|

Upbeat guidance unable to help Persimmon share price

Original content: Upbeat guidance unable to help Persimmon share price

It’s been one way traffic for the Persimmon share price this year, the shares are down 35% year to date despite a reasonably robust housing market and little sign that demand for its properties is slowing.

Today’s H1 numbers haven’t told us anything we didn’t know before, given the pre-close update a few weeks ago, with the house builder confirming that it had sold 6,652 properties in H1 at an average selling price of £245,600, up from £236,200 a year ago.

The industry is certainly facing challenges, however despite the lower number of properties sold compared to last year, gross margins improved to 31%.

The lower level of completions has seen total revenues decline, falling to £1.69bn from £1.84bn a year ago, while profits before tax came in at £439.7m, down from £480.1m a year ago.

It is apparent that rising costs and energy prices are proving to be a challenge and that for the most part Persimmon has shown that it has been able to pass some of these costs on, while the forward order book position is also higher than a year ago, at £2.32bn, currently 90% sold. 

All so far so good, however there are dark clouds on the horizon, and it is starting to show in the guidance, with average private sales in the first 7 weeks of H2, down by 11% from a year ago.

The housebuilder continues to target 10% growth in outlets by the end of the current year, however this could prove challenging, given that CPI inflation in July posted a new record high of 10.1%.

It won’t just be the housing sector, the whole UK economy is facing a challenging second half of this year from higher mortgage rates, while banks are likely to be a lot more careful when it comes to its lending practices, assuming of course anyone wants to go to the expense of moving house.

This morning’s higher than expected CPI print is likely to see the Bank of England raise rates by another 50bps next month, further raising costs for those on variable rates, while further uncertainty about rising energy bills and other prices could well start to crimp demand.

While management have remained optimistic about the outlook for all this year investors appear to have other ideas if the weakness seen in the share price so far, is any guide with the shares falling further in the opening minutes of trade. 

Author

Michael Hewson MSTA CFTe

Michael Hewson MSTA CFTe

Independent Analyst

Award winning technical analyst, trader and market commentator. In my many years in the business I’ve been passionate about delivering education to retail traders, as well as other financial professionals. Visit my Substack here.

More from Michael Hewson MSTA CFTe
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD extends its optimism past 1.1900

EUR/USD retains a firm underlying bid, surpassing the 1.1900 mark as the NA session draws to a close on Monday. The pair’s persistent uptrend comes as the US Dollar remains on the defensive, with traders staying cautious ahead of upcoming US NFP prints and CPI data.
 

GBP/USD tilts bullish as markets barrel toward mid-week NFP print

GBP/USD is holding a broader bullish structure on the daily chart, with price trading well above the 50 Exponential Moving Average at 1.3507 and the 200 EMA at 1.3310, confirming the intermediate uptrend that has been in place since the November 2025 low near 1.2300. 

Gold pushes back above $5,000

The daily chart shows spot Gold in a parabolic uptrend that accelerated sharply from the $4,600 area in late January, printing a record high at $5,598.25 before a violent reversal erased nearly $1,000 in value during the final days of the month. 

Litecoin eyes $50 as heavy losses weigh on investors

Following a strong downtrend across the crypto market over the past week, Litecoin holders are under immense pressure. The Bitcoin fork has trimmed about $1.81 billion from its market capitalization since the beginning of the year, sending it below the top 20 cryptos by market cap.

Japanese PM Takaichi nabs unprecedented victory – US data eyed this week

I do not think I would be exaggerating to say that Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s snap general election gamble paid off over the weekend – and then some. This secured the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) an unprecedented mandate just three months into her tenure.

Ripple exposed to volatility amid low retail interest, modest fund inflows

Ripple (XRP) is extending its intraday decline to around $1.40 at the time of writing on Monday amid growing pressure from the retail market and risk-off sentiment that continues to keep investors on the sidelines.