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PRIVACY
Commercial Property

Barratt profits up despite buyers feeling the pinch

The average selling price of a Barratt home was up about £20,000 to £319,600

Barratt London's Fulham Riverside Development

Barratt Developments said profits were up also 10 per cent over the last 12 months despite a drop in the number of new homes sold.

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s biggest housebuilder completed 17,206 homes in the year to the end of June, almost 4 per cent fewer than the year before. It said construction slowed as the costs of building a home rose faster than the price the company could charge buyers.

The business – which is based in Coalville, Leicestershire, and has its roots in the North East ­– said statutory pre-tax profits were up 9.8 per cent for the year at £705.1 million, on revenues of £5.3 billion (up 1 per cent).

The average selling price of a Barratt home was up about £20,000 to £319,600.

The business said “whilst the company remains in a strong financial position, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ housing market remains difficult and the outlook remains uncertain” as buyers deal with increased mortgages and a higher cost of living.

Barratt also announced that it cut the size of its workforce by hundreds of people in the wake of Liz Truss’s premiership, introducing a hiring freeze as the “market slowdown accelerated following the mini budget.”

As a result the headcount of the business, which employs more than 6,000 people, fell by 6 per cent between September last year and June.

Chief executive David Thomas said: “We have delivered a strong operational performance in a challenging operating environment.