Bellway posts 82% fall in pre-tax profit

British housebuilder Bellway posted an 82 per cent fall in pretax profit, beating market expectations, and said its strong cash…

British housebuilder Bellway posted an 82 per cent fall in pretax profit, beating market expectations, and said its strong cash position made it well placed should the housing market mount a robust recovery.

Chief Executive John Watson said the company had learnt the lesson of previous recessions and had prioritised cash generation during the downturn, giving it a warchest to buy land.

"There's a bit more stability in the market - builders have dropped their prices and lenders are a little bit more relaxed," he said in an interview today.

Recent data points to a recovery in the British housing market. Mortgage lender Halifax said house prices rose 1.6 percent in September month-on-month, while The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors said prices were rising at the fastest rate since the credit crunch began more than two years ago.

Watson said there was a split in the housing market, with demand in the south of England much firmer than in the north, and rising unemployment meant a double-dip in house prices could not be ruled out.

"There's equal risks on both sides of the fence," he said. "Unemployment is the big worry."

Shares in Bellway, which have fallen 12 percent from a 20-month high of 927.5 pence on September 18th, were 0.9 per cent higher at 813 pence by 0859 GMT.

Panmure Gordon upgraded the company to "buy" from "hold" following the better-then-expected results, and said it expected to raise its 2010 pretax profit forecast to about £24 million from £15.6 million.

"We believe that Bellway is well placed to take advantage of the current market opportunities, and this should stand the business in good stead for the future," the broker said in a note.

Mr Watson said Bellway had slashed debt in the year - by £180.9 million to £36.8 million - and had raised a further £43.7 million from shareholders since year-end.

The money was raised to buy land, in contrast to peers Barratt and Redrow, which turned to investors in September to strengthen their balance sheets.

"We are one builder that can throw a chequebook at land if the opportunities are there," he said. "We are seeing opportunities to buy at what we think is the right time in the cycle."

The group had agreed to spend £120 million buying land since August, the majority of which was in the South, he said, and had headroom of £370 million to buy more.

The company, which sold 4,380 homes in the year to end-July, reported a pretax profit of £29.8 million, down from £165.7 million a year earlier, on turnover of £683.8 million, down from £1.15 billion.

Analysts were expecting the group to post pretax profit of £26.8 million and revenue of £668 million.

Bellway, the only national builder to currently pay a dividend, kept its final payout steady at 6.0 pence a share.

Reuters