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Persimmon reports bumper year amid UK housing market boom

- Mark Sweney

Persimmon has reported a bumper year with weekly sales up a fifth in the second half of 2021 compared with prepandemi­c levels thanks to a booming housing market driven by cheap mortgage deals and a stamp duty holiday.

The UK’s biggest housebuild­er by market value said in a trading update that revenues rose 8.4% last year to £3.61bn as it completed the sale of 14,551 homes, up almost 1,000 on 2020, as the average price of a home rose from £230,534 to £237,050 year-on-year.

However, Persimmon said the spread of the Omicron variant has increased sickness-related absenteeis­m, with some customers delaying moving into new homes to follow government isolation advice.

“Whilst the industry continues to face the ongoing operationa­l and economic challenges as a consequenc­e of the pandemic, particular­ly as the Omicron outbreak unfolded in the last six weeks of the year, the group continues to manage these ongoing challenges comprehens­ively,” said Dean Finch, chief executive at Persimmon. “The long-term fundamenta­ls of the UK housing market remain strong and I am confident.”

The company responded to government plans to force housebuild­ers to pay to fix defective cladding following the Grenfell fire, although Persimmon said it had built only a “very small proportion” of buildings affected.

“We share the secretary of state’s aspiration that leaseholde­rs should not have to pay to remove cladding,” the company said. “Indeed, we made a commitment a year ago that leaseholde­rs in buildings constructe­d by Persimmon, including all those above 11 metres, should not have to cover the cost of cladding removal. We have constructe­d only a very small proportion of buildings affected by this issue. In common with the rest of the house

building industry, we will shortly begin paying the cladding levy announced in the budget.”

The company has previously said that 26 of the buildings it has constructe­d have been found to have defective cladding.

Along with its peers, the FTSE 100 company has benefited from the UK’s pandemic-fuelled housing boom as homebuyers sought to exploit the government’s stamp duty holiday, which ended last October, historical­ly low borrowing costs and the “race for space” trend as the rise in flexible and remote working fuelled a rise in buyers seeking at properties in more rural and picturesqu­e locations.

Persimmon said that homebuying enquiries have “remained encouragin­g” despite the end of government support schemes, with demand continuing to outstrip supply.

However, the company said its £1.62bn order book at 31 December is slightly down on 2020’s £1.69bn, although it’s up on 2019’s £1.36bn.

 ?? Photograph: Lee Smith/Reuters ?? Persimmon signs adorn a building site in Durham, north-east England.
Photograph: Lee Smith/Reuters Persimmon signs adorn a building site in Durham, north-east England.

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