UK house price boom brings Persimmon windfall of nearly £1bn

Housebuilder predicts prices will rise further despite cautioning Ukraine war could disrupt economy

Britain’s biggest housebuilder, Persimmon, has announced profits of nearly £1bn in 2021, but cautioned that the Ukraine invasion could disrupt the the UK economy in the year ahead.

Persimmon’s profits jumped by nearly a quarter to £970m thanks to “positive pricing conditions” in every British region in which it operated, as the house price boom defied the coronavirus pandemic, it said on Wednesday.

Dean Finch, Persimmon’s chief executive, said he was “mindful of the growing risk of an economic impact as a result of the tragic conflict in Ukraine”, but that he expected continued house price rises to “mitigate build cost inflation”, suggesting higher costs for materials and labour would be passed on to buyers.

“The UK housing market remains supportive with demand continuing to exceed supply, favourable interest rates and good levels of mortgage availability,” he said.

Persimmon said it had some built-in protection from increased materials costs, which could be further escalated by the Russian invasion, because it had increased capacity at factories producing timber frames, bricks and tiles.

Vistry, the sixth biggest London-listed housebuilder, also announced bumper results on Wednesday, saying it had more than tripled its annual profits to £320m.

Housebuilders in the UK have benefited from years of strong demand, thanks to a dearth of new homes. Nationwide, the UK’s largest building society, reported on Wednesday that prices of homes on which it offered mortgages increased by 12.6% in the year to February, with the average price crossing the £260,000 mark for the first time.

Many analysts had expected the pandemic to end the extraordinary price increases, but a combination of unprecedented low interest rates and employment support schemes caused prices to defy lockdowns. The UK government indirectly fuelled house price growth by temporarily cutting stamp duty, a subsidy that has now been removed.

Housebuilders have already set aside the costs of removing flammable cladding, found to be a key cause of the Grenfell Tower fire that killed 72 people.

Persimmon built 14,550 new homes in 2021, 1,000 more than 2020 when housebuilding was temporarily disrupted by the first pandemic lockdowns. Its rate of private sales was 22% ahead of 2019, before the pandemic struck. Vistry built 8,600, more than in 2019.

Both companies expected to improve on 2022. Vistry said it predicted a “significant step up in profits and returns in 2022”. Persimmon said it would increase sales volumes by 4-7% in 2022, while keeping similar profit margins. That would suggest a return to above-£1bn profits, a level previously seen only in 2018 and 2019.

Persimmon shares gained 6.4% on Wednesday morning. Shares in Vistry, which was formed in 2020 from the merger of Bovis and Galliford Try, gained 6.6%.

Yet some analysts question whether the housebuilders’ strong run can continue over the next year. Consumer price index inflation has risen to its highest level in 30 years, squeezing household incomes, with more increases to come next month. Economists expect the Bank of England to increase interest rates further this year, which could also dampen demand.

“The backdrop is changing,” said Julie Palmer, a partner at Begbies Traynor, a restructuring consultancy. “House price growth this year is expected to be more muted and we have to question whether Persimmon will be able to absorb ever-increasing costs through higher selling prices.”

Vistry’s chief executive, Greg Fitzgerald, said there had been “strong demand across all areas of the business”. He added that the company had experienced “extended lead times and inflationary pressures on certain products”.

Contributor

Jasper Jolly

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Persimmon reports bumper year amid UK housing market boom
Housebuilder reports weekly sales up 20% on pre-Covid levels

Mark Sweney

13, Jan, 2022 @10:53 AM

Article image
Persimmon reports 64% rise in profits fuelled by UK Covid property boom
Housebuilder adds sites to land bank and predicts sales will stay above pre-crisis levels

Richard Partington and Jasper Jolly

18, Aug, 2021 @3:45 PM

Article image
Housing boom takes Persimmon sales past pre-pandemic levels
Housebuilder benefits from cut in stamp duty to report revenues of £1.84bn for first half of 2021

Jasper Jolly

08, Jul, 2021 @9:47 AM

Article image
Persimmon reports sales and price fall as UK property market dips
Housebuilder says cancellation rate has risen sharply because of interest rates and economic uncertainty

Julia Kollewe

08, Nov, 2022 @9:48 AM

Article image
Persimmon homebuyers can withhold money until faults fixed
Contracts will state that 1.5% of property value can be held back until problems resolved

Julia Kollewe

21, Mar, 2019 @9:26 AM

Article image
Shares in big UK estate agent chain fall as housing market cools
Housebuilders also see share price falls as interest rate rises and cost of living crisis deter potential buyers

Joanna Partridge

25, Nov, 2022 @3:56 PM

Article image
Persimmon profits fall as housebuilder looks at repairing reputation
Company increased customer service spending by about 40% after criticism over quality

Kalyeena Makortoff

20, Aug, 2019 @11:10 AM

Article image
Persimmon sales rise despite Brexit shakeout in the property sector
Britain’s biggest housebuilder, whose shares have slumped since 24 June, said it was too soon to judge the effect of the referendum vote on the housing market

Sean Farrell

05, Jul, 2016 @9:19 AM

Article image
Persimmon profits surge as Help to Buy scheme fuels demand
Britain's second biggest housebuilder says annual underlying pre-tax profits rose 49%, with sale completions up 16%

Sean Farrell

25, Feb, 2014 @12:17 PM

Article image
MPs back plan for ombudsman to resolve new homes disputes
Service would be free and help new-build buyers to get faster redress for defective properties

Julia Kollewe

30, Jun, 2018 @6:00 AM