The traveller: Primus

拢55尘 Turnover
拢1.5尘 Pre-tax profit

This contractor was set up in early 2007 by Martin Tidd, the former Multiplex managing director. It specialises in hotels, interiors and residential work. 鈥淟ast year was tough,鈥 says
Tidd, who knows a thing or two about crises, having joined Multiplex in 2004 just as the problems with Wembley stadium were starting to make headlines.

鈥淭here is a slow pick up in confidence. People are sitting on cash and getting bored. Now real tendering opportunities are coming through and there鈥檚 an increase in enquiries relating to distressed projects where the developer or builder has gone bust.鈥

Primus Build, which has 40 employees, is not on this year鈥檚 list, but plans to get onto it by increasing turnover to 拢200m by 2013. Tidd鈥檚 main concern is that much larger firms will bid for the 拢10m contracts that he specialises in. 鈥淥ur biggest threat is if they discount at a level that we can鈥檛 compete with. That kind of thing goes all the way down the food chain.鈥

As a result, Primus has expanded abroad where it focuses on high-end residential work such as villas, and has set up offices in Kuwait and the Ukraine, as well as establishing a joinery factory in Dubai.

The activist: McLaren Construction

拢130.8尘 Turnover
拢3.2尘 Pre-tax profit

鈥淲e haven鈥檛 just sat back,鈥 says group managing director Philip Pringle. 鈥淲e鈥檝e gone out and created business.鈥

The firm has just won a 拢45m project to build a training ground for Tottenham Hotspur, and recently gained a place on the Royal Mail鈥檚 four-year framework. Other successes are in the hotel and supermarket sectors. The reward has been an 88% rise in pre-tax profit in the year to 31 July 2009, from 拢1.7m to 拢3.2尘.

Pringle says more schemes are going into planning with an end-user signed up, but he still expects another year of being in the economic mire. He says the trend of big firms chasing smaller jobs will be around for some time yet. 鈥淚 think as more of the public sector belt gets tightened those firms will be looking at private and commercial work. I think there鈥檚 another good 12 months of it.鈥