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Wimpey and Woodrow agree to merge | Wimpey and Woodrow agree to merge |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Construction companies George Wimpey and Taylor Woodrow have agreed to merge in a deal that will create the UK's biggest homebuilder, worth about £5bn. | |
The new company will be called Taylor Wimpey and will be large enough in terms of market value to merit a place on London's main FTSE 100 stock index. | |
The new company will have a combined workforce of about 14,000. | |
A spokesman for Taylor Woodrow said he expected job losses from the merger to be in the region of "hundreds". | |
Ian Morris said the job cuts would result from the companies creating a single UK headquarters, and head office for homebuilding. | |
He called reports that 10% of the workforce would be trimmed as "speculative". | |
Job cuts would probably be in the "hundreds, rather than going over 1,000", Mr Morris said, although he added that "nothing is cast in stone". | |
More weight | |
The firms said the merger would allow them to cut costs by £70m a year and boost business in both the UK and US. | |
Mr Morris said that joining forces with Wimpey and its efficient house building team would allow Taylor Woodrow to better exploit its UK land bank. | |
At the same time, in the US the new company would be a bigger player in a market where at present the two firms were successful, but smaller, than many of their rivals. | |
After the merger, Taylor Wimpey will have a total of 22,000 UK house completions a year, with another 9,000 a year in the US. | |
Wimpey's chief executive Peter Redfern will take control of the merged company, while the chairman of Taylor Woodrow, Norman Askew, will remain in that role. | Wimpey's chief executive Peter Redfern will take control of the merged company, while the chairman of Taylor Woodrow, Norman Askew, will remain in that role. |
The new company will be 51%-owned by Taylor Woodrow shareholders and 49%-owned by George Wimpey investors. | The new company will be 51%-owned by Taylor Woodrow shareholders and 49%-owned by George Wimpey investors. |