Peabody Group (incorporating Peabody Trust, Peabody Capital
PLC, Peabody Capital No.2 PLC and TCHG Capital
PLC).
Peabody Group announces the following
unaudited information ahead of its Annual Report for the year ended
31 March 2024 to be published later in the year.
This is the second year of trading
incorporating Catalyst Housing Limited and its subsidiaries as part
of the Peabody Group. It's the first year of trading
following the transfer of engagements of
Catalyst Housing Limited into Peabody Trust and Rosebery Housing
Association Limited into Town & Country Housing.
We've continued to incur planned
costs in relation to the merger, but the consolidation of our
structure and integration has progressed well. This has allowed us
to move towards the next phase of transformation,
getting closer to residents through responsive,
locally focused services, and better use of data and technology
across our operations.
As part of a post-merger review the
Peabody Group Board has identified assets which are not part of our
core operations or strategy going forward. A project to sell
commercial land and other non-core assets is progressing, enabling
us to simplify our activities, pay down debt and keep investing in
our priorities for the benefit of residents.
Resilient performance
Peabody's balance sheet remains
strong, with fixed assets of over £11bn and gearing at around 40%.
Our turnover for 2023-24 was £992m. Turnover from core operations
increased to £855m including £774m from social housing lettings.
Overall revenues reduced due to a planned lower level of sales in
the year (£130m) plus £7m other development income. A further £30m
of contracted sales were anticipated but these have carried over to
Q1 2024-25 due to delays on-site. Sales margins in 23-24 improved
to 12%, up from 10% previously, reflecting careful management of
our development programme.
Despite the significant cost
pressures experienced throughout the year, and a challenging
operating environment, we expect our overall operating margin to be
at a level similar to last year (23%). Our social housing
operating margin will be lower than the prior year, with our low
rents below target/regulated levels. The average Peabody rent is
now £138 per week. Our rent collection for the year was 99.4%,
improving as the year progressed. Our Financial Inclusion teams
continue to work closely with residents in financial difficulty,
supporting them with flexible payment plans and help to boost their
income.
Financing costs, excluding break
costs incurred, increased to £170m. This reflects the full year
impact of increased interest rates but was within our budget for
the year. This has allowed us to maintain a healthy level of
headroom over our banking covenant, whilst continuing to invest
substantially in residents' homes, in line with our commitment to
spend £2bn on our existing homes over 5 years.
These results demonstrate that whilst
facing a challenging environment, Peabody is in a strong,
financially resilient position to support significant further
investment for the long term.
Looking after residents' homes
During the year we spent £374m
looking after our existing homes. This included investing
£135m in improving the condition and environmental performance of
residents' homes. Almost 80% of our homes are now EPC C rated
following further upgrades. We spent a further £64m on fire safety
as we progress remediation work. We also spent £175m on planned
maintenance and responsive repairs. This reflects our continuing priority of getting the basics right
and making residents' homes better places
to live.
In April 2024 we published our
Sustainability Action Plan which sets out some of the specific
activities we're delivering to improve the energy efficiency of our
existing and new homes. It also sets out our approach to reducing
our operational emissions and those of our supply
chain. https://www.peabodygroup.org.uk/sustainability
Operational improvement
We invested in colleagues,
technology and in improving our data in 2023-24.
Our service
standards and goals align with the Regulator of Social Housing's
new consumer standards which came into effect on 1 April 2024. Our
commitment and focus is on embedding our local model, providing
homes that are decent, safe and well-maintained, and ensuring
residents receive good quality services and are treated with
fairness and respect. We're also working hard to ensure we're
communicating well with residents, providing good quality
information and being responsive to their needs.
Ian
McDermott, Peabody Chief Executive said "This has been a year of good progress, but we know there is
much work to do. We're transforming our services and investing in
homes and sustainable places for the long-term. Our local focus and
commitment to getting the basics right remains a strategic
priority. Our plan is to spend around £2bn over 5 years - or around
£1m a day - on improving and maintaining residents' homes. This is
the right thing to do and will bring material benefits. Over
time it will help to reduce the volume of responsive repairs and
complaints and improve residents' satisfaction with our landlord
services.
We also want to support local
government in tackling London's homelessness emergency by providing
new social homes where we can. New homes of all tenures are
essential infrastructure for the country, and we'll continue to
work with public and private partners on regeneration and new
supply. All this activity clearly puts pressure on financial
metrics, but we remain determined to use our balance sheet and
liquidity as well as exploring new, innovative ways to invest in
the things that support our goal of helping people
flourish."
Development and Sales
We invested £553m in our new homes
programme over the last 12 months, completing 1,381 new homes. The
tenure mix is:
· Social rent: 322
· London Affordable rent: 313
· Affordable rent: 91
· Intermediate Market Rent: 16
· Shared Ownership: 478
· Market Sale: 161
We made 1,157 starts on site during
the year, continuing to do what we can to help tackle affordable
housing supply challenges in London and the south-east. But we're
carefully managing our development programme, maintaining
appropriate flexibility on the level of future spend and
commitments which has limited the extent of
expected write downs to around £10m in the
period.
At the start of 2024-25 over £100m of
sales relating to in-year completions were exchanged. The number of
new homes that remain unsold for any length of time remains
low.
Unsold new home - Peabody Group at 31 March
|
|
Reserved
/
|
|
|
|
|
|
exchanged
|
Available
|
|
Total
|
3 - 6 months
|
|
7
|
3
|
|
10
|
Over 6 months
|
|
24
|
39
|
|
63
|
Liquidity
Our access to liquidity remains very
strong with almost £1.3 billion of cash and undrawn facilities to
ensure that we can continue to operate sustainably and deliver for
the benefit of our residents in challenging times. We've continued
to improve our liquidity post year end with an additional £150m in
bank facility.
We have published the Admission
Particulars to our £1bn fully secured note programme, which will
facilitate our access to the public debt capital markets in the
future. Our gearing remains very low for the sector at around 40%
and 75% of our borrowing is on fixed rates. We retain over 40,000
unallocated or unencumbered properties across the Group with a
security value of around £4bn.
Chief Financial Officer
Peabody would like to put on record
its thanks to Eamonn Hughes, who leaves the organisation at the end
of June. Eamonn has been a key member of the Executive team,
steering Peabody through the financial challenges of the last four
years and leaves a financially resilient organisation that is well
placed to move into the next phase of transformation. We look
forward to Phil Day joining as Chief Financial Officer in
September.
Ratings and certification
We are rated G1, V2 by the Regulator
of Social Housing. Our Moody's credit rating is A3 stable, and our
S&P Global rating is A- negative.
Note: Figures quoted in the update are
based on unaudited management accounts, which are subject to review
and further adjustments.
Contact: Anthony Marriott, Director of
Treasury & Corporate Finance or Ben Blades, Assistant Director
Corporate Affairs