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Metricon to meet with Victoria’s treasurer after company denies rumours of collapse

<span>Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP</span>
Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP

Acting chief executive of Australia’s largest homebuilder says company will continue business as usual after founder’s death


Executives from Australia’s largest homebuilder, Metricon, will meet with the Victorian treasurer, Tim Pallas, on Thursday morning after the company denied rumours it was on the verge of collapse.

Metricon holds $195m worth of contracts with the state government, including a five-year deal to build and maintain public housing as part of Victoria’s ambitious “big build” infrastructure program.

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Sources said Metricon requested the meeting late last week but it was pushed back several days after the unexpected death this week of the company’s founder and chief executive, Mario Biasin.

Related: Probuild collapse: administrators investigate $50m transferred to civil construction division

If the company collapsed, insolvency practitioners from KordaMentha would probably be appointed as administrators.

The chief executive of Master Builders Victoria (MBV), Rebecca Casson, said the industry association was “aware there are rumours about the future of Metricon”.

“We are in close contact with them and we are very optimistic about the company’s future,” she said.

“It is incumbent on everyone not to join in with the rumour narrative, especially during this incredibly challenging time.

“We also encourage Metricon’s clients and suppliers to be kind and patient with them as they navigate through these unprecedented challenges.”

Metricon’s acting chief executive, Peter Langfelder, on Wednesday said there was “simply no basis to these rumours”.

“Metricon is a strong viable business without any solvency problem,” he said. “The biggest challenge Australia faces is to get more homes built for more Australian families and as the biggest homebuilder in the country, we are the ones to deliver.”

He asked for “patience and consideration from our customers while our executives and staff deal with their loss” after Biasin’s death.

The Victorian government was contacted for comment.

Building industry sources said Metricon, along with other large-scale homebuilders, reaped large amounts of work due to the federal government’s homebuilder program, which was designed to prop up the industry during the Covid pandemic.

However, the large volume of work has left builders exposed to dramatic inflation in the price of materials, as well as continuing delays in obtaining products due to blockages in global and local supply chains.

The price of timber rose by more than 25% in the year to March, while steel products were up almost 50% over the same period, MBV said.

Builders have been pushing for Victorian law to be changed to allow them to pass on increased materials costs to customers, but this has been rejected by the Andrews government.

Related: Engineers welcome bid to rein in cost blowouts in Victorian government projects

Metricon’s projects include a contract for its Everyone division to build 115 homes as part of Victoria’s Social Housing Pipeline Project, which was due to be completed last year.

As part of a $2.6bn package designed to respond to the housing crisis, the Social Housing Pipeline Project was expanded in March to add 913 homes. It is not clear whether Metricon was part of this expansion.

Through Everyone, Metricon is also involved in building public housing for the Queensland and New South Wales state governments.

It is the largest homebuilder in Australia, with 6,052 homes under construction in 2020-21.

So far this financial year it has undertaken 1,006 home construction jobs in Queensland alone, worth more than $400m, according to Queensland Building and Construction Commission records.

It completed 1,563 jobs in Queensland in 2020-21, more than double the 668 it built in the previous year.

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