Taylor Wimpey slumps to loss on ยฃ222m fire safety hit

Taylor Wimpey has plunged to a half-year loss after taking another ยฃ222 million cost hit for removing cladding from high-rise buildings following the Grenfell Tower fire tragedy.
The housebuilder reported pre-tax losses of ยฃ92.1 million for the six months to June 29 against profits of ยฃ99.7 million a year earlier.
It said this was largely due to an extra ยฃ222.2 million provision for fire safety measures.
The company also said full-year earnings would be lower than expected at ยฃ424 million after taking an unexpected ยฃ20 million charge for historical defective work by a former contractor.
Experts at AJ Bell said the latest cladding cost has seen Taylor Wimpeyโs total bill swell to more than ยฃ550 million in the wake of the Grenfell fire in 2017, which killed 72 people.
They estimated the cost to FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 housebuilders had now reached more than ยฃ3.5 billion.
Large housebuilders agreed in 2022 to pay to fix cladding issues on their properties following public and political pressure.
Taylor Wimpeyโs shares fell 5% on Thursday after its interim results laid bare the impact of the costs.
Jennie Daly, chief executive of Taylor, said: โThe safety of our customers remains our highest priority โ this principle has consistently guided our approach, and we have increased our cladding fire safety provision to reflect findings from updated fire risk assessments and investigations in the first half.โ
The group said it was also pushed to a loss by an ยฃ18 million payout after an investigation into information sharing in the sector by the UK competition watchdog.
Taylor was one of seven builders that recently agreed to pay a record ยฃ100 million between them as part of a package of commitments to address concerns following the probe by the Competition and Markets Authority into whether they shared commercially sensitive information.
In its latest results, Taylor said it saw โsofterโ market conditions in the second quarter as affordability continues to hamper demand, particularly from first-time buyers.
โWhile affordability remains constrained, particularly amongst first-time buyers, lenders remain committed to the UK mortgage market and long-term fundamentals are positive, with significant unmet need for UK housing,โ Ms Daly said.