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BARRATT DEVELOPMENTS PLC

Half year results for the six month period ended 31 December 2020 Strong first half delivery, well positioned for the second half

£m unless otherwise stated1,2

Half year ended 31 December 2020

Half year ended 31 December 2019

Change

Total completions (homes)3

9,077

8,314

9.2%

Revenue

2,494.7

2,266.2

10.1%

Profit from operations

422.9

421.7

0.3%

Adjusted operating margin4

20.3%

19.4%

90 bps

Operating margin4

17.0%

18.6%

(160 bps)

Profit before tax

430.2

423.0

1.7%

Basic earnings per share (pence)

34.3

33.8

1.5%

Interim dividend per share (pence)

7.5

-

ROCE4

17.8%

29.3%

(1,150 bps)

Net cash4

1,106.7

433.8

155.1%

Highlights

  • Record first half year home completions with 9,077 total completions3, up 9.2%
  • Recovery in adjusted operating margin to 20.3% (2019: 19.4%, H2 FY20: 5.9%) mainly driven by growth in completions, delivering adjusted profit before tax of £507.2m (2019: £440.8m). After adjusted items of £77.0m (2019: £17.8m), profit before tax was £430.2m (2019: £423.0m)
  • Continued strong cash generation with period end net cash of £1,106.7m (2019: £433.8m) and land creditors reduced to £601.1m (2019: £830.8m) (21.2%; 2019: 27.4% of land bank) further strengthening our balance sheet
  • Continued progress in maintaining our position as the leading national sustainable housebuilder; the only housebuilder to deliver improved annual CDP scores across all three categories this year (Forest, Water and Climate)
  • Launched The Barratt Charitable Foundation to further support the communities in which we operate

Dividend resumed

  • Following careful consideration, the Board has decided to resume dividend payments with an interim dividend of 7.5 pence per share and continues to target a full year dividend cover of 2.5 times

Current trading

  • Net private reservations per active outlet per average week for January were 0.77, 7.2% below the equivalent period in 2020 (0.83) but 4.1% ahead of the equivalent reservation rate in 2019 of 0.74
  • Strong total forward sales3 as at 31 January 2021 of 14,289 homes (3 February 2020: 13,043 homes) at a value of £3,425.8m (3 February 2020: £3,027.1m) with 11,588 homes secured for completion beyond 31 March 2021
  • Outlook for the full year remains in line with the Board’s expectations with wholly owned completions expected to be between 15,250 and 15,750 homes with around 650 further joint venture home completions in FY21

Commenting on the results David Thomas, Chief Executive of Barratt Developments PLC, said:

"Our first priority remains keeping our colleagues and customers safe. Our customers are at the heart of everything we do and I would like to say a huge thank you to all of our employees and sub-contractors who have continued to deliver great quality homes and excellent customer service throughout these challenging times. We have achieved a fantastic first half performance, with a strong rebound in completion volumes and good progress towards our medium term targets.

We have also made a solid start to the second half and are now over 95% forward sold for our financial year. Whilst we are mindful of the continued economic uncertainties, the housing market fundamentals remain attractive and our outlook for the full year remains in line with expectations. We will continue to lead the industry in quality and service as we deliver the high quality sustainable homes and developments the country needs, creating jobs and supporting the economic recovery across England, Scotland and Wales”.

  1. Refer to Glossary for definition of key financial metrics
  2. Unless otherwise stated, all numbers quoted exclude JVs
  3. Including JVs in which the Group has an interest
  4. In addition to the Group using a variety of statutory performance measures it also measures performance using alternative performance measures (APMs). Definitions of APMs and reconciliations to the equivalent statutory measures are detailed in the Glossary and Definitions. Net cash definition in Note 5.1

Note on forward looking statements

Certain statements in this document may be forward looking statements. By their nature, forward looking statements involve a number of risks, uncertainties or assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by those statements. Forward looking statements regarding past trends or activities should not be taken as a representation that such trends or activities will continue in the future. Accordingly undue reliance should not be placed on forward looking statements.

This announcement contains inside information. The person responsible for arranging for the release of this announcement on behalf of Barratt Developments PLC is John Messenger (Group Investor Relations Director).

There will be an analyst conference call and webcast at 8.30am today. Dial in UK toll free: 0808 109 0700

International dial in: +44 (0) 203 003 2666

The presentation will also be webcast live with the follow on Q&A. Please register and access the webcast using the following link:

https://webcast.merchantcantoscdn.com/webcaster/dyn/4000/7464/16532/125087/Lobby/default.htm

An archived version of the webcast will also be available on our website during the afternoon of 4 February 2021.

Further copies of this announcement can be downloaded from the Barratt Developments PLC corporate website at www.barrattdevelopments.co.uk or by request from the Company Secretary's office at: Barratt Developments PLC, Barratt House, Cartwright Way, Forest Business Park, Bardon Hill, Coalville, Leicestershire, LE67 1UF.

For further information please contact:

Barratt Developments PLC

Jessica White, Chief Financial Officer

01530 278 259

Analyst/investor enquiries

John Messenger, Group Investor Relations Director

07867 201 763

Media enquiries

Tim Collins, Head of Corporate Communications

020 7299 4874

Brunswick

Jonathan Glass / Rosie Oddy

020 7404 5959

Barratt Developments PLC LEI: 2138006R85VEOF5YNK29

Financial reporting calendar

The Group's next scheduled announcement of financial information is the trading update on 6 May 2021.

Chief Executive’s Statement Overview

We have delivered an excellent operational and financial performance in our first half. We have made rapid progress in increasing build activity and home completions after the unprecedented impact of COVID-19 and the first national lockdown in FY20. We are building homes the country needs, supporting and creating jobs, and aiding wider economic growth whilst delivering both operationally and financially for our stakeholders.

H1 FY21

Medium term targets

Progress in the half year

Wholly owned completions

8,699

homes

Disciplined growth in wholly owned home completions towards 20,000 over the medium term, initially reversing COVID- 19 disruption through sales and build driven recovery back to FY19 levels

  • On track to deliver between 15,250 and 15,750 wholly owned home completions in FY21

Gross margin

20.6%

Land acquisition at a minimum 23% gross margin and optimising performance

  • Excellent progress towards our margin target with additional momentum given first half home completions
  • Adjusted gross margin up 80 bps to 23.8% (2019: 23.0%)

ROCE

17.8%

Minimum of 25% delivered through improving margin and return to operating framework

  • COVID-19 impact on H2 FY20 continues to dilute ROCE
  • ROCE at 17.8% for 12 months to 31 December 2020
    • down 1,150 bps vs 31 December 2019 at 29.3%
    • ahead 220 bps vs 30 June 2020 at 15.6%

We are very proud to be the UK’s leading national sustainable housebuilder and to consistently lead the industry in both customer service and build quality. We operate across England, Scotland and Wales through our three brands: Barratt Homes, David Wilson Homes and Barratt London. We strive to meet our customers’ expectations and we believe that the high quality of our homes and our excellent customer service is fundamental to our ongoing success.

We remain committed to playing our part in addressing Britain’s housing shortage and our completion recovery reflects this commitment and our growth aspirations. We delivered record half year completions with total completions3 up 9.2% to 9,077. This growth reflected underlying market strength, pent up demand following the initial national lockdown and also demand resulting from the stamp duty holiday and the March 2021 end of Help to Buy for existing homeowners.

After the unprecedented challenges arising from COVID-19 in FY20 we are determined to rebuild our completion volumes to those delivered in FY19 as quickly as we can, whilst maintaining our disciplined approach and focus on customer service and quality, and thereafter will return to our medium term target of 20,000 wholly owned completions.

Through rebuilding our completion volumes we will recover our build, sales and operating overhead efficiencies and in doing so, unlock the attractive returns available within our high quality land bank. Our new product ranges and their continual refinement continue to underpin our land acquisition at a minimum of 23% gross margin. We also remain focused on driving further improvements in the efficiency of our operations, controlling costs whilst maintaining our focus on quality and customer satisfaction.

It is a credit to our construction teams across the country that not only did they deliver an excellent return to build activity from a standing start after the national lockdown, they have also continued to lead the industry on quality. For the sixteenth year in a row, we achieved more NHBC Pride in the Job Quality awards than any other builder.

As a result of our successful completion recovery and the underlying strength of our land bank, in the half year we delivered a 80 bps increase in adjusted gross margin to 23.8% (2019: 23.0%) and a 90 bps increase in adjusted operating margin to 20.3% (2019: 19.4%). During the period, as highlighted at the time of our FY20 results, we incurred

£26.0m (2019: £nil) of adjusted items associated with the return of CJRS grant income and a charge of £51.0m (2019:

£17.8m) associated with legacy properties. We therefore delivered a gross margin of 20.6% (2019: 22.2%) and an operating margin of 17.0% (2019: 18.6%). Profit from operations for the half year was £422.9m (2019: £421.7m).

Our ROCE of 17.8% (2019: 29.3%), whilst below our target of a minimum 25% over the medium term, recovered by 220 bps on the 15.6% reported to 30 June 2020. Our ROCE reflected both the depressed level of profitability from the second half of FY20 and the elevated level of work in progress created by the initial national lockdown. In this context we are satisfied with our ROCE performance but remain committed to recovering to our medium term target at the earliest opportunity. The ROCE recovery to date is also pleasing as our revised operating framework, including the significantly reduced level of land creditors, makes its recovery more challenging.

We have further strengthened our balance sheet and ended the half year with net cash of £1,106.7m (31 December 2019: £433.8m) and, in line with our operating framework, reduced land creditors of £601.1m (2019: £830.8m) (21.2%; 2019: 27.4% of land bank).

The discipline embedded within our operating framework and the financial strength which this has created, evidenced through the challenges created by COVID-19, enables us to keep investing in our business and the future of housebuilding.

Attractive housing market fundamentals

Despite economic uncertainties, the housing market fundamentals remain attractive. There is strong demand for new homes across the country and Government is still targeting the construction of 300,000 new homes each year.

For the industry to continue to increase supply it is important that consumers are able to access sustainable mortgage finance.

Throughout 2020 we saw a reduction in the number of mortgages and mortgage products available at higher loan to value (LTV), partly as a result of the increased demand for mortgages coming out of the first national lockdown and also reflecting increased activity after the introduction of the stamp duty holiday. Whilst the lending environment is broadly positive, with some signs of increased competition since the start of December, there remains an absence of mortgage lending at higher LTV levels from many of the mainstream lenders, particularly for home buyers unable to access Help to Buy.

There has also been an increase in mortgage interest rates outside those attached to Help to Buy home purchases, although they still remain attractive in a longer term context. The health of the housing market, and housebuilders’ ability to build homes to meet demand relies on a strong and competitive mortgage market with a wide range of affordable and accessible mortgage options for home buyers. Absent an increase in LTV levels, Help To Buy is likely to become the only way into home ownership for many first time buyers.

Leadership in quality and customer service

We remain committed to playing our part in addressing the housing shortage. We design attractive developments that meet our high quality standards and will enhance local communities for years to come. We aim to continue to increase volumes whilst maintaining our industry-leading quality, and remain committed to investing in the future of housebuilding.

We believe our industry leadership in quality and customer service is fundamental to our business resilience and our quality has been externally recognised through a number of awards.

The NHBC Pride in the Job Awards recognise excellence in build quality and site management. In June 2020 our site managers were awarded 92 awards, more than any other housebuilder for the 16th consecutive year. In the subsequent Regional NHBC Pride in the Job Awards, Barratt secured seven out of the ten regional awards where we operate, an unprecedented achievement.

We are also the only major housebuilder to be awarded the maximum 5 Star rating by our customers in the HBF customer satisfaction survey for 11 years in a row.

In December 2020, we were named ‘Large Housebuilder of the Year’ at The Housebuilder Awards 2020. This is the second year in a row we have won this award and the third time we have secured this title in the last five years.

Investing in our people and recognising their commitment

We are committed to the development of our people, not just because it is the right thing to do, but because it is fundamental to our long-term success. As our industry continues to face a skills shortage, it is important to attract and retain the best people.

Our aim is to create a great place to work founded on an open and honest culture. We engage with our employees on a regular basis so we can understand their issues and concerns and address them. We carry out an annual engagement survey, further surveys throughout the year and consult with our Workforce Forum. Areas that we have consulted on this year include our response to COVID-19 and our enhanced working practices and protocols.

We continue to invest for the future and to develop award winning schemes including those for graduates, apprentices and former Armed Forces personnel, alongside our own Degree Apprenticeship in Residential Development and Construction run in conjunction with Sheffield Hallam University. Our development programmes included 473 participants at 31 December 2020 and we have plans to grow these programmes significantly in 2021. We also continue to collaborate with the wider housebuilding industry. We actively participate in the Home Building Skills Partnership, the aims of which include attracting new entrants to the industry, providing the skills for today and the future, and supporting the supply chain in attracting and developing the skills they need to support our industry.

We are seeking to build a diverse and inclusive workforce that reflects the communities in which we operate, delivering excellence for our customers by drawing on a broad range of talents, skills and experience. This is embedded in delivering our Diversity and Inclusion Strategy, with identified targets in areas such as gender and ethnicity and an aim to improve in all areas. We also have a successful career development programme for high potential female employees.

We are an accredited Living Wage Employer, making us one of the first major housebuilders to receive the accreditation. The real Living Wage is different to the Government’s National Minimum and Living Wage, as it is an independently calculated higher hourly rate of pay that is based on the actual cost of living. Receiving this accreditation demonstrates our commitment to our employees as well as our suppliers and subcontractors.

Delivering our long term commitment to quality and customer service rests with the effort and dedication of our employees across the country. We believe it is important that we recognise our colleagues’ commitment, particularly after the challenges faced over the last year, and that we share the success of the business with the people who make it possible. Reflecting the challenges met and overcome in 2020, and to mark the milestone of completing our 500,000th home in late 2020, an award of 200 shares was made to all employees below managing director level. This is the third year in a row that the Board has recognised our employees’ commitment and support in this way, following the special share award in 2019 to mark ten years of HBF 5 Star rating and our 60th anniversary share award in 2018.

Our financial performance Half year results

The Group has delivered an excellent first half performance. Overall our sales rate in the period was 11.6% ahead at 0.77 (2019: 0.69) net private reservations per active outlet per week. Our sales rate over the six-month period moderated, as anticipated, with an exceptionally strong sales rate in the first quarter, reflecting both underlying demand strength and pent up demand post the national lockdown, followed by a more normalised sales rate in the second quarter.

During the half year, we operated from an average of 342 (2019: 372) active outlets including 8 (2019: 9) JV active sites, a reduction of 8.1% reflecting the delay to site starts created by the initial national lockdown period. We have made good progress on new site openings, launching 63 new outlets3 (2019: 45 outlets) in the half year, ahead of our expectations. New outlet launches in the second half, along with those launched in the first half, are expected to support a stable average sales outlet position for the remainder of this financial year.

Total home completions3 were a record level for the half year with 9,077 homes (2019: 8,314 homes) delivered to customers. Completion growth benefited from both the elevated level of working capital carried into the new financial year and our higher forward sales position, created by the initial national lockdown delaying completions.

The Group’s completion mix was:

Completions (units)

H1 FY21

H1 FY20

Change

Private

6,903

6,301

9.6%

Affordable

1,796

1,699

5.7%

Wholly owned

8,699

8,000

8.7%

JV

378

314

20.4%

Total3

9,077

8,314

9.2%

As a result of the strong half year completion growth and based on current market conditions and site construction activity, we expect wholly owned completions to be between 15,250 and 15,750 homes in FY21, whilst maintaining our industry leading standards of build quality and customer service. We continue to expect affordable completions to represent c. 20% of our completion volumes this year.

Our private ASP was £319,500 (2019: £312,000) reflecting both a positive regional mix impact as well as low single digit house price inflation. The affordable ASP reduced by 9.2% to £145,300 (2019: £160,000) reflecting the change in geographic mix with a reduced level of affordable units delivered in London. As a result, total ASP was £283,500 (2019: £279,800).

We delivered an uplift of 80 bps in adjusted gross margin in the half year. This reflected both low single-digit house price growth and limited build cost inflation, as well as the strength of completion volume growth in the period, driving incremental fixed cost efficiency with each home completion delivering a contribution of c. 32% after land and build costs. As a result, our adjusted gross margin was 23.8% (2019: 23.0%).

Based on our full year completions guidance, with wholly owned completions in the second half expected to be between 19% and 25% lower than our first half, our second half is expected to see some reversal of the cost efficiency experienced in the first half.

In line with our commitment to put customers first and reflecting the Board decision to repay CJRS grant income received during the first national lockdown, adjusted item costs of £79.1m (2019: £17.8m) were recognised through cost of sales in the period. This resulted in a reported gross margin of 20.6% (2019: 22.2%).

We have sought to minimise cost growth in our administrative expenses with limited underlying inflationary costs. Costs have increased from that experienced in the second half of FY20 due to director and employee incentive schemes, which were cancelled or did not vest in the second half due to the pandemic, as well as a reduced level of sundry income. Administrative costs in the half year were £94.3m (2019: £83.9m). We now expect net administrative expenses for FY21 will be around £200m.

Adjusted operating profit increased by £65.7m to £505.2m (2019: £439.5m) as a result of our increased completion delivery, the improvement in adjusted gross margin and tight control of administrative expenses in the period.

The improvement in adjusted operating margin reflected a number of factors:

  • Regional trading: our margin initiatives continue to drive underlying improvement, including the continued transition to sites using our new and continually refined standard house types, increasing margin by 60bps;
  • Site extension costs: reflecting an extension in site durations, the charge across our completions created an 80 bps negative margin impact;
  • Net impact of build cost relative to selling prices: low single-digit house price inflation, offset by limited build cost inflation produced a 100 bps positive margin improvement;
  • Sales mix and other items: other factors, including a change in sales mix and the withdrawal from Central London, resulted in a 50 bps improvement to margin; and
  • Administrative expenses: the change in administrative expenses resulted in a 40 bps negative margin impact, reflecting additional costs accrued in respect of performance incentive schemes as well as reduced sundry income.

Our adjusted operating margin, as a result, increased by 90 bps to 20.3% (2019: 19.4%). After adjusted items, the reported operating margin for the half year was 17.0% (2019: 18.6%).

Net finance charges were in line with the prior period at £14.8m (2019: £14.1m). The cash finance charge was £4.9m (2019: £3.1m) with non-cash charges of £9.9m (2019: £11.0m). We continue to expect FY21 net finance costs to be around £30m, comprising £10m of cash and £20m of non-cash charges.

In the half year, the Group’s share of JV profit was £22.1m (2019: £15.4m). We continue to expect to deliver around 650 JV completions in FY21.

Profit before tax increased by 1.7% to £430.2m (2019: £423.0m) and the Group recognised £81.2m of tax charges at an effective rate of 18.9% (2019: 18.4%). Basic earnings per share increased by 1.5% to 34.3 pence per share (2019: 33.8 pence per share).

Adjusted items

There were two adjusted items recognised during the half year, being costs associated with legacy properties and the reversal of grant income received under the CJRS in FY20.

Cost associated with legacy properties: the Group incurred an additional £56.3m (2019: £17.8m) of costs in the half year in relation to legacy properties, and a credit of £5.3m in relation to legacy properties in joint ventures.

The largest component of charges in the period related to Citiscape and the associated review, announced in July 2020, which is now substantially complete and has not identified any other buildings with issues as severe as those present at Citiscape. Detailed reviews are ongoing and, in line with our commitment to put our customers first we will ensure that the costs associated with any remedial works from these reviews are not borne by leaseholders.

Additionally, with the evolving Government advice on fire safety for multi-storey buildings, we continue to work with building owners and management companies on the assessment of buildings we have constructed. We have borne the cost of some remedial works at a small number of developments where we have a legal liability to do so or where relevant build issues have been identified.

We recognise that the complex issues surrounding fire safety guidance have caused distress for affected homeowners, and that a long term industry-wide solution is required. We understand that the Government is considering various options to provide this long term solution and we will continue to work with Government as we have done to date being founding signatories to the Building Safety Charter and active members of the Early Adopters Group, which is committed to protect life by putting safety first ahead of all other building priorities.

CJRS grant income: The Board decided on 5 July 2020 to repay all furlough funds received during the first national lockdown. With the decision to repay CJRS funds taken after the year end, we have recognised the reversal of the total grant income of £26.0m received in FY20 as an adjusted item in H1 FY21.

Capital structure and operating framework

We continue to maintain an appropriate capital structure reflecting our disciplined operating framework to ensure our balance sheet strength. Our capital structure remains centred on shareholders’ funds and land creditors funding the longer term requirements of the business with term loans and bank debt funding shorter term requirements for working capital.

In order to maintain a resilient balance sheet, our operating framework is to hold average net cash over the financial year and to be cash positive at year end. We have achieved a half year total indebtedness (net cash and land creditors combined) surplus of £505.6m (31 December 2019: total indebtedness of £397.0m).

Our net cash balance of £1,106.7m (31 December 2019: £433.8m), reflected the strength of underlying operating cash generation, the reversal of elevated working capital investment carried at 30 June 2020, the decision not to pay dividends in respect of FY20 partially offset by significant land creditor payments. We now expect year end net cash of between £700 - £750m as a result of improved trading but reflecting too, increased land and working capital investment in the second half to support our growth plans beyond FY21, as well as the payment of the interim dividend. Average net cash in FY21 is now expected to be approximately £700m.

Whilst we continue to defer payment for some land purchases to meet land vendor aspirations and drive a higher ROCE, we are in line with our operating framework level. As at 31 December 2020 land creditors totalled £601.1m (31 December 2019: £830.8m) and equated to 21.2% (31 December 2019: 27.4%) of the owned land bank. Land creditors falling due within the next 12 months totalled £333.6m at 31 December 2020.

Our operating framework, revised with our FY20 results, remains unchanged looking forward and progress over both the last six and twelve month periods is shown below:

Operating framework

Position at 31 December vs 30

June 2020

Position at 31 December 2019

Land bankA

c. 3.5 years owned and c. 1.0 year controlled

5.0 years owned and 0.9 years controlled

(2020: 5.7 years owned and 1.0 year controlled)

3.7 years owned and 0.9 years controlled

Land creditors

Reduce usage to 15 - 25% of the land bank over medium term

21.2%

(2020: 25.4%)

2019: 27.4%

Net cash

Modest average net cash over the financial year

£548m over six months ending 31 December 2020

(£348m over twelve months ending 30 June 2020)

£458m over six months ending 31 December 2019

Year end net cash

£1,106.7m (2020: £308.2m)

£433.8m

Total indebtedness (net cash and land

creditors)

Minimal year end total indebtedness in the medium term

Total net surplus of £505.6m (2020: Total indebtedness of

£483.7m)

Total indebtedness of

£397.0m

Treasury

Appropriate financing facilities

£700m RCF extended to November 2024

£200m USPP maturing 2027

£700m RCF extended to November 2024

£200m USPP maturing 2027

Dividend policy

2.5x dividend cover

FY21 interim dividend proposed of 7.5p

(No FY20 dividend)

No FY20 interim dividend

A. Land supply is calculated as total owned (owned land and land subject to unconditional contracts) and controlled (land subject to conditional contracts) land bank plots divided by wholly owned completions in the last 12 months

Net tangible assets were £4,298.2m and £4.22 per share, (2019: £3,941.5m and £3.87p per share) of which land, net of land creditors, and work in progress, totalled £3,835.2m and £3.77 per share (2019: £4,005.8m and £3.93p per share).

The key dimensions underpinning delivery of our strategy

Land and planning

Our land bank is the foundation of our future operational and financial performance. Throughout the period, we have focussed on optimising our existing land bank to balance site duration and our build and sales capacity across our portfolio. This has included:

  • Introducing, where appropriate, additional dual branding with both the Barratt and David Wilson product ranges and sales offices, to ensure the most efficient use of our land bank;
  • Reviewing house type designs in response to changing market trends and continuous customer feedback; and
  • Re-planning sites to ensure we optimise both selling areas and adopt our most popular and most efficient house types to deliver both the most advantageous use of space and the most attractive street scenes for our customers.

Following our return to the land market, in August 2020, we have been disciplined and selective in our land purchasing and have approved £254.0m (2019: £406.1m) of operational land for purchase, which equates to 5,635 plots (2019: 9,242 plots) on 35 (2019: 44) new sites in attractive geographical locations that meet our hurdle rates. For FY21 we expect to approve between 14,000 and 16,000 plots of operational land (2019: 9,441) with this returning to more normal levels of between 18,000 and 20,000 plots in FY22.

We are now seeing a greater range of land buying opportunities come to market and have a good pipeline of offers accepted on additional sites. We spent around £320m on land during the half year and continue to expect to invest c. £850m on land in FY21, in line with previous guidance.

We continue to target a regionally balanced land portfolio with a supply of owned land of c. 3.5 years and a further c. 1.0 year of controlled land. Our target of a shorter than sector average land bank recognises our focus on ROCE and our fast build and sell model. Reflecting the impact of the national lockdown on completions in H2 FY20 and despite the recovery delivered in the first half, we remain above this target with 5.9 years land supply comprising 5.0 years owned land and 0.9 years of controlled land, with the owned land bank including land with both outline and detailed planning consents.

Our land bank at 31 December comprised:

Our land bank

31 December 2020

31 December 2019

Plots with detailed planning consent

54,079

51,929

Plots with outline planning consent

9,846

13,462

Plots with resolution to grant and other

235

337

Owned and unconditional land bank (plots)

64,160

65,728

Conditionally contracted land bank (plots)

11,450

15,118

Total owned and controlled land bank (plots)

75,610

80,846

Number of years’ supply (A)

5.9

4.6

JVs owned and controlled land bank (plots)

5,010

5,656

Strategic land (acres)

13,232

12,988

Land bank carrying value

£2,836.7m

£3,036.3m

A. Land supply is calculated as total owned (owned land and land subject to unconditional contracts) and controlled (land subject to conditional contracts) land bank plots divided by wholly owned completions in the last 12 months

At 31 December 2020, the ASP of plots in our owned land bank was £275k (2019: £277k).

During the half year we delivered 2,149 (2019: 1,942) completions from strategically sourced land, and we converted 1,106 plots (2019: 2,421 plots) of strategic land into our owned and controlled land bank. Around 29% of our strategic land is allocated or included in draft in local plans. We continue to target 30% of completions from strategic land in the medium term, which we believe is an appropriate level for our business.

The vast majority of our owned and unconditional land bank plots have detailed planning consent and the deliverability of these plots supports sales outlet numbers both now and into the future. We are well positioned for our next financial year, with almost all of our expected FY22 completions (2019: 98% of FY21 completions) having outline or detailed planning consent.

Rebuilding site based construction activity

The potential of our land bank can only be unlocked through an efficient build process and we are pleased with the way our business has rebuilt activity from the complete shutdown which was required during the first national lockdown in March 2020. It is a testament to the strength and commitment of our construction teams, our sub-contractors, many of whom have worked with Barratt for many years, and our supply chain partners that we have recovered our site based construction activity.

As a result, construction activity, in the first half was slightly ahead of planned output, with an average of 298 equivalent homes, including JV’s constructed each week. We enter the second half with a reduced level of work in progress carried forward at 31 December 2020 compared with the position at 30 June 2020 and, as a result, a greater reliance on construction activity in the half year ahead.

Our long standing commitment to quality is the focus of our teams across our business. Through the year to 31 December 2020 and measured against the major housebuilders, constructing more than 1,000 homes annually, our sites have secured:

  • The lowest Reportable Items per NHBC inspection; and
  • The lowest Builder Responsible Items per NHBC completed home inspection.

These external benchmarks complement the quality recognised through the NHBC Pride in the Job Awards for site management. In June 2020 our site managers were awarded 92 awards, more than any other housebuilder for the 16th consecutive year. In the subsequent Regional NHBC Pride in the Job Awards, in Autumn 2020, Barratt secured seven out of the ten regional awards where we operate, an unprecedented achievement for us.

We remain committed to increasing the number of homes we build using MMC to increase efficiency and to help mitigate the challenges posed by the shortage of skilled workers within the industry. We continue to develop, trial and implement MMC. In the first half we built and sold 18.4% of homes using timber frame or large format block (2019: 17.6%). We remain on track with our target to use MMC to build 25% of our homes by 2025.

Improving efficiency and reducing costs

Improving the efficiency of our operations and controlling costs, whilst maintaining our focus on quality and customer satisfaction, remains a key focus for the Group, enhancing our margin and improving our operational and financial resilience.

Our new housetype ranges, which are subject to continuous refinement, maintain our high standards of design whilst being faster to build, helping us to reduce build cost and waste and are more suitable for MMC.

Through our sales teams and regular home buyer surveys we also continue to monitor changing home buyer priorities and requirements, particularly with respect to working from home and other lifestyle changes, which may have an enduring impact on home buyer preferences following the pandemic.

We delivered 5,376 completions (2019: 4,491 completions) from these ranges across the country in the half year. Of our outlets, 83% (2019: 76%) have the new product ranges and we expect to deliver around 10,000 completions from these ranges in FY21.

Over the next few years, we expect that c. 90% of our outlets will be suitable for our new product ranges equating to c. 85% of our completions. Our continually refined house type ranges cover all segments of our market providing us with the flexibility to replan sites to suit market conditions and meet changing consumer demands should the need arise.

We also continue to make further refinements to our housing ranges in response to the changing costs of certain trades and materials, without affecting our quality or design standards. As part of our continuous review process, we have introduced improvements to some of our standard house types, which reduce the amount of brickwork required and optimise internal floor plans, to achieve more usable living space from the same house footprint and increase profitability.

We have a robust and carefully managed supply chain with more than 90% of the housebuild materials sourced by our centralised procurement function being manufactured or assembled in the UK.

We have fixed price agreements in place for almost all of these materials to June 2021 and 37% are fixed until December 2021. We continue to anticipate inflation of between 1% and 2% in FY21. We also continue to see limited pressure on skilled labour supply given the impact of COVID-19 with any shortages being location and trade specific.

Health and safety

Our fundamental priority is to provide a safe working environment for all of our employees and sub-contractors. We are committed to achieving the highest industry health and safety standard and the wellbeing of our people is paramount to us.

We are committed to improving our processes and procedures, challenging unsafe behaviours and looking at ways we can further improve standards. We therefore welcome that in the 12 months to 31 December 2020, our reportable injury incidence rate reduced to 305 (2019: 330) per 100,000 workers and our Health and Safety SHE audit compliance rate was 96% (12 months to 31 December 2019: 96%).

Following the outbreak of COVID-19 we fundamentally reassessed site risks, particularly around social distancing. This resulted in our industry-leading and British Safety Council accredited COVID-secure policies and protocols, which are fully embedded across our business and underscore our priority to keep our employees, sub-contractors, suppliers and customers safe. We continue to manage the operational challenges created by COVID-19 across our business including providing flexibility for those with childcare responsibilities and supporting our clinically extremely vulnerable employees who are unable to work from home.

Under the latest regulations to address the recent increase in coronavirus infections, we are able to continue site based construction across Britain. Our sales offices continue to operate on an appointment basis in England and Scotland but have been required to close in Wales.

Sustainability

Our aim is to maintain our position as the leading national sustainable housebuilder, connecting social, environmental and economic value through our commitment to sustainability, creating a strong and resilient business for the future and delivering long term value for our stakeholders.

As previously announced, based on our stakeholders’ views we adopted a number of the UN Sustainable Development Goals, after researching their relevance to the UK, our sector, and how they link to what matters most to our stakeholders, and our priorities and principles. We will report on our progress on these in our Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 30 June 2021.

In recognition of the transparency of our sustainability disclosures, in 2020 we achieved our highest results for our CDP submissions and we were the only housebuilder to have improved our scores from the previous year in all three disclosures. This year, we scored A- in the ‘Climate’ category and moved into the leadership level, B for the ‘Forest’ category and B- for the ‘Water’ category, which we submitted voluntarily for the first time.

Reducing carbon emissions

We recognise the contribution we can make to the UK’s net zero by 2050 target which is why we were the first national housebuilder to publish science-based carbon reduction targets and subsequently had them officially approved by the Science Based Targets Initiative.

In our own operations we are targeting a reduction in carbon emissions of 29% from FY18 to FY25 and reduce indirect carbon emissions by 24% per m2 including from our supply chain and our homes in use by 2030.

We have also committed to purchase 100% of our operational electricity from renewable sources by 2025. Just over half of the electricity we purchase for our offices and construction sites is already from renewables and achieving the new 100% target will help us reduce emissions further.

Taking these commitments further, in June 2020, we announced that by 2040 we will be a net zero emissions business covering all of our direct operations. We are identifying the solutions to achieving these reductions, for example, by reducing our red diesel use, maximising our purchase of electricity from renewable tariffs and engaging our supply chain.

We have committed to delivering low carbon homes for our customers and have set a new target to ensure all housetypes will be zero carbon from 2030. This will be achieved through better insulation, more efficient services and new low carbon technology.

These targets and our constant commitment to lead the industry in both quality and sustainability means that our customers will live in high quality, low carbon, energy efficient homes which have a lower impact on our environment and are cheaper to run.

Research and innovation continues to be a priority for the business. In November 2020, we officially launched our Energy House 2.0 house project with Salford University, a leading project to test the technology needed to deliver a step change in delivering low carbon homes and places.

We are continuing to work with Innovate UK on AIMCH, a research project to compare issues such as embodied carbon in homes and the generation of waste between offsite and traditional build methods. We are actively looking at how we can meet the now confirmed requirements of the Future Homes Standard and design homes that will no longer be connected to the gas grid.

Biodiversity

We are continuing to create a net positive impact for ecology and biodiversity across all new developments that we have progressed through planning from 2020 onwards and have strengthened our strategic partnership with the RSPB, mandating all new showhome gardens to achieve at least a ‘Bronze’ level against RSPB criteria. We have also continued