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Source: http://www.thestar.com/article/572606
Tony Wong
BUSINESS REPORTER
Monarch Homes, Canada's oldest home builder, has been seeking a buyer as its British parent company struggles under a crushing debt load.
The Canadian arm carries an asking price in the range of $200 million (U.S.), says one source familiar with details of the sale.
Finding a buyer for a major home builder in this economic climate may prove difficult, however, as home buying continues to slide.
Monarch, founded in 1917, built its first home in Toronto's Forest Hill neighbourhood, and has been affected by the fortunes of the global real estate market. It is the Canadian division of Taylor Wimpey PLC, the world's fifth-largest homebuilder. The firm last year wrote off £586 million ($1.07 billion Canadian) and said this week it may need "further provisions" if business doesn't pick up in the U.K.
The Canadian firm, run by industry veteran Brian Johnston, has been a jewel in the company's portfolio and has outperformed the market in recent years.
Johnston would not comment on whether the company is in play.
Taylor Wimpey has been particularly hurt by the real estate downturn since its key markets – Florida, California, the U.K. and Spain – were the hardest hit.
And this year is not expected to get a lot better for the building industry, with analysts forecasting slower sales and economic confidence shattered by a plethora of grim statistics that show the situation may get worse before it improves.
"It might seem odd that builders can enjoy a happy new year, but Ontario builders are still out there building homes," a seemingly frustrated Ontario Home Builders' president Frank Giannone told an industry dinner last week.
"This has been exaggerated by a media that has a death wish for the economy."
Ontario's Energy and Infrastructure Minister George Smitherman, the guest speaker, got a standing ovation after he urged builders to remain positive.
"In these difficult times we ask you to remain upbeat and resilient, not to hang your heads but rather to raise them up."
Tony Wong
BUSINESS REPORTER
Monarch Homes, Canada's oldest home builder, has been seeking a buyer as its British parent company struggles under a crushing debt load.
The Canadian arm carries an asking price in the range of $200 million (U.S.), says one source familiar with details of the sale.
Finding a buyer for a major home builder in this economic climate may prove difficult, however, as home buying continues to slide.
Monarch, founded in 1917, built its first home in Toronto's Forest Hill neighbourhood, and has been affected by the fortunes of the global real estate market. It is the Canadian division of Taylor Wimpey PLC, the world's fifth-largest homebuilder. The firm last year wrote off £586 million ($1.07 billion Canadian) and said this week it may need "further provisions" if business doesn't pick up in the U.K.
The Canadian firm, run by industry veteran Brian Johnston, has been a jewel in the company's portfolio and has outperformed the market in recent years.
Johnston would not comment on whether the company is in play.
Taylor Wimpey has been particularly hurt by the real estate downturn since its key markets – Florida, California, the U.K. and Spain – were the hardest hit.
And this year is not expected to get a lot better for the building industry, with analysts forecasting slower sales and economic confidence shattered by a plethora of grim statistics that show the situation may get worse before it improves.
"It might seem odd that builders can enjoy a happy new year, but Ontario builders are still out there building homes," a seemingly frustrated Ontario Home Builders' president Frank Giannone told an industry dinner last week.
"This has been exaggerated by a media that has a death wish for the economy."
Ontario's Energy and Infrastructure Minister George Smitherman, the guest speaker, got a standing ovation after he urged builders to remain positive.
"In these difficult times we ask you to remain upbeat and resilient, not to hang your heads but rather to raise them up."