Housebuilder finished nearly 10,000 homes last year

Persimmon’s home completions dropped 33% last year but were higher than the housebuilder had previously forecast. 

Last November, the business said it expected to build around 9,500 homes in 2023, which would have been 36% down on the 14,868 built in the previous year. 

persimmon 2

Source: Shutterstock

Persimmon’s forward sales was up 2% on the previous year

But in a trading update published this morning, Persimmon revealed it had in fact built 9,922 homes after a better-than-expected fourth quarter performance. 

The group also saw its private average selling price rise by roughly 5% to around £286,000 – up from £272,000. Its partnerships average selling price rose 8% to £153,000. 

It said its full-year operating margins were expected to be in line with the 14% delivered in the first half of the year. 

“This reflects the impact of build cost inflation, coupled with the effects of lower volume, one-off costs associated with the remediation of a small number of completed sites and accelerated exit from two sites, along with further investment to position the business for future success,” it said. 

The firm’s forward sales position was up 2% on the prior year at £1.06bn, of which £499m relates to private forward sales, up 4%. 

Dean Finch, group chief executive, said the business had “performed well in challenging market conditions” and had “successfully balanced our need to control costs, whilst investing in the business to position it for sustainable growth when conditions improve”. 

>>See also: Persimmon and Primegate Properties granted planning permission for 1,500-home Swindon scheme 

>>See also: Persimmon brings in new chief finance officer from Galliford Try

>>See also: Top 50 Housebuilders 

Andy Murphy, director of financials and industrials at investment relations firm Edison Group said the trading statement “showcase[s] the company’s resilience amidst the challenging market conditions for UK housebuilders”, but noted that “rising mortgage rates, lower buyer demand and inflated costs of raw materials” had impacted completion rates. 

“Persimmon will continue to navigate these challenging market conditions into 2024 as macro-economic worries temper the hopes for the recovery of the British housing sector, despite easing mortgage rates,” he said. 

Persimmon’s results for the full-year ended 31 December 2023 will be released on 12 March this year.