Travis Perkins warns over cost rises for building materials amid Iran war
The boss of Travis Perkins has cautioned over price rises for building materials on the back of soaring energy costs, while higher fuel bills will bite.
Gavin Slark, the new chief executive of the UKโs largest distributor of building materials, said events over the last few weeks had already been affecting prices for the industry.
This has been prompted by the escalation of conflict in the Middle East which has disrupted oil and gas supplies, therefore sending wholesale prices soaring.
โIn the last week or so, weโve had communications from various manufacturing suppliers of ours saying theyโre looking at energy surcharges or theyโre looking at price increases to counteract energy rises,โ he told the Press Association.
โIf youโre very energy intensive then itโs a short-term pricing issue and it happens very quickly in terms of the price hitting your business.
โWeโre very alert to it and weโre very aware of what the impact will be.โ
Mr Slark said it was a โbalancing actโ for the retailer to pass on price increases โfairlyโ to its own customers but not โdisadvantage ourselvesโ.
โI think our customers understand that energy prices are rising significantly therefore the cost price of the materials will be rising,โ he said.
โI think if we can find a resolution to the conflict as quickly as possible thatโs probably the best scenario in terms of managing pricing within our industry.โ
The Builders Merchants Federation (BMF) revealed that the volume of sales of building materials dropped by 7.2% in January in the UK, compared with the same month last year, before the US-Israel war with Iran escalating.
The BMF said about 75% of building materials are made in the UK, but many of its members require energy for materials like steel, oils, resins and glass to manufacture goods.
Mr Slark also said rising road fuel costs could have the biggest impact on Travis Perkins, with a major part of its business being the delivery of products to builders around the UK.
He also said most of the products it sells were sourced within the UK but that there were โsome small products brought in from the Far Eastโ which could be affected by higher shipping costs.
Travis Perkins reportedย a pre-tax loss of ยฃ134.7 million for 2025, widening from 2024โs ยฃ38.4 million loss.
However, on an adjusted basis, which strips out the impact of one-off costs including accounting issues, it generated an operating profit of ยฃ133 million โ down 12.5% year on year.
The company highlighted a stronger performance for its Toolstation brand, with revenues increasing during the year.
Travis Perkinsโ share price was up by more than 5% on Tuesday.
