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Bellway profits halve and firm takes near £50m hit over potentially unsafe cladding

Newcastle housebuilder reinstates dividends after seeing robust demand after lifiting of coronavirus lockdown

A Bellway housing development in Westerhope, Newcastle(Image: newcastle chronicle)

Newcastle housebuilder has set aside almost £50m to deal with apartment blocks built with cladding shown to be unsafe after the Grenfell tragedy.

The charge of £46.8m has been revealed in the company’s preliminary results, in which it also outlined how profits had more than halved due mainly to the disruption of the coronavirus pandemic.

But the FTSE 250 company, which recent moved into new headquarters, said its recent trading had been “robust” and that it was well placed to help the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ meet its shortage of new homes.

Bellway said that it had made the multimillion-pound provision after the Government published new guidance following the fire at the 24-storey Grenfell Tower block of flats in London in 2017, in which 72 people died.

The Government document requires all buildings above 18 metres to be risk assessed – and as a result Bellway identified a number of developments where works will be carried out, which were granted building regulation approval when they were built but where the building materials used may not fully comply with the most recent guidance.

Chief executive Jason Honeyman said: “We understand that by adopting this proactive and responsible approach there could be some disruption to customers as remediation works are undertaken. We therefore apologise to all customers affected. Going forward, Bellway has renewed its efforts to ensure that all future apartment schemes fully comply with the most up-to-date interpretation of building regulations.”

His comments come in the publication of results for the year ending July 31 2020, which showed that turnover fell 30% to £2.2bn, while operating profit reduced by more than 50%, coming in at £321.7m. Pre-tax profit also took a hit, tumbling 64.3% from £662.6m to £237.6m.

The company’s cash position had also plummeted by 99.3%, going from £201.2m at the start of the year to just £1.4m.