Cover Story


Comfort zone



How Bill Murdy turned Comfort Systems USA from foundering to flourishing by making tough choices

By Erik Cassano


Smart Business Houston | August 2008

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It was September 2001 when Bill Murdy trekked to New York to talk to a number of investment bankers about arranging a high-yield bond deal to help pull Comfort Systems USA Inc. out of massive debt.

Murdy says that when he took over as chairman and CEO of Comfort Systems USA — a $1.1 billion company that designs and installs commercial HVAC systems — in 2000, the company had amassed about $350 million in debt brought about by, among other things, aggressive spending on acquisitions during what Murdy described as a “frothier time,” during the Internet-driven economic boom of the 1990s.

“The trees were going to grow to the sky; everyone had this kind of exuberance (about the economy) from the Internet bubble and all of the other things from the late ’90s,” he says.

The economy started to wilt throughout 2000 and 2001, and Comfort Systems soon found itself in a large financial hole. Internal spending cuts reduced the debt by about $150 million, but Comfort Systems needed help from the outside to pare down the remaining $200 million.

That’s why, on the morning of Tuesday, Sept. 11, Murdy stood on the trading floor of JPMorgan Chase & Co. in midtown Manhattan, attempting to hammer out a deal that would allow Comfort Systems to pay off the remainder of its debt through manageable, mortgage-style payments.

Then came the news flash. Airliners had crashed into the World Trade Center, several miles away from the very room in which Murdy was standing.

Manhattan was on lockdown. Towers were plummeting to the ground. America was sent into a state of shock, both emotionally and economically.

The previous year had been difficult from a financial standpoint, but things were about to get a lot worse before they improved. Murdy knew right then and there that the road ahead was about to get extremely bumpy for his business. It didn’t take long for his hunch to be proven correct.

“When the buildings came down, the deal came down with them,” he says. “We knew we had to do something because we were headed for a big downturn in the commercial HVAC business.”

The months that followed were full of difficult decisions for Murdy and his management team.

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