Housebuilder Berkeley to pause buying new land for homes amid global volatility


Housebuilder Berkeley Group has said it will stop buying new land and reduce investment in building work while war in the Middle East weighs on the housing market and it grapples with challenging conditions.

The company, which specialises in building homes in urban areas, especially London,ย said the decision comesย in the context of recent global events.

Berkeley had said earlier in March that the US-Israelโ€™s war with Iran was โ€œweighing heavily on risk sentimentโ€ and that it was mindful of the potential for higher inflation this year, and for interest rates to stay elevated for longer.

The risk of this slowing recovery in the housing market โ€œhas now become a realityโ€, it said on Wednesday.

It also flagged an โ€œunprecedentedโ€ increase in costs and regulation over recent years, and said new rules had lengthened the time it takes between gaining planning approval and starting building work by about a year.

In this context, Berkeley said it โ€œdoes not believe it can make its required rate of return on investment in new land acquisitionsโ€.

It had therefore decided to stop acquiring new land while conditions โ€œprevailโ€, except through joint ventures, and focus instead on its existing developments.

The group currently holds land comprising over 50,000 homes, with a further 10,000 in the pipeline, located in London and the south east of England.

Berkeley also said it would reduce investment into construction work that was in progress to match current sales levels.

The London-listed company still expects to make a pre-tax profit of ยฃ450 million for the year to the end of April.

Looking ahead, it is forecasting generating more than ยฃ1.4 billion in profit over the next four years to 2030.

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