Sir Fraser Morrison, the owner and chairman of architect RMJM, is the backer behind the investment firm that bought RMJM for £11m in late March.
Declan Thompson, RMJM’s group commercial director, said the deal, which involved Duthus Investments buying RMJM Architecture Limited for £11m, would wipe £12m of debt off the RMJM books and allow the firm to reinvest.
According to Companies House, Duthus Investments was incorporated on the 5 March.
Sir Fraser Morrison is a construction tycoon and one of Scotland’s wealthiest individuals and Thompson said the investment firm was part of his “family of investment companies”.
Morrison bought a 56% share in RMJM in 2002 and installed his son Peter Morrison as chief executive in 2006. At the time of the sale to Duthus Investments earlier this week Morrison owned 75% of the voting rights.
Thompson said the sale was a “simple thing to allow Sir Fraser Morrison to write off £12m” and was part of the board’s “strategy to get rid of debt off the books”.
He added that the deal left the firm with debts totalling around £11m and that the firm was “quite optimistic” about the future.
Thompson said the firm’s cash flow problems, which have seen staff receive salaries late and pension payments delayed, were now behind it following the sale.
“RMJM has spent much of 2011-12 doing difficult things and making difficult choices to get the business stable,” he said.
He said the loss of a number of senior staff over the last year had been wrongly reported by the media. “In quite a lot of instances those people have been asked to leave the business because they weren’t performing,” he said.
He added there were no more plans for further cuts to staff numbers and the firm would be hiring new staff where necessary. “We have got to the point where we have enough, or just enough, very busy architects,” he said.
Thompson said he had no plans to add to the senior team, which includes recently-appointed principal Jonathan French, who joined from David Chipperfield Architects earlier this year.
Thompson said he expected to see recovery in the Chinese and Middle East markets to return some growth to the firm. “The UK market is going to stay quite difficult,” he added.
http://www.building.co.uk/buildings/architecture/morrison-emerges-as-backer-behind-rmjm-buyer/5052760.article
Related Stories
Codes and Standards | Oct 7, 2020
More energy efficiency programs are encouraging zero-energy projects
At least 20 programs for new construction, major renovations emerge.
Codes and Standards | Oct 6, 2020
LEED, GBCI rating systems spur resilience-enhancing strategies
Expanded programs, resources address impact of climate change.
Codes and Standards | Oct 6, 2020
International Code Council to hold inaugural online education event
Week-long ICC Learn Live will include panel conversations, keynotes, and breakout sessions around key topics in building safety.
Codes and Standards | Oct 5, 2020
Guides addressing fenestration anchorage updated
First update to decade-old technical documents released.
Codes and Standards | Oct 1, 2020
Deadline extension for LEED 2009 project certifications
Delivery timeline delays due to COVID-19 pandemic prompt action.
Codes and Standards | Sep 29, 2020
New drinking water standard criteria further restricts lead leaching in plumbing products
Tightened standard applies to endpoint devices that dispense drinking water, and other plumbing components
Codes and Standards | Sep 29, 2020
Groups sue CDC over eviction moratorium
Natl. Apartment Assn. and New Civil Liberties Alliance want hearing by October.
Codes and Standards | Sep 24, 2020
Benefits of building enclosure commissioning include reduced costs
Savings achieved in less rework and fewer and shorter punch lists.
Codes and Standards | Sep 23, 2020
Intl. Code Council aims to stay ahead of new tech, efficiency trends, and resiliency
Passive survivability, social resiliency, and community health among the goals.
Codes and Standards | Sep 22, 2020
Air cleaners, chemical and UV treatments among tools to safeguard indoor air amid pandemic
Strategies augment social distancing, increased air flow to combat COVID-19 spread.