Berkeley reveals leadership reshuffle as profits fall


Housebuilder Berkeley Group has unveiled an overhaul at the top as it posted lower annual profits and confirmed earnings would remain under pressure over the next two years.

The group, which specialises in building homes in London, said chief executive Rob Perrins would become executive chairman when current chair Michael Dobson steps down in September after three years in the role.

Chief financial officer Richard Stearn will then become chief executive, with the group saying his promotion โ€œwill uphold Berkeleyโ€™s longstanding tradition and preference for promoting from withinโ€.

The leadership reshuffle comes as Berkeley reported a 5.1% fall in pre-tax profits to ยฃ528.9 million for the year to April 30.

It said it was on track for guidance for 2025-26 of ยฃ450 million in pre-tax profits, but this would mark a 15% drop year-on-year, with the group saying it expects a similar result for the following year too.

The group had said it previously expected profits of โ€œat leastโ€ ยฃ450 million in 2025-26.

Shares in the firm dropped more than 7% in morning trading on Friday.

Mr Perrins said: โ€œThere is good underlying demand for our homes, with transaction volumes gradually improving over the course of the year.

โ€œHowever, consumer confidence remains finely balanced and a more meaningful recovery requires both improved sentiment and macroeconomic stability.โ€

He added: โ€œWe have adapted our business to current market conditions over the last 18 months, which results in the pre-tax profit guidance for 2025-26 of ยฃ450 million, with 2026-27 likely to be similar, based on current sales rates.โ€

The groupโ€™s results showed it delivered 4,047 homes, excluding joint ventures, up from 3,521 in 2023-24, though the average sale price fell to ยฃ593,000 from ยฃ664,000 in 2023-24.

Sales reservations were 5% higher, but the group said โ€œcurrent sales levels are below our long-term aspirations and around 30% lower than 2022-23โ€.

Forward sales were ยฃ1.4 billion at the end of April, down from ยฃ1.7 billion a year earlier, โ€œand will moderate further over the next 12 months under prevailing market conditionsโ€.

Analysts at Peel Hunt said they had trimmed their forecasts for the next two financial years by between 5% and 6% after the housebuildersโ€™ more downbeat guidance.

โ€œWe suspect that tougher trading and increased sales incentives are at the heart of this drop in expectations,โ€ they said.

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