Middle East-owned Currie & Brown’s boss says takeover is ā€˜vote of confidence’ in UK post-Brexit vote

Euan McEwan

The historic Sweett brand will be dropped within two months of the consultant’s takeover by Currie & Brown, the buying firm’s chief executive Euan McEwan has told ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ.

McEwan (pictured) was speaking ahead of his Middle East-owned firm’s Ā£29m offer for Sweett Group going ā€œunconditionalā€ on Tuesday, after it purchased 89% of its shares, taking it over the 75% threshold needed to seal the deal.

The takeover is set to complete next month and will de-list Sweett from the AIM arm of the London Stock Exchange after nine years. The takeover – which will create a combined company of over 2,000 employees – ends nearly 90 years of independence at Sweett.

Rival bidder WSP Parsons Brinckerhoff had already formally quit the race to buy Sweett in June, after being gazumped by Currie & Brown’s higher offer.

McEwan said Currie & Brown will move swifty to end the Sweett brand as ā€œyou can’t have two names in the same marketplaceā€.

He said the firm was attracted to the deal by ā€œSweett’s team and their strength in the UKā€.

McEwan described the acquisition as a ā€œvote of confidenceā€ in the UK by its parent company, Middle East-based Dar Group, post-EU referendum. The firm’s Ā£29m offer for Sweett was first announced on 24 June, the day the UK’s decision to vote for Brexit was announced and the country lost its prime minister.

McEwan said: ā€œDar is very positive about the UK […] You get on with it. There will be opportunities coming out of Brexit.ā€

McEwan said he expected further major M&A deals within construction consultancy and for the market to reduce to a ā€œbig four or five playersā€, like in accountancy.

He said: ā€œI’m an accountant as well as an engineer and we went through this in the mid-1980s. It makes sense to consolidate to match up services with clients around the world.ā€

He said Currie & Brown’s strategy was primarily to ā€œcontinue to grow organicallyā€ but further M&A ā€œmight beā€ part of the picture.

Sweett’s board of directors - including chief executive Douglas McCormick - will step down once the deal completes.

Currie & Brown had already acquired Sweett’s struggling Asia Pacific businesses in a deal agreed late last year and concluded in June. This purchase had been delayed by a disagreement between the two parties over the impact of currency fluctuations on the takeover price, which was resolved after a decision from an independent arbitration.

Currie & Brown has said it believes cost savings can be made at Sweett, principally through de-listing and cutbacks in property, back office and shared services. 

Dar Group also owns architect Perkins + Will.