17
September 2024
HENRY BOOT
PLC
('Henry
Boot', the 'Company' or the 'group')
Ticker:
BOOT.L: Main market premium listing: FTSE: Real Estate Investment
and Services.
UNAUDITED INTERIM RESULTS FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED 30 JUNE
2024
Strong sales, a prime
portfolio and an improving outlook underpin increased
dividend
Henry Boot PLC, a Company engaged
in land promotion, property investment and development, and
construction, announces its unaudited interim results for the six
months ended 30 June 2024.
Tim Roberts, Chief Executive Officer,
commented:
'During the first half of the year we have started to see an
improvement in our markets and this together with our focus on
prime land and development, plus premium homes has helped us to
achieve relatively strong property sales. The lower forward sales
with which we started the year has affected our first half
financial performance and as flagged at the time of our 2023
results, we expect 2024 to be heavily weighted towards the second
half. With 81% of budgeted sales already completed, exchanged or
reserved, we remain on track to perform in line with market
expectations for the full year. Furthermore, we remain confident in
our key markets, and have significant latent value in our
development and land portfolio which is held at cost, as well as
plenty of opportunity to grow in order to meet our stated medium
term targets. This together with our rock solid balance sheet
underpins our decision to raise the interim dividend by
5%.'
Financial highlights
· Completed and exchanged on total land and property sales of
£150.8m (H1 23: £129.3m), reflecting growing demand for our prime
projects and buildings as sentiment in our markets begins to
improve
· A
lower starting forward sales position resulting in revenue of
£106.0m (H1 23: £179.8m) and a profit before tax of £3.7m (H1 23:
£25.0m) or an underlying profit1 of £3.6m (H1 23:
£23.3m)
· 81% of
budgeted sales for 2024 completed, exchanged or reserved, with the
remaining deals either under offer or in detailed
negotiations
· 5%
increase in interim dividend to 3.08p, consistent with our
progressive dividend policy and our confidence in achieving full
year performance in line with market expectations and in the
group's future prospects
· Capital employed has increased by 1.7% to £424m (December
2023: £417m) continuing our stated growth strategy and progressing
toward our medium term target of £500m
· Return
on capital employed (ROCE2) was 1.4% (H1 23: 6.3%) but
is expected to finish the year only marginally below the Company's
target of 10%-15%. We remain confident of achieving returns within
the target range in the medium term
· The
group's Net Asset Value (NAV3) per share remained broadly
flat at 305p (December 2023: 306p) or 299p (December 2023: 300p),
excluding the defined benefit pension scheme surplus
· Net
debt4 increased to £103.9m (December 2023: £77.8m) as we
continued to fund infrastructure works to unlock our prime
strategic land sites and build out our high-quality committed
development programme. Gearing at 25.5% (December 2023: 19.0%), has
already reduced to c.18% as of 16 September, and is back within our
optimal range of 10-20%
Operational highlights
· Land
promotion
o 843
plots sold (H1 23: 1,900); a further 1,695 plots have exchanged, of
which 1,246 plots are due to complete by year end. With 1,070 plots
under offer we are on target to sell 3,000 plots this year
(December 2023: 1,944)
o The
total land bank has marginally grown to 101,491 plots (December
2023: 100,972 plots)
o 7,990 plots with planning permission (December 2023: 8,501),
all held at cost and 13,392 submitted for planning (December 2023:
13,468)
o Following the welcomed publication of the draft amendments to
the NPPF we aim to advance new applications on c.8,500 plots over
2025
· Property investment & development
o High quality committed development programme with Gross
Development Value (GDV) of £264m (HBD share: £119m) with 64%
pre-sold or pre-let
o £1.5bn development pipeline (HB share: £1.3bn GDV), 57% of
which is focused on Industrial & Logistics markets
o The
market value of the investment portfolio including our share of JVs
increased marginally by 0.3% to £113.2m (December 2023: £112.9m)
with a total property return5 of 2.7% in the six month
period, very marginally below the CBRE UK Monthly Index
(2.9%)
o Stonebridge Homes (SH) has secured 95% of its 2024 delivery
target of 275 units (2023: 251 units) with a total owned and
controlled land bank of 1,407 plots (December 2023: 1,513 plots),
in line with growth targets
· Construction
o The
construction segment achieved turnover of £43.5m (H1 23: £56.2m)
with an operating profit of £2.9m (H1 23: £4.4m)
· Responsible business
o Making good progress against our Responsible Business Strategy
targets set in January 2022, and on course to achieve our 2025
objectives and targets
NOTES:
1
Underlying profit before tax is an alternative
performance measure (APM) and is defined as profit before tax
excluding revaluation movements on completed investment properties.
Revaluation movement on completed investment properties includes
gains of £nil (2023: £1.4m gain) on wholly owned completed
investment property and gains of £0.1m (2023: £0.3m gains) on
completed investment property held in joint ventures. This APM
provides the users with a measure that excludes specific external
factors beyond management's controls and reflects the group's
underlying results. This measure is used in the business in
appraising senior management performance.
2
Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) is an APM and is
defined as operating profit/average of total assets less current
liabilities (excluding DB pension surplus) at the opening and
closing balance sheet dates.
3
Net Asset Value (NAV) per share is an APM and is defined using
the statutory measures net assets/ordinary share
capital.
4
Net (debt)/cash is an APM and is reconciled to statutory
measures in note 14.
5
Total property return is a metric that combines
capital and income returns for the investment portfolio. It is
calculated as the percentage value change plus net income accrual,
relative to the capital employed and is calculated on a monthly
basis and then indexed in line with the benchmark.
For further information, please
contact:
Enquiries:
Henry Boot PLC
Tim Roberts, Chief Executive
Officer
Darren Littlewood, Chief Financial
Officer
Daniel Boot, Senior Corporate
Communications Manager
Tel: 0114 255 5444
www.henryboot.co.uk
Deutsche Numis
Joint Corporate Broker
Ben Stoop/Thomas
Philpott
Tel: 0207 260 1000
Peel Hunt LLP
Joint Corporate Broker
Ed Allsopp/Pete Mackie
Tel: 0207 418 8900
FTI Consulting
Financial PR
Giles Barrie/Richard
Sunderland
Tel: 020 3727 1000
henryboot@fticonsulting.com
A webcast for analysts and investors
will be held at 9.30am today and presentation slides will be
available to download via
www.henryboot.co.uk.
Details for the live dial-in facility and webcast
are as follows:
About Henry Boot
Henry Boot is one of the UK's
leading land, property development, home building and construction
businesses - and we've been transforming land and spaces since
1886. Listed on the London Stock Exchange since 1919, we're
renowned for quality, expertise, delivery and a partnership
approach across the group - which comprises, Hallam Land, HBD,
Stonebridge, Henry Boot Construction, Banner Plant and Road
Link.
Operating across the UK, and
employing over 500 people, we focus on three key markets: urban
development, industrial and logistics and residential. Hallam Land
has facilitated 52,000 new homes since 1990, managing one of the
top five largest land portfolios in the country, with the potential
to facilitate over 100,000 homes. HBD manages a development
pipeline of £1.3bn, the equivalent of 7m sq ft of developments
across our key markets, while maintaining a £113m investment
portfolio, of which 73% of the properties have an EPC rating of 'C'
or higher. Stonebridge, our jointly-owned home building business,
manages a land portfolio capable of delivering 1,500 homes, with an
ambition to deliver up to 600 new homes a year.
Henry Boot Construction has
extensive experience in both the public and private sectors,
including major projects such as the £200m regeneration of Barnsley
town centre, and The Cocoa Works, a £57m residential development in
York. For over 65 years, Banner Plant has supplied construction
products and services, operating from seven regional depots in the
North of England.
We have also developed an ambitious
Responsible Business Strategy to help us meet our aim of being Net
Zero Carbon by 2030, and to deliver, by 2025, charitable, community
and education work valued at £1m.
From land promotion, property
development and investment to home building, construction and plant
hire, Henry Boot is where great places start.
www.henryboot.co.uk
CEO's
review
During the first half of 2024 our
markets stabilised and showed further signs of recovering demand.
Inflation moderated, expectations for interest rate cuts increased,
the economy grew and customer and investor confidence picked up. In
the first six months UK commercial property and land values were
broadly unchanged following the valuation declines experienced
since mid 2022, suggesting that the market has, or is beginning to
turn. While there has been some improvement in investment markets,
with the volume of commercial property transactions in H1 24 up 14%
on the same period one year earlier, the overall level of activity
in H1 24 was around 25% below the long-term average.
House prices increased by 1.2% during
the six months to June 2024 according to Nationwide and are now
around 3% below the peak in August 2022, however completions of new
homes have slowed markedly. While there has been a corresponding
reduction in land sale volumes, we have seen several major
housebuilders re-entering the market since the start of the year
with competitive bidding for our strategic land. There has also
been increased M&A activity within the housebuilding sector as
housebuilders seek economies of scale from procurement costs and
increasing asset turn, but also growing land banks.
Against this backdrop, our strategic
focus on high quality land, commercial property development and
housebuilding in prime locations saw us increase the level of sales
completed and exchanged in the first half to £150.8m (H1 23:
£129.3m). As of 1 September, the total had risen to £203.7m
reflecting higher levels of activity post period end, leaving the
group positioned to achieve full year performance in line with
market expectations*.
However, as stated at the time of our
results in March, a lower starting forward sales position combined
with reduced levels of activity in our markets meant that we expect
2024's full year results to be heavily second half weighted. This
is reflected in a profit before tax for the period of £3.7m,
compared to £25m for the same period last year. Since 1 July we
have completed, or exchanged on, several disposals with further
accretive sales also currently under negotiation, which underpins
our decision to raise the dividend payable for the first half by
5%.
With inflation back in line with the
Bank of England's target and the Monetary Policy Committee's
decision in August to cut interest rates for the first time since
March 2020, market sentiment has improved, resulting in reduced
borrowing costs leading to an increase in activity. We are also
encouraged by the direction of the new Labour government around
reforms to the planning system and reintroduction of housebuilding
targets for local authorities.
With proposed changes to the National
Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) suggested to be implemented by the
end of the year, this will represent over the life of this
Parliament a significant opportunity for our business to speed up
securing planning consents in our large land bank and development
pipeline. In particular, we have already identified c.8,500 plots
in Hallam Land's (Hallam) land bank where we expect to expedite
planning applications. We also believe it will help with our plans
to grow Stonebridge Homes (SH) where planning has been a
consistent, frustrating drag on growth.
During the first half of the year and
including post H1 sales up to 1 September, 81% of budgeted sales
for 2024 have either been completed, exchanged or reserved.
Significant transactions that have exchanged or are anticipated to
close this year, include:
· Swindon (Hallam) - we exchanged on the sale of 759 residential
plots to Vistry Group. The first phase of the sale (393 plots)
completed post period end in July, with the balance expected to
complete in 2025.
· Ambrosden (Hallam) - in June we unconditionally exchanged on
the sale of 75 residential plots to Mulberry Homes. The sale is
scheduled to complete in December.
· Pickford Gate, Coventry (Phase 2) (Hallam) - in July we
exchanged on the sale of 491 residential plots to David Wilson
Homes, which completed in September.
· The
Chocolate Works in York (HBD) - the conditional sale of a two-acre
development site was agreed to McCarthy Stone. The deal is
primarily conditional on securing planning, and having achieved
consent for a retirement community in March, is now scheduled to
complete in October.
The remaining transactions which
are in advanced discussions, once completed in H2 24, will mean we
hit our sales target for 2024. This includes securing SH's annual
housebuilding sales target of 275 units, of which 95% is reserved
as of 8 September, with several other deals across the group also
in negotiation:
· Pickford Gate, Coventry (Phase 3) (Hallam) - following the
completion of phase two in September, the third phase sale is in
detailed negotiations with a major housebuilder which, when
concluded, will secure Hallam's target for 2024.
· Setl,
Birmingham (HBD) - in May we achieved practical completion of the
102 premium apartment building (£32m GDV) in the city centre and up
to 1 September this scheme has pre-sold 52% by value of the units
at target selling prices. We expect the sale of the majority of the
remaining units to be secured by the year end.
· Spark,
Walsall (HBD) - with planning approved in June for the first three
units, totalling 464,000 sq ft, there is strong interest in the
first unit, which when secured adds a further c.£40m GDV to HBD's
committed programme.
At Island, the £66m GDV (Our share:
£33m) NZC office scheme located in the heart of Manchester, HBD has
45,700 sq ft across 5 floors of the building under offer. This
means our £264m (HBD share £119m) committed development programme
is 64% pre-let or pre-sold.
The group's NAV per share remained
broadly flat at 305p (December 2023: 306p) or 299p (December 2023:
300p), excluding the defined benefit pension scheme surplus, with
lower profits offset by payment of the 2023 final dividend of 4.4p
in the period.
Net debt was £103.9m as at 30 June
2024 (December 2023: £77.8m) reflecting a £52.8m net increase in
land and work in progress in the period as we continued to fund our
high-quality committed development programme, as well as undertake
infrastructure works to facilitate major strategic land disposals
at Swindon and Coventry, both of which have completed post period.
This resulted in an anticipated increase in our gearing to 25.5% as
at 30 June 2024, which has already been reduced to c.18%, as of 16
September, back within our optimal range of 10-20%.
In May, the group agreed terms with
existing lenders Barclays, HSBC and NatWest for a new £125m, three
year facility, with the option to extend for a further two years to
May 2029. The margin payable under the new facility is 160bps above
SONIA. In addition, the facility includes a £60m accordion. This
replaces a £105m committed facility with a margin of 140bps, which
had a scheduled maturity in January 2025.
We continue to build on our Henry
Boot legacy and invest in our long term business, in particular
investing in technology and processes to help our people work
smarter and more efficiently, and following our HQ relocation to
Isaacs Building, we have begun a rolling upgrade on our regional
network of offices and depots. We also launched a refreshed group
brand in June to reinforce our values, optimise customer
experiences, and to be clearly recognised as a modern, progressive
and successful business. Simply stated, Henry Boot is 'Where great
places start'.
*Market expectations being the average of current analyst
consensus of £30.7m profit before tax, comprising three forecasts
from Deutsche Numis, Peel Hunt and Panmure
Liberum.
Dividend
The Board has declared an interim
dividend of 3.08p (June 2023: 2.93p), with the 5% increase
demonstrating our progressive dividend policy and continued
confidence in the future prospects for the business. This will be
paid on 11 October 2024 to shareholders on the register at the
close of business on 20 September 2024.
Strategy
The group set a medium-term strategy
in 2021 to grow the size of the business by increasing capital
employed from £365m to £500m, focusing on its three key markets:
I&L, Residential and Urban Development; while maintaining ROCE
within a 10-15% range.
In the first six months of the year
our capital employed has increased to £424m (December 2023: £417m).
Despite recent challenging markets we remain on course to realise
our strategic medium term target of £500m.
See below for the progress made in H1
24 against our stated medium term targets:
Measure
|
Medium term target
|
H1
24 Performance
|
Progress
|
Capital employed
|
To over £500m
|
£424m as at 30 June 2024
|
On track to grow capital employed
to over £500m
|
Return on average capital
employed
|
10-15% pa
|
1.4% in H1 24 due to heavy
weighting to H2 in 2024
|
We expect
to be marginally below stated strategic target for FY24, although
maintain our medium term aim through the cycle
|
Land promotion plot
sales
|
c.3,500 pa
|
843 plots in H1 24
|
With an additional 1,246 plots
already scheduled for completion in H2 24, we remain on target to
sell c.3,000 plots this year
|
Development completions
|
Our share c.£200m pa
|
Our share: £68m in H1 24, with
committed programme of £119m for 2024
|
We are on track to complete on
£192m GDV this year, just marginally short of our medium term
target. We have optionality to build our committed programme back
up from our £1.3bn pipeline
|
Grow investment
portfolio
|
To around £150m
|
£113.2m as at 30 June
2024
|
Value broadly unchanged, with no
acquisitions completed. We will remain patient in building the
portfolio up to its medium term target
|
Stonebridge Homes sales
|
Up to 600 units pa
|
Secured 95% of its 2024 delivery
target of 275 units
|
Continue to target increased output
in 2024, in line with overall strategic objective of 600 units,
albeit at a slower growth rate
|
Construction order book
secured
|
Minimum of 65% for the following
year
|
20% at H1 24 for 2025
|
HBC is behind schedule in winning
work for next year. In response, the opportunity pipeline has been
refocused, with £54m PCSA's in progress
|
Responsible
business
We launched our Responsible Business
Strategy in January 2022, with our primary aim to be Net Zero
Carbon (NZC) by 2030 with respect to Scopes 1 & 2 greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions. I am pleased with the progress we have made so
far against our 2025 objectives and targets. Our strategy is guided
by three principal objectives:
· To
further embed ESG factors into commercial decision making so that
the business adapts, ensuring long-term sustainability and value
creation for the group's stakeholders.
· To
empower and engage our people to deliver long term meaningful
change and impact for the communities and environments Henry Boot
works in.
· To
focus on issues deemed to be most significant and material to the
business and hold ourselves accountable by reporting regularly on
progress.
30 month performance against
our 2025 target
As we passed the midpoint of our
Responsible Business Strategy, the table below highlights the good
progress we have made so far against our 2025 objectives and
targets.
Our people
|
Performance
|
Our places
|
Performance
|
Develop and deliver a group-wide
Health and Wellbeing Strategy
|
New Health and Wellbeing Strategy
and Programme launched in 2023. Approximately 50 employees trained
as Mental Health First Aiders
|
Contribute £1,000,000 of financial
(and equivalent) value to our charitable partners
|
We contributed (financial and
equivalent value of) over £640,000 to our charitable and
community
partners
|
Increase gender representation in
the business, aiming for 30% of our team and line managers being
female
|
We have made progress, with female
representation across our workforce increasing to 29% (2023:
28%)
|
Contribute 7,500 volunteering hours
to a range of community, charity, and education projects
|
More than 6,500 volunteering hours
have been delivered, putting us well over half way to our
goal
|
Our planet
|
Performance
|
Our partners
|
Performance
|
Reduce Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions
by over 20% to support reaching NZC by 2030
|
Total direct GHG emissions (Scopes
1 and 2) in 2023 were 2,833 tonnes which equates to a 14% reduction
from the 2019 baseline
|
Pay all of our suppliers the real
living wage and secure accreditation with the Living Wage
Foundation
|
Internal experts are working with
the Living Wage Foundation to meet the criteria of membership with
accreditation to be achieved in 2024
|
Reduce consumption of
avoidable
plastic by 50%
|
Sustainability audits completed and
a Waste Management Plan is in development
|
Collaborate with all our partners
to reduce our environmental impact
|
We continue to engage with
membership organisations
and our supply chain to share
knowledge and best practice
|
Outlook
Looking ahead it feels like the
economy is picking up, with inflation normalising, and the prospect
of further falls in interest rates increasing following the cut in
August. We have also had two areas of uncertainty removed, with the
General Election and the subsequent new administration showing a
clear intent to free up the planning system and drive development,
with a particular emphasis on housebuilding.
All of this is encouraging for our
business, where demand is rate sensitive and can also vary
depending on levels of confidence and where dysfunctional planning
has been a drag on performance. There has been data during H1
showing our markets stabilising, and over the summer, when
traditionally we have had a quieter period, there have been signs
of a recovery in demand. As a result, we are operationally gearing
up to submit more planning applications across the group over the
next 12 months to take advantage of this improving
situation.
We were clear that this year would
be heavily second half weighted, and that has been the case,
however, with 81% of budgeted sales for 2024 completed, exchanged
or reserved, we are firmly on track to meet our full year
expectations.
The group remains convinced that our
three key markets - industrial, residential and urban development -
benefit from long term structural trends where demand is likely to
outstrip supply. That, together with a rock solid balance sheet,
the recently signed, larger banking facility, and a portfolio
across the group with attractive opportunities, means we are
confident we have the resources to continue to grow the business
and achieve returns in line with our medium term
targets.
Business
review
Land promotion
Hallam has delivered an operating
profit of £4.2m (H1 23: £17.0m) by completing the sale of 843 plots
(H1 23: 1,900 plots). A further 1,695 plots have exchanged, of
which 1,246 plots are due to complete by year end. In addition,
another 1,070 plots are under offer, the majority of which are
expected to complete in 2024 and contribute to profit this year.
Hallam is on target to achieve sales this year of c.3,000
plots.
UK greenfield land values were
stable in the six months to June 2024, according to Savills
Research. There has been an uptick in confidence since the start of
the year with buyers returning to the land market, including an
increase in activity from the major housebuilders. A lack of new
land supply coming forward has supported pricing with 12% fewer
homes granted planning consent in Q1 24, compared to the same
period in 2023. However, deals continue to take longer to progress
than in the post Covid bounce period.
During the period Hallam witnessed
the recovery in demand for prime deliverable sites from major
housebuilders, disposing of 843 plots, including a significant sale
of 494 plots in Chatteris, Cambridgeshire to David Wilson Homes.
Overall, Hallam achieved an average gross profit per plot of £9,680
(H1 23: £11,400), lower than the comparative period last year,
which was boosted by a significant freehold sale at Tonbridge,
Kent. The current level of profitability is still above the 5 year
average of £9,100.
At 30 June, Hallam had 1,695 plots
exchanged, of which 1,246 plots are scheduled for completion in H2
24, including:
1. 759 residential
plots in Swindon to Vistry Group. Hallam secured an option to
purchase the site over 20 years ago and since then it has been
promoting the land through the planning process. In August 2021,
outline planning consent was secured for a total of 2,380
residential plots across a 400 acre site, of which 1,063 relate to
Hallam's site. The site will also bring several additional
community benefits, including a new primary school, community and
sport buildings, significant woodland planting and green
infrastructure. The first phase of the sale completed (393 plots)
in July 24 and the second phase (366 plots) is targeting completion
for 2025.
2. A freehold site with
planning permission for 75 homes in Ambrosden, Oxfordshire to
Mulberry Homes. Hallam acquired the site in
2014 before promoting the land through the planning process with an
application strategically submitted in July 2022. Hallam then
secured outline consent in December 2023 for a total of 75 homes as
well as local highways improvements, green infrastructure and a
children's play area. The sale is anticipated to complete in
December 2024.
3. 491 residential
plots at Pickford Gate, Coventry to David Wilson Homes. Hallam
secured a planning promotion agreement in 2015 before submitting a
planning application in 2018. An outline planning consent was
secured in 2021 for a total of 2,400 homes, of which 25% is
affordable housing. The project also involved delivering a new
junction on the A45 dual carriageway, for which Hallam secured
funding through the Homes England HIF process. Works on the
junction successfully completed in April 2024. Post half year, this deal has now finalised, completing in
September.
An additional 1,070 plots are also
under offer, with the majority being related to Pickford Gate,
Coventry, where phase three of the scheme is in detailed
negotiations with a major housebuilder. When agreed, this will
secure Hallam's target for 2024.
|
Residential Land
Plots
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
With
permission
|
In planning
|
Future
|
Total
|
|
b/f
|
granted
|
sold
|
c/f
|
2024
|
8,501
|
332
|
(843)
|
7,990
|
13,392
|
80,109
|
101,491
|
2023
|
9,431
|
1,014
|
(1,944)
|
8,501
|
13,468
|
79,003
|
100,972
|
2022
|
12,865
|
435
|
(3,869)
|
9,431
|
12,297
|
73,976
|
95,704
|
2021
|
15,421
|
452
|
(3,008)
|
12,865
|
11,259
|
68,543
|
92,667
|
2020
|
14,713
|
2,708
|
(2,000)
|
15,421
|
8,312
|
64,337
|
88,070
|
Hallam's land bank has grown
marginally to 101,491 plots (December 2023: 100,972 plots), of
which 7,990 plots (December 2023: 8,501 plots) have planning
permission (or a Resolution to Grant, subject to S106). In the
first half of the year the planning system remained challenging,
reflected by the decrease in plots with planning permission, having
disposed of 843 plots and only 332 plots achieving consent. In
response to this, Hallam has submitted appeals on several sites,
including Sittingbourne, which in H2 24 won a consent on appeal for
290 plots. Appeals have also been lodged on another seven sites,
which, if successful would add c.2,500 plots with
planning.
The new government has proposed
significant revisions to the NPPF as part of its broader
recognition that the current system is not working effectively and
is hindering economic growth. The proposed changes would provide
much clearer direction to local authorities in terms of housing
delivery, and with 13,392 plots awaiting planning determination it
leaves Hallam in a strong position to meet its ambitious targets.
In addition, Hallam has identified 8,500 plots where we expect to
be able to expedite planning applications.
There is significant latent value
in the group's strategic land portfolio, which is held as inventory
at the lower of cost or net realisable value. As such, no uplift in
value is recognised within its accounts relating to any of the
7,990 plots with planning, and any increase in value created from
securing planning permission will be recognised on
disposal.
Property investment and development
Property Investment and Development,
which includes HBD and Stonebridge Homes (SH), delivered a combined
operating profit of £2.7m (H1 23: £8.5m).
According to the CBRE Monthly Index,
commercial property values increased by 0.1% in the six months to
June 2024. Retail property was the best performing sector with
values up 1.5% during the first half of the year, ahead of
industrial, up 1.2%, while offices declined by 2.9%. Rental value
growth remains strongest for the industrial sector with growth of
2.5% in the six months to June with yields broadly unchanged over
the period.
In H1 24, the volume of UK commercial
property transactions totalled £16.2bn according to JLL, an
increase of 14% compared to the same period one year earlier, but
down 44% on H1 2022. While most sectors have seen increased
transactional activity this year, overall deal volume has been held
back by fewer large portfolio deals than during 2021 and
2022.
While there was some slowing in take
up from the record levels seen during and just after the pandemic,
I&L occupier demand improved during H1 24, with take up
marginally ahead of the same period last year and effectively back
to the pre-pandemic average. Manufacturers have driven the recent
improvement in demand with many looking to de-risk supply chains
through nearshoring operations. HBD has deliberately built a high
weighting to I&L, which makes up 74% of our investment
portfolio and 57% of the development pipeline. Given the strong
underlying demand drivers and societal changes that are supporting
the sector, we continue to have confidence that the outlook for
this asset class remains positive over the medium to long term. At
the same time, the outlook for build to rent (BtR) also remains
positive, according to CBRE, with rental growth for multifamily
assets of 7.7% in the year to March 2024 driven by continued strong
demand and a lack of available units.
HBD completed on three developments
and three land sales with a total GDV of £68m (HBD share), with 77%
of these either sold or let:
1. At Setl (HBD share:
£32m GDV), the 102 premium apartment building in Birmingham, the
building works finished at the end of May and 52% of the units by
value are pre-sold at target selling prices as of 1
September.
2. Completed two
logistic units totalling 156,000 sq ft (HBD share: £20m GDV) at
Airport Business Park, Southend.
3. Three development
sites sold (HBD share: £16m GDV) at both Wakefield Hub and Pool,
South Crofty. At Wakefield Hub, a significant 200 acre industrial
and logistic development, HBD completed the sale of an 8 acre
development site to NewCold and a 6 acre site to Aeroservices. At
Pool, South Crofty, the disposal of a
45,000 sq ft development site was completed in May.
The committed development programme
now totals a GDV of £264m (HBD share: £119m GDV) and is currently
64% pre-let, pre-sold or under offer, with 96% of development costs
fixed.
2024 Committed
programme
Scheme
|
GDV
(£m)
|
HBD share of GDV
(£m)
|
Commercial
('000 sq
ft)
|
Residential
size
(Units)
|
Status
|
Completion
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Industrial
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Leicester, TMS
|
10
|
10
|
29
|
-
|
Pre-sold
|
Q4 24
|
Leicester, Melton Road
|
2
|
2
|
20
|
-
|
Pre-sold
|
Q1 25
|
Preston, Aptus
|
10
|
5
|
150
|
-
|
Pre-sold
|
Q3 25
|
Rainham, Momentum
|
120
|
24
|
380
|
-
|
Speculative
|
Q3 24
|
Walsall, SPARK
Remediation
|
37
|
37
|
-
|
-
|
Forward funded
|
Q3 24
|
|
179
|
78
|
579
|
-
|
|
|
Urban Residential
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Aberdeen, Bridge of Don
|
12
|
1
|
-
|
500
|
Under-offer
|
Q1 25
|
York, McCarthy Stone
|
4
|
4
|
-
|
72
|
Pre-sold
|
Q4 24
|
|
16
|
5
|
-
|
572
|
|
|
Urban Commercial
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Manchester, Island
|
66
|
33
|
91
|
-
|
Part under offer
|
Q4 24
|
Manchester, Equitable
|
3
|
3
|
19
|
-
|
Pre-sold
|
Q3 24
|
|
69
|
36
|
110
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total for the year
|
264
|
119
|
689
|
572
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
%
sold or pre-let
|
38%
|
64%*
|
|
|
|
|
*This includes space under offer at Island and units reserved
at Setl- 01/09/24
Within the committed
programme HBD has conditionally
agreed the sale of
development sites at a combined GDV of £17m (HBD share: £12m GDV)
at The Chocolate Works, York, and Equitable in Manchester. Both
sales are due to complete in H2 24. At Aptus, Preston, the £86m
GDV, 790,000 sq ft I&L development, a 10 acre development land
sale has unconditionally been agreed with Kerakoll, a world leader
in green building materials. HBD will lead on the infrastructure
works before handing the site over to Kerakoll, who will then
undertake the development.
At Island, Manchester, a 50:50 JV
scheme with Greater Manchester Pension Fund, delivering a 91,000 sq
ft NZC office building, HBD has 45,700 sq ft across 5 floors under
offer, which represents c.50% of the office space in the building.
The scheme is scheduled for completion in Q4 24. At Momentum,
Rainham (an 80:20 JV with Barings), a four unit NZC I&L
development serving Greater London, the contractor went into
administration earlier this year. This delayed the scheme achieving
practical completion until August, although the building works
completed within budget. The delay has left HBD behind in its
letting plan, however there are enquiries for the scheme and the
majority is anticipated to be let within a year.
HBD's future total development
pipeline value remained stable at £1.5bn GDV (HBD share: £1.3bn
GDV). All these opportunities sit within the Company's three key
markets of I&L (57%), Urban Commercial (22%) and Urban
Residential (21%).
Looking ahead, HBD is forecast to
complete on £192m GDV this year, which is slightly short of its
medium term strategic target of c.£200m pa. The committed programme
is expected to reduce by the year end because of lower activity in
the market and investment uncertainties. However, within the
development pipeline, HBD has c.£200m near-term schemes which have
the potential to be added to the committed programme within the
next 12 months, comprising:
1. Neighbourhood,
Birmingham (HBD share: £123m GDV) - after securing planning in
March 2023 for a 404-unit BtR development, HBD is continuing
preparatory works and is pursuing interest that has been shown in
forward funding the scheme.
2. Spark, Walsall - HBD
is set to complete remediation works in Q3 24. Planning for the
first three units was approved in June,
totalling 464,000 sq ft and HBD has strong interest in the first
unit, which when secured adds a further c.£40m GDV to HBD's
committed programme.
3. Welwyn Garden City
(HBD share: £20m GDV) - HBD is currently pursuing occupier interest
for a part pre-let on this 71,200 sq ft industrial scheme and once
concluded is targeting a start on site by the year end.
At the flagship £1bn innovation and
technology project known as Golden Valley (HBD share of phase one:
£155m GDV), which is located adjacent to GCHQ in Cheltenham, HBD is
working towards receiving an outline planning consent in Q4 24. The
consent is in relation to circa 1 million sq ft of commercial space
and c.1,000 residential units. The first phase, which will be known
as the National Cyber Innovation Centre, is in detailed design and
subject to consent, construction is planned to commence mid
2025.
Investment portfolio - key
stats
|
Jun-24
|
Dec-23
|
Market values - inc. share of
JVs
|
£113.2m
|
£112.9m
|
Total Area - '000 sq ft
|
795
|
795
|
'Topped-up' net initial
yield
|
5.8%
|
5.8%
|
Reversionary yield
|
6.6%
|
6.5%
|
WAULT to Expiry¹
|
10.4 years
|
10.8
years
|
Occupancy²
|
93%
|
93%
|
¹Weighted average unexpired lease
term (WAULT) on commercial properties
²As a percentage of completed
property portfolio estimated rental value (ERV)
The total value of the investment
portfolio (including the share of properties held in JVs) was
broadly unchanged in this period at £113.2m (December 2023:
£112.9m), with no acquisitions completed. Capital values increased
by 0.3% in the first six months of 2024, with rental value growth
for the I&L assets of 3.8% and the portfolio 'topped-up' net
initial yield unchanged at 5.8%. The total property return of 2.7%
for the six months to June 2024 was marginally below the total
return from the CBRE UK Monthly Index (2.9%). During the period,
occupancy was unchanged at 93% (December 2023: 93%) with the
weighted average unexpired lease term now 10.4 years (8.5 years to
first break).
Currently 73% of the investment
portfolio (based on floor area) has an EPC rating of 'C' or higher,
with 44% being rated 'A' or 'B'. The 27% of the portfolio which
does not have an EPC within the target range is allocated for
either redevelopment or sale in the short to medium
term.
The UK housing market remained fairly
subdued during H1 24 as homebuyer demand continued to be impacted
by higher mortgage rates. According to Nationwide, after taking
account of seasonal effects, UK house prices increased by 1.2%
during the six months to June and are now around 3% below the
summer 2022 peak. Northern England continues to outperform southern
England, with prices up 2.4% year on year, which is positive for
SH, the group's jointly owned Yorkshire focused housebuilder, that
has recently expanded into the North East.
SH has secured 95% (186 Private/75
Social) of its 2024 delivery target of 275 units (2023: 251 units).
While pricing remained firm on a like for like basis, the overall
average selling price for private units decreased to £381k (June
2023: £489k). This was due to the wider housing mix on offer to
capture more demand and geographic changes as the business also
expanded its sales outlets into new locations. Furthermore, the
average sales rate of 0.50 (June 2023: 0.48) units per week per
outlet, for private houses (PH) has marginally increased year on
year as customer confidence begins to return in line with the
improved economy. Post H1 24, Stonebridge has seen an improvement
in trading with the average sales rate increasing to 0.54, which is
26% above the same period last year.
Supply chain availability and cost
pressures continue to improve, with build cost inflation moderating
at 3% (December 2023: 4%). SH is in the process of undertaking a
comprehensive house type specification review to see if costs can
be reduced further without compromising customer value or its
premium market position.
SH total owned and controlled land
bank stands at 1,407 plots (December 2023: 1,513). Delays in
the planning system have slowed the rate at which SH has been able
to replenish our consented land bank following sales, which now
stands at 862 plots (December 2023: 923) equating to a healthy 3.0
years' supply based on anticipated one year forward sales. SH also
has three sites under offer with the potential to add a total of
c.750 plots by year end, including SH's first site in the North
Midlands, its planned third operational region.
The strategic objective of growing
the business to achieve 600 completions per annum over the medium
term remains on track.
Construction
The group's construction segment,
which includes Henry Boot Construction (HBC), Banner Plant and Road
Link (A69), remained profitable in H1 24, with an operating profit
of £2.9m (2023: £4.4m).
UK construction output remained
relatively flat during the first half of 2024, with seasonally
adjusted monthly output estimated to have risen by 0.7% between
December 2023 and June 2024. The Q2 2024 RICS UK Construction
Monitor suggests that apart from infrastructure, workloads remain
stagnant across both the residential and non-residential sectors,
with little change expected in profitability levels over the next
year with a headline net balance of -3%.
HBC is behind schedule in winning
work for this year, with a secured orderbook of 61% at H1 24,
against a medium term target of 65% secured at the start of the
year. As a result, turnover is expected to be lower this year. The
business has the lowest capital employed of any subsidiary of the
group, limiting the risk it imposes on Henry Boot's broader
strategic growth plans.
In July 2024, it was announced that
Lee Powell, currently CEO of GMI Construction, will assume the role
of Managing Director of HBC, joining the business in January 2025.
Lee's immediate focus will be to restore and grow the
orderbook.
In January 2024, works at Sheffield
Council's Heart of the City, Block H, a £42m urban scheme,
completed its final phase. Its largest active site, the Cocoa Works
in York, a £57m urban residential project, has experienced delays
as subcontractor installed pipe fittings failed. Insurers are being
pursued to recover costs and the project is now expected to
complete later this year.
In H1 24, HBC was appointed by
Rotherham Council to deliver the £36m redevelopment of Rotherham
Markets and an adjacent new library, forming a key part of the
wider town centre masterplan. The project comprises a major
refurbishment and redevelopment of the existing indoor and outdoor
markets and is scheduled for completion in 2027.
Looking ahead, HBC has a healthy
pipeline of opportunities, and is actively pursuing £54m of
Pre-Construction Services Agreements across urban development and
residential schemes.
Banner Plant and Road Link (A69) are
both trading in line with management expectations.
Financial
review
Consolidated statement of comprehensive
income
Group revenue for the period
decreased 41.0% to £106.0m (H1 23: £179.8m) with transactional
activity in Land Promotion and in core Property Development
affected by reduced levels of activity in our markets. The gradual
upturn in the UK economy through H1 has seen appetite for
transactions returning and the group has already begun to secure
additional revenues for H2 and beyond. Despite these challenges the
group's premium housebuilder Stonebridge Homes continued to deliver
a good level of completions, achieving 90 unit sales in H1 (H1 23:
99 unit sales) and carrying a healthy level of reservations into H2
that should again show annual growth in completions.
Gross profit was down on the prior
period at £24.7m (H1 23: £40.8m) as the timing of transactions in
2024 will be heavily weighted to H2. Administrative expenses remain
comparable with the prior period (H1 23: increased £2.2m) with
continued investment in our people, systems and brand offset by
focused savings and efficiencies.
Other income in the prior year
related to a legal settlement on a property development contract
completed in 2016.
Fair value of investment properties
remained flat (H1 23: increase £0.6m) with group assets performing
marginally below the CBRE index. Profits on sale of investment
properties were £nil (H1 23: £0.1m). The group's share of profit
from joint ventures and associates was £1.9m (H1 23: £0.2m),
including investment property valuation gains of £0.1m (H1 23:
£0.3m).
Property revaluation gains/(loss)
|
H1 24
£'m
|
H1
23
£'m
|
2023
£'m
|
Wholly owned investment
property:
|
|
|
|
- Completed investment
property
|
-
|
1.4
|
0.5
|
- Investment property in the course
of construction
|
-
|
(0.8)
|
(0.2)
|
|
|
0.6
|
0.3
|
Joint ventures and
associates:
|
|
|
|
- Completed investment
property
|
0.1
|
0.3
|
0.1
|
- Investment property in the course
of construction
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
0.3
|
0.1
|
|
0.1
|
0.9
|
0.4
|
This results in an operating profit
of £5.9m (H1 23: £25.7m) which generated an underlying profit
before tax1 of £3.6m or £3.7m on a statutory basis (H1
23: £23.3m underlying or £25.0m statutory). Earnings per share
follows the above, reducing to 2.8p (H1 23: 14.0p).
Return on capital employed
Lower operating profits in the
period resulted in a decrease in return on capital employed (ROCE)
to 1.4% over the six-month period (H1 23: 6.3%). Over a 12-month
period we continue to believe a target return of 10-15% is
appropriate for our current operating model, and we expect to be
close to the bottom end of this range at the end of the
year.
Finance and gearing
Financing costs were £4.3m (H1 23:
£2.5m) reflecting the impact of higher borrowing levels and
interest rates. This is partially offset by finance income of £2.1m
(H1 23: £1.8m) as an element of financing costs are recovered
through our joint venture arrangements.
At 30 June 2024, net debt was
£103.9m (31 December 2023: £77.8m). This reflects an increase in
the level of land and property assets held on the balance sheet as
we continue to fund our high-quality committed development
programme and undertake infrastructure works to facilitate major
strategic land disposals. Debt levels are forecast to reduce in H2
as transactions complete and assets are recycled into
cash.
As a result. gearing has increased
to 25.5% (31 December 2023: 19.0%) and while above our preferred
operating range of 10%-20% we remain within the board approved
limit of 30% and expect to return within this range by the year end
as H2 sales complete. We remain selective on new investments but
are ready to react to any compelling opportunities that might
arise.
Cash flows
The group completed a major
refinancing in May 2024, securing increased facility levels on
comparable terms to the previous agreement.
Operating cash inflows before
movements in working capital were £6.6m (H1 23: £22.0m).
Working capital requirements have
increased due to continued progression of development schemes and
strategic land investments, resulting in working capital outflows
of £13.4m (H1 23: £15.8m outflow) which in turn meant that
operations generated outflows of £6.8m (H1 23: £6.1m inflow). After
interest paid of £3.6m (H1 23: £1.9m) and tax paid of £3.9m (H1 23:
£0.9m) net cash outflows from operating activities were £14.2m (H1
23: £3.3m inflow).
Including net advances to joint
ventures and associates of £7.3m (H1 23: £6.8m), interest received
of £1.9m (H1 23: £1.3m), dividends from joint ventures and
associates of £1.5m (H1 23: £nil) and expenditure on investment
properties of £nil (H1 23: £7.0m), net cash outflows from investing
activities were £4.1m (H1 23: £12.3m).
The final dividend on ordinary
shares for 2023 increased by 10% to £5.9m
(H1 23: £5.3m).
Statement of financial position
Total non-current assets were
£197.0m (31 December 2023: £193.7m). Significant movements arose as
follows:
-
an increase in non-current trade receivables of
£2.2m (H1 23: £14.6m) following further investment in our joint
ventures arrangements;
-
the pension scheme asset has increased £2.1m to
£9.8m (31 December 2023: £7.7m) largely due to the effect of the
increasing liabilities discount rate partially offset by asset
returns during the period; and,
-
an increase in investments in joint ventures and
associates of £0.3m to £10.8m (31 December 2023: £10.5m), being
profits generated of £1.8m (H1 23: £0.2m)
less dividend distributions of £1.5m (H1
23: £nil).
Current assets were £42.6m higher
at £443.4m (31 December 2023: £400.7m) resulting from:
-
A £52.8m uplift in inventories to £350.4m (31
December 2023: £297.6m) due to investment in our strategic land
bank and delivery of our committed development
programme;
-
lower trade and other receivables of £64.7m (31
December 2023: £76.4m); and,
-
cash and cash equivalents which were £1.3m higher
at £14.4m (31 December 2023: £13.0m) due to current cash
requirements and timing on loan repayments.
Total liabilities rose to £232.2m
(31 December 2023: £184.3m) with the most significant changes
arising from:
-
trade and other payables, including contract
liabilities, increased £24.1m to £101.1m (31 December 2023: £77.0m)
due to sizeable land purchases made on deferred terms;
and,
-
borrowings, including lease liabilities, increased
to £118.3m (31 December 2023: £90.8m) as the Group continues to
invest in its committed development programme and strategic land
assets.
Retained earnings less dividends
paid marginally decreased net assets to £408.1m (31 December 2023:
£410.1m) with the net asset value per share decreasing by 0.5% to
305p (31 December 2023: 306p), an underlying decrease of 0.1% to
299p (Dec 2023: 302p) when excluding the defined
benefit pension scheme surplus net of tax
liability.
NOTES:
1
Underlying profit before tax is an alternative
performance measure (APM) and is defined as profit before tax
excluding revaluation movements on completed investment properties.
Revaluation movement on completed investment properties includes
gains of £nil (2023: £1.4m gain) on wholly owned completed
investment property and gains of £0.1m (2023: £0.3m gains) on
completed investment property held in joint ventures. This APM
provides the users with a measure that excludes specific external
factors beyond management's controls and reflects the group's
underlying results. This measure is used in the business in
appraising senior management performance.
2
Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) is an APM and is
defined as operating profit/ average of
total assets less current liabilities (excluding DB pension
surplus) at the opening and closing balance sheet dates.
3
Net Asset Value (NAV) per share is an APM and is defined using
the statutory measures net assets/ordinary share
capital.
4
Net (debt)/cash is an APM and is reconciled to statutory
measures in note 14.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
(UNAUDITED)
for the half year ended 30 June
2024
|
Half year
|
Half
year
|
Year
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
Unaudited
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue
|
106,047
|
179,756
|
359,399
|
Cost of sales
|
(81,373)
|
(138,909)
|
(282,634)
|
Gross profit
|
24,674
|
40,847
|
76,765
|
Other income
|
-
|
4,800
|
4,800
|
Administrative expenses
|
(20,689)
|
(20,831)
|
(44,342)
|
|
3,985
|
24,816
|
37,223
|
(Decrease)/increase in fair value
of investment properties
|
(28)
|
595
|
307
|
Profit on sale of investment
properties
|
37
|
86
|
733
|
Profit on sale of assets held for
sale
|
-
|
-
|
1,571
|
Profit on disposal of joint
ventures
|
-
|
-
|
371
|
Share of profit of joint ventures
and associates
|
1,860
|
188
|
-
|
Operating profit
|
5,854
|
25,685
|
40,205
|
Finance income
|
2,116
|
1,769
|
3,357
|
Finance costs
|
(4,283)
|
(2,495)
|
(6,260)
|
Profit before tax
|
3,687
|
24,959
|
37,302
|
Tax
|
(478)
|
(5,805)
|
(8,759)
|
Profit for the period from continuing
operations
|
3,209
|
19,154
|
28,543
|
Other comprehensive (expense)/income not being reclassified to
profit or loss in subsequent periods:
|
|
Revaluation of group occupied
property
|
(14)
|
(86)
|
(228)
|
Deferred tax on property
revaluations
|
(48)
|
15
|
279
|
Actuarial gain/(loss) on defined
benefit pension scheme
|
2,024
|
(2,049)
|
(3,066)
|
Deferred tax on actuarial
(gain)/loss
|
(506)
|
512
|
767
|
Total other comprehensive income/(expense) not being
reclassified to profit or loss in subsequent
periods
|
1,456
|
(1,608)
|
(2,248)
|
Total comprehensive income for the period
|
4,665
|
17,546
|
26,295
|
Profit for the period attributable to:
|
|
|
|
Owners of the Parent
Company
|
3,689
|
18,661
|
26,299
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
(480)
|
493
|
2,244
|
|
3,209
|
19,154
|
28,543
|
Total comprehensive income attributable to:
|
|
|
|
Owners of the Parent
Company
|
5,145
|
17,053
|
24,051
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
(480)
|
493
|
2,244
|
|
4,665
|
17,546
|
26,295
|
Basic earnings per ordinary share for the profit
attributable to owners of the Parent
Company during the period
|
2.8p
|
14.0p
|
19.7p
|
Diluted earnings per ordinary share for the profit
attributable to owners of the Parent
Company during the period
|
2.7p
|
13.7p
|
19.3p
|
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION
(UNAUDITED)
as at 30 June 2024
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
Unaudited
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Intangible assets
|
1,809
|
2,552
|
2,179
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
28,533
|
27,760
|
29,218
|
Right of use assets
|
3,837
|
2,926
|
3,986
|
Investment properties
|
100,468
|
102,716
|
100,602
|
Investment in joint ventures and
associates
|
10,844
|
10,178
|
10,484
|
Retirement benefit asset
|
9,800
|
8,108
|
7,725
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
41,511
|
51,648
|
39,263
|
Deferred tax assets
|
214
|
249
|
213
|
|
197,016
|
206,137
|
193,670
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Inventories
|
350,402
|
297,664
|
297,618
|
Contract assets
|
13,851
|
17,421
|
13,659
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
64,734
|
65,207
|
76,416
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
14,379
|
20,538
|
13,034
|
Assets classified as held for
sale
|
-
|
3,142
|
-
|
|
443,366
|
403,972
|
400,727
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
82,578
|
90,243
|
73,477
|
Contract liabilities
|
4,915
|
1,468
|
1,060
|
Current tax liabilities
|
3,304
|
7,664
|
6,677
|
Borrowings
|
111,929
|
86,181
|
84,819
|
Lease liabilities
|
898
|
358
|
728
|
Provisions
|
3,177
|
2,836
|
3,221
|
|
206,801
|
188,750
|
169,982
|
Net current assets
|
236,565
|
215,222
|
230,745
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
13,647
|
4,235
|
2,501
|
Borrowings
|
2,083
|
2,132
|
1,699
|
Lease liabilities
|
3,389
|
2,638
|
3,547
|
Deferred tax liability
|
5,896
|
4,878
|
5,372
|
Provisions
|
422
|
2,057
|
1,178
|
|
25,437
|
15,940
|
14,297
|
Net assets
|
408,144
|
405,419
|
410,118
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
13,799
|
13,798
|
13,799
|
Property revaluation
reserve
|
949
|
2,281
|
1,011
|
Retained earnings
|
383,181
|
378,213
|
383,219
|
Other reserves
|
8,252
|
8,246
|
8,248
|
Cost of shares held by ESOP
trust
|
(645)
|
(966)
|
(875)
|
Equity attributable to owners of the Parent
Company
|
405,536
|
401,572
|
405,402
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
2,608
|
3,847
|
4,716
|
Total equity
|
408,144
|
405,419
|
410,118
|
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
(UNAUDITED)
for the half year ended 30 June
2024
|
Attributable to owners of the Parent Company
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cost
of
|
|
|
|
|
|
Property
|
|
|
shares
held
|
|
Non-
|
|
|
Share
|
revaluation
|
Retained
|
Other
|
by
ESOP
|
|
controlling
|
Total
|
|
capital
|
reserve
|
earnings
|
reserves
|
trust
|
Total
|
interests
|
equity
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
At 1 January 2023
|
13,763
|
2,352
|
365,692
|
7,482
|
(967)
|
388,322
|
5,967
|
394,289
|
Profit for the period
|
-
|
-
|
18,661
|
-
|
-
|
18,661
|
493
|
19,154
|
Other comprehensive
expense
|
-
|
(71)
|
(1,537)
|
-
|
-
|
(1,608)
|
-
|
(1,608)
|
Total comprehensive
income
|
-
|
(71)
|
17,124
|
-
|
-
|
17,053
|
493
|
17,546
|
Equity dividends
|
-
|
-
|
(5,347)
|
-
|
-
|
(5,347)
|
(2,613)
|
(7,960)
|
Proceeds from shares
issued
|
35
|
-
|
-
|
764
|
-
|
799
|
-
|
799
|
Share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
744
|
-
|
1
|
745
|
-
|
745
|
|
35
|
-
|
(4,603)
|
764
|
1
|
(3,803)
|
(2,613)
|
(6,416)
|
At 30 June 2023
(unaudited)
|
13,798
|
2,281
|
378,213
|
8,246
|
(966)
|
401,572
|
3,847
|
405,419
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
13,763
|
2,352
|
365,692
|
7,482
|
(967)
|
388,322
|
5,967
|
394,289
|
Profit for the year
|
-
|
-
|
26,299
|
-
|
-
|
26,299
|
2,244
|
28,543
|
Other comprehensive
expense
|
-
|
51
|
(2,299)
|
-
|
-
|
(2,248)
|
-
|
(2,248)
|
Total comprehensive
income
|
-
|
51
|
24,000
|
-
|
-
|
24,051
|
2,244
|
26,295
|
Transfer between
reserves
|
-
|
(1,392)
|
1,392
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Equity dividends
|
-
|
-
|
(9,274)
|
-
|
-
|
(9,274)
|
(3,495)
|
(12,769)
|
Purchase of treasury
shares
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(98)
|
(98)
|
-
|
(98)
|
Proceeds from shares
issued
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
766
|
-
|
802
|
-
|
802
|
Share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
1,409
|
-
|
190
|
1,599
|
-
|
1,599
|
|
36
|
(1,392)
|
(6,473)
|
766
|
92
|
(6,971)
|
(3,495)
|
(10,466)
|
At 31 December 2023
(audited)
|
13,799
|
1,011
|
383,219
|
8,248
|
(875)
|
405,402
|
4,716
|
410,118
|
Profit for the period
|
-
|
-
|
3,689
|
-
|
-
|
3,689
|
(480)
|
3,209
|
Other comprehensive
income
|
-
|
(62)
|
1,518
|
-
|
-
|
1,456
|
-
|
1,456
|
Total comprehensive
income
|
-
|
(62)
|
5,207
|
-
|
-
|
5,145
|
(480)
|
4,665
|
Equity dividends
|
-
|
-
|
(5,890)
|
-
|
-
|
(5,890)
|
(1,628)
|
(7,518)
|
Proceeds from shares
issued
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
4
|
-
|
4
|
-
|
4
|
Share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
645
|
-
|
230
|
875
|
-
|
875
|
|
-
|
-
|
(5,245)
|
4
|
230
|
(5,011)
|
(1,628)
|
(6,639)
|
At
30 June 2024 (unaudited)
|
13,799
|
949
|
383,181
|
8,252
|
(645)
|
405,536
|
2,608
|
408,144
|
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
(UNAUDITED)
for the half year ended 30 June
2024
|
Half year
|
Half
year
|
Year
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
Unaudited
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cash flows from operating activities
|
|
|
|
Cash generated from
operations
|
(6,761)
|
6,140
|
5,871
|
Interest paid
|
(3,575)
|
(1,949)
|
(5,475)
|
Tax paid
|
(3,857)
|
(930)
|
(3,797)
|
Net cash flows from operating
activities
|
(14,193)
|
3,261
|
(3,401)
|
Cash flows from investing activities
|
|
|
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
(375)
|
(926)
|
(4,074)
|
Purchase of investment
property
|
(43)
|
(6,975)
|
(8,017)
|
Proceeds on disposal of property,
plant and equipment (excluding assets held for hire)
|
66
|
21
|
432
|
Proceeds on disposal of assets held
for sale
|
-
|
-
|
4,713
|
Proceeds on disposal of investment
properties
|
176
|
1,013
|
7,764
|
Repayment of loans from joint
ventures and associates
|
1,004
|
-
|
10,868
|
Advances to joint ventures and
associates
|
(8,266)
|
(6,752)
|
(24,321)
|
Distributions received from joint
ventures and associates
|
1,500
|
-
|
900
|
Interest received
|
1,851
|
1,299
|
1,830
|
Net cash flows from investing
activities
|
(4,087)
|
(12,320)
|
(9,905)
|
Cash flows from financing activities
|
|
|
|
Proceeds from shares
issued
|
4
|
801
|
802
|
Purchase of treasury
shares
|
-
|
-
|
(98)
|
(Payments to)/Advances from joint
ventures and associates
|
(71)
|
4
|
12
|
Decrease in borrowings
|
(7,722)
|
(15,000)
|
(36,510)
|
Increase in borrowings
|
35,216
|
35,000
|
58,028
|
Principal element of lease
payments
|
(284)
|
(648)
|
(526)
|
Dividends paid
|
- ordinary shares
|
(5,879)
|
(5,336)
|
(9,253)
|
|
- non-controlling
interests
|
(1,628)
|
(2,614)
|
(3,495)
|
|
- preference shares
|
(11)
|
(11)
|
(21)
|
Net cash flows from financing
activities
|
19,625
|
12,196
|
8,939
|
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents
|
1,345
|
3,137
|
(4,367)
|
Net cash and cash equivalents at
beginning of period
|
13,034
|
17,401
|
17,401
|
Net cash and cash equivalents at end of
period
|
14,379
|
20,538
|
13,034
|
NOTES TO THE CONDENSED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
for the half year ended 30 June
2024
1. GENERAL
INFORMATION
The Company is a public limited
company, listed on the London Stock Exchange and incorporated and
domiciled in the United Kingdom. The address of its registered
office: is Isaacs Building, 4 Charles Street, Sheffield, United
Kingdom, S1 2HS.
The financial information set out
above does not comprise statutory accounts within the meaning of
Section 434 of the Companies Act 2006 and is neither audited nor
reviewed. The Financial Statements for the year ended 31 December
2023, which were prepared in accordance with UK-adopted
International Accounting Standards, have been reported on by the
group's auditors and delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The
Independent Auditors' Report was unqualified and did not contain
any statement under Section 498 of the Companies Act
2006.
2. Basis of
preparation and accounting policies
The half-yearly financial
information has been prepared in accordance with the Disclosure and
Transparency Rules of the Financial Conduct Authority and with UK
adopted International Accounting Standard IAS 34 'Interim Financial
Reporting'.
The half-yearly financial
information has been prepared using the same accounting policies
and methods of computation as compared with the annual Financial
Statements for the year ended 31 December 2023.
A number of other standards,
amendments and interpretations became effective from 1 January
2024, which do not have a material impact on the group's financial
statements or accounting policies.
Going Concern
The group meets its day-to-day
working capital requirements through a secured loan facility. The
facility was renewed on 21 May 2024, at a level of £125m, for a
period of three years and extended by one year in May 2025 and a
further year in May 2026 taking the facility renewal to 21 May 2029
on comparable terms to the existing agreement. The facility
includes an accordion to increase the facility by up to £60m,
increasing the overall facility to £185m.
The Directors have considered the
group's principal risk areas, including the risk of economic
slowdown, that they consider material to the assessment of going
concern.
The Directors have prepared
forecasts to 31 December 2025 covering a base case and severe
downside scenario.
Having conducted significant stress
testing at the year-end they have further considered the outcome of
our half year position and their latest forecasts, while taking
into account the current trading conditions, the markets in which
the group's businesses operate and associated credit risks together
with the available committed banking facilities and the potential
mitigations that can be taken, to protect operating profits and
cash flows.
The severe downside scenario
considered includes short-term curtailment in transactional
activity and percentage reductions in other activities mirroring
recent downturn experiences. This is followed by a short to
medium-term recovery, coupled with the ability to manage future
expenditure as described in the 2023 Annual
Report.
As reported in the 2023 Annual
Report, the most sensitive covenant in our facilities relates to
the ratio of EBIT (Earnings Before Interest and Tax) on a 12-month
rolling basis to senior facility finance costs. Our downside
modelling, which reflects a near 34% reduction in revenue and near
87% reduction in profit before tax from our base case for 2024,
demonstrates significant headroom over this covenant throughout the
forecast period to the end of December 2025.
Their review supports the view that
the group will have adequate resources, liquidity and available
bank facilities to continue in operational existence for the
foreseeable future. Accordingly, they continue to adopt the going
concern basis of accounting in preparing the half-yearly financial
information.
Estimates and Judgements
The preparation of half-yearly
financial information requires management to make judgements,
estimates and assumptions that affect the application of accounting
policies and the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income
and expense. Actual results may differ from these
estimates.
In preparing these half-yearly
financial statements, the significant judgements made by management
in applying the group's accounting policies and the key sources of
estimation uncertainty were the same as those that applied to the
Consolidated Financial Statements for the year ended 31 December
2023.
Goodwill
Goodwill is subjected to an
impairment test at the reporting date or when there has been an
indication that the goodwill should be impaired, any loss is
recognised immediately through the Consolidated Statement of
Comprehensive Income and is not subsequently reversed.
3. Segment information
For the purpose of the Board making
strategic decisions, the group is currently organised into three
operating segments: Property Investment and Development; Land
Promotion; and Construction. Group overheads are not a reportable
segment; however, information about them is considered by the Board
in conjunction with the reportable segments.
Operations are carried out entirely
within the United Kingdom.
Inter-segment sales are charged at
prevailing market prices.
The accounting policies of the
reportable segments are the same as the group's accounting
policies, as detailed above.
Segment profit represents the
profit earned by each segment before tax and is consistent with the
measure reported to the group's Board for the purpose of resource
allocation and assessment of segment performance.
|
Half year ended 30 June 2024
Unaudited
|
|
Property
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
investment
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
and
|
Land
|
|
Group
|
|
|
|
development
|
promotion
|
Construction
|
overheads
|
Eliminations
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
External sales
|
49,878
|
13,022
|
43,147
|
-
|
-
|
106,047
|
Inter-segment sales
|
204
|
-
|
355
|
84
|
(643)
|
-
|
Total revenue
|
50,082
|
13,022
|
43,502
|
84
|
(643)
|
106,047
|
Gross profit/(loss)
|
8,493
|
8,944
|
7,223
|
14
|
-
|
24,674
|
Administrative expenses
|
(7,710)
|
(4,745)
|
(4,326)
|
(3,908)
|
-
|
(20,689)
|
Other operating
income/(expense)
|
1,870
|
(1)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,869
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
2,653
|
4,198
|
2,897
|
(3,894)
|
-
|
5,854
|
Finance income
|
1,547
|
274
|
249
|
173
|
(127)
|
2,116
|
Finance costs
|
(25)
|
(716)
|
(243)
|
(3,453)
|
154
|
(4,283)
|
Profit/(loss) before tax
|
4,175
|
3,756
|
2,903
|
(7,174)
|
27
|
3,687
|
Tax
|
(616)
|
(939)
|
(716)
|
1,793
|
-
|
(478)
|
Profit/(loss) for the period
|
3,559
|
2,817
|
2,187
|
(5,381)
|
27
|
3,209
|
|
Half
year ended 30 June 2023 Unaudited
|
|
Property
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
investment
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
and
|
Land
|
|
Group
|
|
|
|
development
|
promotion
|
Construction
|
overheads
|
Eliminations
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
External sales
|
71,517
|
52,645
|
55,594
|
-
|
-
|
179,756
|
Inter-segment sales
|
144
|
-
|
585
|
156
|
(885)
|
-
|
Total revenue
|
71,661
|
52,645
|
56,179
|
156
|
(885)
|
179,756
|
Gross profit/(loss)
|
11,117
|
21,143
|
8,467
|
134
|
(14)
|
40,847
|
Other income
|
4,800
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
4,800
|
Administrative expenses
|
(8,297)
|
(4,168)
|
(4,087)
|
(4,293)
|
14
|
(20,831)
|
Other operating
income/(expense)
|
872
|
(3)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
869
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
8,492
|
16,972
|
4,380
|
(4,159)
|
-
|
25,685
|
Finance income
|
4,219
|
529
|
229
|
140
|
(3,348)
|
1,769
|
Finance costs
|
(2,455)
|
(263)
|
(217)
|
(2,163)
|
2,603
|
(2,495)
|
Profit/(loss) before tax
|
10,256
|
17,238
|
4,392
|
(6,182)
|
(745)
|
24,959
|
Tax
|
(2,338)
|
(4,076)
|
(1,098)
|
1,707
|
-
|
(5,805)
|
Profit/(loss) for the year
|
7,918
|
13,162
|
3,294
|
(4,475)
|
(745)
|
19,154
|
|
|
|
Year
ended 31 December 2023 Audited
|
|
Property
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
investment
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
and
|
Land
|
|
Group
|
|
|
|
development
|
promotion
|
Construction
|
overheads
|
Eliminations
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
External sales
|
191,884
|
67,992
|
99,523
|
-
|
-
|
359,399
|
Inter-segment sales
|
258
|
-
|
1,050
|
271
|
(1,579)
|
-
|
Total revenue
|
192,142
|
67,992
|
100,573
|
271
|
(1,579)
|
359,399
|
Gross profit/(loss)
|
31,554
|
29,815
|
15,177
|
238
|
(19)
|
76,765
|
Other income
|
4,800
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
4,800
|
Administrative expenses
|
(17,172)
|
(8,371)
|
(8,682)
|
(10,136)
|
19
|
(44,342)
|
Other operating income
|
2,989
|
(7)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,982
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
22,171
|
21,437
|
6,495
|
(9,898)
|
-
|
40,205
|
Finance income
|
3,273
|
1,197
|
458
|
25,813
|
(27,384)
|
3,357
|
Finance costs
|
(11,596)
|
(615)
|
(480)
|
(5,437)
|
11,868
|
(6,260)
|
Profit/(loss) before tax
|
13,848
|
22,019
|
6,473
|
10,478
|
(15,516)
|
37,302
|
Tax
|
(5,741)
|
(4,470)
|
(1,686)
|
3,138
|
-
|
(8,759)
|
Profit/(loss) for the year
|
8,107
|
17,549
|
4,787
|
13,616
|
(15,516)
|
28,543
|
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
Unaudited
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Segment assets
|
|
|
|
Property investment and
development
|
372,351
|
375,023
|
362,737
|
Land promotion
|
192,532
|
152,251
|
160,690
|
Construction
|
43,209
|
48,116
|
41,635
|
Group overheads
|
7,897
|
5,826
|
8,363
|
|
615,989
|
581,216
|
573,425
|
Unallocated assets
|
|
|
|
Retirement benefit
assets
|
9,800
|
8,108
|
7,725
|
Deferred tax assets
|
214
|
249
|
213
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
14,379
|
20,536
|
13,034
|
Total assets
|
640,382
|
610,109
|
594,397
|
Segment liabilities
|
|
|
|
Property investment and
development
|
41,796
|
52,955
|
38,101
|
Land promotion
|
34,260
|
14,183
|
15,635
|
Construction
|
25,222
|
28,427
|
22,797
|
Group overheads
|
3,461
|
5,274
|
4,904
|
|
104,739
|
100,839
|
81,437
|
Unallocated liabilities
|
|
|
|
Current tax liabilities
|
3,304
|
7,664
|
6,677
|
Deferred tax liabilities
|
5,896
|
4,878
|
5,372
|
Current lease
liabilities
|
898
|
1,539
|
728
|
Current borrowings
|
111,929
|
85,000
|
84,819
|
Non-current lease
liabilities
|
3,389
|
4,770
|
3,547
|
Non-current borrowings
|
2,083
|
-
|
1,699
|
Total liabilities
|
232,238
|
204,690
|
184,279
|
Total net assets
|
408,144
|
405,419
|
410,118
|
4. REVENUE
The group's revenue is derived from
contracts with customers. In the following table, revenue is
disaggregated by primary activity, being the group's operating
segments and timing of revenue recognition:
|
|
Timing of
revenue
recognition
|
|
Timing of
revenue
recognition
|
Activity in the United Kingdom
|
30 June
2024
Unaudited
£'000
|
At a point in
time
|
Over
time
|
30 June
2023
Unaudited
£'000
|
At a point in
time
|
Over
time
|
Construction contracts:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- Construction
|
28,632
|
-
|
28,632
|
41,096
|
-
|
41,096
|
- Property investment and
development
|
11,398
|
-
|
11,398
|
24,663
|
-
|
24,663
|
Sale of land and
properties:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- Property investment and
development
|
6,186
|
6,186
|
-
|
12,836
|
12,836
|
-
|
- House builder unit
sales
|
29,156
|
29,156
|
-
|
31,012
|
31,012
|
-
|
- Land promotion
|
12,926
|
12,926
|
-
|
52,502
|
52,502
|
-
|
PFI concession
|
6,797
|
6,797
|
-
|
6,502
|
6,502
|
-
|
Revenue from contracts with customers
|
95,095
|
55,065
|
40,030
|
168,611
|
102,852
|
65,759
|
Plant and equipment hire
|
7,718
|
|
|
7,996
|
|
|
Investment property rental
income
|
3,126
|
|
|
3,002
|
|
|
Other rental income - property
development
|
12
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
Other rental income - land
promotion
|
96
|
|
|
143
|
|
|
|
106,047
|
|
|
179,756
|
|
|
5. Earnings per ordinary
share
Earnings per ordinary share is
calculated on the weighted average number of shares in issue being
133,986,686 (30 June 2023: 133,386,168). Diluted earnings per
ordinary share is calculated on the weighted average number of
shares in issue adjusted for the effects of any dilutive potential
ordinary shares.
6. Dividends
|
Half year
|
Half
year
|
Year
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
Unaudited
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Amounts recognised as distributions
to equity holders in period:
|
|
|
|
Preference dividend on cumulative
preference shares
|
11
|
11
|
21
|
Interim dividend for the year ended
31 December 2023 of 2.93p per share (2022: 2.66p)
|
-
|
-
|
5,336
|
Final dividend for the year ended
31 December 2023 of 4.40p per share (2022: 4.00p)
|
5,879
|
5,336
|
3,917
|
|
5,890
|
5,347
|
9,274
|
An interim dividend amounting to
£4,196,000 (2023: £3,910,000) will be paid on 11 October 2024 to
shareholders whose names are on the register at the close of
business on 20 September 2024. The proposed interim dividend has
not been approved at the date of the Consolidated Statement of
Financial Position and so has not been included as a liability in
these Financial Statements.
7. Tax
|
Half year
|
Half
year
|
Year
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
Unaudited
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Current tax:
|
|
|
|
UK corporation tax on profits for
the period
|
455
|
4,886
|
6,745
|
Adjustment in respect of earlier
periods
|
54
|
(85)
|
(39)
|
Total current tax
|
509
|
4,801
|
6,706
|
Deferred tax:
|
|
|
|
Origination and reversal of
temporary differences
|
(31)
|
1,004
|
2,053
|
Total deferred tax
|
(31)
|
1,004
|
2,053
|
Total tax
|
478
|
5,805
|
8,759
|
Corporation tax is calculated at
25% (31 December 2023: 23.5%) of the estimated assessable profit
for the period being management's estimate of the weighted average
corporation tax rate for the period. The group's effective rate of
tax of
13.0% is lower than the standard
rate of corporation tax due to joint venture profits reported net
of tax.
8. Investment properties
|
|
Investment
|
|
|
Completed
|
property
|
|
|
investment
|
under
|
|
|
property
|
construction
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Fair value
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2024
(audited)
|
100,602
|
-
|
100,602
|
Subsequent expenditure on
investment property
|
43
|
-
|
43
|
Amortisation of capitalised letting
fees
|
(10)
|
-
|
(10)
|
Disposals
|
(139)
|
-
|
(139)
|
Transfer to assets held for
sale
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Decrease in fair value in
period
|
(28)
|
-
|
(28)
|
At
30 June 2024 (unaudited)
|
100,468
|
-
|
100,468
|
Adjustment in respect of tenant
incentives
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Market value at 30 June 2024
|
100,468
|
-
|
100,468
|
|
|
|
|
Fair value
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
(audited)
|
87,198
|
9,918
|
97,116
|
Subsequent expenditure on
investment property
|
83
|
6,892
|
6,975
|
Disposals
|
(928)
|
-
|
(928)
|
Transfer to assets held for
sale
|
(1,042)
|
-
|
(1,042)
|
Increase/(decrease) in fair value
in period
|
1,405
|
(810)
|
595
|
At 30 June 2023
(unaudited)
|
86,716
|
16,000
|
102,716
|
Adjustment in respect of tenant
incentives
|
(2,213)
|
-
|
(2,213)
|
Market value at 30 June
2023
|
84,503
|
16,000
|
100,503
|
|
|
|
|
Fair value
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
87,198
|
9,918
|
97,116
|
Initial acquisition
|
-
|
627
|
627
|
Subsequent expenditure on
investment property
|
119
|
7,229
|
7,348
|
Capitalised letting fees
|
15
|
26
|
41
|
Amortisation of capitalised letting
fees
|
(54)
|
-
|
(54)
|
Disposals
|
(7,032)
|
-
|
(7,032)
|
Transfer to assets held for
sale
|
(1,041)
|
-
|
(1,041)
|
Transfer from inventory
|
3,290
|
-
|
3,290
|
Transfers from investment property
under construction
|
17,580
|
(17,580)
|
-
|
Increase/(decrease) in fair value
in period
|
527
|
(220)
|
307
|
At
31 December 2023 (audited)
|
100,602
|
-
|
100,602
|
Adjustment in respect of tenant
incentives
|
2,758
|
-
|
2,758
|
Market value at 31 December 2023
|
103,360
|
-
|
103,360
|
At 30 June 2024, the group had
entered into contractual commitments for the acquisition and repair
of investment property amounting to £nil (31 December 2023:
£711,000).
9. Borrowings
|
Half year
|
Half
year
|
Year
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
Unaudited
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Bank loans
|
110,000
|
85,000
|
83,500
|
Sale and leaseback
|
4,012
|
-
|
3,018
|
|
114,012
|
85,000
|
86,518
|
Movements in borrowings are
analysed as follows:
|
£'000
|
At 1 January 2024
|
86,518
|
Secured bank loans
|
33,500
|
Repayment of secured bank
loans
|
(7,000)
|
New leases - sale and
leaseback
|
1,717
|
Repayment of sale and
leaseback
|
(723)
|
At
30 June 2024
|
114,012
|
Bank loans include the group's
revolving loan facility which runs to May 2029 and is drawn for
durations of up to six months.
10. Provisions for liabilities and
charges
Since 31 December 2023, the
following movements on provisions for liabilities and charges have
occurred:
·
|
The road maintenance provision
represents management's best estimate of the group's liability
under a five-year rolling programme for the maintenance of the
group's PFI asset. During the period £718,000 has been utilised and
additional provisions of £1,199,000 have been made, all of which
were due to normal operating procedures.
|
·
|
The Land promotion provision
represents management's best estimate of the group's liability to
provide infrastructure and service obligations, which remain with
the group following the disposal of land. During the period,
£628,000 has been utilised and £653,000 has been
released.
|
11. Defined benefit pension
scheme
The main financial assumptions used
in the valuation of the liabilities of the scheme under IAS 19
are:
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
%
|
%
|
%
|
Retail Prices Index
(RPI)
|
3.20
|
3.30
|
3.15
|
Consumer Prices Index
(CPI)
|
2.65
|
2.70
|
2.55
|
Rate in increase to pensions in
payment liable for Limited Price Indexation (LPI)
|
2.65
|
2.70
|
2.55
|
Revaluation of deferred
pensions
|
2.65
|
2.70
|
2.55
|
Liabilities discount
rate
|
5.20
|
5.40
|
4.60
|
Amounts recognised in the
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income in respect of the
scheme are as follows:
|
Half year
|
Half
year
|
Year
|
|
Ended
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
Unaudited
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Service cost:
|
|
|
|
Ongoing scheme expenses
|
353
|
439
|
745
|
Net interest income
|
(174)
|
(196)
|
(406)
|
Pension Protection Fund
|
22
|
45
|
81
|
Pension expenses recognised in
profit or loss
|
201
|
288
|
420
|
Remeasurement on the net defined
benefit liability:
|
|
|
|
Return on plan assets (excluding
amounts included in net interest expense)
|
6,794
|
6,451
|
(1,044)
|
Actuarial losses/(gains) arising
from changes in demographic assumptions
|
-
|
986
|
(1,675)
|
Actuarial (gains)/losses arising
from experience adjustments
|
(9,226)
|
2,138
|
4,710
|
Actuarial losses/(gains) arising
from changes in financial assumptions
|
408
|
(7,526)
|
1,075
|
Actuarial (gains)/losses recognised
in other comprehensive income
|
(2,024)
|
2,049
|
3,066
|
Total
|
(1,823)
|
2,337
|
3,486
|
The amount included in the
Statement of Financial Position arising from the group's
obligations in respect of the scheme is as follows:
|
Half year
|
Half
year
|
Year
|
|
Ended
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
Unaudited
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Present value of scheme
obligations
|
(145,396)
|
(147,410)
|
(155,264)
|
Fair value of scheme
assets
|
155,196
|
155,518
|
162,989
|
|
9,800
|
8,108
|
7,725
|
12. Related party
transactions
There have been no material
transactions with related parties during the period.
There have been no material changes
to the related party arrangements as reported in note 30 to the
Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 31
December 2023.
Transactions between the Company
and its subsidiaries, which are related parties, have been
eliminated on consolidation and are not disclosed in this
note.
13. SHARE CAPITAL
|
Half year
|
Half
year
|
Year
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
Unaudited
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
400,000 5.25% cumulative preference
shares of £1 each (31 December 2023: 400,000)
|
400
|
400
|
400
|
133,988,603 ordinary shares of 10p
each (31 December 2023: 133,985,763)
|
13,399
|
13,398
|
13,399
|
|
13,799
|
13,798
|
13,799
|
14. Cash generated from
operations
|
Half year
|
Half
year
|
Year
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
30 June
|
30
June
|
31
December
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
Unaudited
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Profit before tax
|
3,687
|
24,959
|
37,302
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
Amortisation of PFI
asset
|
268
|
279
|
551
|
Goodwill impairment
|
102
|
102
|
203
|
Depreciation of property, plant and
equipment
|
2,760
|
2,125
|
4,462
|
Depreciation of right-of-use
assets
|
-
|
287
|
779
|
Revaluation decrease/(increase) in
investment properties
|
28
|
(595)
|
(307)
|
Amortisation of capitalised letting
fees
|
10
|
-
|
54
|
Share-based payment
expense
|
875
|
744
|
1,601
|
Pension scheme credit
|
(51)
|
(3,969)
|
(4,197)
|
Loss/(profit) on disposal of
property, plant and equipment (excluding equipment held for
hire)
|
36
|
14
|
(341)
|
Profit on disposal of equipment
held for hire
|
(789)
|
(596)
|
(1,185)
|
Profit on disposal of investment
properties
|
(37)
|
(85)
|
(733)
|
Profit on disposal of assets held
for sale
|
-
|
-
|
(1,571)
|
Finance income
|
(2,116)
|
(1,769)
|
(3,357)
|
Finance costs
|
4,283
|
2,495
|
6,260
|
Share of profit of joint ventures
and associates
|
(1,860)
|
(188)
|
(371)
|
Operating cash flows before
movements in equipment held for hire
|
7,196
|
23,803
|
39,150
|
Purchase of equipment held for
hire
|
(1,666)
|
(2,538)
|
(3,497)
|
Proceeds on disposal of equipment
held for hire
|
1,073
|
722
|
1,423
|
Operating cash flows before
movements in working capital
|
6,603
|
21,987
|
37,076
|
Increase in inventories
|
(52,784)
|
(5,886)
|
(9,129)
|
Decrease/(increase) in
receivables
|
16,961
|
(6,005)
|
1,503
|
(Increase)/decrease in contract
assets
|
(192)
|
1,836
|
5,598
|
(Increase)/decrease in
payables
|
18,796
|
(3,252)
|
(26,231)
|
(Increase)/decrease in contract
liabilities
|
3,855
|
(2,540)
|
(2,946)
|
Cash generated from operations
|
(6,761)
|
6,140
|
5,871
|
Net debt is an alternative
performance measure used by the group and comprises the
following:
Analysis of net debt:
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
14,379
|
20,538
|
13,034
|
Bank overdrafts
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Net cash and cash
equivalents
|
14,379
|
20,538
|
13,034
|
Bank loans
|
(110,000)
|
(85,000)
|
(83,500)
|
Other loans - sale and
leaseback
|
(4,012)
|
(3,313)
|
(3,018)
|
Lease liabilities
|
(4,287)
|
(2,996)
|
(4,275)
|
Net debt
|
(103,920)
|
(70,771)
|
(77,759)
|
15. GROUP RISKS AND
UNCERTAINTIES
The Directors consider that the
principal risks and uncertainties which could have a material
impact on the group's performance over the remaining six months of
the 2024 financial year remain consistent with those set out in the
Strategic Report on pages 48 to 54 of the group's Annual Report and
Financial Statements. These risks and uncertainties
include:
Safety; Environmental and climate
change; Economic; People and culture; Funding; Cyber; Pensions;
Construction contracts; Property assets, Property development; Land
sourcing; Land demand; Political; housebuilding.
The recovering UK economy, falling
inflation and potential for interest rate cuts are good for our
markets and brings down some key risk exposure.
Our short-term focus becomes
realisation of asset values, returning levels of gearing to within
our targeted range and progressing key opportunities.
The group operates a system of
internal control and risk management in order to provide assurance
that it is managing risk while achieving our business objectives.
No system can fully eliminate risk and therefore the understanding
of operational risk is central to the management process within
Henry Boot. The long-term success of the group depends on the
continual review, assessment and control of the key business risks
it faces.
16. Approval
The issue of these statements was
formally approved by a duly appointed committee of the Board on 17
September 2024.
RESPONSIBILITY STATEMENTS OF THE DIRECTORS
The Directors confirm that these
condensed interim Financial Statements have been prepared in
accordance with International Accounting Standard 34, 'Interim
Financial Reporting', as adopted by the European Union and that the
interim management report includes a fair review of the information
required by DTR 4.2.7 and DTR 4.2.8, namely:
·
|
an indication of important events
that have occurred during the first six months and their impact on the condensed set of financial statements,
and a description of the principal risks and uncertainties for the
remaining six months of the financial year; and
|
·
|
material related-party transactions
in the first six months and any material changes in the
related-party transactions described in the last Annual
Report.
|
The Directors of Henry Boot PLC are
listed in the Henry Boot PLC Annual Report for the year ended 31
December 2023. A list of current Directors is maintained on the
Henry Boot PLC group website: www.henryboot.co.uk.
On behalf of the Board
T
A ROBERTS
Director
17 September 2024
|
D
L LITTLEWOOD
Director
17 September 2024
|