Apologies if this has already been mentioned elsewhere (or should be in AE?). Things not going too well in the property market for SJM...
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/b ... 128318.eceSir John Madejski is in talks with lenders over the future of one of his biggest companies Sackville Properties.
Sir John, who owns a slew of companies based in his home town of Reading, is in negotiations with the taxpayer-backed Royal Bank of Scotland to safeguard Sackville’s future in expectation of a covenant breach on July 1, which would give the bank the right to take control.
Sackville owns industrial and business park properties across the country. Sir John is likely to press for a waiver or an amendment to the terms of the bank’s £63 million loan.
In common with companies owned by other property entrepreneurs, such as Vincent and Robbie Tchenguiz and Simon Halabi, Sackville has been hit hard by the recession and the collapse in British property values. The property company’s shareholders, of which Sir John is the biggest, are facing losses of more than £30 million.
Sir John — whose life was documented recently in the BBC television programme Rich Man Poor Man: a Knight’s Tale — has pumped about £160 million of his personal fortune into his business empire and is facing mounting losses at companies ranging from Reading Football Club to the traffic management group Clearview. Unlike many other millionaires, he has reached into his own pocket to prop up some of his companies, including Clearview and Reading Broadcasing, to which he has lent tens of millions of pounds.
“I’m involved with about 18 companies globally and we’ve had to work through the recession,” Sir John told The Times.
“We’re trying to keep jobs and we are doing the best we can. Hopefully, with a new Government, things will start looking up again.”
Sir John is pressing ahead with a £400 million scheme to revitalise Reading town centre, which will include office blocks, shops and hundreds of flats near the railway station.
The Station Hill development is owned by Sackville Developments (Reading) Limited, which is in breach of the covenants on a £43.6 million bank loan from HBOS, now Lloyds Banking Group, taken out at the time the company acquired the site in 2005.
Sir John, who has invested almost £20 million in the company since becoming chairman in 2001, has negotiated a waiver with Lloyds after promising to find a joint venture partner to inject more cash in the business and restart the development. The company won planning permission for the 3¼-acre site last September, although work is not expected to begin until at least 2012. Tenants in the existing buildings are paying enough rent to “broadly cover” the
interest payments on the loan in the meantime.
Sir John told The Times that he believed the property market was coming back. “This is a short-term market position. The fundamentals of the property industry haven’t really changed,” he said.
Commercial property values fell by 45 per cent from peak to their trough in August last year, according to the Investment Property Databank, but have since regained about 10 per cent of their value.
However, despite the recent rebound, banks remain wary of lending against speculative property developments.
Lloyds Banking Group and RBS are the two biggest lenders against commercial property in the UK and have billions of pounds of loans outstanding against properties that are now worth less than the debt. The two banks have been calling in loans in cases where they do not believe the properties will recover their value under their existing owners.