Western Daily Press

Redrow warns of impact of self-isolating workers as profits rise

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HOUSEBUILD­ER Redrow has revealed that a growing number of self-isolating workers is affecting constructi­on, as it posted higher halfyear profits on record revenues.

The group said it is seeing “some impact on work” due to self-isolating sub-contractor­s who are unable to work on building sites amid the second wave of the pandemic. Its comments came as it posted an 11% rise in pre-tax profits to £174 million for the six months to December 27, as revenues topped £1 billion, up 20%.

Matthew Pratt, group chief executive of Redrow, said: “Operating within a further national lockdown continues to present challenges.”

He added: “There has been some impact on build as an increasing number of sub-contractor colleagues are unable to work whilst self-isolating. We expect to see this situation improve as the country’s overall Covid-19 infection rate decreases,” Redrow said.

The company said its sales centres were open on an appointmen­t-only basis, with comprehens­ive Covid-19 measures in place, while most officebase­d staff were working from home.

The group saw legal completion­s jump 20% to 3,065 over its first half as its refocus away from London towards the regions pays off.

Last year Redrow scaled back operations in the capital, and has now exited four of six sites it had planned to develop.

It expects to quit the remaining two before the end of its financial year in June. Many homeowners are now looking for bigger properties as lockdowns and the pandemic force more people to stay at home.

The switch in demand, together with a stamp duty holiday that is due to end in March, has sparked a miniboom in the housing market that has helped hold up the UK’s struggling economy.

Redrow said the changing buyer trends are “completely aligned to Redrow’s strategy”.

“Demand in the regions for our heritage homes has been particular­ly high as more buyers reflect on their lockdown experience­s and prioritise space in their homes and access to green areas,” it added.

The group said its order book stood at £1.3 billion, up from £1.2 billion a year ago.

It restarted shareholde­r dividends thanks to the robust results. But Redrow said average weekly value of private sales reservatio­ns edged lower since the end of 2020 to £265,000 per outlet, down from strong comparativ­es of £298,000 a year ago.

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