News follows fall in 2016 profits
Housebuilder Bovis is to slash its build programme in a bid to get control of production issues which led to an unexpected fall in profit in 2016, the housebuilder announced in full year results today.
The announcement it will cut production levels by anything up to 15% in 2017 saw the group鈥檚 shares fall by over 7% in early trading and follows the departure of the group鈥檚 former chief executive, David Ritchie, in January.
Alongside results reporting pre-tax profit down 3% to 拢154m on revenue of 拢1.05bn, up 11%, the group said it had made a provision of 拢7m to resolve 鈥渃ustomer care鈥 issues following the housebuilder鈥檚 well-publicised construction difficulties. It said that 鈥渨eaknesses in our production process鈥 and 鈥渁 high level of customer service issues鈥 we behind the provision.
The firm, now under the temporary leadership of former finance director Earl Sibley, said in a statement it will now use 2017 to 鈥渞e-set鈥 the business, with an end-to-end review of production processes, and an overhaul of its customer service function with a new customer task force.
The business said in its results statement: 鈥淭he Group is focused on making 2017 the year when we re-set the business and deliver on our operational priorities. Reflecting this we are slowing our rate of production and targeting completion volumes for 2017 to be c. 10% to 15% below the 2016 level, before a return to normal industry production levels.
鈥淥ur production rate in early January has been slowed to support our priority focus on customer service, and current production programmes have been extended to allow sufficient time to ensure each home is delivered to the high standard of quality that we and our customers expect.
Chairman Ian Tyler admitted that there would 鈥渋nevitably be an impact on our earnings and cash flow from the actions we are taking in 2017鈥.
Bovis Homes has been one of the fastest growing housebuilders since the credit crunch, more than doubling home output since 2009. However, as the construction market has tightened Bovis has struggled, seeing its HBF customer service star rating drop, and ultimately leading it to warn in December that it was going to manage to complete 180 fewer homes than expected in 2016. Tyler today said construction had been hit by 鈥渢he twin pressures of our growth strategy and the resource shortages across the industry.鈥
Interim chief executive Earl Sibley said the 2016 shortfall 鈥渞eflected underlying weaknesses in our production processes and resulted in higher than expected costs.鈥
Sibley added: 鈥淭he business has suffered from weakness in our production processes which has manifested in our development programmes not delivering to plan, in particular around the half year and year end periods when we have had a heavy weighting of completions.
鈥淲e have commenced an end to end review of our build process from the point we acquire a development to the timing of the final completion.鈥
The group said the 鈥渇undamentals鈥 of the business remained strong, and its dividend for 2016 was up 13% on the previous year at 45p per share.
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