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Persimmon sees sustained housing demand beyond tax holiday

Persimmon said revenue for the six months ended June 30 came in at £1.84 billion, compared with £1.19 billion a year ago
Persimmon said revenue for the six months ended June 30 came in at £1.84 billion, compared with £1.19 billion a year ago

British homebuilder Persimmon has reported higher half-year revenue and said it expected housing demand to remain robust beyond a tax holiday, as customers sought bigger homes after saving more during the lockdowns.

Government incentives such as the tax break, which ends in September, and a mortgage guarantee scheme, along with increasing customer preferences for spacious properties better suited to remote working, have helped homebuilders forecast higher returns for the medium term.

"Customer demand for our new homes has been strong right across the UK with healthy sales reservation rates through the period," chief executive Dean Finch said in a statement.

The country's second-largest homebuilder, which offers a range of homes from studio apartments to five-bedroom houses, said it expected to operate on around 300 sales outlets on average throughout the year.

The FTSE 100 company said the average selling price of new homes forward sold to owner occupiers was about £250,350, 3.3% higher than £242,400 a year earlier, while forward sales stood at £1.82 billion as of the end of June.

York-based Persimmon said revenue for the six months ended June 30 came in at £1.84 billion, compared with £1.19 billion a year earlier.

UK house prices rose by 13.4% in June compared with the same month last year, the biggest annual increase since November 2004, according to mortgage lender Nationwide.