ao link
Twitter
Facebook
Linked In
Twitter
Facebook
Linked In

You are viewing 1 of your 1 free articles

Finance boss of 26,000-home landlord to exit after three years

GreenSquareAccord (GSA) has announced that its chief finance officer is leaving to take up a newly created role with a larger landlord in the South of England.

Linked InTwitterFacebookeCard
Jo Makinson
Jo Makinson will join Abri in January as its first chief investment officer
Sharelines

Finance boss of 26,000-home landlord to exit after three years #UKhousing

Jo Makinson, who joined 26,000-home GSA in early 2022, will step down at the end of December. 

She will join 50,000-home Abri in January as its first chief investment officer, GSA said in a filing. 

“Recruitment is already under way for an interim CFO with recruitment to the permanent role to follow,” GSA said.


READ MORE

GreenSquareAccord appoints new permanent finance bossGreenSquareAccord appoints new permanent finance boss
Housing Moves: our round-up of senior sector appointments in September 2024Housing Moves: our round-up of senior sector appointments in September 2024
GreenSquareAccord posts first-ever surplus after ditching care servicesGreenSquareAccord posts first-ever surplus after ditching care services

The landlord, which has a G1/V2 rating with the Regulator of Social Housing, previously had an interim finance boss for six months before Ms Makinson joined.

Ruth Cooke, chief executive of GSA, said: “I would like to take this opportunity, on behalf of all at GSA, to wish Jo the very best in her new role at fellow housing association Abri.

“Jo has made a massive contribution to GSA in the time she’s been with us as shown in our financial statements for 2023-24.”

Like many housing associations, GSA has faced a difficult time financially amid the tough conditions.

Last November, its Fitch credit rating was downgraded, while in February this year Moody’s downgraded its rating on GSA to Baa1 due to its “very tight covenant headroom”.

However, earlier this month the group revealed that it had posted its first surplus since it was formed, helped by an exit from loss-making care and support services.

Ms Makinson was appointed by GSA following a tough period for the landlord, which was formed through a merger in April 2021.

The group was found to have breached the regulator’s Home Standard in October 2021 after it was discovered that hundreds of its homes did not have a current fire risk assessment and more than 10,000 had never had an electrical inspection.

Following the breach, Elisabeth Buggins, chair of GSA, stepped down after less than a year in the role.

Sign up for our monthly Housing Moves newsletter

Sign up for our monthly Housing Moves newsletter
Linked InTwitterFacebookeCard
Add New Comment
You must be logged in to comment.