The UK housebuilder Bellway has said demand for houses has moderated since the summer and it expects the number of sales to be roughly flat over the next year against a backdrop of rising interest rates and a deteriorating economy.
The company completed a record 11,198 homes in the year to 31 July, up 10.5% on the previous year, as a booming housing market drove £3.5bn of revenues, up 13% and also a record.
However, profit before tax fell 36.5% to £304m last year because of a £346m charge, a payment it made towards the industry’s £5bn building safety levy to fix all unsafe tall buildings after the Grenfell Tower fire in 2017. Excluding this charge, profit rose 22.5% to £650m. Bellway said it had set aside £513m in relation to buildings in England, Scotland and Wales since 2017.
The housebuilder, which focuses mainly on two-storey family homes, warned that the next 12 months would be tougher, with the UK economy likely to go into recession and interest rates heading higher.
“While Bellway entered the year with a strong forward order book, given the backdrop of rising interest rates and wider economic uncertainty, the board currently expects to deliver volume at a similar level to the prior year,” the builder said. It had previously predicted 12,200 completions.
“The final outturn will be dependent on the autumn and spring selling seasons and the group will prioritise its strong disciplines in relation to both margin and quality of profit,” it added.
Bellway said strong demand for housing since the start of the Covid pandemic had “moderated” in the nine weeks since 1 August. Weekly reservations fell by 12.4% to 191 a week over the period. This compares with 218 a week in the same period last year and 239 a week in 2020.
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