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PRIVACY
Commercial Property

Grainger sees continued growth on the back of rental demand

The listed property firm said it was strong despite economic uncertainty

Grainger Plc is building Derby's first purpose-built rental development (CGI) on the former Debenhams site as part of a £200million regeneration scheme at Becketwell (Image: Grainger Plc)

Demand for rental properties amid the pandemic has helped boost Grainger plc's revenue and operating profit, new results show.

The Newcastle-based group said it recognised that many people's dreams of home ownership had been put on hold but said it was committed to making renting "life enriching and fun". Announcing performance in the year to the end of September, Grainger said revenue was £279.2m, up from £248.9m the year before with operating profit also increasing to £122.2m from £113.8m.

Overall net rental income, across the group's private rented sector and regulated tenancy portfolio, grew by 22% to £86.3m, up from £70.6m. Further growth is anticipated in the next few years.

Read more: North East unemployment reaches record low but concerns over inactivity

With a £3.2bn operational portfolio of 9,669 rental homes and, £1.8bn build-to-rent pipeline of 6,838 homes the Grainger said it was in a resilient position, regardless of economic uncertainty.

Speaking to BusinessLive, chief executive Helen Gordon said there was good visibility of earnings growth for the next four years, including the launch of 1,600 homes next year, many of which are in cities new to Grainger, that will bring another £17m of income for 2024. Despite turmoil in the economy and cost of living pressures felt by households, Ms Gordon said she saw no signs of distress in the firm's 98% rent collection having weathered the pandemic with 23,000 customers and only 63 on rent payment plans.

She said: "I put that down to the fact that we know the detail behind what our residents are paying and affordability. I think as we've placed the business in the mid-market we know that those rents are affordable and in fact Shelter, the charity, say that people should be paying less than a third or around a third of their income on property. On average, we're below that."

In a statement attached to the results, Ms Gordon said: "Our £953m committed pipeline of 3,658 new build-to-rent homes is locked-in, fully-funded and de-risked with fixed construction costs, providing visibility on earnings growth for the next four years. On top of this we have the option to proceed with a further £241m of 769 homes in our secured pipeline and we have £599m in our planning and legal pipeline, comprising 2,411 homes. In total, our build-to-rent pipeline stands at £1.8bn and 6,838 new homes.