LONDON: British builder Bovis said on Friday it was on track to deliver a significant increase in profitability in 2018 as it seeks to turn its business around after seeing off two takeover bids last year following a profit warning.
Some buyers have also complained about the quality of its homes, citing problems ranging from a lack of sealant in bathrooms to the heads of nails poking through walls, issues that have been highlighted in media reports.
The group said its pre-tax profit would fall around 25 per cent to roughly 115 million pounds ($156 million) after one-off charges linked to restructuring, extra work it is undertaking to improve its homes and merger talks.
The number of homes it built in 2017 fell by 8 per cent to 3,645 units as it focuses on improving quality.
Chief Executive Greg Fitzgerald, appointed only last April, told Reuters 2018 full-year profit should meet consensus expectations of around 155 million pounds.
“Our forward order position is strong, and with robust industry fundamentals, we expect the Group to deliver a significant improvement in profitability in 2018,” he said.
Bovis shares traded 3 per cent higher at 0820 GMT. Barratt, Britain’s biggest housebuilder, on Thursday reported a flat sales rate in the last six months of 2017, adding that prices rose and it expects to build even more homes this year.
Bovis has also initiated a number of changes to address shortcomings in quality.
“There’s no one single golden bullet: One, we’ve improved most importantly, and have still got some work to do, the quality of our site managers,” Fitzgerald said.
Reuters
|