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Sometimes saying no is your best bet.
That was the takeaway from Tutor Perini’s third-quarter conference call on Nov. 6, where the major civil contractor said it now has so much work lined up that it’s considering hitting the pause button when it comes to bidding on additional major projects .
After telling investors the company had a track record of $14 billion in future work on its books, CEO and President Ron Tutor said the company would likely take a break from bidding on valued multi-year megaprojects at $500 million or more, at least for a while.
“With a record backlog at a level that will sustain us for the next five years, we will probably stop bidding or at least reduce that commitment,” said Tutor, who characterized the pause as “a short-term hiatus from the bidding of ‘some”. of the greatest activities”.
Still some offers
He stressed that the company’s many subsidiaries will likely continue to look for smaller jobs in their local markets, but that for larger projects, the pause could last up to a year. Tutor also stressed that his company would likely still proceed with the $3.8 billion Southeast Gateway Line light rail project in Los Angeles, as well as the $2 billion. Light rail line from South Jersey to New Jerseyin the short term
“These are the only projects of substance that we are reviewing and keeping a finger on the pulse of over the next year to 18 months,” he said.
The Los Angeles-based contractor’s announcement comes at a time when the construction industry is starving for workers. When pressed by analysts later in the call about why the company is withdrawing from the bid, Tutor said he was referring to the bodies available at the company’s various subsidiaries.
“It’s a matter of their internal capacity. Do they have people? Do they have the resources? If they do, we don’t hesitate to support them. If we don’t, we turn off the faucet and say you have an adequate backlog with significant cash flow and significant income. Go out and deliver it, [then] we will talk,” Tutor said.
Bigger losses
Tutor announced the pivot at the same time as his signing cut a loss of $101 million for the quarter, even bigger than the $37 million loss it posted a year ago. Revenue was $1.08 billion, up 2% from the same period in 2023.
The the company warned investors on October 21 that it would likely take a loss due to an unfavorable dispute settlement that it estimated at $145 million at the time. Those charges actually totaled $152 million.
Tutor Perini has been working to resolve disputes over legacy work that have resulted in litigation, an outcome not uncommon in large, multi-year megaprojects. It said it settled seven of its largest disputes in the quarter, which resulted in the charges.
More favorable conditions
In addition to having so much work that he can take a step back in looking for new jobs, Tutor also reiterated that the company has been able to dictate more of their own terms to clients recently as the number of heavy civil contractors with the ability to handle multi-million dollar jobs has dwindled.
“In the past, let’s say 60 years, all contracts written by landlords were completely one-sided, onerous and dictatorial,” Tutor said. “As long as they had five to seven bidders on each job, regardless of the comment, when I would protest, the response would be, ‘Well, don’t bid if you don’t like our terms.’
Now, however, with so much work on the market and fewer large contractors capable of completing these jobs, the tables have turned.
“We basically take the position that either you negotiate with us something that is reasonable and acceptable to us, or you don’t bid,” Tutor said, referring to landlords dictating that contractors use their own capital to start a job or that impose unrealistic deadlines. “And when you only have two potential bidders, and one says he’s not going to bid, now you’re down to one, you can’t bid.”
As an example, Tutor cited the New York City Department of Design and Construction which identified Tutor Perini’s joint venture with O&G Industries as likely choice for his New Manhattan prison facilitya win the company announced before its earnings on Nov. 6.
Tutor said when the initial request for proposal for the work went out, he sent a letter to the city saying the terms were too onerous and the company would not bid on the work.
“Three months go by, I get a letter that says, ‘Basically, you’re right, they’re too onerous, we want you to make an offer. We would like to talk and know what you expect,” said Tutor. “We met, we had all the terms of reason. And it’s not that we were unreasonable. These are fair conditions.”
