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2nd UPDATE: G4S Swings To Loss On Charges, Agrees Government Settlement

12th Mar 2014 12:45

LONDON (Alliance News) - Troubled outsourcing company G4S PLC Wednesday said it swung to a loss in 2013 as it booked GBP386 million in charges and restructuring costs related to its issues with UK government contracts, but it also finally reached a settlement on the contracts meaning it may be able to bid again for crucial government tenders.

G4S and rival Serco PLC were placed under investigation by the UK government last July and all their government contracts were placed under review, after details from an audit emerged showing that they had been over-charging on criminal tagging contracts, claiming for people who were dead, who had never been to prison, or never tagged in the first place. In November, the Serious Fraud Office opened a criminal investigation into the tagging contracts.

In December, two G4S court facilities management contracts were also referred to the SFO.

Serco in December agreed a GBP69.5 million settlement on the tagging contract with the UK government, which has endorsed its restructuring programme and said it can bid once more for government contracts after a six month ban.

G4S Wednesday said it had finally reached its own settlement with the government, which had rejected a previous offer by the company to refund GBP24.1 million for overcharging.

G4S said it will pay GBP108.9 million, comprising a GBP75.9 million cash payment and GBP33 million in credits for services provided, to settle both the tagging and the facilities management contract issues.

"We believe that the conclusion of this matter, together with the actions we are developing on corporate renewal, will enable us to maintain our position as a strategic supplier to Government," G4S Chief Executive Ashley Almanza said in a statement.

Like Serco, G4S has also been going through a restructuring programme in the wake of the contract issues.

It said it had booked GBP136 million in charges in 2013 for a global review of contracts, including a provision for the UK tagging contract, a charge of GBP182 million following a review of its assets and liabilities, and a GBP68 million for accelerating its restructuring programme.

That pushed it to a pretax loss of GBP170 million for 2013, compared with a profit of GBP158 million in 2012. Its net loss was GBP362 million, compared with a GBP40 million profit.

Excluding the charges, its closely-watched profit before interest, tax and amortisation was down 6% at GBP442 million, while the figure was up 2.8% at constant currencies. Its revenues rose to GBP7.43 billion, from GBP7.24 billion.

Despite this, Almanza said the company was already looking to the future.

"This has been an extremely challenging year for G4S. We have taken clear action to address longstanding issues and have introduced wide ranging changes to strengthen our business. We can now look to the future with increasing confidence, focusing on the growing demand for G4S services that underpins our plans to deliver sustainable, profitable growth," the new CEO said in a statement.

"That confidence is reflected in the Board's recommendation to maintain the dividend."

G4S kept its final dividend unchanged at 5.54 pence, meaning the total dividend for the year was also flat at 8.96p.

Still, its shares were down 7.2% at 227.7 pence early Wednesday, the biggest decline on the FTSE 100.

By Steve McGrath; [email protected]; @SteveMcGrath1

Copyright © 2014 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.


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