Chair's Statement
Making sustainable living a reality, creating strong
communities
Since taking over as Chair on 30
June 2023, I have met many of our stakeholders, including
employees, customers, shareholders, supply chain partners and
sub-contractors.
It is evident that we have a
strong culture and a desire to ensure colleagues can develop to
their full potential within a diverse, safe and inclusive workplace
and we are fully committed to delivering high-quality homes to our
customers whilst protecting the environment.
Colleagues across the business are
passionate and helped in the development and launch, earlier this
year, of our new purpose: "Making sustainable living a reality,
building strong communities". Our new purpose is also supported by
refreshed values which reflect the ever-changing needs of our
stakeholders, the environment and our desire to lead the future of
housebuilding. Input was also sought from external stakeholders to
help shape our new purpose and values.
Our performance
Barratt has delivered a solid
operational performance over the past 12 months, at the upper end
our expectations against a tough trading backdrop encompassing
political, economic and interest rate instability. Importantly, we
have done so whilst maintaining our industry-leading quality,
customer service and sustainability performance.
Our balance sheet remains strong,
with net cash of £868.5m, and provides the financial strength and
flexibility to ensure we can manage and deliver the optimal
integration of the Redrow business, whilst maintaining a positive
and proactive approach to organic growth opportunities.
I am incredibly proud of the
external recognition we have received over the past 12
months:
·
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We were awarded the Home Builders
Federation (HBF) five-star status for the 15th year in a row,
making us the only national housebuilder to have achieved
this.
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Our site managers secured 89 NHBC
Pride in the Job awards, again more than any other housebuilder for
a record 20th year.
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We maintained our position as the
only UK housebuilder on the CDP Climate Change A List for
Leadership, one of fewer than 365 companies worldwide.
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Sustainability
We have continued to deliver
against our Building Sustainably framework which is designed to
drive positive change for nature, places and people. This is
enabling us to drive innovation, reduce costs and enhance our
competitiveness.
The housebuilding industry's
impact on climate change makes it imperative that we continually
scrutinise and challenge the ways in which we operate and reduce
our environmental impact. The successful opening of our new Oregon
Timber Frame manufacturing facility near Derby has significantly
expanded our capacity to build more homes using timber frame and
will help towards meeting the requirements of the Future Homes
Standard and reduce on-site labour requirements. It will also
deliver benefits to the environment by reducing the embodied carbon
used in build, and through thermal efficiency, reduce emissions
generated when the home is occupied.
Industry collaboration
I am also pleased that Barratt is
playing a leading role in the Future Homes Hub with David Thomas,
our Chief Executive, chairing the organisation. The Future Homes
Hub is enabling collaboration between Government, housebuilders,
supply chain partners, mortgage providers, valuers and planners to
deliver both the country's legislated targets to 2050 and our own
carbon emission reduction targets to 2040.
Board changes
Nigel Webb joined the Board as a
Non- Executive Director in October 2023, bringing a wealth of
property, construction and land experience to the Board.
Subject to obtaining CMA clearance
of the Redrow acquisition, Matthew Pratt, Geeta Nanda and Nicky
Dulieu will join the Board in the coming months. Matthew will join
as Chief Executive Officer, Redrow and Group Executive Director.
Geeta and Nicky will join as independent Non-Executive
Directors.
Shareholder returns
The Board paid an interim dividend
for FY24 of 4.4 pence per share (FY23: interim dividend 10.2 pence
per share) and is pleased to recommend a final FY24 dividend of
11.8 pence per share (FY23: final dividend of 23.5 pence per share)
in line with our dividend policy of maintaining cover at 1.75 times
adjusted earnings per share. Subject to shareholder approval, the
final dividend will be paid on 1 November 2024 to shareholders on
the register at the close of business on 27 September 2024. The
total proposed dividend for FY24, including the interim dividend,
is 16.2 pence per share (FY23: 33.7 pence per share) - lower than
last year reflecting the reduction in adjusted basic earnings per
share.
The Board regularly reviews its
approach to capital allocation. With the Redrow acquisition
completed, but CMA clearance outstanding, we will assess the
capital requirements for the enlarged group taking into account
current market conditions, our obligations with respect to building
safety and our desire to be active in the land market. We will
provide an update on our policy along with our first half results
in February 2025.
CMA Market Study and CMA investigation
The CMA completed its Housing
Market Study and issued its final report in February 2024. The CMA
drew clear and fair conclusions on how the planning system has
negatively impacted the housebuilding industry and its detrimental
impact on new housing delivery across the country over successive
decades.
On 26 February 2024, the CMA also
launched an investigation into suspected breaches of competition
law, relating to the exchange of competitively sensitive
information by eight housebuilders, including Barratt and Redrow.
This investigation remains in its early stages and we continue to
co-operate with the CMA.
The future
The housing market faces ongoing
challenges. The current interest rate environment continues to
impact mortgage affordability and the ability of many first-time
buyers to unlock mortgage qualification through deposit savings.
There also remain uncertainties around the speed and scale of
future economic, employment and earnings growth, which will be key
determinants on the future direction of consumer confidence and
spending. We welcome the policy changes proposed by the new UK
Government which suggest a real commitment to unlock the planning
system, drive national targets for housebuilding growth and support
the industry in delivering the homes, across all tenures, the
country so desperately needs.
The Board recognises that it needs
to manage Barratt through what may be another challenging year for
the market whilst delivering a smooth, efficient and effective
integration of the Redrow business once CMA clearance has been
obtained. We remain focused on managing the risks and challenges
within our control, whilst ensuring we are in the best possible
position to create long-term value for all our stakeholders. Our
operating disciplines, forward order book and strong financial
position provide us with the platform to adjust to changes in the
operating and political environment in the year ahead.
Finally, on behalf of the Board, I
would like to express our thanks to all our colleagues,
subcontractors and our supply chain partners for their commitment
to the Group, both over the last year and as we look forward to the
exciting opportunities ahead bringing together the Barratt and
Redrow businesses. I look forward to meeting many more colleagues
across the enlarged Group in the coming year.
Caroline Silver
Chair
3
September 2024
Chief Executive's Statement
Introduction
The past year has proved
challenging for both the housebuilding industry and homebuyers,
with cost-of-living pressures, much higher mortgage rates and
limited consumer confidence having a negative impact on housing
market activity. Against this backdrop, we have remained focused on
delivering high-quality, energy-efficient and sustainable homes
across the country. We have driven revenue to support our business
as well as our supply chain partners to position us to meet the
growing shortfall in new homes supply. We have been rigorous in
controlling our build activity, managing our cost base and being
highly selective in our land buying, whilst ensuring we continue to
lead the industry through our unwavering commitment to build
quality, customer service, social responsibility and
sustainability.
We also launched our new purpose
during the year which is anchored around sustainability and
building strong communities. Our new values are focused on our
customers, on doing it right and doing it together, and making
things happen. This framework formalises the culture and principles
which have driven our success to date.
The acquisition of Redrow
Against this challenging backdrop,
we have proactively considered opportunities to strengthen our
business and give us an even stronger platform from which to
deliver sustainable growth and meet housing needs throughout Great
Britain. This process culminated in the announcement in February
2024 of the proposed acquisition of Redrow plc, which completed on
21 August 2024. We are working with the CMA to address the findings
of its Phase 1 competition review which is expected to complete by
mid-October 2024. We are excited about the opportunities for
the combined group, which creates an exceptional UK housebuilder
with strong quality, customer service and sustainability
credentials.
Performance summary
We delivered a solid operating
performance in FY24, at the upper end of our expectations,
supported by the commitment, flexibility and determination of our
employees, sub-contractors and supply chain partners,
including:
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Total home completions of 14,004
(FY23: 17,206).
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16.5% adjusted gross margin (FY23:
21.2%) and adjusted gross profit of £689.0m (FY23: £1,130.4m). The
reduction in adjusted gross profit reflected:
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stabilisation of customer demand
at lower levels;
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softening house prices;
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ongoing, but moderating, build
cost inflation; and
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the operational gearing impact of
lower home completions.
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The impact of adjusting items,
which reflected legacy property costs associated with building
safety-related remediation activities resulted in a reported gross
profit of £509.5m (FY23: £974.9m) and a reported gross margin of
12.2% (FY23: 18.3%).
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Adjusted profit before tax of
£385.0m (FY23: £884.3m).
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Reported profit before tax, after
deducting adjusting items, of £170.5m (FY23: £705.1m).
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Maintained balance sheet strength
with year-end net cash of £868.5m (FY23: £1,069.4m) after dividend
payments of £270.6m (FY23: £360.0m), legacy property related cash
expenditure of £91.5m (FY23: £32.9m) and a £33.9m reduction in land
creditors (FY23: £226.9m reduction).
|
·
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ROCE reduced to 9.5% (FY23: 22.2%)
reflecting reduced profitability.
|
Anticipating a more challenging
backdrop, we set four strategic priorities in summer 2023 which
supported our performance through FY24.
Strategic Priorities - FY24 progress
1. Driving revenue through the
targeted use of incentives for private purchasers and increased
sales into the private rented and social housing
sectors:
·
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Price deflation slowed on our
underlying private home reservations, from 5.6% in H1 to 2.7% in
H2
|
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Private rented sector home
completions increased by 306.2% to 1,048 homes (FY23: 258
homes).
|
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Multi-unit sales, including those
to registered providers, increased by 46.9% to 767 homes (FY23: 522
homes).
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2. Controlling build activity and
managing our costs:
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We aligned our site-based
construction activity to lower reservations, with an average of 257
equivalent homes (including JVs) constructed each week in FY24,
20.2% below the 322 average equivalent homes, built weekly, in
FY23.
|
·
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We reduced our headcount by a
cumulative 12% through to 30 June 2024 from 30 September 2022,
delivered through our ongoing recruitment freeze. This compared
with a 6% cumulative reduction from 30 September 2022 through to 30
June 2023.
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3. Maintaining our highly selective
approach to land buying:
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We approved 58 net site additions,
equating to 12,439 plots in the year with activity weighted to the
second half of the year.
|
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We continued to rigorously apply
our long-standing hurdle requirements for new land investment, at a
minimum gross margin of 23% and ROCE of 25%.
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Through our long-standing
relationships, and industry-leading reputation, we have concluded
important deals with both public and private landowners, which will
deliver significant development pipelines over the coming
years.
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4. Leading the industry around
customer service, build quality, social responsibility and
sustainability:
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We maintained our five-star HBF
customer satisfaction status with the latest rolling annual
recommend score of 93%, the highest score for UK national
housebuilders.
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We also maintained our industry
leadership position among the major UK housebuilders, registering
the lowest NHBC Reportable Items per inspection at 0.13 through
FY24 (FY23: 0.16).
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The Barratt Foundation reached a
significant milestone, delivering more than £10m of funding for
local and national charities since its launch in 2021.
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We were recognised, once again, as
the leading national sustainable housebuilder by NextGeneration and
received their Gold Award for the eighth consecutive
year.
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These priorities supported our
solid operational and financial performance during FY24, protected
our balance sheet and our strong financial position, and
strengthened our credentials with our customers, building materials
suppliers, landowners and wider stakeholders.
Responsible development
Keeping people safe
Our first priority is always to
provide a safe working environment for all of our employees and
subcontractors, and we are committed to achieving the highest
industry health and safety standards.
We were deeply saddened by the
tragic accidental death of a sub-contractor at one of our sites in
November 2023.
During FY24, despite concerted
campaigns to raise health and safety issues, our Injury incidence
rate increased to 302 (FY23: 289) per 100,000 workers whilst we
improved our SHE audit compliance to 97% (FY23: 96%).
We remain focused on improving our
site-based processes and procedures, challenging unsafe behaviours
and building on our health and safety performance through on-site
induction training, safety awareness for all personnel and
developing our site managers' vigilance to health and safety risks
on site.
Fire safety and external wall systems
We continue to make progress with
the assessment and remediation of buildings covered under the
Building Safety Self Remediation Terms and Contract, to which the
Group became a signatory on 13 March 2023.
Around 53% of our portfolio under
review has been assessed under the Fire Risk Assessment of External
Walls ('FRAEW') and has an appropriate PAS 9980 assessment in
place. Through inspections and testing in FY24, we identified a
further 26 buildings requiring potential remedial works (FY23: 65
buildings) and 42 buildings were either successfully remediated or
were assessed as not requiring remediation (FY23: 10 buildings). As
a result, at 30 June 2024, we have an ongoing portfolio of 262
buildings across 92 developments under review (30 June 2023: 278
buildings across 89 developments).
Reflecting our commitment to
dealing with these buildings as quickly and efficiently as
possible, of the 262 buildings under review at 30 June 2024, 137
were in progress at tender, site mobilisation or remediation
stage.
In the first half of the year, we
recognised a charge of £56.4m to reflect higher than expected
tender returns and cost increases on buildings being remediated by
the Building Safety Fund. These generally related to buildings with
atypical features and costs in relation to the remaining buildings
are broadly in line with our initial estimates.
During the second half of the year
we recognised a charge of £64.5m, following an initial £5.0m for
fire testing recognised in the first half, in relation to a
development of three buildings which we had previously disclosed as
a contingent liability. We have been unable to develop a testing
methodology under the FRAEW for these buildings due to the unique
unitised wall system in place, which we now assess will need to be
replaced. The provision is based on the current expected method of
remediation, designed to minimise disruption to residents, though
due to the unique nature of the building, this estimate may vary as
the process is further developed.
After incorporating the additional
adjusted item charges for fire safety and external wall systems of
£125.9m, as well as with remediation costs incurred during FY24 and
time discounting adjustments, the provision in relation to fire
safety and external wall systems totalled £628.1m at 30 June 2024
(30 June 2023: £535.9m). This reflects our current best estimate of
the extent and future costs of remediation work required and we
will continue to review these estimates as we gather data and
complete the remediation of buildings within our
portfolio.
We signed the Scottish
Government's Safer Building Accord on 31 May 2023. The process to
agree a legally binding, long-form contract to give effect to the
Principles of the Accord remains in progress with Homes for
Scotland and the Scottish Government. As a result of this
uncertainty, our existing provisions for Scottish buildings have
been made on a consistent basis with England and Wales but are
subject to change depending on the outcome of the contract
negotiations.
Reinforced concrete frames
We continued our remediation
activities for concrete frame design and construction during
FY24. Work on our developments proceeded in line with our
plans and remediation is well advanced.
During FY23, structural issues
were identified at two developments where reinforced concrete
frames were designed for us by a different engineering firm to that
employed at Citiscape. Having initially disclosed these as
contingent liabilities, following further analysis during the
second half of FY24, we now expect that remediation work will be
required. Based on our current assessment of the required work, a
further £56.6m has been provided and an additional £7.6m recognised
as our share of the costs within joint ventures in respect of these
two developments.
After the additional charge of
£56.6m, as well as the costs incurred on concrete frame remediation
during FY24 and time discounting adjustments, the provision for
reinforced concrete frames totalled £102.2m at 30 June 2024 (30
June 2023: £76.4m) and reflects our current best estimate of the
scope and future costs of remediation work required.
Building safety considerations are
paramount in prioritising and scheduling remediation works. Our
dedicated Building Safety Unit manages our ongoing building safety
remediation programme, which we expect to deliver over the next
five years.
Charitable giving and the Barratt
Foundation
As part of our purpose, building
strong communities, we recognise we have a role to play both as a
business and through the efforts of our employees in the
communities in which they live and work across the country. We work
with the Barratt Foundation to focus our charitable work on
improving our impact across the communities we support. Thanks to
Barratt Developments' core funding, every pound raised by the
Foundation is available for charitable purposes.
The year has been an exceptional
one for charitable giving, thanks to the Barratt Foundation and the
fundraising and volunteering efforts of individuals and teams
across the Group.
In November 2023, the Barratt
Foundation celebrated a significant milestone: it has now delivered
more than £10m of funding to more than 1,000 local and national
charities since it launched in January 2021. In FY24, we donated
£6.4m (FY23: £6.3m) to charitable causes through the Barratt
Foundation and employee fundraising.
Our impact and reach
In FY24, the Foundation
has:
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supported over 500 charities, with
more than £4m funds donated;
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supported around 400 local
communities through funding and employee volunteering;
and
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positively changed the lives of
over 90,000 children and young people through national partnerships
and grants.
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The Barratt Foundation's
activities - three areas of charity support:
1. Our national charity
partners
The Foundation supports national
charities that positively affect the lives of children, young
people and those most disadvantaged in communities across the UK.
During FY24, the Foundation donated over £2.5m to national
partnerships and grants, including our six national charity
partners: Whizz Kidz, Place2Be, The Outward Bound Trust, Bookmark
Reading, Magic Breakfast and Street League.
2. The Barratt and David Wilson
Community Fund
Through this fund, our divisions
and Group offices can donate £1,500 each month to different local
charities and organisations that really matter to them and which
enhance the lives of people living in their area. Reflecting the
additional challenges that communities face in the winter, we also
provided a Winter Support Fund in FY24. Our divisions and teams
supported 66 selected small and local charities such as hospices,
homeless charities and food banks, which each received a donation
of £3,000.
3. Match funding for our employees
fundraising activities
In FY24, our employees and
divisions raised a record £1.4m (FY23: £1.3m) to support local or
national charities and good causes, with an additional £0.6m (FY23:
£0.8m) from the Barratt Foundation, which provides matched funding
of up to £12,000 per division and up to £1,000 per employee. We
also partner with Payroll Giving in Action so our employees can
make regular, tax-free donations to their chosen charities - UK or
international.
Street League
Street League, our new national
charity partner, uses the power of sport to support young people
into employment. With operations in 35 locations spanning London to
Edinburgh, the charity works with unemployed 16 to 24 year olds who
face tough life challenges and personal barriers. Many of the
deprived areas where Street League operates are the most
disadvantaged communities in the UK, where youth unemployment is
three times the national average and can exceed 20%.
The Foundation's initial donation
of £300,000 in FY24 is targeted to fund at least 700 young people
into employment, and is vital to enhancing their life chances,
social inclusion and sense of worth and wellbeing.
Employee volunteering
A key component to our charitable
activities is our employee volunteering, where we made significant
strides in FY24, notwithstanding a 100% increase in volunteering
days during FY23. In FY24, our employees gave up 1,935 days to
volunteer with projects in their local communities, an advance of
73% on FY23. The Big Barratt Cleanup in April 2024 was our first
national volunteering campaign with CleanupUK. It gave our
employees the opportunity to take part in a local litter pick to
help transform their local community. More than 430 volunteered
their time to take part in 25 Big Barratt Cleanup events, removing
more than 500 bags of rubbish and litter from local landscapes -
equivalent to 2.7 tonnes.
Working together with our charity partners to help the Group
deliver for our customers
As part of our drive to create
inclusivity and build stronger communities, we aim to improve and
enhance the play areas in our developments for children and young
people with physical disabilities and neurodiverse
conditions.
Through Whizz Kidz and the
generous help of families supported by the charity, our designers
were able to research, develop and test our newly enhanced play
area designs for children with different needs. Specifically
designed play areas and tailored play area equipment are set for
rollout at various Barratt developments around the UK in
FY25.
Operational review
Reservation activity
Our net private reservation rate
in FY24 was 0.58 (FY23: 0.55). The 5.5% improvement across FY24
reflected a pick-up in activity as mortgage interest rates moved
lower from August 2023. Month-to-month reservation rates thereafter
showed relative stability, but with a greater degree of sensitivity
to mortgage interest rate movements. This sensitivity reflected the
mortgage affordability and qualification challenges faced by
prospective homebuyers, the majority of whom depended on access to
mortgages.
Net private reservation rate
|
H1
|
H2
|
FY
|
FY24 - reported private
reservation rate
|
0.48
|
0.69
|
0.58
|
Of which: PRS and other multi-unit
sales
|
0.06
|
0.10
|
0.08
|
Private reservation rate excluding
PRS and other multi-unit sales
|
0.42
|
0.59
|
0.50
|
FY23 - reported private
reservation rate
|
0.44
|
0.65
|
0.55
|
Of which: PRS and other multi-unit
sales
|
0.05
|
0.13
|
0.10
|
Private reservation rate excluding
PRS and other multi-unit sales
|
0.39
|
0.52
|
0.45
|
Change FY24 vs FY23
|
|
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|
Reported private reservation
rate
|
9.1%
|
6.2%
|
5.5%
|
Of which: PRS and other multi-unit
sales
|
20.0%
|
(23.1%)
|
(20.0%)
|
Private reservation rate excluding
PRS and other multi-unit sales
|
7.7%
|
13.5%
|
11.1%
|
Reservation activity during the year reflected stabilising demand
from first-time buyers. This, despite many first-time buyers
finding it hard to both raise deposits, given cost of living
pressures, and secure income and affordability qualification, given
the higher mortgage rates available. Rental cost inflation has,
however, also been a continuing challenge for first-time buyers and
a key driver for those in rental accommodation looking to move into
home ownership as and when mortgage qualification metrics are
met.
There was resilient demand from
existing homeowners with accrued equity in their current homes.
Reservation activity from existing homeowners did, however, require
additional sales support with 16% (FY23: 11%) of the Group's
reservations in the year utilising part-exchange. At the end of the
year we held 120 unsold part-exchange homes, lower than the 146
held at the end of the prior year.
Increased sales into the private
rented sector, along with additional multi-unit sales to registered
providers of social housing and others, partly mitigated the
weakness in traditional private reservations, supported our
construction activity and ensured more of our homes were made
available for both the private rented and affordable homes markets.
The net private reservation rate into the private rented sector,
along with additional multi-unit sales contributed 0.08 (FY23:
0.10) to the reservation rate in the year.
Sales outlets
During the year, we operated from
an average of 346 active sales outlets (FY23: 367), including 9
active JV sales outlets (FY23: 8). Whilst average sales outlets
were ahead in the first half, the decline in active outlets through
the second half reflected two factors:
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A conscious decision within the
Group to slow site openings to ensure our new sales outlets were
launched to create maximum market impact. Notwithstanding this
decision, as well as ongoing planning delays, we launched a total
of 57 new sales outlets (including JVs) in the year (FY23: 104);
and
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Whilst the average life of our
sales outlets has been extended by the lower private sales rate
experienced since Autumn 2022, we saw a significant proportion of
these "extended" outlets close, as they sold through from late 2023
through to June 2024.
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At 30 June 2024 we were operating
from 326 active sales outlets (FY23: 389), including 10 JV outlets
(FY23: 9).
As previously announced, in FY25
we expect average active sales outlets will reduce by approximately
9% due to lower land buying activity in 2022 and 2023 and the
annualised impact of sales outlets closing in the second half of
FY24. We expect this reduction to be temporary with significant net
sales outlet growth in Q4 FY25 and throughout FY26 supporting
average sales outlets for FY26 above FY24 levels.
Home completions
Total home completions including
JVs reduced by 18.6% in FY24 to 14,004 (FY23: 17,206). Our reduced
private forward order book at the start of FY24, in combination
with the ongoing rate of weekly reservation activity, crystallised
a 24.2% decline in our private wholly owned home completions
(excluding homes for PRS and other multi-unit sales). Our
deliberate decision to seek growth through PRS and other multi-unit
sales limited the decline in total home completions, with PRS home
sales advancing 306.2% and other multi-unit sales completions
increasing by 46.9%.
The affordable housing share of
wholly owned home completions reduced to 20.8% (FY23: 23.9%). Many
registered providers are facing operational and financial
constraints due to the higher interest environment, as well as
increased scrutiny on maintenance, repair and improvement of their
existing housing portfolios. As a result, registered providers are
less eager to secure additional affordable housing through the
homes we deliver through Section 106 arrangements. In FY25 we
anticipate the affordable housing share of wholly owned completions
will be in the high teens.
Completions (homes) (2)
|
FY24
|
FY23
|
Change
|
Private excluding PRS and other
multi-unit sales
|
8,851
|
11,676
|
(24.2%)
|
PRS
|
1,048
|
258
|
306.2%
|
Other multi-unit sales
|
767
|
522
|
46.9%
|
Total private
|
10,666
|
12,456
|
(14.4%)
|
Affordable
|
2,802
|
3,922
|
(28.6%)
|
Wholly owned
|
13,468
|
16,378
|
(17.8%)
|
JV
|
536
|
828
|
(35.3%)
|
Total(3)
(including
JVs)
|
14,004
|
17,206
|
(18.6%)
|
The average selling price (ASP) of wholly owned completions reduced
by 4.0% to £306.8k (FY23: £319.6k). The total private ASP reduced
by 6.4% to £343.9k (FY23: £367.6k).
Within our total private
completions, we completed 1,048 PRS homes (FY23: 258). The ASP of
these PRS completions was £285.1k (FY23: £280.9k) with the ASP
movement reflecting the diverse geographic spread of the homes
completed in the period.
We also completed 767 other
multi-unit home sales (FY23: 522) including home completions for
registered providers, meeting their demand for additional homes
using Government grant funding, and incremental to affordable homes
provided under Section 106 requirements. The ASP of other
multi-unit sales completions was £292.3k (FY23: £284.7k), with
geographic mix accounting for the larger part of the ASP
movement.
The ASP of our affordable home
completions reduced by 1.1% to £165.3k (FY23: £167.2k), reflecting
a reduced proportion of completions from our London operations
offset by site mix.
We expect the affordable ASP in
FY25 will be similar to that reported in FY24.
Our customers
Back in 2014, we first introduced
Barratt Developments' vision. It cemented our commitment to our
customers by setting down our aims and ambitions: "To lead the
future of housebuilding by putting customers at the heart of
everything we do". Over the past decade, this vision has been a
constant: driving our actions and behaviours, our culture and our
decision making - but first and foremost, it prioritised our
unwavering commitment to our customers.
Yet, we recognise that the needs
of our many customers are constantly changing, as well as the
communities in which we operate and play a key role in creating,
and that we have an increasing responsibility to protect our
environment. Through engagement with customers, our employees and
teams, as well as our wider stakeholders, we have formulated our
new purpose: "Making sustainable living a reality, building strong
communities."
This evolution in our purpose is
supported by our new values centred on "We do it for our customers"
and "We do it right". These values reflect not only the unwavering
focus we have on our customers, but also a broadening of the
expectations set by our customers and upon which we ourselves
should aspire to meet and exceed.
We put our customers and their new
homes, as well as their communities and local environment, at the
heart of everything we do.
Great choice for potential customers
Through our existing housebuilding
brands, we offer a wide range of homes for our customers: from
one-bedroom apartments to five and six-bedroom homes. Barratt
London is our award-winning operation within the M25. Barratt Homes
and David Wilson Homes operate across Great Britain outside London.
Depending on the size of the development and local market dynamics,
they operate single-branded sites or as dual-branded locations,
creating greater variety and choice for potential homebuyers
through development design, street scenes, house types and price
points. As a result, dual-branded developments generate higher
sales rates than those offering a single brand.
During FY24, we operated with 252
developments on average across Great Britain: 97 developments under
the Barratt Homes brand; 54 under the David Wilson Homes brand; and
101 dual-branded developments with both Barratt and David Wilson
Homes. We are continually looking to enhance choices for our
customers and increase the variety and diversity of our
developments through our branded house types.
The acquisition of Redrow, along
with CMA approval, will support the further development of our
portfolio of strong brands, with recognisable house types and
reputations for great quality and customer service. It will also
create greater choice for both Redrow and Barratt customers,
accelerate the pace of housebuilding across our developments and is
a key ingredient in making our land banks work efficiently for all
stakeholders.
Great service through the buying process and
beyond
We believe our industry leadership
in customer service is fundamental to our success. We are the only
major housebuilder to have been awarded the maximum five-star
rating by our customers in the HBF Customer Satisfaction Survey for
15 consecutive years, with our latest customer satisfaction rating
at 93%.
We want our customers to receive
the best possible service, not only throughout their home buying
journey but also post-completion. We invest in training and
workshops to enhance our service and our customers' experience
beyond the handover of their new home.
New Homes Quality Code
We operate under the New Homes
Quality Code (the Code) as a registered developer with the New
Homes Quality Board. Introduced in 2023, the Code covers the period
from initial homebuyer enquiry through to completion and then two
years post-occupation of the new home. It centres on fairness
throughout the customer journey, and not simply the achievement of
technical standards around build quality and defects. Since
becoming a registered developer under the Code, there have been no
adjudications required by the New Homes Ombudsman
Service.
New build advantages for our customers
We are continually seeking to
improve the energy and water efficiency, as well as the
sustainability of our homes and adapting our home designs to
respond to both changing homebuyer demands, as well as the Future
Homes Standard and other changes to building regulations. We aim to
build high-quality homes that optimise internal space, deliver
excellent energy and water efficiency and, as a result, unlock
lower lifetime costs for our customers.
We actively promote the lower
running costs and wider environmental benefits such as biodiversity
features and transport connections of our homes across all our
communication channels and in our sales centres. This is an
increasingly important purchasing consideration for our customers.
A typical Barratt or David Wilson house, built from June 2023 under
latest Building Regulations, can unlock annual energy bill savings
estimated at more than £2,570(5) annually when compared
to an average existing house. In FY24 more than 99% of our home
completions were EPC rated "B" or above, a level of energy
efficiency shared by just 3.3%(6) of the existing
housing stock.
In addition, all of our homes are
designed to a water use standard of 105 litres per person per day,
creating the potential to reduce consumption by 25% when compared
to the national average(7) and creating further cost
savings for our homeowners.
Green mortgage development reflecting new build
advantages
The financial and environmental
advantages of new build homes have never been as significant as
they are today, and we are committed to enhancing both the access
and affordability of our new homes in partnership with both
mortgage lenders and surveyors.
Mortgage lenders, driven by their
own sustainability initiatives, the growing recognition of future
retrofit costs in relation energy efficiency for existing homes,
and the scale of annual savings from new build home ownership, are
increasingly engaging with the housebuilding industry around green
mortgages.
The surveying industry is critical
in developing a consistent and enduring valuation framework that
will allow the recognition of the financial and environmental
advantages of high-quality, new build homes.
As the leading national
sustainable housebuilder, we have a dual approach to green mortgage
development:
·
|
We work directly with mortgage
lenders to develop enhanced mortgage products that recognise the
advantages of our new build, energy-efficient homes. During FY24,
Accord (The Yorkshire Building Society) joined The Leeds Building
Society with the launch of a new green mortgage product. Both
mortgage lenders recognise the advantages inherent in new energy
efficient homes, and their mortgage products have the potential to
unlock up to a 10% uplift in lending.
|
·
|
We collaborate with the wider
industry and the Government, notably through the Future Homes Hub.
Barratt's Head of Mortgage Lender Relations also chairs the
"Valuation Group", which is considering how the value of
sustainable benefits of new homes can be recognised in the mortgage
valuation process.
|
Our people
We are seeking to build a diverse
and inclusive workforce that reflects the communities in which we
operate, delivering excellence for our customers by drawing on a
broad range of life experience, talents and skills. This approach
is embedded within our new purpose and values, our Building
Sustainably Framework and in our Diversity and Inclusion Strategy,
through which we aim to improve the representation of all groups
across the business and drive an inclusive culture, where
difference is valued.
Engaging with our employees
Our annual employee engagement
survey was completed in October 2023. It delivered an engagement
score of 74.9% (2022: 84.4%), reflecting:
·
|
our ongoing recruitment freeze,
which has created additional workload and responsibilities;
and
|
·
|
the lower FY23 bonus compared to
previous years.
|
·
|
a return to more normal engagement
levels following a strong score in 2022 which was supported by two
cost-of-living support payments that ended in July 2023;
|
Following the 2023 engagement
survey, we conducted workshops and consultations, reflecting our
desire to respond positively and engage with our workforce to
improve engagement. A follow-up shorter 'pulse' survey conducted in
April 2024 showed a positive impact on engagement, which improved
to 78.9%.
Investing in development and training
Against a skills shortage backdrop
in the industry, it is important we not only attract and retain the
best people with a diverse range of skills and experience but also
play a leading role in tackling industry recruitment and retention
challenges.
We invest for the future through
our numerous award‑winning schemes including those for graduates, apprentices
and former Armed Forces personnel. We have four Degree
Apprenticeships delivered in partnership with Sheffield Hallam
University, encompassing Construction, Quantity Surveying and
Technical Design and Real Estate. Our development programmes
included 353 participants at 30 June 2024 (FY23: 483), around 6%
(FY23: 7%) of our workforce, highlighting our commitment to future
talent development.
Retaining the best talent
It is vital for us to retain the
most talented people within our business to ensure we have the
necessary skills for continued operational delivery and future
growth. Identifying and supporting our leaders of the future, along
with effective succession planning, are important elements in our
long-term success. Our "Rising Stars" programme seeks to identify,
motivate and develop our high-potential employees and in total 344
employees have attended our "Rising Stars" programme.
With the ongoing pause in
recruitment, we continue to work to improve the visibility of our
employees' career paths across all functions, through individual
development plans, line manager development, developing over 500
managers through our management development programme to date, and
the prioritising and tracking of internal promotions. Remuneration
and benefits are an important element of employee retention. We
continue to review our employee packages to ensure they are
effective and industry competitive.
Expanding share ownership for our employees
In April 2024, we invited all
eligible employees to participate in the 16th grant under the
Group's Sharesave scheme, which allows eligible employees to
contribute a maximum of £500 per month in one or more Sharesave
schemes. As at 30 June 2024, approximately 52.1% (FY23: 51.4%) of
our employees participated in one or more of the active schemes. In
recognition of the continued dedication and commitment of our
employees, in FY24 the Board agreed that an annual share award
would be made to all employees below Managing Director level.
Accordingly, in July 2024, an award of shares equating to £750
(FY23: £1,250) was made to all qualifying employees. This award
will vest in July 2026.
Reflecting the challenges faced by
our industry and as well as our recruitment freeze throughout FY24,
our total employee turnover reduced to 13% for the year to 30 June
2024 (FY23: 15%). Our target over the medium term remains at
15%.
Accredited Living Wage Employer
We continue to operate as an
accredited Living Wage Employer and we promote the payment of the
real Living Wage within our UK supply chain through our standard
subcontractor terms and conditions.
Our standard sub-contractor terms
and conditions also mandate the payment of the real Living Wage
within our supply chain. To ensure this real Living Wage commitment
is adhered to, we implement spot checks on higher risk trades and
operate internal remediation feedback reporting. Where we find
instances of non-compliance, we require this to be rectified, with
follow-up audits conducted to ensure full compliance. For those
working in jurisdictions other than the UK, our expectation,
included within our contract requirements, is that local statutory
minimum wage terms are met.
Employee networking
Our employee networks remain a key
element of the wider work to listen to our people, helping us
create a truly inclusive culture through peer-to-peer support,
learning and feedback. We have six employee network groups: Gender;
Women on sites; Ethnicity, Culture and Religion; Disability;
Families (including carers); and LGBTQ+, offering a range of
activities from webinars, face-to-face events, leading discussions,
marking of key calendar events, religious festivals and signposting
support.
All our networks are open to
allies, and we have seen a strong increase in membership over the
year. A member of the Executive Committee sponsors each
network.
We recognise that our employees
are all a unique blend of different identities. We encourage our
networks to combine on actions in support of this.
Gender and ethnicity pay gap reporting
In December 2023, we published our
annual Gender Pay Gap Report and, for the second year, our
Ethnicity Pay Gap Report, as part of our commitment to transparency
and to support our Diversity and Inclusion Strategy to improve the
representation of all groups across the business.
Despite our ongoing commitment to
gender pay equality both our mean and median gender pay gaps
increased compared to 2022, rising to 9.6% (from 8.8%) and 7.4%
(from 6.3%), respectively. Challenging conditions in the wider
housing market led to a 17% reduction in sales commissions,
predominantly affecting our sales teams, where the majority of
colleagues are female. The construction skills shortage also
continues to impact the industry as a whole, with increasing demand
for, and scarcity of, skilled site-based tradespeople, triggering a
wage increase in the UK. This prompted us to raise hourly rates for
trade roles in some of our regions, primarily occupied by male
site-based colleagues. This helped to address external economic
pressures but contributed to the pay gap increase.
Although our mean gender pay gap
is smaller than the average for UK businesses in 2023 at 13.2%, as
we navigate changes in the market, we remain committed to
continuous improvement, implementing proactive measures to address
any pay disparities and delivering against our 2025 Diversity and
Inclusion Strategy.
Although we are not statutorily
required to disclose our ethnicity pay gap data, we are committed
to diversity and inclusion, as well as being transparent with our
people and ensuring we measure our impact.
In 2023, the mean ethnicity pay
gap decreased to 6.6% from 7.7%, and the median gap decreased to
3.6% from 5.9%. This shift was partly attributed to an increased
willingness from colleagues to identify their self-declared
ethnicity, notably a change in declaration from "Do not wish to
state" to identifying with an Ethnic Minority Community (EMC). The
median ethnicity pay gap has also reduced due to comparatively
larger salary increases for middle managers within the EMC
community compared to white colleagues.
To deliver change in both areas,
we will continue to build on the work in place to support our teams
through our recruitment processes, talent programmes, employee
networks, succession planning and early careers development. We
also remain committed to implementing proactive measures to address
any pay disparities based on either gender or ethnicity.
Physical health and mental wellbeing
As a market leader and responsible
employer, we are continually exploring how we can best support our
employees whilst positively influencing the construction industry
and beyond. We have delivered programmes and services for a number
of years to support and enhance the health and wellbeing of our
people, including mental health. We have been signatories of the
Building Mental Health Charter since 2022, a member of the Zero
Suicide Alliance since 2023 and we are active members of the Home
Building Skills Partnership Mental Health Awareness
Group.
We also support our employees
through a sector-leading benefits package, including pension with
death in service benefit, access to discounts on fitness
memberships, high street savings, the ability to purchase
additional holiday, financial education, access to savings and
loans through payroll and a suite of family-friendly
policies.
Our new purpose and, in
particular, the new values we seek to extol, emphasise a supportive
culture based on positive behaviours, inclusion and
respect.
Diversity and inclusion
We are committed to developing an
environment that is inclusive for everyone. We want everyone who
works with us or for us to feel valued, that they are treated
equally and fairly, and that they can succeed in their role -
regardless of their background. We believe there are two elements
that create a workplace where everyone feels valued and that they
belong:
·
|
Diversity is the representation of
all of our differences, and how we differentiate ourselves as
individuals and as groups. Striving for diversity provides the
widest access to talent and reflects our customers and the
communities we serve. We know our people want to see role models
that reflect them across the organisation.
|
·
|
Inclusion is about building a
culture of belonging by actively inviting colleagues to contribute
and participate, which is proven to increase business performance.
We believe every person's voice adds value and it is vital that all
our current colleagues, and any prospective colleagues, feel
respected and valued.
|
We are committed to giving full,
fair and transparent consideration to applications for employment
made by those with disabilities and ensuring continued employment
of those who may become disabled during their employment. As an
organisation we seek to ensure that training, career development
and promotion is fair in all circumstances.
Our Diversity and Inclusion Strategy
Our Diversity and Inclusion
Strategy aims to improve both the representation of all groups
across the business, as well as our ability to listen and
communicate to them all, and is focused on three key
areas:
·
|
Talent: increasing our
representation through the attraction, recruitment and development
of diverse skills and experience at all levels.
|
·
|
Leadership: taking
accountability for change and creating an inclusive environment
where everyone can thrive.
|
·
|
Attitudes: supporting our
people to understand and value difference, with respect and
kindness.
|
Gender and ethnic diversity
Improving our gender and ethnic
diversity is a key focus and we continue to ensure we have gender
balanced and diverse recruitment shortlists, and provide inclusive
hiring training for all recruiting managers. Additionally, to drive
improvement, we:
·
|
are measuring gender and ethnic
representation in each function and level within the Group on a
quarterly tracking basis;
|
·
|
are operating with a specified
group of preferred recruiters, who have all committed to provide
balanced and diverse shortlists; and
|
·
|
have increased the female and
ethnic minority background cohorts on our Accelerated Leadership
Programme, which is designed to identify our future Managing
Directors.
|
Catalyst
"Catalyst", our long-standing
development and support programme, designed to help high-potential
female employees develop their careers within the Group, is a key
part of our gender diversity strategy. This programme continues to
show positive results with eight divisional directors who are
alumni from the programme and 18% of the last cohort, in FY23,
already promoted or having their roles extended. Our Catalyst
programme in FY24 has been our largest, since inception, with 110
participants. As at 30 June 2024, women held 20% (FY23: 18%) of
senior manager roles within the Group.
Increasing the ethnic diversity of
our organisation remains a clear target for the Group's leadership
teams and as at 30 June 2024, 8% (FY23: 7%) of employees were from
ethnic minority backgrounds and 3% (FY23: 3%) of senior leadership
positions were held by ethnic minority employees.
Human rights and anti-bribery
Our respect for human rights is
embedded within our new purpose and values. Our policies and
procedures support the core values of the UN Universal Declaration
of Human Rights and the UN Guiding Principles of Business and Human
Rights, and we act in accordance with our principles regarding
diversity and the Modern Slavery Act 2015.
Our non-financial KPIs for health
and safety and employee engagement reflect our belief that it is a
fundamental human right to work in a safe and supportive
environment. Our employees undertake training on modern slavery,
which was updated this year ready for launch in FY25. Concerns can
be raised anonymously via our externally managed whistleblowing
process which is available to agency staff and subcontractors as
well as our employees and promoted in site welfare
cabins.
This year we began to develop a
framework for risk assessing and managing our supply chain human
rights risks.
We have a strict Anti-Bribery and
Corruption Policy and conduct our business in a fair, open and
transparent manner. All our employees are required to undertake
regular training on our Anti-Bribery and Corruption Policy, and it
is a condition of all our supplier and subcontractor contracts that
they comply with the Bribery Act and this policy.
Our land position
Since stepping back from the land
market in September 2022, we have adopted a highly selective
approach to incremental investment in land. Our stance reflects our
strong land bank position, uncertainty on house prices, build cost
inflationary pressures and limited movement in wider market
reported land prices to reflect these changed market dynamics.
However, since the start of 2024, we have seen an uptick in the
quantity of land made available that meets our rigorous land buying
requirements and is centred on a minimum gross margin of 23% and
25% ROCE.
Gross and net land approvals
As a result, gross site approvals
have increased to 69 new sites during the year. These were
partially offset by 11 previously approved sites no longer
proceeding to purchase, resulting in a net increase of 58 site
approvals in FY24 (FY23: net cancellation of two sites).
Approved sites along with planning
amendments added 15,233 plots (FY23: 4,821), at a cost of £771.7m
(FY23: £345.2m), with 2,794 plots (FY23: 5,633) removed for sites
no longer proceeding, at an agreed cost of £124.8m (FY23: £360.1m).
This resulted in a net increase of 12,439 plots in FY24 (FY23: net
reduction of 812 plots) and a net increase in our land approval
commitments of £646.9m (FY23: net decrease of £14.9m).
Given the subdued but more stable
market backdrop and the growing number of land opportunities
available we expect to increase our land approvals significantly in
FY25 whilst maintaining our rigorous land investment
requirements.
Land investment
We invested £674.3m (FY23:
£822.8m) on land acquisitions and the settlement of land creditors
during FY24, and we currently expect to spend c. £800m on land in
FY25.
We continue to target a regionally
balanced land portfolio in the medium term with a supply of owned
land of c. 3.5 years and a further c. 1.0 year of controlled land.
We are broadly in line with this target, with our land bank
comprising 4.3 years of owned land (30 June 2023: 3.6 years) and
0.6 years of controlled land at 30 June 2024 (30 June 2023: 0.7
years).
Our land bank
Planning and ownership or control status
|
30 June 2024
|
30 June 2023
|
Plots with detailed planning
consent
|
40,030
|
48,270
|
Plots with outline planning
consent
|
15,239
|
9,658
|
Plots with resolution to grant and
other
|
2,363
|
1,320
|
Owned and unconditional land bank (plots)
|
57,632
|
59,248
|
Conditionally contracted land bank
(plots)
|
8,607
|
11,142
|
Total owned and controlled land bank
(plots)
|
66,239
|
70,390
|
Number of years' supply
|
4.9
|
4.3
|
JVs owned and controlled land bank
(plots)
|
4,631
|
4,356
|
Strategic land bank
(acres)
|
16,865
|
16,431
|
Strategic land bank
(plots)
|
106,516
|
101,784
|
Promotional land bank
(plots)
|
105,359
|
96,844
|
Land bank carrying value
(£m)
|
3,233.6
|
3,139.9
|
At 30 June 2024, the estimated ASP
of plots in our owned land bank was £328k (30 June 2023: £331k) and
the estimated gross margin in our land bank, based on current
estimated sales prices and build costs at 30 June 2024 was 18.6%
(30 June 2023: 19.7%).
Land market activity
Notable development transactions
in FY24:
·
|
ASDA Park Royal, London: a
major regeneration scheme in Ealing which, over a number of years,
will see the development of 1,505 mixed tenure homes as well as a
new ASDA superstore.
|
·
|
Fort Halstead, Kent: a
significant redevelopment of former MOD research facility to
deliver 635 homes near Sevenoaks.
|
·
|
Durieshill village, Stirling: a major new village development on the outskirts of Stirling
to develop more than 1,500 homes in a 50:50 partnership with
Springfield Properties.
|
Planning permission activity
Despite the challenging planning
backdrop across the country, we secured planning consents on 9,026
plots across 54 developments during the year (FY23: 12,969 plots on
81 developments). As well as standard applications, which received
planning approval at a local level, we took three planning refusals
to appeal and were successful in overturning them.
Whilst our business and the wider
industry continue to experience significant challenges with the
ineffective and highly unpredictable state of the planning system,
more than 69% (30 June 2023: 81%) of our owned and unconditional
land bank plots have detailed planning consent, supporting our
sales outlets position and future home completions. We are
also well positioned for the coming financial year with almost all
budgeted FY25 home completions (FY24: all budgeted FY24 home
completions) having outline or detailed planning
consent.
Strategic land
Our strategic land teams were
focused on securing additional strategic land to support future
growth and 4,477 plots across 30 strategic sites were approved
during FY24 (FY23: 21,802 plots and 70 sites). Plots secured
through our strategic land bank delivered 3,290 (FY23: 3,938) or
24% (FY23: 24%) of our wholly owned home completions in FY24. We
converted 3,723 plots (FY23: 777) of strategic land into our owned
and controlled land bank during FY24. After significantly expanding
our strategic land bank over the past few years, our strategic land
and planning teams (with input from Gladman) will now increasingly
focus on securing planning consent by promoting strategic land
through Local Plan reviews, as well as speculative planning
applications.
At 30 June 2024, around 20% (30
June 2023: around 23%) of our strategic land is allocated or
included in draft Local Plans.
We target around 30% of wholly
owned completions from strategic and promotional land in the medium
term. This reflects the development and planning prospects in our
strategic land portfolio, our business model and our targeted land
bank length and focus on ROCE.
Land promotion
Our promotional land portfolio is
held through Gladman Developments Limited (Gladman) and consists of
105,359 plots (30 June 2023: 96,844 plots), with Gladman operating
at arm's length and as a standalone business within the
Group.
Over FY24, Gladman secured an
estimated 9,239 plots, (FY23: 9,453 plots) through new promotional
agreements with landowners. Following several successful planning
applications, Gladman received planning consents on 2,804 plots
during the year (FY23: 2,437 plots). Whilst wider market demand for
land remained weak in FY24, Gladman secured land sales equating to
773 plots (FY23: 1,813 plots), dominated by demand from smaller
developers.
Gladman generated revenue of
£13.1m and an operating profit, before amortisation of intangible
assets, of £0.2m during FY24 (FY23: sales of £20.4m and operating
profit, before amortisation of intangible assets, of £3.8m). The
reduction in revenue and profitability reflected the low level of
land market activity across the year as many housebuilders limited
or paused their land buying plans. We expect Gladman's performance
to recover as land market activity increases over the coming
months.
Gladman, with the benefit of the
Group's financial, legal and development resources, continues to
engage with new and existing land promotion partners around the
most attractive routes to unlock value from their land positions.
Gladman also offers the ability to convert promotional agreements
into option, hybrid or freehold sale arrangements for all, or part,
of their land promotion partners' holdings, to meet their changing
needs and aspirations.
Our build performance
Maintaining the efficiency of our
operations and controlling costs, whilst also retaining our
capacity to deliver the homes that the country needs, has remained
a key area of consideration throughout the year.
Managing site-based construction
Coming into FY24, our reduced
order book and limited improvement in the reservation rates
necessitated further adjustments to construction activity. We also
sought to manage customer commitments for home completions, our
finished homes inventory and the investment in new site
infrastructure to support future sales outlet openings. As a
result, our annual build activity reduced by 20.2% to an average
257 (FY23: 322) equivalent homes (including JVs) built per
week.
In FY25, we will seek to balance
construction activity between the expansion in sales outlets for
FY26 and the anticipated reduction in completion
volumes.
Controlling our cost base
We proactively managed our
operating cost base throughout FY24, particularly in areas where
activity levels have stepped materially lower. Our site-based teams
have inherent flexibility through the use of our sub-contractor
workforce. With respect to our directly employed team members, we
began a headcount freeze in September 2022, which has reduced our
number of employees by 12.2% cumulatively through to the year end
(30 June 2023: 6.0% cumulatively).
Headcount reductions have been
most significant across our divisional network of offices, where
reduced activity has not warranted recruitment as team members have
moved either to new opportunities or reached retirement. We have
continued to invest in priority areas, including sustainability,
building safety and our IT infrastructure. However, we are only
recruiting where we need additional skills. We continue to
scrutinise and limit discretionary spend in all areas.
Build quality
Throughout FY24, we maintained our
unwavering attention to build quality throughout our divisions.
Once again - and for a fifth consecutive year - we were rated
industry leader among the major housebuilders by the NHBC,
registering the lowest Reportable Items (RIs) per NHBC inspection
at 0.13 (FY23: 0.16)(8).
The NHBC has also introduced a new
Construction Quality Index (CQI), which takes into consideration
the Reportable Items index, based on the five-stage inspection of
our new homes as well as Construction Quality Reviews, which are an
in-depth review of quality across a site and focus only on build
stages available at the time of the review. NHBC views this new CQI
measure as a valuable tool in managing quality across
housebuilders' operations.
On this additional metric, we have
ranked a clear industry leader among the major housebuilders
throughout FY24. Our build quality was also recognised through the
NHBC Pride in the Job Awards for site management. At the 2023
Regional NHBC Pride in the Job Awards, 30 of our site managers won
"Seals of Excellence". At the NHBC Pride in the Job Supreme Awards
in January 2024, Sean O'Regan, Site Manager at Waldmers Wood in our
Manchester division, was named "Supreme Runner Up" in the "Large
Builder" category.
At the 2024 National NHBC Pride in
the Job Awards, 89 of our site managers secured awards, more than
any other housebuilder for the 20th consecutive year. No other
major housebuilder has achieved this level of consistent success,
recognising our management of excellent site standards and build
quality. All our sites operate under our certification to the
Environmental Management System standard ISO 14001, and Health and
Safety standard, OHSAS 18001.
MMC expansion through timber frame
We are looking to drive
construction efficiency through standardising our house types and
increased use of modern methods of construction (MMC). The adoption
of MMC, particularly timber frame construction, helps to mitigate
the long-term challenges posed by the shortage of skilled workers
within the industry, as well as increasing build efficiency,
reducing embodied carbon and on-site construction waste. Our new
timber frame facility, near Derby, continued to grow its timber
frame production to support our growing migration to timber frame
construction.
MMC
|
FY24
|
FY23
|
Timber frame
|
4,107
|
4,564
|
Roof cassettes
|
199
|
224
|
Offsite ground floors
|
268
|
560
|
Large format block
|
94
|
230
|
TotalA
|
4,668
|
5,578
|
Percentage of
completionsA
|
33%
|
32%
|
A Total and percentage of completions includes JVs and has been
adjusted for homes where more than one technology has been
used.
Our supply chain and cost inflation
Our supply chain, on which our
build activity relies, is robust and carefully managed.
Approximately 95% of our building materials are sourced by our
centralised procurement function and approximately 90% of our
building materials are either manufactured or assembled in the UK.
We are committed to our supply chain partners and seek to secure
not only sustainable but also competitive pricing, whilst
maintaining security of supply to support our site-based
operations.
During FY24, overall building
material cost inflation slowed sharply on a spot purchasing basis,
moving to a relatively flat to slightly deflationary position at
the half year with this position being broadly maintained through
to year end. This recent purchasing position is complemented by our
future supply agreements which cover 85% of our material
requirements to 31 December 2024 (FY24: 73% to 31 December 2023)
and 19% of our requirements until 30 June 2025 (FY24: 14% to 30
June 2024).
Whilst we saw the inflationary
pressures around skilled labour recede during the year, the
industry still has a longstanding need for skilled tradespeople,
combined with limited access to overseas labour and more
opportunities for workers to either shift to alternative sectors or
to leave the industry. These factors, along with the broader cost
of living backdrop, meant wage inflation proved stickier and we
anticipate labour inflation will remain the more inflationary
component of our total costs in FY25.
During FY24, total build cost
inflation (including infrastructure costs, materials and labour)
reported through our income statement was approximately 5%, with
the rate of inflation moving sequentially lower throughout the
year. Reflecting the current market backdrop, and assuming no
further significant changes in the costs of key commodities or
energy, we anticipate total costs will be broadly flat in
FY25.
Further improvement in our waste
performance
Waste reduction and resource
efficiency remain clear priorities within the Group targets. In
FY24 we delivered a further improvement in our waste intensity with
a 12% reduction to 3.83 tonnes per 100m2 of housebuild
equivalent build area (FY23: 4.34 tonnes per 100m2 of
housebuild equivalent build area). Over FY24, our absolute waste
tonnage decreased by 29.1% (FY23: decreased by 17.1%).
We promote the segregation of
waste and the efficient use of skips across our sites; our
diversion of waste from landfill increased during the year to 97%
(FY23: 96%).
Future homes for our customers
Our Group Design and Technical
team continues to develop plans to meet the requirements of the
Future Homes Standard in 2025/2026. The team is developing and
evolving our house types to meet a step change in the materials
used in the homes we build, as well as the design of them, as a
result of the new standard.
Our eHome2 project continues to
provide invaluable insights and solutions. It is now providing data
on how it is performing across various external temperatures and
weather conditions, controlled within the Energy House 2.0 chamber
at the University of Salford.
Current trading and outlook
Long-term housing market
fundamentals reflect a significant imbalance between housing supply
and demand. Despite this imbalance, the market in FY24 remained
constrained by significant macroeconomic headwinds, most notably
higher interest rates and inflation. The higher interest rate
environment is impacting mortgage affordability and qualification,
as well as the cumulative cost-of-living squeeze, which has
depressed real disposable incomes and constrained economic growth,
employment, consumer confidence and discretionary
spending.
Whilst the new Government has only
been in place for two months, we are encouraged by early activity
on housing and the focus on improving the planning system, as well
as tackling the funding challenges in the affordable housing
sector. They will create greater permissioned land supply, mortgage
access, predictability and confidence for homebuyers. However,
these supply-side changes will take time to be implemented
effectively.
We entered FY25 with a solid
forward sales position, and at 25 August 2024 we are 42% forward
sold with respect to private wholly owned home completions for FY25
(27 August 2023 for FY24: 45%), with 52% of the private order book
exchanged (27 August 2023: 51%).
Forward order book
|
25 August
2024
|
27 August
2023
|
Variance %
|
|
£m
|
Homes
|
£m
|
Homes
|
£m
|
Homes
|
Private
|
1,467.0
|
4,159
|
1,527.6
|
4,440
|
(4.0%)
|
(6.3%)
|
Affordable
|
579.6
|
3,519
|
752.0
|
4,691
|
(22.9%)
|
(25.0%)
|
Wholly owned
|
2,046.6
|
7,678
|
2,279.6
|
9,131
|
(10.2%)
|
(15.9%)
|
JVs
|
151.1
|
399
|
157.7
|
477
|
(4.2%)
|
(16.4%)
|
Total
|
2,197.7
|
8,077
|
2,437.3
|
9,608
|
(9.8%)
|
(15.9%)
|
Since the start of FY25, our net private reservation rate per
active outlet per week through to 25 August 2024 has been 0.58
(FY24: 0.42). Whilst the prior year period was particularly
impacted by available mortgage rates, the current year reservation
rate reflects the continuing affordability challenges faced by
potential homebuyers. During the period to 25 August 2024,
reservations into the private rented sector and other multi-unit
sales contributed 0.03 (FY24: 0.02) to the weekly reservation
rate.
Based on trading year to date and
current market conditions, we continue to target total home
completions of between 13,000 and 13,500 in FY25, including c. 600
completions from our JVs, whilst ensuring we maintain our
industry-leading standards of build quality and customer service.
We also currently estimate that around 42% of our
completions will be delivered in the first half of the
financial year.
We were delighted to complete the
acquisition of Redrow plc in August 2024 and are working with the
CMA to obtain competition clearance. We look forward with
confidence; we have created a leading UK housebuilder focused on
quality, service and sustainability which will deliver more homes
across the UK than the two companies on a stand-alone basis, as
well as delivering significant cost synergies from the
combination.
David Thomas
Chief Executive
3
September 2024
1
Refer to Glossary for definition of key financial
metrics.
2 Unless
otherwise stated, all numbers quoted exclude
JVs.
3
Including JVs in which the Group has an interest.
4 In
addition to the Group using a variety of statutory performance
measures, it also measures performance using alternative
performance measures (APMs). Definitions of APMs and
reconciliations to the equivalent statutory measures are detailed
in the Glossary and Definitions. Net cash definition in note
11.
5 Data
based on HBF "Watt a Save" report updated and published 19 August
2024 available at: https://www.hbf.co.uk/policy/wattasave/
6 Based
on EPC registrations to 30 June 2024, published 30 July
2024.
7
Statista data at:
https://www.statista.com/statistics/1211708/liters-per-day-per-person-water-usage-united-kingdom-uk/
8
Measured by the NHBC amongst the 14 major
housebuilders constructing more than 1,000 homes annually over the
year to 30 June 2024.
Chief Financial Officer's Review
Despite the UK housing market
stabilising at significantly lower activity levels, following the
sharp rise in mortgage interest rates in the Autumn of 2022 and the
ongoing pressures created by the cost of living, we have delivered
a solid financial performance.
Our financial results reflect the
Group's clear operational priorities set at the start of the year
centred around driving revenue, controlling costs, maintaining land
buying discipline and continuing to lead the industry around
customer service, build quality and sustainability.
Our disciplined operating
framework has ensured that, despite the challenging trading
conditions, the Group remains in a strong financial position, well
placed to take operational and financial advantage of any market
recovery.
Results to 30 June 2024
Income statement
Group revenue was £4,168.2m in
FY24 (FY23: £5,321.4m), with Group wholly owned completions 17.8%
lower at 13,468 (FY23: 16,378), reflecting our lower order book at
the start of the year and ongoing slower rate of reservations
throughout the financial year.
The average selling price of our
wholly owned completions reduced by 4.0% to £306.8k (FY23:
£319.6k), with a reduced proportion of affordable homes, accounting
for 20.8% (FY23: 23.9%) of wholly owned completions, diluting the
degree of reported ASP decline. Our private average selling price
reduced by 6.4% to £343.9k (FY23: £367.6k), due to underlying house
price decline, a reduced proportion of completions in London and
the dilutive impact of PRS growth, offset by minor changes in
product and geographic mix.
Adjusted gross profit reduced by
39% to £689.0m (FY23: £1,130.4m) and adjusted gross margin reduced
by 470 bps to 16.5% (FY23: 21.2%). This was a result of the
combined impact of increased sales incentives, build cost inflation
and a decline in completion volumes, which reduced fixed cost
efficiencies. In FY24, our contribution margin was c. 29% (FY23: c.
32%) after land and direct build costs.
After adjusted items charged
through cost of sales, totalling £179.5m (FY23: £155.5m) and
relating to legacy property costs, reported gross profit was
£509.5m (FY23: £974.9m) and reported gross margin was 12.2% (FY23:
18.3%).
Administrative expenses before
adjusting items were £314.5m (FY23: £270.8m) and
included:
·
|
Group-wide inflationary salary
increases at an average of c. 5%, effective in FY24;
|
·
|
A reduction in Building Safety
Unit running costs as we insourced support;
|
·
|
An increase in group-wide
performance related pay compared to FY23;
|
·
|
Project-related IT and digital
investment; and
|
·
|
Reduced sundry income of £14.8m,
when compared with £16.7m in FY23.
|
After deducting administrative
expenses before adjusting items and a modest net gain of £2.1m on
part-exchange activities (FY23: £3.3m), the Group delivered an
adjusted profit from operations of £376.6m (FY23: £862.9m), with an
adjusted operating margin of 9.0% (FY23: 16.2%). The 720 bps
decline in the adjusted operating margin reflected:
·
|
Completion volumes: a decline
in our wholly owned completion volumes of 17.8% or 2,910 homes
created a 300 bps negative impact (FY23: 30 bps negative
impact).
|
·
|
Net inflation: adverse sales
price movements compounded by higher underlying build cost
inflation produced a 430 bps negative impact (FY23: 170 bps
negative impact).
|
·
|
London: a significant
decrease in completions from our London operations to 2% in FY24
(FY23: 8%), where margins are lower than our regional business
resulted in a 60 bps positive margin impact (FY23: 20 bps negative
impact).
|
·
|
Completed developments provision: after incurring significantly higher charges in FY23 due to
lengthening timescales for local authority adoption of roads and
public spaces on completed developments, a more normal movement in
this provision created a 20 bps positive margin impact (FY23: 60
bps negative margin impact).
|
·
|
Mix and other items: changes
in sales mix, increased selling costs, reduced abortive costs in
relation to land transactions no longer proceeding and other
smaller items created a 30 bps positive impact (FY23: 70 bps
negative impact).
|
·
|
Net administrative expenses: the small decrease in part-exchange income and the increase
in administrative expenses deducted 100 bps (FY23: deducted 30 bps)
from the adjusted operating margin.
|
After deducting adjusted items, on
a reported basis, profit from operations reduced to £174.7m (FY23:
£707.4m), with a reported operating margin of 4.2% (FY23:
13.3%).
Net finance charges were £6.5m
(FY23: £11.1m), reflecting increased interest received on cash
balances throughout FY24. The cash component of the finance charge
was an increased credit of £37.1m (FY23: £13.4m credit) with
non-cash charges of £43.6m (FY23: £24.5m). The increase in non-cash
finance charges reflected the impact of the increase in legacy
property provisions and the higher discount rate applied to these
provisions, arising from the movement in the gilt rate. In FY25, we
expect finance costs will be c. £25m, reflecting a cash component
credit of c. £15m and non-cash charges of c. £40m.
Our JVs delivered lower adjusted
profit for the year of £14.9m (FY23: £32.5m). Including adjusted
charges for JV legacy properties of £12.6m (FY23: £23.7m), JV
reported profits reduced to £2.3m (FY23: £8.8m). Consequently,
reported profit before tax for the year declined to £170.5m (FY23:
£705.1m).
The Group's tax charge for the
year reduced to £56.4m (FY23: £174.8m). This included the full year
impact of the increase in the rate of corporation tax from 19% to
25%, effective from 1 April 2023. The tax charge
comprised:
·
|
A corporation tax charge on
adjusted profit before tax of £104.7m (FY23: £188.1m);
|
·
|
Residential Property Developer Tax
of £6.1m (FY23: £26.0m); and,
|
·
|
A tax credit for adjusted items
totalling £54.4m in FY24 (FY23: £39.3m credit).
|
Adjusted basic earnings per share
decreased by 57.9% to 28.3 pence per share (FY23: 67.3 pence) due
to a 56.5% decline in adjusted pre-tax profitability and a 6.0%
impact from the increased corporate tax rate and was partially
offset by a 2.8% benefit from the reduced average share count,
reflecting the impact of our share buyback completed in June
2023.
Basic earnings per share reduced
by 77.8% to 11.8 pence per share (FY23: 53.2 pence).
Reflecting the decline in adjusted
profitability as well as the slowing in asset turn -
notwithstanding the disciplined management of capital employed
throughout the year - our ROCE declined to 9.5% (FY23:
22.2%).
Adjusted items
Adjusted items recognised in the
year related to costs associated with legacy properties of £192.1m
(FY23: £179.2m), as well as initial costs in relation to the Redrow
transaction of £22.4m, where the balance of transaction costs will
be recorded in FY25. Of the total charge related to legacy
properties, £125.3m (FY23: £117.7m) related to future fire safety
and external wall systems commitments, with a further £66.8m (FY23:
£51.5m) relating to remedial works arising from the review of
reinforced concrete frames.
Our commitment to addressing fire
safety and concrete frame design and construction is clear and
evidenced by further investment in our dedicated Building Safety
Unit, which manages our ongoing building safety remediation
programme across the country. Whilst the regulatory backdrop and
assessment regime remain subject to variability and subjective
interpretation, we are focused on the efficient delivery of both
suitable and sustainable remediation solutions, which we anticipate
will be delivered over the next five years, with building safety
considerations paramount in prioritising and scheduling remediation
works.
Fire safety and external wall systems
Reflecting our commitment to
dealing with these buildings as quickly and efficiently as
possible, of the 262 buildings under review at 30 June 2024, 137
were in progress at tender, site mobilisation or remediation
stage.
In the first half of the year, we
recognised a charge of £56.4m to reflect higher than expected
tender returns and cost increases on buildings being remediated by
the Building Safety Fund. These generally related to buildings with
atypical features and costs in relation to the remaining buildings
are broadly in line with our initial estimates.
During the second half of the year
we recognised a charge of £64.5m, following an initial £5.0m for
fire testing recognised in the first half, in relation to a
development of three buildings which we had previously disclosed as
a contingent liability. We have been unable to develop a testing
methodology under the FRAEW for these buildings due to the unique
unitised wall system in place, which we now assess will need to be
replaced. The provision is based on the current expected method of
remediation, designed to minimise disruption to residents, though
due to the unique nature of the building, this estimate may vary as
the process is further developed.
After incorporating the additional
adjusted item charges for fire safety and external wall systems of
£125.9m, as well as with remediation costs incurred during FY24 and
time discounting adjustments, the provision in relation to fire
safety and external wall systems totalled £628.1m at 30 June 2024
(30 June 2023: £535.9m). We believe this reflects our current best
estimate of the extent and future costs of remediation work
required and we will continue to review these estimates as we
gather data and complete the remediation of buildings within our
portfolio.
We signed the Scottish
Government's Safer Building Accord on 31 May 2023. The process to
agree a legally binding, long-form contract to give effect to the
Principles of the Accord remains in progress with Homes for
Scotland and the Scottish Government. As a result of this
uncertainty, our existing provisions for Scottish buildings have
been made on a consistent basis with England and Wales but are
subject to change depending on the outcome of the contract
negotiations.
Reinforced concrete frames
Our remediation activities for
concrete frame design and construction continued during FY24 with
developments proceeding in line with our plans.
As highlighted earlier, in the
Chief Executive's report, during FY23 and separate from the
original concrete frame review, structural issues were found at two
developments where reinforced concrete frames were designed for us
by a different engineering firm to that employed at Citiscape.
Following preliminary work on these developments and further
analysis, undertaken during the second half of FY24, it is now
considered probable that extensive concrete frame remediation will
be required. Based on a high-level risk review, an additional
£56.6m has been provided for by the Group and £7.6m recognised as a
share of loss from joint ventures in respect of these two
developments.
Whilst charges for legacy
properties reflect our current best estimates of the extent and
future costs of work required, we may have to update these figures
as assessments and work progress.
Cash flow
Net cash decreased to £868.5m at
30 June 2024 (30 June 2023: £1,069.4m). The main components of the
change in net cash position were:
·
|
a £96.2m net cash inflow from
operating activities (FY23: £465.5m cash inflow);
|
·
|
a £12.0m net cash inflow from
investing activities (FY23: inflow of £55.4m), with the reduction
reflecting reduced cash received from joint ventures;
and
|
·
|
a £308.6m net cash outflow from
financing activities (FY23: outflow of £590.6m), principally
reflecting dividends paid of £270.6m (FY23: £360.0m) and the
absence of any share buyback activities in FY24 (FY23: £201.3m
share buyback including stamp duty charges of £1.3m).
|
The major driver of the decline to
£96.2m net cash inflow from operating activities in the year was
the reduction in our profit from operations, which reduced to
£174.7m (FY23: £707.4m). This was partially offset by a reduced net
cash outflow from working capital and provisions of £12.0m (FY23:
£64.9m outflow) and net interest and tax payments, which reduced to
£73.7m (FY23: £196.3m outflow).
The net £12.0m outflow (FY23:
£64.9m outflow) with respect to working capital and provisions
included:
·
|
A £38.0m outflow (FY23: £48.9m
inflow) with respect to inventories where a reduction in
construction work in progress of £77.7m was offset by additional
net land investment of £93.7m and investment at Gladman and
additional part-exchange property costs.
|
·
|
A £87.2m decrease (FY23: £337.6m
decrease) in payables, with land creditor balances reducing by a
more modest £33.9m (FY23: £226.9m reduction) and a more modest
reduction in trade and other payables of £53.3m (FY23:
£110.7m).
|
·
|
A £132.8m increase in provisions
(FY23: £163.4m increase) created in large part by the additional
legacy building safety charges incurred in FY24. During FY24, we
spent £91.5m (FY23: £32.9m) on the remediation of legacy
properties.
|
Balance sheet
The Group's net assets at 30 June
2024 were £5,439.1m (30 June 2023: £5,596.4m) after the payment of
dividends totalling £270.6m (30 June 2023: £360.0m).
Goodwill and intangible assets
reduced to £1,037.4m (30 June 2023: £1,047.8m), reflecting
amortisation charges in the year.
Our balance sheet assets showed
limited movement over the year with:
·
|
The investment in our land bank
increasing by £93.7m to £3,233.6m (30 June 2023:
£3,139.9m);
|
·
|
Construction work in progress
tightly controlled and reducing by £77.7m to £1,829.4m (30 June
2023: £1,907.1m);
|
·
|
Increased investment in land
promotion activity at Gladman resulting in a £13.8m increase in
promotional agreement work in progress to £111.5m (30 June 2023:
£97.7m); and
|
·
|
Part-exchange properties and other
inventories tightly controlled at £103.7m (30 June 2023:
£93.3m).
|
Adjusted item charges in relation
to legacy properties were the most significant factor impacting our
balance sheet liabilities.
Our provisions on the balance
sheet increased to £921.2m at 30 June 2024 (30 June 2023: £788.4m)
and included £730.3m (30 June 2023: £612.3m) of provisions to cover
future costs in connection with the remediation of external wall
systems and reinforced concrete frames.
Net tangible assets were £4,401.7m
(452 pence per share) at 30 June 2024 (30 June 2023: £4,548.6m; 467
pence per share). Land, net of land creditors, and work in progress
totalled £4,590.2m (471 pence per share) at 30 June 2024 (30 June
2023: £4,540.3m; 466 pence per share).
At 30 June 2024, the Group held
net cash balances of £868.5m (30 June 2023: £1,069.4m). Whilst we
continue to defer payment for some land purchases to optimise ROCE,
the pause in land buying has led to a reduction in land creditors.
At 30 June 2024, land creditors were £472.8m (30 June 2023:
£506.7m) and equated to 14.6% (30 June 2023: 16.1%) of the owned
land bank.
Our minimal year-end total net
indebtedness target was achieved with a net surplus of £395.7m at
30 June 2024 (30 June 2023: £562.7m net surplus).
During FY25, £307.8m of land
creditors will fall due for payment (30 June 2023, during FY24:
£321.5m). Land creditors due beyond 30 June 2025 totalled £165.0m
at 30 June 2024 (30 June 2023: £185.2m due beyond 30 June
2024).
Capital returns
The Board has reviewed capital
allocation as is customary as part of its annual cycle. Having
recently completed the Redrow acquisition, we will assess the
capital requirements for the enlarged group taking into account
current market conditions including the positive supply-side
developments, our obligations with respect to building safety and
our desire to be proactive in the land market. In principle we
continue to believe that when appropriate, that excess capital will
be returned to shareholders and the timing of any such returns
remains under review.
Operating framework and capital structure
Our operating framework and
appropriate capital structure continue to deliver a stable and
solid foundation for the Group. We target an appropriate capital
structure as part of our disciplined operating framework, with
shareholders' funds and land creditors funding the longer term land
requirements of our business, and term loans and bank debt funding
the shorter-term requirements for working capital.
Our highly selective approach to
land buying since the summer of 2022 has limited investment in land
and the creation of additional land creditor obligations.
Reflecting the calendar-based settlement of previously agreed land
creditor obligations, but the limited investment in new land up
until the final quarter of FY24, land creditors have reduced to
14.6% of our land bank. This situation is expected to reverse as
land buying activity increases over the medium term.
Our operating framework remains
unchanged, and our performance against targets at 30 June 2024 and
2023 is summarised below:
|
Operating framework
|
Position at 30 June 2024
|
Position at 30 June 2023
|
Land bank
|
c. 3.5 years owned and c. 1.0 year
controlled
|
4.3 years owned and 0.6 years
controlled
|
3.6 years owned and 0.7 years
controlled
|
Land creditors
|
Maintain at 15 - 25% of the land
bank over medium term
|
14.6%
|
16.1%
|
Net cash
|
Modest average net cash over the
financial year
|
FY24: average net cash of
£732.3m
|
FY23: average net cash of
£759.1m
|
Year-end net cash
|
£868.5m
|
£1,069.4m
|
Total indebtedness
|
Minimal year-end total
indebtedness in the medium term
|
Total net surplus of
£395.7m.
|
Total net surplus of
£562.7m
|
Treasury
|
Appropriate financing
facilities
|
£700m Revolving Credit Facility
extended to November 2028
£200m US Private Placing Notes
maturing August 2027
|
£700m Revolving Credit Facility
extended to November 2027
£200m US Private Placing Notes
maturing August 2027
|
Dividend Policy
|
Dividend cover of 1.75x adjusted
basic earnings per share
|
FY24: total ordinary dividend of
16.2 pence per share
|
FY23: total ordinary dividend of
33.7 pence per share
|
In pursuing this clear framework we have ensured that, even through
challenging trading conditions, the Group has remained in a strong
financial position, ready to take both operational and financial
advantage of both market recovery and organic investment
opportunities looking forward.
Treasury
The Board sets and approves the
Treasury Policy and senior management controls day-to-day
operations. The Group's Treasury Policy seeks to maintain an
appropriate capital structure and provide the right platform for
the business to manage both operating risks and
opportunities.
Cash management and relationships
with our banking partners are co-ordinated centrally by the Group
Head of Treasury. During the year, we extended our £700m Revolving
Credit Facility to November 2028 with one further one-year
extension period through to November 2029 available, if agreed
between the Group and its lenders.
Tax
The Group does not enter into
business transactions for the sole purpose of reducing potential
tax liabilities. The Group's tax strategy is to only use any
available reliefs and exemptions, which have been set out in any
current tax legislation, to minimise the Group's tax
liabilities.
The rate of corporation tax,
including RPDT, for the year ended 30 June 2024 was 33.1% (FY23:
24.8%), which, reflecting the impact of the non-deductible Redrow
transaction expenses, was above the standard effective rate of tax
of 29% (inclusive of RPDT at 4%) (FY23: 24.5% inclusive of RPDT at
4%).
Looking ahead, the Group's tax
charge and underlying effective rate of tax is expected to be
approximately 29.0% in FY25.
Pensions
Defined contribution pension
arrangements are in place for current employees. Defined
contribution scheme charges for qualifying employees totalled
£21.2m (FY23: £19.2m). Pension contributions are based upon a fixed
percentage of each qualifying employee's pay and, once paid, the
Group has no further obligations under these schemes.
Guidance for FY25
Looking to FY25, for regulatory
reasons we are unable to provide guidance for the combined group at
the date of our Annual Report and Accounts. We provide below
guidance with respect to Barratt Developments PLC as it would have
applied on a standalone basis, before considering the potential
impact of the acquisition of Redrow plc:
Completions
|
c.
13,000 - 13,500 total home completions including c. 600 JV
completions
Affordable mix expected to be in the high teens
|
Average sales outlet movement
(inc. JVs)
|
c. 9% decline
|
Build cost inflation
|
c. Broadly flat
|
Adjusted administrative
expenses
|
c.
£310m, excluding integration costs, (including amortisation of
intangible asset charges of c. £10m)
|
Interest cost
|
c. £25m
charge
(c.
£15m cash credit, c. £40m non-cash charge)
|
Land approvals
|
Return
to normal approval activity during the year
|
Land cash spend
|
c.
£0.8bn
|
Year-end net cash
|
c.
£0.5bn
|
Taxation
|
Effective underlying tax rate of 29%, reflecting current
corporation tax rate at 25% and 4% RPDT
|
Ordinary dividend cover
|
1.75x
ordinary dividend cover based on adjusted basic earnings per
share
|
Well placed for FY25, despite continuing economic and political
uncertainties
Despite limited economic growth
and the ongoing affordability challenges for our customers, the
Group is in a strong position. We entered FY25 with an excellent
net cash position, our forward sales position is solid, albeit
reduced and we have maintained a strong land bank. Our operating
framework and our strong financial position are the foundations for
our divisions to focus on delivering high-quality, sustainable
homes and developments throughout the country, as well as giving us
the flexibility to react to changing market conditions and
opportunities as they evolve.
Mike Scott
Chief Financial Officer
3
September 2024
Statement of Changes in Shareholders'
Equity
Group
|
Share
capital (note 13) £m
|
Share
premium £m
|
Merger
reserve £m
|
Capital redemption
reserve £m
|
Own
shares (note 14) £m
|
Share-based
payments £m
|
Group retained
earnings due to shareholders of the Company
£m
|
Total
Group retained
earnings due to shareholders of the Company
£m
|
Non- controlling interests
(note 15)
£m
|
Total
equity £m
|
At 1 July 2022
|
102.2
|
253.4
|
1,109.0
|
-
|
(27.0)
|
29.0
|
4,163.9
|
4,165.9
|
0.8
|
5,631.3
|
Profit for the year being total
comprehensive income recognised for the year ended 30 June
2023
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
530.3
|
530.3
|
-
|
530.3
|
Dividend payments (note
8)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(360.0)
|
(360.0)
|
-
|
(360.0)
|
Distributions to non-controlling
interests
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.3)
|
(0.3)
|
Issue of shares
|
-
|
0.1
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.1
|
Buyback and cancellation of
shares
|
(4.8)
|
-
|
-
|
4.8
|
-
|
-
|
(201.3)
|
(201.3)
|
-
|
(201.3)
|
Share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
10.2
|
-
|
10.2
|
-
|
10.2
|
Purchase of own shares by
EBT
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(14.0)
|
-
|
-
|
(14.0)
|
-
|
(14.0)
|
Transfers in respect of share
options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
17.8
|
(18.3)
|
(0.7)
|
(1.2)
|
-
|
(1.2)
|
Tax on share-based
payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
1.4
|
1.3
|
-
|
1.3
|
At 30 June 2023
|
97.4
|
253.5
|
1,109.0
|
4.8
|
(23.2)
|
20.8
|
4,133.6
|
4,131.2
|
0.5
|
5,596.4
|
Profit for the year being total
comprehensive income recognised for the year ended 30 June
2024
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
114.1
|
114.1
|
-
|
114.1
|
Dividend payments (note
8)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(270.6)
|
(270.6)
|
-
|
(270.6)
|
Distributions to non-controlling
interests
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.4)
|
(0.4)
|
Share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
19.9
|
-
|
19.9
|
-
|
19.9
|
Purchase of own shares by
EBT
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(23.3)
|
-
|
-
|
(23.3)
|
-
|
(23.3)
|
Transfers in respect of share
options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
9.6
|
(12.1)
|
4.7
|
2.2
|
-
|
2.2
|
Tax on share-based
payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.8
|
-
|
0.8
|
-
|
0.8
|
At 30 June 2024
|
97.4
|
253.5
|
1,109.0
|
4.8
|
(36.9)
|
29.4
|
3,981.8
|
3,974.3
|
0.1
|
5,439.1
|
Balance sheet
At 30 June 2024
|
|
Group
|
|
Notes
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Other intangible assets
|
|
|
184.5
|
194.9
|
Goodwill
|
9
|
|
852.9
|
852.9
|
Investments in jointly controlled
entities
|
|
|
158.5
|
129.8
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
|
|
57.5
|
58.1
|
Right-of-use assets
|
|
|
41.2
|
45.1
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
|
3.4
|
2.9
|
|
|
|
1,298.0
|
1,283.7
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Inventories
|
10
|
|
5,278.2
|
5,238.0
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
|
201.9
|
182.1
|
Current tax assets
|
|
|
31.8
|
31.1
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
11
|
|
1,065.3
|
1,269.1
|
|
|
|
6,577.2
|
6,720.3
|
Total assets
|
|
|
7,875.2
|
8,004.0
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Loans and borrowings
|
11
|
|
(200.0)
|
(200.0)
|
Trade and other
payables
|
|
|
(172.0)
|
(188.7)
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
|
(29.4)
|
(33.1)
|
Deferred tax
liabilities
|
|
|
(45.0)
|
(53.5)
|
Provisions
|
12
|
|
(543.2)
|
(477.9)
|
|
|
|
(989.6)
|
(953.2)
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Loans and borrowings
|
11
|
|
-
|
(3.4)
|
Trade and other
payables
|
|
|
(1,055.1)
|
(1,127.4)
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
|
(13.4)
|
(13.1)
|
Provisions
|
12
|
|
(378.0)
|
(310.5)
|
|
|
|
(1,446.5)
|
(1,454.4)
|
Total liabilities
|
|
|
(2,436.1)
|
(2,407.6)
|
Net assets
|
|
|
5,439.1
|
5,596.4
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
13
|
|
97.4
|
97.4
|
Share premium
|
|
|
253.5
|
253.5
|
Merger reserve
|
|
|
1,109.0
|
1,109.0
|
Capital redemption
reserve
|
|
|
4.8
|
4.8
|
Total retained earnings
|
|
|
3,974.3
|
4,131.2
|
Equity attributable to the owners of the
Company
|
|
|
5,439.0
|
5,595.9
|
Non-controlling interests
|
15
|
|
0.1
|
0.5
|
Total equity
|
|
|
5,439.1
|
5,596.4
|
Cash Flow Statement
Year ended 30 June 2024
|
|
Group
|
|
Notes
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Reconciliation of profit from operations to cash flow from
operating activities
|
|
|
|
Profit from operations
|
|
174.7
|
707.4
|
Depreciation of property, plant
and equipment
|
|
7.5
|
6.1
|
Depreciation of right-of-use
assets
|
|
15.2
|
12.3
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
|
10.4
|
10.5
|
(Reversal of
impairment)/impairment of inventories
|
|
(2.2)
|
4.7
|
Share-based payments
expense
|
|
19.9
|
10.2
|
Imputed interest on long-term
payables
|
5
|
(40.2)
|
(21.4)
|
Imputed interest on lease
arrangements
|
|
(1.8)
|
(1.2)
|
Amortisation of facility
fees
|
5
|
(1.6)
|
(1.9)
|
Total non-cash items
|
|
7.2
|
19.3
|
(Increase)/decrease in
inventories
|
|
(38.0)
|
48.9
|
(Increase)/decrease in
receivables
|
|
(19.6)
|
60.4
|
Decrease in
payables1
|
|
(87.2)
|
(337.6)
|
Increase in provisions
|
|
132.8
|
163.4
|
Total movements in working capital and
provisions
|
|
(12.0)
|
(64.9)
|
Interest paid
|
|
(10.1)
|
(10.4)
|
Tax paid
|
|
(63.6)
|
(185.9)
|
Net cash inflow from operating activities
|
|
96.2
|
465.5
|
Investing activities:
|
|
|
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
|
(7.2)
|
(23.1)
|
Proceeds from the disposal of
property, plant and equipment
|
|
0.3
|
0.1
|
Increase in amounts invested in
jointly controlled entities
|
|
(38.3)
|
(18.1)
|
Repayment of amounts invested in
jointly controlled entities
|
|
4.8
|
40.2
|
Distributions received from
jointly controlled entities
|
|
7.1
|
34.8
|
Interest received
|
|
45.3
|
21.5
|
Net cash inflow from investing activities
|
|
12.0
|
55.4
|
Financing activities:
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid to equity holders
of the Company
|
8
|
(270.6)
|
(360.0)
|
Distribution made to
non-controlling interest
|
15
|
(0.4)
|
(0.3)
|
Purchase of own shares for the
EBT
|
|
(23.3)
|
(14.0)
|
Buyback and cancellation of
shares
|
|
-
|
(201.3)
|
Proceeds from issue of share
capital
|
|
-
|
0.1
|
Payment of dividend
equivalents
|
|
(0.5)
|
(1.2)
|
Proceeds from the exercise of
Sharesave options
|
|
2.7
|
-
|
Repayment of lease
liabilities
|
|
(16.5)
|
(13.9)
|
Net cash outflow from financing activities
|
|
(308.6)
|
(590.6)
|
Net decrease in cash, cash equivalents and bank
overdrafts
|
|
(200.4)
|
(69.7)
|
Cash, cash equivalents and bank overdrafts at the beginning
of the year
|
|
1,265.7
|
1,335.4
|
Cash, cash equivalents and bank overdrafts at the end of the
year
|
11
|
1,065.3
|
1,265.7
|
1 The working capital movements in land payables include
non-cash movements due to imputed interest. Imputed interest
is included within non-cash items in the statement
above.
1. Basis of preparation
Cautionary statement
The Chairman's Statement and Chief
Executive's Statement commentary contained in this Annual Results
Announcement, including the principal risks and uncertainties (note
21), have been prepared by the Directors in good faith, based on
the information available to them up to the time of their approval
of this report, solely for the Company's shareholders as a body, so
as to assist them in assessing the Group's strategies and the
potential for those strategies to succeed. Accordingly, they should
not be relied on by any other party or for any other purpose and
the Company hereby disclaims any liability to any such other party,
or for reliance on such information for any such other
purpose.
This Annual Results Announcement
has been prepared in respect of the Group as a whole and
accordingly matters identified as being significant or material are
so identified in the context of Barratt Developments PLC and its
subsidiary undertakings in the consolidation taken as a
whole.
Basis of preparation
Whilst the financial information
included in this Annual Results Announcement has been prepared in
accordance with UK adopted IAS in conformity with the requirements
of the Companies Act 2006 and in accordance with UK adopted IFRS,
this announcement does not itself contain sufficient information to
comply with those standards. Full Financial Statements that comply
with those standards are included in the 2024 Annual Report and
Accounts, which will be made available at
www.barrattdevelopments.co.uk during September 2024.
The financial information set out
in this announcement does not constitute the Company's statutory
accounts, within the meaning of section 430 of the Companies Act
2006, for the years ended 30 June 2024 or 2023, but is derived from
those accounts.
The accounting policies adopted
are consistent with those followed in the preparation of the
Group's 2024 Annual Report and Accounts which have not changed from
those adopted in the Group's 2023 Annual Report and Accounts except
as disclosed below in the 'Application of accounting standards'
section of this note.
This Annual Results Announcement
has been prepared under the historical cost convention as modified
by the revaluation of share-based payments.
Statutory accounts for the year
ended 30 June 2023 have been delivered to the Registrar of
Companies and those for the year ended 30 June 2024 will be
delivered following the Company's annual general meeting. The
auditors have reported on those accounts; their reports were
unqualified and did not contain statements under section 498(2) or
(3) of the Companies Act 2006.
The auditors have consented to the
publication of this Annual Results Announcement as required by
Listing Rule 9.7a having completed their procedures under APB
bulletin 2008/2.
Critical accounting judgements and key sources of estimation
uncertainty
The preparation of condensed
consolidated financial statements (the "financial statements") in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles requires
the use of estimates and assumptions that affect the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities at the date of the Financial
Statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during
the reporting period. Although these estimates are based on the
Directors' best knowledge of the amounts, actual results may
ultimately differ from those estimates. The Directors have made no
individual critical accounting judgements that have a significant
impact upon the Financial Statements, apart from those involving
estimations.
The most significant estimates
made by the Directors in these financial statements which are the
key sources of estimation uncertainty that may have a significant
risk of causing a material difference to the carrying amounts of
assets and liabilities within the next financial year,
are:
Estimation of future income and costs to
complete
Margin recognition - In order
to determine the profit that the Group is able to recognise on its
developments in a specific period, the Group allocates site-wide
development costs between homes built in the current year and in
future years. It also has to estimate costs to complete on such
developments and make estimates relating to future sales price
margins on those developments and homes. In making these
assessments there is a degree of inherent uncertainty.
The Group's site valuation process
determines the forecast profit margin for each site. The valuation
process acts as a method of allocating land costs and construction
work in progress costs of a development to each individual plot and
drives the recognition of costs in the Income Statement as each
plot is sold. Any changes in the forecast profit margin of a site
from changes in sales prices or costs to complete are recognised
across all homes sold in both the current period and future
periods. This ensures that the forecast site margin achieved on
each individual home is equal for all current year completions and
future plots across the development.
Management has performed a
sensitivity analysis to assess the impact of a change in estimated
future costs or forecast selling prices for developments on which
sales were recognised in the year. A 2% increase in the forecast
costs to complete would increase site-cost allocation in cost of
sales in 2024 by £24.9m, resulting in a reduction in gross margin
of 60 bps. A 3% decrease in forecast private sales prices would
increase site-cost allocation in cost of sales in 2024 by £43.6m,
resulting in a reduction in gross margin of 100 bps.
Costs associated with legacy properties
External wall systems and associated review
On 13 March 2023, the Group signed
the Self-Remediation Terms and Contract, codifying the commitments
previously made under the Building Safety Pledge to undertake, or
to fund, remediation or mitigation works on external wall systems
(EWS) on all buildings of 11 metres or above in England and Wales
that it has developed or refurbished in the 30 years preceding the
date of the Building Safety Pledge, and to reimburse the
Government's Building Safety Fund wherever they have contributed to
such activities. The Group has provided for the cost of fulfilling
this commitment, as well as assisting with remedial work identified
at a limited number of other legacy properties where it has a legal
liability to do so, where relevant build issues have been
identified, or where it is considered probable that such build
issues exist.
|
30 June
2023
|
Identified for review
|
Review
confirmed no remediation, or remediation completed
|
30 June
2024
|
Under review:
|
|
|
|
|
Buildings above 18
metres
|
168
|
6
|
(28)
|
146
|
Buildings between 11 and 18
metres
|
110
|
20
|
(14)
|
116
|
Total buildings
|
278
|
26
|
(42)
|
262
|
Developments
|
89
|
14
|
(11)
|
92
|
The Group continues to review all of its current and legacy
buildings where it has used EWS or cladding solutions, assessing
the action required in line with the latest updates to Government
guidance, as it applies, to multi-storey and multi-occupied
residential buildings. All our buildings, including those
incorporating EWS or cladding solutions, were signed off by
approved inspectors as compliant with the relevant Building
Regulations at the time of completion.
This is a complex area requiring
significant estimates with respect to the estimates for the number
of buildings affected, the individual remediation requirements of
each building and the costs associated with that remediation (see
also note 16).
Following contact from building
owners regarding potential issues, a net further 26 buildings with
a height of over 11 metres were added to the scope of works in the
period (2023: 65 buildings). This reflects a reduction in the rate
at which new buildings are being identified in comparison to the
period immediately following the signature of the Self-Remediation
Terms on 13 March 2023. At 30 June 2024, of the 262 buildings in
the portfolio under review, 137 were at tender or site mobilisation
or were in the process of being remediated (2023: 278 buildings, of
which 63 were at tender or site mobilisation or were in the process
of being remediated).
As investigations into, and
remediation of, the remaining buildings in the programme continue
under the PAS9980 regime, it is possible that a limited number will
require more extensive remediation than initially expected, which
will represent a higher cost per unit than the population average.
Whilst existing provisions have more than covered the additional
costs on such properties, we have received higher than expected
tender returns in the year relating to future remediations. In
addition, we have seen costs from the Building Safety Fund continue
to be higher than initially communicated to us. The Group has
increased its overall EWS provision by £56.4m to reflect its
revised estimates.
During the second half of the year
it was identified following further investigation that, due to the
unique unitised curtain wall system used in their construction,
there is no testing methodology available to certify under PAS9980
the fire safety of three buildings on one development. This wall
system has not been used in any other of the Group's buildings. As
a result, it is now expected that the wall system will need to be
replaced, which will be undertaken in a manner that minimises
disruption to residents. The cost of these works is estimated to be
£69.5m based on the current expected method of remediation, though
due to the unique nature of the building, this estimate may vary as
the process is further developed.
It is now assumed that the
majority of work will be completed over the next five years. This
depends on a number of factors including timely engagement of
building owners and remediation work being delivered in line with
our estimated timings. Accordingly, the provision has been revalued
to its present value, considering the effect of inflation and a
discount rate of 4.0% based on gilt rates at the reporting date
(2023: 4.7%), resulting in a release through cost of sales of £0.6m
(2023: charge of £7.5m).
The investigation of the works
required at many of the buildings is at an early stage and
therefore it is possible that the scope of work required could
change. If government legislation and regulation further evolve, or
if the estimated timing of work is affected by building owner
engagement or contractor availability, these estimates will change.
In relation to the Group's obligations under the Scottish Safer
Buildings Accord, signed on 31 May 2023, and the Housing (Cladding
Remediation) (Scotland) Act, passed on 21 June 2024, the external
wall provision is recorded on the basis that the standard of
remediation required in Scotland is consistent with England and
Wales. This will be determined when the final contract with the
Scottish Government is signed (see note 16).
The estimates are based on key
assumptions that will be updated as work and time progress. The
sensitivity of the provision held at the balance sheet date to the
following possible movements in key assumptions is shown
below:
|
|
Increase/(decrease) in
provisions at 30 June 2024
£m
|
Sensitivity
|
|
|
10% increase in estimated
cost
|
60.8
|
5% increase in the number of
buildings
|
28.5
|
100 bps increase in discount
rate
|
|
(13.6)
|
Reinforced concrete frames
As announced in July 2020, we took
the decision to pay for required remedial action on the reinforced
concrete frame at the Citiscape development in Croydon and
undertook an associated review of 27 other developments designed by
the same engineering firm or its associated companies. This review
is substantially complete and remediation work is ongoing. As work
progresses, estimates of costs to complete are reassessed and the
provision updated accordingly.
In the prior year, structural
issues were separately found at two developments where reinforced
concrete frames were designed for us by a different engineering
firm to that employed at Citiscape. Following further analysis
undertaken during the second half of the year and as preliminary
work on those developments has progressed, it is now considered
probable that extensive remediation will be required. Based on a
high-level risk review, an additional £56.6m has been provided at
the reporting date. Further analysis must be undertaken to
determine both the exact locations within the developments which
will need to be remediated and the nature of the work to be
performed in each case, which may result in revisions to the
estimated costs and time frame of delivery.
Management has made estimates as
to the future costs, the extent of the remedial works required and
the costs of providing alternative accommodation to any residents
affected by the remedial works. These financial statements have
been prepared based on currently available information, including
known costs and quotations where possible. However, the extent,
cost and timing of remedial work may change as work
progresses.
Going concern
In determining the appropriate
basis of preparation of the Financial Statements, the Directors are
required to consider whether the Group can continue to meet its
liabilities and other obligations for the foreseeable
future.
The Group's business activities,
together with factors that the Directors consider are likely to
affect its development, financial performance and financial
position, are set out in the Chief Executive's statement. The
material financial and operational risks and uncertainties that may
affect the Group's performance and their mitigation are outlined in
note 21 to these financial statements, and financial risks
including liquidity, market, credit and capital risks are outlined
in note 18.
At 30 June 2024, the Group held
cash of £1,065.3m and total loans and borrowings of £200.0m,
comprising £200.0m Sterling USPP notes maturing in August 2027.
These balances, set against pre-paid facility fees, comprise the
Group's net cash of £868.5m, presented in note 11.
Should further funding be
required, the Group has a committed £700.0m RCF, subject to
compliance with certain financial covenants, that matures in
November 2028, with a further one-year extension period through to
November 2029, if agreed between the Group and its
lenders.
As such, in consideration of its
net current assets of £5,130.7m, the Directors are satisfied that
the Group has sufficient liquidity to meet its current liabilities
and working capital requirements.
Long-term housing market
fundamentals reflect a significant imbalance between housing supply
and demand. Despite this imbalance, the housing market in FY24
remained constrained by significant macro-economic headwinds
including higher interest rates and inflation, affecting economic
growth, consumer confidence and mortgage affordability. Whilst
there are positive signs, including recent reductions in interest
rates and positive political messaging on improving the planning
system and delivering new housing, uncertainty remains over the
general economic outlook and the outcome of industry-specific
challenges such as further building safety costs or greenhouse gas
emissions legislation along with material cost inflation and supply
chain disruption. These, and other disruptions, could result in
flat or negative economic growth, reduced buyer confidence, reduced
mortgage availability and affordability, falls in house prices or
land values and cost increases associated with raw materials,
suppliers, subcontractors and employees.
On 21 August 2024 the Group
acquired the full share capital of Redrow plc in an all share
transaction. In accordance with standard practice, the Competition
and Markets Authority (the CMA) has issued an Initial Enforcement
Order requiring the Barratt and Redrow businesses to continue to
operate independently until the CMA has formally accepted the
undertakings proposed by the parties in response to the findings of
its phase 1 investigation, or otherwise agrees to integration
taking place. The sharing of competitively sensitive information
between the businesses is prohibited while the Enforcement Order is
in place. In recognition of the need for the pre-acquisition
business to be able to support itself independently, the Directors
have considered the ability to continue trading of both the group
of companies that existed prior to the acquisition (the 'Barratt
group') and the new group including Redrow plc and its subsidiaries
(the 'combined group').
To assess the Barratt group's
resilience to more adverse outcomes, its forecast performance was
sensitised to reflect a series of scenarios based on the Barratt
group's principal risks and the downside prospects for the UK
economy and housing market presented in the latest available
external economic forecasts. The Directors consider the principal
risks of the Barratt group to be applicable to the combined group.
A combined group forecast was therefore sensitised to the same
scenarios, with no synergies assumed. For the purposes of this
assessment, it was assumed that the financing facilities available
to the combined group were those currently available to the Barratt
group, and that all associated financial covenants would apply. It
was assumed that the combined group would undertake mitigating
actions in response to the challenging circumstances modelled,
primarily a reduction in investment in land and work in progress in
line with the fall in expected sales, without preventing the
combined group's ability to grow over the long term.
The above analysis included a
reasonable worst-case scenario in which the principal risks
manifest in aggregate to a severe but plausible level. This assumed
that average private selling prices fall by 5%, sales volumes fall
by 15% and construction costs increase by 2% in addition to the
base forecasts, in addition to the implementation of a building
safety levy, further increases in legacy property costs and the
acceleration of regulatory changes to reduce indirect greenhouse
gas emissions.
The effects were modelled over the
12 months from the date of the signing of these Financial
Statements, alongside reasonable mitigation that the Barratt and
combined groups would expect to undertake in such circumstances,
primarily reductions in investment in inventories and uncommitted
land spend in line with the fall in expected sales.
In all scenarios, including the
reasonable worst case, the Barratt group and combined group are
able to comply with the financial covenants, operate within current
facilities and meet liabilities as they fall due for a period of at
least 12 months from the date of signing of these financial
statements. The Group has a policy of maintaining a £150m headroom
on its available facilities and both the Barratt group and combined
group would remain in compliance with this policy throughout the
review period.
Accordingly, the Directors
consider there to be no material uncertainties that may cast
significant doubt on the Group's ability to continue to operate as
a going concern. They have formed a judgement that, at the time of
approving the financial statements, there is a reasonable
expectation that the Group has adequate resources to continue in
operational existence for the foreseeable future, being at least 12
months from the date of signing of these financial statements. For
this reason, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in the
preparation of these financial statements.
Application of accounting standards
During the year ended 30 June
2024, the Group has applied accounting policies and methods of
computation consistent with those applied in the prior
year.
During the year, the Group has
adopted the following new and revised standards and interpretations
which have had no material impact on the Financial
Statements:
·
|
Amendments to IAS 1: Disclosure of
material accounting policies;
|
·
|
Amendments to IAS 8: Definition of
accounting estimates;
|
·
|
Amendments to IAS 12: Deferred tax
related to assets and liabilities arising from a single
transaction; and
|
·
|
Amendments to and initial
application of IFRS 17: Insurance Contracts.
|
2. Revenue
An analysis of the Group's
continuing revenue is as follows:
|
Residential
completions1
|
|
Revenue
|
|
2024
number
|
2023
number
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Revenue from private residential
sales
|
10,666
|
12,456
|
3,668.5
|
4,578.5
|
Revenue from affordable
residential sales
|
2,802
|
3,922
|
463.1
|
655.8
|
Revenue from commercial
sales
|
-
|
-
|
21.9
|
64.7
|
Revenue from planning promotion
agreements
|
-
|
-
|
12.9
|
20.4
|
Sundry revenue
|
-
|
-
|
1.8
|
2.0
|
|
13,468
|
16,378
|
4,168.2
|
5,321.4
|
1 Residential completions exclude JV completions of 536 homes
(2023: 828) in which the Group has an interest.
3. Profit from operations
Profit from operations includes
all of the revenue and costs derived from the Group's operating
businesses. Profit from operations excludes finance costs, finance
income, the Group's share of profits or losses from JVs and
tax.
The Group's principal activity is
housebuilding. None of the other business activities undertaken by
the Group, individually or in aggregate, account for more than 10%
of the Group's revenue, profit or total assets and do not meet the
IFRS 8 thresholds for disclosure. The operating results of these
activities are not presented separately to the Board. Therefore, no
segmental information is presented in these financial
statements.
4. Adjusted items
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
Adjusted items in cost of sales:
|
|
|
|
Costs incurred in respect of
legacy properties
|
|
180.0
|
158.2
|
Amounts in respect of legacy
properties recovered from third parties
|
|
(0.5)
|
(2.7)
|
Total adjusted items in cost of sales
|
|
179.5
|
155.5
|
Adjusted items in administrative expenses:
|
|
|
|
Costs incurred in respect of the
all-share offer for the share capital of Redrow plc
|
|
22.4
|
-
|
Adjusted items in share of post-tax profit from joint
ventures:
|
|
|
|
Costs incurred in respect of
legacy properties by joint ventures
|
|
12.6
|
23.7
|
Total adjusted items
|
|
214.5
|
179.2
|
Costs incurred in respect of legacy
properties
The adjusted costs in the year,
associated with Group legacy properties, comprise additions to
provisions of £182.5m, provision releases of £3.5m, a charge of
£1.0m due to the revaluation of the provisions at the reporting
date and reimbursements recognised directly in the income statement
of £0.5m. In addition £12.6m of net costs in respect of JV legacy
properties were incurred in the year. Further details of provisions
movements are provided in note 12.
Costs incurred in respect of the acquisition of Redrow
plc
On 7 February 2024, the Group
announced an offer to acquire the entire share capital of Redrow
plc through an all-share transaction. The transaction was approved
by the shareholders of both groups on 15 May 2024 and legally
completed on 21 August 2024, as disclosed in note 19. In the course
of progressing the transaction, during the year the Group has
incurred £22.4m in adviser fees. The total costs that will be
incurred are expected to be material in aggregate.
5. Net finance costs
Recognised in the Consolidated Income
Statement:
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
Finance income
|
|
|
|
Finance income on short-term bank
deposits
|
|
(44.9)
|
(22.0)
|
Other interest
receivable
|
|
(2.3)
|
(1.8)
|
|
|
(47.2)
|
(23.8)
|
Finance costs
|
|
|
|
Interest on loans and
borrowings
|
|
9.4
|
9.3
|
Imputed interest on long-term
payables
|
|
40.2
|
21.4
|
Finance charge on leased
assets
|
|
1.8
|
1.2
|
Amortisation of facility
fees
|
|
1.6
|
1.9
|
Other interest payable
|
|
0.7
|
1.1
|
|
|
53.7
|
34.9
|
Net finance costs
|
|
6.5
|
11.1
|
The weighted average interest
rates (excluding fees) paid in the year were as follows:
|
|
Group
|
|
2024
%
|
2023
%
|
USPP notes
|
2.8
|
2.8
|
6. Tax
All profits of the Group are
subject to UK tax.
The current year tax charge has
been provided for, by the Group, at a standard effective rate,
inclusive of RPDT, of 29.0% (2023: 24.5%). The closing deferred tax
assets and liabilities have been provided in these financial
statements at a rate of 25.0% - 29.0% (2023: 20.5% - 29.0%) on the
temporary differences giving rise to these assets and
liabilities.
Tax recognised in the Income Statement
The tax expense represents the sum
of the tax currently payable and deferred tax.
Analysis of the tax charge for the year
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
Current tax:
|
|
|
UK corporation tax on profits for
the year
|
54.8
|
147.2
|
RPDT for the year
|
6.1
|
26.0
|
Adjustment in respect of previous
years
|
3.2
|
(6.7)
|
|
64.1
|
166.5
|
Deferred tax:
|
|
|
Origination and reversal of
temporary differences
|
(6.1)
|
1.8
|
Adjustment in respect of previous
years
|
(1.6)
|
7.2
|
Impact of change in tax
rates
|
-
|
(0.7)
|
|
(7.7)
|
8.3
|
Tax charge for the year
|
56.4
|
174.8
|
Factors affecting the tax charge for the year
The tax rate assessed for the year
is higher (2023: higher) than the standard effective rate of tax in
the UK of 29.0% (inclusive of corporation tax and RPDT) (2023:
24.5%). The differences are explained below:
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
Profit before tax
|
170.5
|
705.1
|
Profit before tax multiplied by
the standard rate of corporation tax of 29.0% (inclusive of
corporation tax and RPDT) (2023: 24.5%)
|
49.4
|
172.7
|
Effects of:
|
|
|
Other items including
non-deductible expenses and non-taxable income
|
8.0
|
4.5
|
Additional tax relief for land
remediation costs
|
(2.6)
|
(2.2)
|
Adjustment in respect of previous
years
|
1.6
|
0.5
|
Impact of change in tax
rates
|
-
|
(0.7)
|
Tax charge for the year
|
56.4
|
174.8
|
Tax recognised in equity
In addition to the amount charged
to the Consolidated Income Statement, a net current and deferred
tax credit of £0.8m (2023: £1.3m) was recognised directly in
equity.
7. Earnings per share
The earnings per share from
continuing operations were as follows:
|
2024
pence
|
2023
pence
|
Basic earnings per
share
|
11.8
|
53.2
|
Diluted earnings per
share
|
11.6
|
52.6
|
Adjusted basic earnings per
share
|
28.3
|
67.3
|
Adjusted diluted earnings per
share
|
27.8
|
66.5
|
Basic earnings per share is
calculated by dividing the profit for the year attributable to
ordinary shareholders of the Company by the weighted average number
of ordinary shares in issue during the year, excluding those held
by the EBT that do not attract dividend equivalents and which are
treated as cancelled.
Diluted earnings per share is
calculated by dividing the profit for the year attributable to
ordinary shareholders of the Company by the weighted average number
of ordinary shares in issue adjusted to assume conversion of all
potentially dilutive share options from the start of the
year.
Adjusted basic and adjusted
diluted earnings per share exclude the impact of adjusted items and
any associated net tax amounts.
|
2024
|
2023
|
Profit attributable to ordinary
shareholders of the Company (£m)
|
114.1
|
530.3
|
Adjusted items (£m)
|
214.5
|
179.2
|
Tax on adjusted items
(£m)
|
(54.4)
|
(39.3)
|
Adjusted profit attributable to
ordinary shareholders of the Company (£m)
|
274.2
|
670.2
|
|
|
|
Weighted average number of shares
in issue (million)
|
974.6
|
1,000.1
|
Weighted average number of shares
in EBT (million)
|
(5.8)
|
(3.8)
|
Weighted average number of shares
for basic earnings per share (million)
|
968.8
|
996.3
|
|
|
|
Weighted average number of shares
in issue (million)
|
974.6
|
1,000.1
|
Adjustment to assume conversion of
all potentially dilutive shares (million)
|
12.5
|
8.4
|
Weighted average number of shares
for diluted earnings per share (million)
|
987.1
|
1,008.5
|
8. Dividends
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
Amounts recognised as distributions to equity shareholders in
the year:
|
|
|
Final dividend for the year ended
30 June 2023 of 23.5p (2022: 25.7p) per share
|
228.0
|
259.8
|
Interim dividend for the year
ended 30 June 2024 of 4.4p (2023: 10.2p) per share
|
42.6
|
100.2
|
Total dividends distributed to equity shareholders in the
year
|
270.6
|
360.0
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
Proposed final dividend for the
year ended 30 June 2024 of 11.8p (2023: 23.5p) per
share1
|
170.2
|
227.9
|
1 The cost of the proposed dividend is calculated based upon
the number of shares ranking for dividend at the balance sheet
date, as adjusted, in the current year, for the issue of shares
used in the acquisition of Redrow plc..
9. Goodwill and other intangible assets
Goodwill
|
|
Group
|
Goodwill
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
Cost
|
|
|
At 1 July and 30 June
|
877.4
|
877.4
|
Accumulated impairment losses
|
|
|
At 1 July and 30 June
|
24.5
|
24.5
|
Carrying amount
|
|
|
At 30 June
|
852.9
|
852.9
|
The Group's goodwill relating to the acquisition of Wilson Bowden
Limited in 2007 has a carrying value of £792.2m and goodwill
relating to the 2019 acquisition of Oregon Timber Frame Limited has
a carrying value of £13.7m, both relating to the housebuilding
business.
In addition, the Group has
goodwill of £47.0m relating to the Group's land promotion business,
following the 2022 acquisition of Gladman Developments
Limited.
Other intangible assets
The Group has capitalised, as
intangible assets, brands that have been acquired. Acquired brand
values are calculated using discounted cash flows.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Group
|
Other intangible assets
|
|
Brands
|
Customer
contracts
|
|
Total
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 July
|
118.7
|
118.7
|
98.9
|
98.9
|
217.6
|
217.6
|
Acquired in the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Amounts written off
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
At 30 June
|
118.7
|
118.7
|
98.9
|
98.9
|
217.6
|
217.6
|
Amortisation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 July
|
8.7
|
8.1
|
14.0
|
4.1
|
22.7
|
12.2
|
Amortisation in the
year
|
0.5
|
0.6
|
9.9
|
9.9
|
10.4
|
10.5
|
Amounts written off
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
At 30 June
|
9.2
|
8.7
|
23.9
|
14.0
|
33.1
|
22.7
|
Carrying amount
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 30 June
|
109.5
|
110.0
|
75.0
|
84.9
|
184.5
|
194.9
|
The Group does not amortise the housebuilding brand acquired with
Wilson Bowden, being David Wilson Homes, valued at £100.0m, as the
Directors consider that this brand has an indefinite useful
economic life due to the Group intending to hold and support the
brand for an indefinite period, and there are no factors that would
prevent it from doing so.
In 2022, the Group acquired brands
valued at £10.8m and customer contracts valued at £98.9m with
Gladman Developments Limited. The customer contracts are amortised
on a straight-line basis over the expected life of the contracts;
the brands acquired are amortised on a straight-line basis over a
20-year period.
The cost of brands disclosed above
also includes £0.9m acquired with Oregon Timber Frame Limited in
2019 and £7.0m in respect of Wilson Bowden Developments Limited,
both of which have been fully amortised or impaired in previous
periods.
Impairment of goodwill and indefinite life
brand
The Group conducts an annual
impairment review of goodwill and its indefinite life brand, David
Wilson Homes.
Goodwill and indefinite life brand allocated to
housebuilding
An impairment review was performed
at 30 April 2024 by comparing the value in use of the housebuilding
business to the carrying value of its tangible and intangible
assets and allocated goodwill.
The value in use was determined by
discounting the expected future cash flows of the housebuilding
business. The cash flows until 30 June 2027, being the three-year
period aligned to the Group's operating cycle, were determined
using the Group's approved detailed business plan and the cash
flows for FY28 and FY29 were based on management projections based
on expected volumes, selling prices and margins, taking into
account available land purchases and work in progress levels. The
cash flows for subsequent years were extrapolated in perpetuity
using an estimated growth rate of 2.1% (2023: 1.0%).
The key assumptions for the value
in use calculation for the housebuilding business were:
·
|
expected changes in selling prices
for completed houses and the related impact on operating margin:
these are determined on a site-by-site basis in the Group's
approved business plan dependent upon local market conditions and
product type. For subsequent years, these have been estimated at a
Group level based upon past experience and expectations of future
changes in the market, considering external market
forecasts;
|
·
|
sales volumes: these are
determined on a site-by-site basis in the Group's approved business
plan dependent upon local market conditions, land availability and
planning permissions. For subsequent years, these have been
estimated at a Group level based on past experience and
expectations of future changes in the market, taking into account
external market forecasts;
|
·
|
expected changes in site costs to
complete: these are determined on a site-by-site basis in the
Group's approved business plan dependent upon the expected costs of
completing all aspects of each individual development. For
subsequent years, these have been estimated at a Group level based
on past experience and expectations of future changes in the
market, taking into account external market forecasts;
and
|
·
|
discount rate: this is a pre-tax
rate reflecting the Group's target capital structure, risks
appropriate to the housebuilding business and current market
assessments of the time value of money. A rate of 14.2% (2023:
15.0%) is considered by the Directors to be the appropriate pre-tax
discount rate.
|
The result of the value in use
exercise concluded that the recoverable value of goodwill and
intangible assets allocated to the housebuilding business exceeded
its carrying value by £819.7m (2023: £1,176.0m) and there has been
no impairment.
Goodwill allocated to land promotion
An impairment review was performed
at 30 June 2024 by comparing the value in use of the land promotion
business to the carrying value of its tangible and intangible
assets and allocated goodwill.
The value in use was determined by
discounting the expected future cash flows of the land promotion
business. The operating cycle for the land promotion business
extends over a longer period than the housebuilding business, with
land sales completing at the point in an economic cycle that
generates the most profit. Inventories held at the current date may
generate cash inflows in the medium to long term and, as a result,
management's forecasts extend up to ten years from the reporting
date. It is therefore appropriate to consider projections over a
longer period in the value in use calculation. Cash flows until 30
June 2033 were determined using the business's approved forecast,
dependent upon expected site permissions and best estimates for
targeted site sales, anticipated spend and overhead inflation. Due
to the sensitivity of cash flows of the land promotion business to
the economic cycle, the cash flows for years subsequent to 2033
were based on an average sales receipts from the final five years
of the forecast, adjusted for expected increases in cost,
extrapolated in perpetuity using an estimated growth rate of 2.1%
(2023: 1.0%).
The key assumptions for the value
in use calculation were the expected sales values achieved under
land promotion agreements, based on current market values for
similar land, costs required to fulfil customer contracts, and the
discount rate of 13.2% (2023: 14.3%), being a pre-tax rate
reflecting the risks appropriate to the land promotion business and
current market assessments of the time value of money.
The result of the value in use
exercise concluded that the recoverable amount of goodwill
allocated to the land promotion business exceeded its carrying
value by £52.6m (2023: £13.1m) and there has been no impairment. An
increase in the discount rate of 220 bps would reduce the headroom
of the recoverable amount over the carrying value to
£nil.
10. Inventories
|
Group
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
Land held for
development
|
3,233.6
|
3,139.9
|
Construction work in
progress
|
1,829.4
|
1,907.1
|
Promotion agreements work in
progress
|
111.5
|
97.7
|
Part-exchange properties and other
inventories
|
103.7
|
93.3
|
|
5,278.2
|
5,238.0
|
Nature and carrying value of inventories
The Group's principal activities
are housebuilding and commercial development. The majority of the
development activity is not contracted prior to the development
commencing. Accordingly, the Group has in its Balance Sheet at 30
June 2024 current assets that are not covered by a forward sale.
The Group's internal controls are designed to identify any
developments where the balance sheet value of land and work in
progress is more than the projected lower of cost or net realisable
value. During the year, the Group has conducted six-monthly reviews
of the net realisable value of specific sites identified as at high
risk of impairment, based upon a number of criteria including low
site profit margins and sites with no forecast completions. Where
the estimated net realisable value of a site was less than its
current carrying value, the Group has impaired the land and work in
progress value.
During the year, due to
performance variations, changes in assumptions and changes to
viability on individual sites, there were gross impairment charges
of £9.2m (2023: £16.7m) and gross impairment reversals of £11.4m
(2023: £12.0m), resulting in a net impairment reversal of £2.2m
(2023: £4.7m charge) included within cost of sales.
The key estimates in these
six-monthly reviews are those used to estimate the realisable value
of a site, which is determined by forecast sales rates, expected
sales prices and estimated costs to complete.
The Directors consider all
inventories to be essentially current in nature, although the
Group's operational cycle is such that a proportion of inventories
will not be realised within 12 months. It is not possible to
determine with accuracy when specific inventory will be realised,
as this will be subject to a number of variables such as consumer
demand and planning permission delays.
Inventories include £9.0m (2023:
£11.0m) in respect of properties currently occupied under the
refugee support scheme.
Expensed inventories
The value of inventories expensed
in the year ended 30 June 2024 and included in cost of sales was
£3,241.6m (2023: £3,907.3m).
11. Net cash
Net cash is defined as cash and
cash equivalents, bank overdrafts, interest-bearing borrowings and
prepaid fees. Net cash at 30 June is shown below:
Group
|
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
1,065.3
|
1,269.1
|
Drawn debt
|
|
|
|
Borrowings:
|
|
|
|
Sterling US private placement
notes
|
|
(200.0)
|
(200.0)
|
Bank overdrafts
|
|
-
|
(3.4)
|
Total borrowings, being total drawn debt
|
|
(200.0)
|
(203.4)
|
Prepaid fees
|
|
3.2
|
3.7
|
Net cash
|
|
868.5
|
1,069.4
|
|
|
|
|
Total borrowings at 30 June are analysed
as:
|
|
|
|
Non-current borrowings
|
|
(200.0)
|
(200.0)
|
Current borrowings
|
|
-
|
(3.4)
|
Total borrowings, being total drawn debt
|
|
(200.0)
|
(203.4)
|
Movement in net cash is analysed
as follows:
|
Group
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents
|
(203.8)
|
(83.6)
|
Repayment/(drawdown) of borrowings:
|
|
|
Loans and borrowings
drawdowns
|
-
|
(3.4)
|
Loans and borrowings
repayments
|
3.4
|
17.3
|
Other movements in borrowings:
|
|
|
Movement in prepaid
fees
|
(0.5)
|
0.5
|
Movement in net cash in the
year
|
(200.9)
|
(69.2)
|
Opening net cash
|
1,069.4
|
1,138.6
|
Closing net cash
|
868.5
|
1,069.4
|
Cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents are held
at floating interest rates linked to the UK bank rate and money
market rates as applicable. Cash and cash equivalents comprise cash
held by the Group and short-term bank deposits with an original
maturity of three months or less from inception and are subject to
an insignificant risk of changes in value.
Cash, cash equivalents and bank
overdrafts, as presented in the Cash Flow Statement, are analysed
as follows:
|
Group
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
1,065.3
|
1,269.1
|
Bank overdrafts including loans
and borrowings
|
-
|
(3.4)
|
Cash, cash equivalents and bank overdrafts
|
1,065.3
|
1,265.7
|
Borrowings and facilities
All debt facilities at 30 June
2024 are unsecured.
The principal features of the
Group's committed debt facilities at 30 June 2024 and 30 June 2023
were as follows:
|
|
Amount
drawn
|
|
|
Facility
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
Maturity
|
Committed facilities:
|
|
|
|
|
RCF
|
£700.0m
|
-
|
-
|
17 November 2028
|
Fixed rate Sterling USPP
notes
|
£200.0m
|
£200.0m
|
£200.0m
|
22 August 2027
|
The Group also uses various bank
overdrafts and uncommitted borrowing facilities that are subject to
floating interest rates linked to SONIA and money market rates as
applicable.
Weighted average interest rates
are disclosed in note 5.
12. Provisions
|
|
|
|
Group
|
|
Costs in relation to
completed developments £m
|
Legacy
properties - EWS and associated
review £m
|
Legacy properties -
reinforced concrete frames £m
|
Total
£m
|
|
At 1 July 2023
|
176.1
|
535.9
|
76.4
|
788.4
|
Additions
|
67.7
|
125.9
|
56.6
|
250.2
|
Sites reclassified to completed
developments
|
15.0
|
-
|
-
|
15.0
|
Releases
|
(20.5)
|
-
|
(3.5)
|
(24.0)
|
Revaluation due to the present
value and timing of cash flows
|
-
|
(0.6)
|
1.6
|
1.0
|
Imputed interest
|
-
|
26.3
|
3.2
|
29.5
|
Utilisation in the year
|
(47.4)
|
(59.4)
|
(32.1)
|
(138.9)
|
At 30 June 2024
|
190.9
|
628.1
|
102.2
|
921.2
|
|
Group
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Current
|
378.0
|
310.5
|
Non-current
|
543.2
|
477.9
|
|
921.2
|
788.4
|
Further information on the Group's
provisions is provided in note 1.
13. Share capital
Ordinary share capital
Allotted and issued ordinary shares
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
10p each fully paid: 974,592,261
(2023: 974,584,613) ordinary shares
|
97.4
|
97.4
|
Options over the Company's shares granted during the
year
|
2024
Number
|
2023 Number
|
LTPP
|
4,497,287
|
4,028,187
|
Sharesave
|
2,549,465
|
6,637,568
|
DBP
|
107,057
|
920,887
|
ELTIP
|
1,972,714
|
1,792,966
|
|
9,126,523
|
13,379,608
|
Allotment/cancellation of shares during the
year
|
2024
Number
|
2023 Number
|
At 1 July
|
974,584,613
|
1,022,562,819
|
Buyback and cancellation of shares
in the year
|
-
|
(47,985,293)
|
Issued to satisfy exercises under
Sharesave schemes
|
7,648
|
7,087
|
At 30 June
|
974,592,261
|
974,584,613
|
14. Own shares reserve
The own shares reserve represents
the cost of shares in Barratt Developments PLC purchased in the
market or issued by the Company and held by the EBT on behalf of
the Company in order to satisfy options and awards that
have been granted by the Company.
The EBT has agreed to waive all,
or any future right to dividend payments on shares held within the
EBT and these shares do not count in the calculation of the
weighted average number of shares used to calculate EPS until such
time as they are vested to the relevant employee.
|
2024
|
2023
|
Ordinary shares in the Company
held in the EBT (number)
|
8,063,747
|
4,998,602
|
Cost of shares held in the EBT
(£m)
|
36.9
|
23.2
|
Market value of shares held in the
EBT at 472.2p (2023: 413.5p) per share (£m)
|
38.1
|
20.7
|
During the year, the EBT purchased
5,000,000 (2023: 2,951,352) shares in the market and disposed of
1,351,813 (2023: 3,254,817) shares, which were used to satisfy the
vesting of ELTIP and LTPP awards in both years and also the DBP
awards in 2023. A further 583,042 shares were used in settlement of
exercises under Sharesave schemes (2023: 18,101).
15. Non-controlling interests
|
Group
|
Movement in non-controlling interest share of net assets
recognised in the Consolidated Balance Sheet
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
At 1 July
|
0.5
|
0.8
|
Distribution of profits to
non-controlling partner
|
(0.4)
|
(0.3)
|
Share of profit for the year
recognised in the Consolidated Income Statement
|
-
|
-
|
At 30 June
|
0.1
|
0.5
|
16. Contingent liabilities
Contingent liabilities related to
subsidiaries
Certain subsidiary undertakings
have commitments for the purchase of trading stock entered into in
the normal course of business.
In the normal course of business,
the Group has given counter-indemnities in respect of performance
bonds and financial guarantees. At 30 June 2024 the bonds and
guarantees amount to £419.9m (2023: £412.7m) and at the date of
these financial statements, the possibility of cash outflow is
considered minimal and no provision is required.
External wall systems
As disclosed in note 1, on 13
March 2023, the Group signed the Self-Remediation Terms and
Contract and is continuing to undertake a review of all of its
current and legacy buildings where it has used EWS or cladding
solutions. Approved inspectors signed off all of our buildings,
including the EWS or cladding used, as compliant with the relevant
building regulations at the time of completion.
At 30 June 2024, the Group held
provisions of £628.1m (2023: £535.9m) in relation to EWS and
associated reviews, based on management's best estimate of the cost
and timing of remediation of in-scope buildings. It is possible
that as remediation work proceeds, additional remedial works are
required which do not relate to EWS or cladding solutions. Such
works may not have been identified from the reviews and physical
inspections undertaken to date and may only be identified when
detailed remediation work is in progress. Therefore, the nature,
timing and extent of any such costs were unknown at the balance
sheet date.
It is also possible that the
number of buildings requiring remediation may increase. This could
occur because buildings which hold valid EWS1 certificates are
found to require remediation or because investigatory works
identify remediation not previously identified.
In addition, we recognise that the
retrospective review of building materials and fire safety matters
continues to evolve. The financial statements have been prepared
based on currently available information and regulatory guidance.
However, these estimates may be updated if government legislation
and regulation further evolve.
On 31 May 2023 the Group signed
the Scottish Safer Buildings Accord, committing to resolve
life-critical fire safety defects in multi-occupancy residential
domestic or part-domestic buildings, over 11 metres, built by us as
a developer in the period of 30 years to 1 June 2022. This Accord
is not legally binding, but we are committed to working in good
faith with the Scottish Government to agree a legal form contract.
The Group has undertaken preliminary cost assessments at
multi-occupancy buildings over 11 metres in Scotland at which fire
safety defects have been identified. The Group's EWS provision at
30 June 2024 reflects the outcome of these assessments. The
estimates are based on the assumption that the standard of
remediation required in Scotland is consistent with that in England
and Wales. The Housing (Cladding Remediation) (Scotland) Act 2024,
which became law on 21 June 2024, has provided a framework on which
the remediation programme in Scotland can be based, but requires
secondary legislation and further contractual agreement with
developers to determine the details. The estimated cost may vary
depending on the final form of the developer remediation contract
agreed with the Scottish Government.
During the year, warranty
providers received claims under warranties for building safety
matters on three developments historically delivered by the Group.
Further investigation is required to determine whether the nature
and extent of any remediation work is incremental to that already
expected and we expect this process to be completed within the next
financial year.
Reinforced concrete frames
As disclosed in note 1, the Group
is undertaking remediation at developments designed by certain
engineering firms or associated companies. The financial statements
have been prepared based on currently available information;
however, the detailed review is ongoing and the extent and cost of
any remedial work may change as this work progresses.
We are actively seeking to recover
costs from third parties in respect of EWS and reinforced concrete
frames; however, there is no certainty regarding the extent of any
financial recovery.
Contingent liabilities related to JVs
The Group has given
counter-indemnities in respect of performance bonds and financial
guarantees to its JVs totalling £5.0m at 30 June 2024 (2023:
£9.5m).
The Group has also given a number
of performance guarantees in respect of the obligations of its JVs,
requiring the Group to complete development agreement contractual
obligations in the event that the JVs do not perform as required
under the terms of the related contracts. At 30 June 2024, the
probability of any loss to the Group resulting from these
guarantees is considered to be remote.
Contingent liabilities related to legal
claims
Provision is made for the
Directors' best estimates of all known material legal claims and
all legal actions in progress. The Group takes legal advice as to
the likelihood of success of claims and actions and no provision is
made (other than for legal costs) where the Directors consider,
based on such advice, that claims or actions are unlikely to
succeed, or a sufficiently reliable estimate of the potential
obligations cannot be made.
Contingent liability in respect of the investigation by the
Competition and Markets Authority
On 26 February 2024, the
Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) launched an investigation
under Chapter I of the Competition Act 1998 into suspected breaches
of competition law by eight housebuilders, relating to the exchange of competitively sensitive
information, including the Company and its
subsidiaries. We continue to cooperate with the CMA in its
investigation. The timing of the conclusions of this investigation
and any potential impact on the Group is unknown.
17. Related party transactions
Directors of Barratt Developments PLC and remuneration of key
personnel
The Board and certain members of
senior management are related parties within the definition of IAS
24 (Revised): 'Related Party Disclosures' and the Board members are
related parties within the definition of Chapter 11 of the UK
Listing Rules. There is no difference between transactions with key
personnel of the Company and transactions with key personnel of the
Group.
Disclosures related to the
remuneration of key personnel as defined in IAS 24 will be provided
in note 5 of the 2024 Annual Report and Accounts.
There have been no related party
transactions as defined in Listing Rule 11.1.5R for the year ended
30 June 2024.
Transactions between the Company and its subsidiaries and a
former JV
The Company has entered into
transactions with its subsidiary undertakings in respect of funding
and Group services which include management accounting and audit,
sales and marketing, IT, company secretarial, architects and
purchasing. Recharges are made to the subsidiaries based on their
utilisation of these services.
|
|
Company
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Transactions between the Company and its subsidiaries and a
former JV during the year:
|
|
|
Charges in respect of management
and other services provided to subsidiaries
|
158.0
|
142.7
|
Net interest paid by the Company
on net loans from subsidiaries
|
16.9
|
18.4
|
Dividends received from subsidiary
undertakings
|
516.0
|
500.0
|
Distribution received from a
former JV of the Company1
|
-
|
0.1
|
Balances at 30 June:
|
|
|
Amounts due by the Company to
subsidiary undertakings
|
91.3
|
354.2
|
Amounts due to the Company from
subsidiary undertakings
|
245.1
|
79.0
|
1 The Company's only JV, Rose Shared Equity LLP, was wound up
during the prior year. Prior to this, it made a final distribution
to its members.
The Company and its subsidiaries
have entered into counter-indemnities in the normal course of
business in respect of performance
bonds.
Transactions between the Group and its JVs
The Group has entered into
transactions with its JVs as follows:
|
|
Group
|
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Transactions between the Group and its JVs during the
year:
|
|
|
Charges in respect of development
management and other services provided to JVs
|
10.3
|
8.4
|
Net interest charges in respect of
funding provided to JVs
|
2.1
|
1.6
|
Dividends received from
JVs
|
7.1
|
34.8
|
Balances at 30 June:
|
|
|
Funding loans and interest due
from JVs net of impairment
|
86.3
|
66.5
|
Other amounts due from
JVs
|
27.8
|
37.1
|
Loans and other amounts due to
JVs
|
(0.6)
|
(0.5)
|
In addition, one of the Group's
subsidiaries, BDW Trading Limited, contracts with a number of the
Group's JVs to provide construction services.
The Group's contingent liabilities
relating to its JVs are disclosed in note 16.
18. Financial risk management
The Group's approach to risk
management and the principal operational risks of the business are
detailed in note 21.
The Group's operations and
financing arrangements expose it to a variety of financial risks,
of which the most material are: liquidity risk, the availability of
funding at reasonable margins, credit risk and interest rates.
There is a regular, detailed system for the reporting and
forecasting of cash flows from operations to senior management
including Executive Directors to ensure that liquidity risks are
promptly identified and appropriate mitigating actions are taken by
the Treasury department. These forecasts are further stress tested
at a Group level on a regular basis to ensure that adequate
headroom within facilities and banking covenants is maintained. In
addition, the Group has a risk management programme that seeks to
limit the adverse effects of the other risks on its financial
performance.
The Board approves treasury
policies and certain day-to-day treasury activities have been
delegated to a centralised Treasury Operating Committee, which in
turn regularly reports to the Board. The Treasury department
implements guidelines that are established by the Board and the
Treasury Operating Committee.
Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that
the Group will be unable to meet its liabilities as they fall due.
The Group actively maintains a mixture of long-term and medium-term
committed facilities that are designed to ensure that the Group has
sufficient available funds for operations.
The Group's borrowings are
typically cyclical throughout the financial year and peak in April
to May, and October to November of each year, due to seasonal
trends in income. Accordingly, the Group maintains sufficient
facility headroom to cover these requirements. On a normal
operating basis, the Group has a policy of maintaining a minimum
headroom of £150.0m. The Group identifies and takes appropriate
actions based on its regular, detailed system for the reporting and
forecasting of cash flows from its operations. The Group's drawn
debt, excluding fees, represented 22.2% (2023: 22.6%) of available
committed facilities at 30 June 2024. In addition, the Group had
£1,065.3m (2023: £1,269.1m) of cash and cash
equivalents.
The Group was in compliance with
its financial covenants at 30 June 2024. The Group's resilience to
its principal risks has been modelled, together with possible
mitigating actions, over a three-year period, considering the
prospects of the combined group. At the date of approval of these
financial statements, the Group's internal forecasts indicate that
it will be able to operate within its current facilities and remain
in compliance with these covenants for the foreseeable future,
being at least 12 months from the date of approval of these
financial statements.
One of the Group's objectives is
to minimise refinancing risk. The Group has a policy that the
average maturity of its committed bank facilities and private
placement notes is a minimum of two years with a target of two to
three years. At 30 June 2024, the average maturity of the Group's
committed facilities was 4.1 years (2023: 4.4 years).
The Group maintains certain
committed floating rate facilities with banks to ensure sufficient
liquidity for its operations. The undrawn committed facilities
available to the Group, in respect of which all conditions
precedent had been met, were as follows:
|
Group
|
Expiry date
|
2024
£m
|
2023 £m
|
In more than two years but not
more than five years
|
700.0
|
700.0
|
In addition, the Group had undrawn, uncommitted overdraft
facilities available at 30 June 2024 of £37.0m (2023:
£37.0m).
Market risk (price risk)
Interest rate
risk
The Group has both interest-
bearing assets and interest- bearing liabilities. Floating rate
borrowings expose the Group to cash flow interest rate risk, and
fixed rate borrowings expose the Group to fair value interest rate
risk.
The Group has a conservative
treasury risk management strategy and the Group's interest rates
are set using fixed rate debt instruments.
Due to the level of the Group's
interest cover ratio and in accordance with the Group's policy to
hedge a proportion of the forecast RCF drawings based on the
Group's three-year plan, no interest rate hedges are currently
required.
The exposure of the Group's
financial liabilities to interest rate risk is as
follows:
Group
|
Floating rate financial
liabilities £m
|
Fixed rate financial
liabilities £m
|
Non-interest bearing
financial liabilities £m
|
Total
£m
|
2024
|
|
|
|
|
Financial liability exposure to
interest rate risk
|
-
|
200.0
|
1,068.7
|
1,268.7
|
2023
|
|
|
|
|
Financial liability exposure to
interest rate risk
|
-
|
200.0
|
1,169.1
|
1,369.1
|
The Group retained a strong cash
position throughout the year and, therefore, the Group did not draw
on its RCF during the year and the use of other facilities was
minimal. No interest was paid by the Group on floating rate
borrowings in 2024 or 2023.
Sterling USPP notes of £200.0m
were issued on 22 August 2017 with a fixed coupon of 2.77% and a
ten-year maturity. These fixed rate notes expose the Group to fair
value interest rate risk.
Sensitivity
analysis
In the year ended 30 June 2024, if
UK interest rates had been 1.0% higher/lower (considered to be a
reasonably possible change based on forecast Bank of England
interest rates) and all other variables were held constant, the
Group's pre-tax profit would increase/decrease by £7.8m, the
Group's post-tax profit would increase/decrease by £5.9m and, as
such, the Group's equity would increase/decrease by
£5.9m.
Credit risk
In the majority of cases, the
Group receives cash on legal completion for private sales and
receives advance stage payments from registered providers for
affordable housing. The Group has £1,065.3m (2023: £1,269.1m) on
deposit or in current accounts with 14 (2023: 14) financial
institutions. Other than this, the Group has no significant
concentration of credit risk, as its exposure is spread over a
large number of counterparties and customers.
The Group manages credit risk
through its credit policy. This limits its exposure to financial
institutions with high credit ratings, as set by international
credit rating agencies, and determines the maximum permissible
exposure to any single counterparty.
The maximum exposure to any
counterparty at 30 June 2024 was £141.2m (2023: £181.3m) of cash on
deposit with a financial institution. The carrying amount of
financial assets recorded in these financial statements, net of any
allowance for losses, represents the Group's maximum exposure to
credit risk.
Capital risk management (cash flow risk)
The Group's objectives when
managing capital are to safeguard its ability to continue as a
going concern in order to provide returns for shareholders and meet
its liabilities as they fall due while maintaining an appropriate
capital structure.
The Group manages its share
capital as equity, as set out in the Statement of Changes in
Shareholders' Equity, and its bank borrowings (being overdrafts and
bank loans) and its private placement notes as other financial
liabilities. The Group is subject to the prevailing conditions of
the UK economy and the quantum of the Group's earnings is dependent
upon the level of UK house prices. UK house prices are determined
by the UK economy and economic conditions, employment levels,
interest rates, consumer confidence, mortgage availability and
competitor pricing. The Group's approach to the management of the
principal operational risks of the business are detailed in note
21.
Other methods by which the Group
can manage its short-term and long-term capital structure include:
adjusting the level of dividend payments to shareholders (assuming
the Company is paying a dividend); issuing new share capital;
arranging debt to meet liability payments; and selling assets to
reduce debt.
19. Post balance sheet events
On 21 August 2024, the Company
acquired the full share capital of Redrow plc in an all share
transaction. On 23 August 2024, the Company issued 476,309,120 new
ordinary shares as consideration for this transaction.
In accordance with standard
practice, the CMA has issued an Initial Enforcement Order requiring
the Barratt and Redrow businesses to continue to operate
independently until the CMA has formally accepted the undertakings
proposed by the parties in response to its limited concerns, or
otherwise agrees to integration taking place.
Due to the short time between the
completion of the acquisition and the signing of these Financial
Statements, the fair values of the consideration and the assets and
liabilities acquired are still being assessed.
20. Statutory accounts
The financial statements for the
year ended 30 June 2024 have been approved by the Directors and
prepared in accordance with UK adopted IAS in conformity with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006 and UK adopted
IFRS.
Barratt Developments PLC's 2024
Annual Report and Accounts will be made available to shareholders
and published on its website www.barrattdevelopments.co.uk in
September 2024. The financial information set out herein does not
constitute the Company's statutory accounts for the year ended 30
June 2024 (as defined in Sections 434 and 436 of the Companies Act
2006) but is derived from the 2024 Annual Report and Accounts and
the accounts contained therein. Statutory accounts for 2024 will be
delivered to the Registrar of Companies prior to the Company's
Annual General Meeting, which will be held on 23 October 2024. The
auditor has reported on these accounts; their report was
unqualified and did not contain statements under Section 498 (2) or
(3) of the Companies Act 2006.
The comparative figures for the
year ended 30 June 2023 are not the Company's statutory accounts
for the financial year but are derived from those accounts which
have been reported on by the Company's auditor and which were
delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The 2023 report of the
auditor is unqualified and does not contain statements under
Section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.
Whilst the financial information
included in this Annual Results Announcement has been prepared in
accordance with UK adopted IFRS, this announcement does not itself
contain sufficient information to comply with IFRS as adopted for
use in the UK.
21. Risk management
In pursuing our strategic
priorities to create value for stakeholders, we are exposed to
risk. The Board is responsible for risk management and ensuring the
Group maintains the appropriate level of risk exposure to achieve
its objectives.
The risks which the Group faces
could have a material adverse effect on the implementation of the
its strategy, its business operations, its financial performance,
shareholder value and returns, and its reputation. Changes in the
economic or trading environment including geopolitical events can
affect the likelihood and potential impact of risks, and may create
new and emerging risks meaning we must continually manage our risk
exposure.
Risk management controls are
integrated into all levels of our business and across all
operations, including at site, divisional, regional and Group
level, and are monitored continually to ensure controls are in line
with risks as they evolve.
Under the Group's enterprise risk
management framework, risk workshops are held between regional
management and Group functional experts to provide a robust
"bottom-up" assessment of the risks being experienced by the
business. The outputs inform the determination of the Group level
key risks by the Executive Risk Committee, which are then reviewed
and challenged by the Board, with support from third-party experts,
to arrive at the final principal risks. The Board has also
refreshed its risk appetite approach during FY24 to ensure that the
Board's appetite for each of the principal risks is clear and can
be used to determine appropriate mitigating actions across the
Group. The Board now categories risk appetite for each principal
risk using the following methodology:
·
|
Averse - Minimise risk as much as
possible, limited tolerance of potential exposure to risk
consequence in pursuit of related benefits.
|
·
|
Cautious - A balanced and informed
approach to risk taking, moderate tolerance of potential exposure
to risk consequence in the pursuit of related benefits.
|
·
|
Opportunistic - A more receptive
approach to adaptability; taking risk for increased
benefits/returns or to achieve strategic goals.
|
As we continue our continuous
improvement over risk management activities in FY25 we will refresh
our approach to key risk indicators.
As part of our risk identification
processes emerging risks were identified through external and
internal risk processes including the regional and functional risk
workshops, discussions with the Executive, and external
benchmarking. The emerging risks are formally reviewed by the Board
and Executive as part of their ongoing activities.
During our FY24, executive
management has reviewed the policies and methodologies behind our
risk management framework to ensure that our procedures suitably
allow key risks and the specific events that may cause them to be
identified.
The Group continues to assess the
potential physical impact of climate change as well as the
regulatory and social measures that may be adopted to mitigate it.
The Board recognises that sustainability is integral to the
delivery of the business strategy and has taken substantial steps
to embed sustainability across all our processes and business
activities. Therefore the Board has removed sustainability as a
standalone principal risk and will manage sustainability activities
as an embedded part of its risk management processes, for example
considering sustainability in its supply chain or Government
regulation risks.
Business continuity has been
removed as a principal risk. Due to the nature of our operations
covering a large number of sites and our continued operational
resilience embedded throughout the Group, for example throughout
the pandemic, we do not feel business continuity is high risk.
Therefore, we will continue to monitor operational resilience as
part of our management of individual key risks.
The existing legacy properties
principal risk has been expanded to reflect both the ongoing risk
with quality of build fo high-rise and complex structures, as well
as the effective remediation of issues already identified in legacy
properties. This has also reduced our construction quality and
innovation risk on a net basis due to it no longer incorporating
build quality over high-rise and complex projects.
A new risk has been added to cover
the Redrow integration. The integration offers significant
synergies which we are confident in achieving but by recognising
the risks associated with the integration early, we will ensure
that we implement appropriate activities to safeguard these
synergies over the medium to long term.
In July the Government published a
revised draft of the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF)
which guides local councils on the location, type and amount of new
homes required. The policies within the new NPPF reduce Barratt's
level of land and planning risk by reason of, (a) increased
Government targets for new homes, (b) new requirement to release
sites currently within Green Belt, and (c) enforcement of the
presumption in favour of approving planning applications in areas
without a 5-year supply of housing. The new policies should lead to
a greater supply of consented land. As these actions materialise
they will help to support a reduction in our risk exposure in the
near future.
On 26 February, the CMA launched
an investigation into suspected breaches of competition law,
relating to the exchange of competitively sensitive information, by
eight housebuilders, including Barratt and Redrow. We continue to
cooperate with the CMA in its investigation. This is considered within our government regulation and
political risk principal risk.
The health, safety and environment
risk has also been decreased on a residual basis due to the Board
being comfortable with our existing mitigation and the priority
that it is given across the Group.
As well as quantitative measures
there are also qualitative measures considered within the risk
methodology. Reputational risk could potentially arise from a
number of sources including external and internal influences
relating to the housebuilding sector that, when combined or over a
period of time, could create a new principal risk. The Group
actively manages the impact of reputational risk by carefully
assessing the potential impact of all the principal risks and
implementing mitigation actions to minimise those risks.
Reputational risk is therefore covered by the management of each of
our individual risks and is not presented as a principal risk in
its own right.
Overall assessment
The Board has completed its
assessment of the Group's principal and emerging risks, including
those that could threaten its business model, future performance,
solvency or liquidity.
The current risk profile is within
our tolerance range as the Group is willing to accept a moderate
level of operational risk to deliver financial returns.
There may be instances where these
risks could have a moderate adverse impact on the Group - either
financially or operationally. To ensure the Group's business model
remains resilient over the medium and long term, the Group has
modelled these scenarios alongside achievable mitigating actions.
The results will be available in the Viability Statement of the
Group's Annual Report.
Risk
|
A
Economic environment
|
B
Land and planning
|
C
Government regulation and political risk
|
D
Construction quality and innovation
|
E
High-rise and complex structures
|
Risk level
|
High risk
|
High risk
|
High risk
|
Low risk
|
High risk
|
Change from previous
year
|
No change
|
No change
|
No change
|
Decrease
|
No change
|
Risk appetite
|
Cautious
|
Cautious
|
Averse
|
Cautious
|
Averse
|
Risk velocity
|
Rapid
|
Moderate
|
Moderate
|
Moderate
|
Moderate
|
Link to strategic priorities
|
Customer first
|
Great places
|
Great places
|
Leading construction
|
Leading construction
|
|
Significant changes in the UK
macroeconomic environment or continuing major geopolitical events
and uncertainty may lead to falling demand, tightened mortgage
availability, lack of funding for housing associations, or reduced
purchaser liquidity, especially in the first time buyer market.
This could reduce the affordability of our homes for private and
rental customers, resulting in reduced sales volumes and our
ability to provide profitable growth.
|
Lack of developable land due to
delays in planning approval, failure of a clear and consistent
Government policy or insufficient consented land and strategic land
options at appropriate cost and quality could affect our ability to
grow sales volumes and/or meet our margin and site ROCE hurdle
rates.
|
The housebuilding industry is
subject to increasingly complex legislation and regulation,
Government intervention and policy changes, for example climate
change, building regulation, legal, NHQC, competition law and
sustainability regulation. Deviation from current regulations or
failure to implement the changes effectively within our processes
could lead to financial penalties, damage to the Group's reputation
or increased costs due to inefficient processes.
|
Failure to achieve excellence in
housebuilding construction and product quality, through
insufficient quality assurance programmes, or inability to develop,
evaluate and implement new and innovative construction methods, or
to be a market leader with changes in technology advancement, could
increase costs, expose the Group to future remediation liabilities,
and result in poor product quality and reputational
damage.
|
Failure to build high-rise and
complex structures in line with building regulations or remediate
existing legacy quality issues effectively could result in
remediation delays, reputational damage, increased provisions or
further future remediation liabilities.
|
Responsibility
|
Executive Committee
|
Land Committee
|
Operations Committee
|
Operations Committee
|
Operations Committee
|
Response/ mitigation
|
• Continual monitoring of the market at Board, Executive
Committee, regional and divisional levels, leading to amendments in
the Group's forecasts and planning as necessary.
• Comprehensive sales policies, regular reviews of pricing in
local markets and development of good relationships with mortgage
lenders.
• Disciplined operating framework with an appropriate capital
structure and strong Balance Sheet.
|
• All land acquisitions are
subject to formal appraisal and approval by the Land and
Development Leadership Group.
• Group, regional and divisional
review of land currently owned, committed and identified against
strategic requirements.
• Regular meetings with external
stakeholders including land agents, promoters and land
owners.
• Review by Land and Development
Leadership Group and management on strategic land and
sites.
• Robust review of land appeals
before resubmission.
|
• Robust and rigorous design
standards for the homes and places we develop that exceed current
and expected statutory requirements.
• Policies and technical guidance
for employees on regulatory and legal compliance and the standards
of business conduct expected.
• Dedicated compliance
team.
• Consultation with Government
agencies and membership of industry groups to help monitor,
understand and plan for proposed regulation change.
|
• Continuous review of design and
materials, which are evaluated by technical experts including the
NHBC, to ensure compliance with all regulations.
• Monitoring and improving the
environmental and sustainability impact of construction methods and
materials.
• Implementation of modern methods
of construction by design and technical teams.
• Detailed build programmes
supported by robust quality assurance.
|
• Hired senior technical
expertise into the business.
• Use of qualified engineers
through an approved panel including structural engineer peer review
process.
• Third-party liability insurance.
• Detailed build programmes supported by robust quality
assurance.
• A
dedicated Building Safety Unit (BSU) which undertakes independent
reviews and investigations of legacy buildings and, where
necessary, conducts remediation work.
• Assumptions on the estimated financial costs for remediation
have been tested and challenged robustly.
|
Key risk indicators
|
Internal:
Gross and operating margins, PBT, ROCE, EPS, TSR, total home
completions.
External:
GDP growth, CPI inflation, mortgage approvals, mortgage
affordability, new housebuilding site starts.
|
Land approvals (plots),
UK quantum of consented housing units per year,
UK quantum of applications decided within statutory
periods.
|
Regulatory violations, audit
findings, data breach incidents
|
Customer service, total home
completions, gross margin, operating margin, PBT, ROCE, EPS,
construction waste intensity and carbon intensity,
NHBC Reportable Items and Builder
Responsible Items.
|
Independent third-party assessors'
results, NHBC Reportable Items and Builder Responsible Items, EPS,
customer satisfaction surveys.
|
Risk
|
F
Supply chain resilience
|
G
Safety, health and environment
|
H
Attracting and retaining high-calibre employees
|
I
Information technology
|
J
Redrow integration
|
Risk level
|
Medium risk
|
Low risk
|
Medium risk
|
Medium risk
|
Medium risk
|
Change from previous
year
|
No change
|
Decrease
|
No change
|
No change
|
New risk
|
Risk appetite
|
Cautious
|
Averse
|
Opportunistic
|
Cautious
|
Cautious
|
Risk velocity
|
Moderate
|
Moderate
|
Slow
|
Rapid
|
Slow
|
Link to strategic priorities
|
Leading construction
|
Investing in our people
|
Investing in our people
|
Underlying all
priorities
|
Underlying all
priorities
|
Risk description
|
Not adequately responding to
shortages or increased costs of materials and skilled labour
including those events caused by geopolitical uncertainty, or the
failure of a key supplier in the current economic environment, may
lead to increased costs and delays in construction.
|
Health and safety or environmental
incidents or compliance breaches can impact employees, sub-
contractors, customers and site visitors, and undermine the
creation of a great place to work and visit.
|
Increasing competition for skills
may mean we are unable to recruit and/or retain the best people.
Having sufficient skilled employees is critical to delivery of the
Group's strategy of volume growth whilst maintaining excellence in
all of our other strategic priorities.
|
Failure of any of the Group's key
systems, particularly those for financial and customer information,
surveying and valuation, through a successful cyber attack or lack
of investment leading to outdated systems, could restrict
operations and disrupt progress in delivering strategic
priorities.
|
Without careful management, there
is a risk that synergies that are initially achieved as part of the
merger may not be maintained over the medium to long term leading
to higher costs than forecast. There is further risk that revenue
opportunities arising from the multi-branded portfolio are not
realised.
|
Responsibility
|
Operations Committee
|
Safety, Health and Environment
Operations Committee
|
Executive Committee
|
Executive Risk
Committee
|
Executive Committee
|
Response/ Mitigation
|
• Centralised team procures most
materials from UK suppliers, ensuring consistent quality and
cost.
• Development of multiple supplier
relationships for labour and material supplies, with contingency
plans should any key supplier fail.
• Clear tendering policies and
procedures.
• Robust due diligence procedures
to ensure quality of products and ethical suppliers.
• Build and material cost controls
throughout build programmes to allow supply chain
planning.
• Monitoring of supplier
performance.
|
• Clear roles and responsibilities
for SHE across the Group.
• SHE management system supports
and reinforces documented SHE policies and procedures.
• Employee and sub-contractor
relevant and appropriate SHE training.
• Monthly operational Divisional
Board reporting on SHE performance.
• Second line team of SHE
compliance managers provide support and guidance.
• Board-level SHE Committee and
SHE Operations Committee review and monitor.
|
• Company values relaunched and
embedded across all areas of the business.
• Comprehensive HR programmes
covering apprenticeships, graduate development, succession planning
and training academies.
• Personal development plans for
all employees.
• Monitoring of employee turnover,
absence statistics and independent feedback from exit
interviews.
• Annual employee engagement
survey to measure employee satisfaction.
• Remuneration
benchmarking.
|
• Regular external reviews to
reduce the risk of successful cyber attacks, including
vulnerability and penetration tests by third parties.
• Adoption of the recognised NIST
control framework.
• Group-wide compliance and
policies on passwords and transferring data to third
parties.
• Mandatory information security
training programme for all employees.
• Cyber security insurance
policy.
• IT disaster recovery
plan.
• Continued investment in IT infrastructure.
|
• Tracking, monitoring and reporting of expected and achieved
synergies.
• Dedicated Integration Management Office.
• Executive and Board oversight of integration through
Integration Steering Committee.
|
Key risk indicators
|
Customer service, gross and
operating margin, PBT, ROCE, EPS, TSR, total home
completions.
|
Health and Safety (SHE) audit
compliance
|
Employee engagement
score.
|
Customer service, gross and
operating margin, PBT, ROCE, EPS.
|
EPS and PBT
|
Statement of Directors' Responsibilities
The responsibility statement set
out below has been prepared in connection with (and will be set out
in) the Annual Report and Accounts of the Company for the year
ended 30 June 2024, which will be available to shareholders and
published on its website www.barrattdevelopments.co.uk in September
2024.
Financial Statements and accounting records
The Directors are responsible for
preparing the Annual Report and Accounts including the Directors'
remuneration report and the Financial Statements in accordance with
applicable law and regulations.
Company law requires the Directors
to prepare financial statements for each financial year. Under that
law the Directors are required to prepare the Group Financial
Statements in accordance with UK adopted IAS in conformity with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006 and UK adopted IFRS. The
Directors have also elected to prepare the Parent Company Financial
Statements in accordance with UK adopted IAS in conformity with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006.
Under company law, the Directors
must not approve the Financial Statements unless they are satisfied
that they give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the
Company and the Group and of the profit or loss of the Company and
the Group for that period.
IAS 1 requires that financial
statements present fairly for each financial year the relevant
entity's financial position, financial performance and cash flows.
This requires the faithful representation of the effects of
transactions, other events and conditions in accordance with the
definitions and recognition criteria for assets, liabilities,
income and expenses set out in the IASB's 'Framework for the
preparation and presentation of financial statements'. In virtually
all circumstances, a fair presentation will be achieved by
compliance with all applicable UK adopted IFRS. Directors are also
required to:
·
|
properly select and apply
accounting policies;
|
·
|
present information, including
accounting policies, in a manner that provides relevant, reliable,
comparable and understandable information;
|
·
|
provide additional disclosures when
compliance with the specific requirements in IFRS are insufficient
to enable users to understand the impact of particular
transactions, other events and conditions on the entity's financial
position and financial performance; and
|
·
|
make an assessment of the Company's
and the Group's (as the case may be) ability to continue as a going
concern.
|
The Directors are responsible for
keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and
explain the Company's and the Group's transactions on an individual
and consolidated basis and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any
time the financial position of the Company and the Group and enable
them to ensure that the Financial Statements comply with the
Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the
assets of the Company and the Group and hence for taking reasonable
steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other
irregularities.
The Directors are responsible for
the maintenance and integrity of the corporate and financial
information included on the Company's website. Legislation in the
UK governing the preparation and dissemination of financial
statements may differ from legislation in other
jurisdictions.
Fair, balanced and understandable
The Board considers, on the advice
of the Audit Committee, that the Annual Report and Accounts, taken
as a whole, is fair, balanced and understandable, and provides the
information necessary for shareholders to assess the Company's and
the Group's position, performance, business model and
strategy.
Directors' responsibility statement
The Directors confirm that, to the
best of each person's knowledge:
a) the Group Financial Statements
in the Annual Report and Accounts, which have been prepared in
accordance with UK adopted IAS in conformity with the requirements
of the Companies Act 2006 and UK adopted IFRS, and those of the
Parent Company, which have been prepared in accordance with UK
adopted IAS in conformity with the requirements of the Companies
Act 2006, give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities,
financial position and profit or loss of the Company and Group taken
as a whole; and
b) the Annual Report and Accounts
includes a fair review of the development and performance of the
business and the position of the Company and the Group taken as a
whole, together with a description of the principal risks and
uncertainties they face.
By order of the Board
David Thomas
Chief Executive
3 September 2024
Definitions of alternative performance measures and
reconciliation to IFRS (unaudited)
The Group uses a number of APMs
that are not defined within IFRS. The Directors use these APMs,
along with IFRS measures, to assess the operational performance of
the Group as detailed in the Strategic report in the Annual Report
and Accounts. These APMs may not be directly comparable with
similarly titled measures reported by other companies and they are
not intended to be a substitute for, or superior to, IFRS measures.
Definitions of adjusted items are presented in note 4 and adjusted
performance measures are reconciled to IFRS measures underneath the
Consolidated Income Statement and Statement of Comprehensive
Income. Definitions and reconciliations of the other financial APMs
used to IFRS measures are included below:
Gross margin is defined as
gross profit divided by revenue:
|
2024
|
2023
|
Revenue per Income Statement
(£m)
|
4,168.2
|
5,321.4
|
Gross profit per Income Statement
(£m)
|
509.5
|
974.9
|
Gross margin
|
12.2%
|
18.3%
|
Adjusted gross margin is
defined as adjusted gross profit divided by revenue:
|
2024
|
2023
|
Revenue per Income Statement
(£m)
|
4,168.2
|
5,321.4
|
Adjusted gross profit per Income
Statement (£m)
|
689.0
|
1,130.4
|
Adjusted gross margin
|
16.5%
|
21.2%
|
Operating margin is defined as
profit from operations divided by revenue:
|
2024
|
2023
|
Revenue per Income Statement
(£m)
|
4,168.2
|
5,321.4
|
Profit from operations per Income
Statement (£m)
|
174.7
|
707.4
|
Operating margin
|
4.2%
|
13.3%
|
Adjusted operating margin is
defined as adjusted profit from operations divided by
revenue:
|
2024
|
2023
|
Revenue per Income Statement
(£m)
|
4,168.2
|
5,321.4
|
Adjusted profit from operations
per Income Statement (£m)
|
376.6
|
862.9
|
Adjusted operating margin
|
9.0%
|
16.2%
|
Adjusted earnings for
adjusted basic earnings per
share and adjusted diluted
earnings per share are calculated by excluding adjusted
items and any associated net tax amounts from profit attributable
to ordinary shareholders of the Company:
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Profit attributable to ordinary
shareholders of the Company
|
114.1
|
530.3
|
Net cost associated with legacy
properties per note 4
|
179.5
|
155.5
|
Costs incurred in respect of the
all-share offer for the share capital of Redrow plc per note
4
|
22.4
|
-
|
Cost associated with JV legacy
properties per note 4
|
12.6
|
23.7
|
Tax impact of adjusted
items
|
(54.4)
|
(39.3)
|
Adjusted earnings
|
274.2
|
670.2
|
ROCE is calculated as earnings
before amortisation, interest, tax and operating adjusting items
for the year, divided by average net assets adjusted for goodwill
and intangibles, tax, net cash, derivative financial
instruments and provisions in relation to
legacy properties:
|
2024
£m
|
2023
£m
|
Profit from operations
|
174.7
|
707.4
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
10.4
|
10.5
|
Net cost associated with legacy
properties
|
179.5
|
155.5
|
Costs incurred in respect of the
all-share offer for the share capital of Redrow plc per note
4
|
22.4
|
-
|
Share of post-tax profit from JVs
and associates
|
2.3
|
8.8
|
Adjusted cost related to JV legacy
properties
|
12.6
|
23.7
|
Earnings before amortisation, interest, tax and adjusted
items
|
401.9
|
905.9
|
|
30 June 2024
£m
|
31
December 2023
£m
|
30 June
2023
£m
|
31
December 2022
£m
|
30 June
2022
£m
|
Group net assets per Balance
Sheet
|
5,439.1
|
5,439.6
|
5,596.4
|
5,656.6
|
5,631.3
|
Less:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other intangible assets per
Balance Sheet
|
(184.5)
|
(189.7)
|
(194.9)
|
(200.1)
|
(205.4)
|
Goodwill per Balance
Sheet
|
(852.9)
|
(852.9)
|
(852.9)
|
(852.9)
|
(852.9)
|
Current tax (assets)
|
(31.8)
|
(27.3)
|
(31.1)
|
(0.1)
|
(9.9)
|
Deferred tax
liabilities
|
45.0
|
50.4
|
53.5
|
44.0
|
45.1
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
(1,065.3)
|
(949.9)
|
(1,269.1)
|
(1,166.5)
|
(1,352.7)
|
Loans and borrowings
|
200.0
|
200.3
|
203.4
|
202.0
|
217.3
|
Provisions in relation to legacy
properties
|
730.3
|
646.0
|
612.3
|
485.3
|
479.5
|
Prepaid fees
|
(3.2)
|
(3.8)
|
(3.7)
|
(4.6)
|
(3.2)
|
Capital employed
|
4,276.7
|
4,312.7
|
4,113.9
|
4,163.7
|
3,949.1
|
Three point average capital employed
|
4,234.4
|
|
4,075.6
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
Earnings before amortisation. interest, tax and adjusted
items (from table above) (£m)
|
401.9
|
905.9
|
Three point average capital employed (from table above)
(£m)
|
4,234.4
|
4,075.6
|
ROCE
|
9.5%
|
22.2%
|
Underlying ROCE is calculated as
ROCE (above) with net assets also adjusted for land
payables:
|
30 June 2024
£m
|
31
December 2023
£m
|
30 June
2023
£m
|
31
December 2022
£m
|
30 June
2022
£m
|
Capital employed (from ROCE table
above)
|
4,276.7
|
4,312.7
|
4,113.9
|
4,163.7
|
3,949.1
|
Adjust for land
payables
|
472.8
|
367.2
|
506.7
|
622.3
|
733.6
|
Capital employed adjusted for land payables
|
4,749.5
|
4,679.9
|
4,620.6
|
4,786.0
|
4,682.7
|
Three point average capital employed adjusted for land
payables
|
4,683.3
|
|
4,696.4
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
Earnings before amortisation, interest, tax and adjusted
items (from table above) (£m)
|
401.9
|
905.9
|
Three point average capital employed adjusted for land
payables (from table above) (£m)
|
4,683.3
|
4,696.4
|
Underlying ROCE
|
8.6%
|
19.3%
|
For the purpose of determining the
Executive Directors' annual bonus, capital employed is adjusted for
land, land payables, trade payables and inventories currently
occupied under the refugee support scheme:
|
30 June 2024
£m
|
31
December 2023
£m
|
30 June
2023
£m
|
31
December 2022
£m
|
30 June
2022
£m
|
Capital employed (from ROCE table
above)
|
4,276.7
|
4,312.7
|
4,113.9
|
4,163.7
|
3,949.1
|
Adjust for land
|
(3,233.6)
|
(2,979.1)
|
(3,139.9)
|
(3,253.7)
|
(3,339.9)
|
Adjust for land
payables
|
472.8
|
367.2
|
506.7
|
622.3
|
733.6
|
Adjust for trade
payables
|
252.7
|
186.9
|
310.3
|
220.4
|
324.0
|
Adjust for inventories currently
occupied under the refugee support scheme
|
(9.0)
|
(11.3)
|
(11.0)
|
-
|
-
|
Capital employed adjusted for land, land payables, trade
payables and inventories currently occupied under the refugee
support scheme
|
1,759.6
|
1,876.4
|
1,780.0
|
1,752.7
|
1,666.8
|
Three point average capital employed adjusted for land, land
payables, trade payables and inventories currently
occupied under the refugee support scheme
|
1,805.3
|
|
1,733.2
|
|
|
Net cash is defined in note
11.
Total indebtedness is defined
as net (cash)/debt and land payables:
|
2024
|
2023
|
Net cash (£m)
|
(868.5)
|
(1,069.4)
|
Land payables (£m)
|
472.8
|
506.7
|
Total indebtedness
|
(395.7)
|
(562.7)
|
TSR is a measure of the performance
of the Group's share price over a period of three financial years.
It combines share price appreciation and dividends paid to show the
total return to the shareholders expressed as a
percentage.
Glossary
Active outlet
|
A site with at least one plot for
sale
|
AGM
|
Annual General Meeting
|
APM
|
Alternative performance
measure
|
ASP
|
Average selling price
|
Barratt
|
Barratt Developments PLC and its
subsidiary undertakings
|
BRIs
|
Builders' Reportable
Items
|
Building Regulations
|
The requirements relating to the
erection and extension of buildings under UK Law
|
Capital Employed
|
Average net assets adjusted for
goodwill and intangibles, tax, cash, loans and borrowings, prepaid
fees, provisions in respect of legacy properties and derivative
financial instruments
|
CDP
|
Charity that runs the global
system for disclosure of environmental impacts for investors,
companies, cities, states and regions
|
CMA
|
Competition and Markets
Authority
|
DBP
|
Deferred Bonus Plan
|
EBT
|
Barratt Developments Employee
Benefit Trust
|
ELTIP
|
Employee Long Term Incentive
Plan
|
EMC
|
Ethnic Minority
Communities
|
EPC
|
Energy Performance
Certificate
|
EPS
|
Earnings per share
|
EWS
|
External Wall System
|
Foundation
|
The Barratt Developments PLC
Charitable Foundation
|
FRAEW
|
Fire Risk Appraisals of External
Wall construction
|
FY
|
Refers to the financial year ended
30 June
|
Gross margin
|
Gross profit divided by total
revenue
|
Group
|
Barratt Deveopments PLC and its
subsidiary undertakings
|
HBF
|
Home Builders
Federation
|
IAS
|
International Accounting
Standards
|
IASB
|
International Accounting Standards
Board
|
IFRS
|
International Financial Reporting
Standards
|
IIR
|
Injury incidence rate
|
ISO
|
International Organisation for
Standardisation
|
JVs
|
Joint ventures
|
KPI
|
Key performance
indicator
|
LGBTQ+
|
Lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender, queer and other gender expressions
|
LTPP
|
Long Term Performance
Plan
|
MMC
|
Modern methods of
construction
|
Net cash
|
Cash and cash equivalents, bank
overdrafts, interest-bearing borrowings and prepaid fees
|
Net tangible assets
|
Group net assets less other
intangible assets and goodwill
|
NHBC
|
National House Building
Council
|
OHSAS
|
Occupational Health and Safety
Assessment Series
|
Operating margin
|
Profit from operations divided by
revenue
|
Oregon
|
Oregon Timber Frame Limited,
Oregon Timber Frame (England) Limited and Oregon Contract
Management Limited
|
PAS9980
|
Code of practice setting out a
method for the completion of a Fire Risk Appraisal of External Wall
construction
|
PRS
|
Private rented sector
|
RCF
|
Revolving Credit
Facility
|
RIs
|
Reportable items - defects found
during NHBC inspections
|
ROCE
|
Return on capital employed ('ROCE')
is calculated as earnings before amortisation, interest, tax and
operating adjusting or exceptional items for the year, divided by
average net assets adjusted for goodwill and intangibles, tax, net
cash, derivative financial instruments and
provisions in relation to legacy properties
|
RPDT
|
Residential Property Developer
Tax
|
Sharesave
|
Savings-Related Share Option
Scheme
|
SHE
|
Safety, Health and the
Environment
|
Site ROCE
|
Site operating profit (site trading
profit less allocated administrative overheads) divided by average
investment in site land and work in progress
|
SONIA
|
Sterling Overnight Interest
Average
|
the Barratt group
|
Barratt Developments PLC and its
subsidiary undertakings prior to the acquisition of Redrow
plc
|
the combined group
|
The new group of companies
comprising the Barratt group as defined above, and Redrow plc and
its subsidiaries
|
the Company
|
Barratt Developments PLC
|
the Financial Statements
|
Refers to the complete Financial
Statements of Barratt Developments PLC and its subsidiaries, rather
than the condensed consolidated financial statements (the
'financial statements') included in this document
|
the Group
|
Barratt Developments PLC and its
subsidiary undertakings as at 30 June 2024
|
Total completions
|
Unless otherwise stated, total
completions quoted include JVs
|
Total indebtedness
|
Net (cash)/debt and land
payables
|
TSR
|
Total shareholder return
|
Underlying ROCE
|
ROCE as defined above, with net
assets also adjusted for land payables
|
USPP
|
US Private Placements
|