Yorkshire Post

McCarthy & Stone sees annual profits slump in tough market

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RETIREMENT HOMEBUILDE­R McCarthy & Stone has revealed annual profits slumped by a quarter and cautioned that the election kept recent trading under pressure.

The group bemoaned a “challengin­g market and strategic structural changes” that left it nursing a 25 per cent slump in pre-tax profits to £43.4m for the 14 months to October 31.

Profits were knocked by around £17m of one-off costs, including redundancy payouts as it cut around 200 jobs – close to 10 per cent of its workforce – and closed offices in Scotland and the south-west of England.

It also booked costs for consultanc­y fees relating to its shake-up and on land that will now no longer be developed.

McCarthy said its woes had continued into the new financial year, with the start of its first half performanc­e weighed down by uncertaint­y ahead of the December General Election.

It said first half profits are set

to be lower than a year earlier, but added that political uncertaint­y had eased since the Conservati­ve Party win and stressed a better second half was expected to keep the full-year out-turn on track.

Last year, McCarthy unveiled a major cost-cutting drive as new chief executive John Tonkiss looked to turn around the retirement specialist’s fortunes.

He has ordered a shift in focus from growth to increased returns on investment and improving profit margins, with a focus on the burgeoning build-to-rent market as more people rent later in life.

The group also swung the axe on jobs largely across its developmen­t businesses across the UK, but confirmed it is not expecting to make any more redundanci­es under the overhaul

Mr Tonkiss said the group is “making excellent progress across our key strategic initiative­s as set out in September 2018, particular­ly rental, where our initial pilots have confirmed strong demand for renting in later life”.

“This is a hugely positive step for the business as it enables our business model to become more resilient and ensures we are in a strong position to capitalise on future market recovery,” he added.

Results showed with the oneoff costs stripped out, underlying pre-tax profits rose 2 per cent to £63.1m.

 ??  ?? JOHN TONKISS: The chief executive ordered a shift in focus at the housebuild­er.
JOHN TONKISS: The chief executive ordered a shift in focus at the housebuild­er.

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