Scottish Daily Mail

Barratt warns of housing market slowdown in UK

- By Calum Muirhead

BARRATT Developmen­ts has warned of a ‘marked slowdown’ in the housing market as the outlook for the industry darkens.

In a further sign that the pandemic property boom has come to a shuddering halt, the FtSE 100 firm reported a slump in sales amid rising mortgage costs and the threat of a fall in prices.

the bleak update came as analysts predicted profits for the major housing groups would decline sharply in 2023 following two years cashing in on red-hot demand.

In an update for the six months to the end of December, Barratt said average weekly sales were 44pc lower than a year earlier, while the value of orders at the end of last year fell to £2.5bn, from £3.8bn.

It blamed ‘political and economic uncertaint­y’ and ‘rapid and significan­t’ changes in mortgage rates which cut affordabil­ity and knocked buyer confidence. the outlook for the next six months was ‘uncertain’ with mortgage pricing and buyer optimism ‘critical’, it said.

It has paused hiring of staff and cut new land approvals to preserve cash. the shares dipped 0.2pc, or 0.7p, to 422.9p.

‘Having enjoyed more than a decade of rock-bottom [interest] rates, buyers are pulling back from making long-term financial commitment­s on mortgages as the cost of living crisis bites. Barratt clearly recognises this,’ said Julie Palmer at insolvency specialist Begbies traynor. She added that a ‘lengthy slowdown’ could affect a £200m share buyback announced in September.

Interactiv­e Investor’s head of investment Victoria Scholar noted a ‘chronic shortage of supply’ was preventing a ‘more aggressive slump’ in prices.

Others were more upbeat. aarin Chiekrie at Hargreaves Lansdown said he was ‘cautiously optimistic’ about Barratt’s prospects in the long run.

‘Barratt’s significan­t net cash position of £965m gives it plenty of wiggle room compared to peers, even if the market deteriorat­es further,’ Chiekrie added.

But Barratt’s warning is likely to unsettle shareholde­rs in rival taylor Wimpey, due to deliver its trading update tomorrow.

the signs of a slowing market appeared to herald a wider downturn in housebuild­er profits, which soared during the pandemic amid demand for spacious properties and a stamp duty holiday.

the FtSE 100’s four biggest builders, Persimmon, Berkeley, Barratt and taylor Wimpey, are projected to rake in profits of nearly £3.2bn in 2022, according to data firm refinitiv estimates.

But this is expected to drop to £2.5bn this year. Persimmon is estimated to see a drop to £645m from £963m while taylor Wimpey was predicted to slide to £551m from £850m.

Several builders have sounded the alarm. Berkeley warned last month that a cooling UK market and a ‘toxic’ mix of challenges would slow developmen­ts. It highlighte­d issues such as a complex and slow planning system, higher costs, more regulation and the planned 6pc increase in corporatio­n tax.

taylor Wimpey has cut its housebuild­ing outlook on the back of weaker sales and rising cancellati­ons, while Persimmon warned rising interest rates and economic uncertaint­y were ‘clearly’ impacting customer behaviour and demand.

the growing fear of a slowdown has hit hard. Persimmon shares lost 57pc of their value last year while Barratt sank 47pc, taylor Wimpey dropped 42pc and Berkeley fell 21pc.

the pain is set to continue. Halifax reported the price of the average UK home fell 1.5pc in December and predicted prices would fall around 8pc this year.

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