Help to Buy is the government鈥檚 big leg-up to help housebuilders increase output. So news of 鈥榦bscene鈥� executive pay along with scandals over leaseholds and defects are not going down well. Joey Gardiner asks if Whitehall鈥檚 patience has been stretched too far and how it might extract more value from the major housebuilders
Earlier this month housebuilder Persimmon plunged into fresh controversy regarding the scale of its management bonus package set, which is to distribute 拢250m between its top three execs, and hundreds of millions more to 140 other bosses. The Times calculated that the payouts to chief executive Jeff Fairburn, financial director Mike Killoran and managing director Dave Jenkinson under the long-term incentive plan (LTIP) have added 拢3,100 to the cost of every single Persimmon house sold since it set it up five years ago. In fact, the package as a whole, worth over 拢500m and described by Liberal Democrat leader Vince Cable as 鈥渙bscene鈥�, comes in around an eye-watering 拢7,000 per house.
The furore over this astonishing package already cost the jobs of both Persimmon chair Nicholas Wrigley and remuneration committee chair Jonathan Davie before Christmas. However, so far Fairburn has hung on to his 拢100m-plus bonus. Likewise, bosses at Berkeley Group pocketed 拢92m this year despite 16% of shareholders voting against the remuneration package.
These controversies, however, are simply the latest in a lengthening charge sheet held against volume housebuilders by their critics. Aside from excessive pay, large housebuilders鈥� role in the leasehold homes 鈥渟candal鈥� under which homes were sold with escalating ground rent charges, the deterioration in customer satisfaction with new homes, alleged slow build-out rates on large sites, the use of viability arguments to escape affordable housing obligations and, above all, the rate of progress on increasing supply, have together conspired to put them in the dock of public opinion. There are growing signs the government is losing patience with a sector it has steadfastly supported since the depths of the recession.
But while housing secretary Sajid Javid has directed some criticism at housebuilders in recent speeches, and chancellor Philip Hammond has set up a review of the pace at which planning permissions are built out, the UK is still reliant on private housebuilders for more than 80% of supply. Therefore, ministers will have to be brave to force any significant changes that might jeopardise this supply.
Have housebuilders delivered?
Housing secretary Sajid Javid in November trumpeted 鈥渘et additions鈥� figures which showed 217,000 homes were added to England鈥檚 housing stock in 2016/17, the highest since the credit crunch. It is these figures upon which the HBF bases its claim of a 74% uplift in industry output in the last four years 鈥� an increase it describes as the 鈥渇astest on record鈥�. However, this top-line figure includes conversions and changes of use, which have increased rapidly in recent years but are rarely carried out by volume housebuilders. As a 鈥渘et鈥� figure it also factors in demolitions, which have fallen sharply. Stripping out all this, the total number of new build completions has increased from a post-credit crunch low of 117,700 in 2010/11, to 183,570 in 2016/17, an increase of 56% 鈥� more modest, though still very significant.
These figures still place the industry some distance (9%) below the number of homes it was producing in the year before the credit crunch, with a high of 200,700 new build completions in 2007/08.
Frustration
While David Cameron and George Osborne held the reins of power in Downing Street, big housebuilders saw funding and policy initiatives tailored specifically to stimulate their businesses, while support for other players in the market 鈥� most notably, grants to housing associations 鈥� was reduced. Most transformative for housebuilders was the launch in 2013 of Help to Buy, which saw the government support new home sales with loans worth 20% of the cost. A spokesperson for the Home Builders Federation (HBF), which represent most major builders, says the scheme 鈥減layed a big part in delivering the significant increase we have seen in housing supply鈥�. Launched alongside a similar mortgage guarantee product, within a year the number of new house starts was up by a third.
鈥滻t鈥檚 indefensible [鈥 It鈥檚 hard not to argue that a significant chunk of their profits are down to a benefit the government has introduced across the whole industry鈥�
Kevin Cammack, Cenkos
However, with the arrival of Theresa May as prime minister came an administration instinctively more sceptical of big business, and a new agenda pushed by a fresh secretary of state, Sajid Javid. The subsequent housing white paper stressed the need to bring in new types of businesses, claiming delivery had been held back by 鈥渁 construction industry that is too reliant on a small number of big players.鈥�
Since then, however, as fears over the track record of the big firms have heightened with the leasehold 鈥渟candal鈥� and the quality problems at Bovis Homes that partly prompted the departure of its chief executive, David Ritchie, the evidence suggests ministers have got even more sceptical about the large firms.
As well as Hammond鈥檚 commissioning of the Letwin Review, in December Javid clamped down much harder than expected on the sale of leasehold homes by banning ground rent charges on new leaseholds entirely, and floated the idea of a new housing ombudsman, previously resisted, to deal with buyer complaints.
The increase in output seen since the introduction of Help to Buy is the basis of housebuilders鈥� defence to their critics. While the HBF counters that the industry is working with the government to solve the leasehold problem and is investing in training, and that the planning system is to blame for preventing builders getting on site quickly, its fundamental point is that homes output has increased 74% in the last four years, largely because of the actions of its members, making serious inroads into the housing crisis (see above, 鈥淗ave Housebuilders Delivered?鈥�). A spokesperson said: 鈥淭he industry has delivered huge increases in supply in recent years. Housebuilders are committed to continuing to deliver further increases and supply even more high-quality homes. The industry is recruiting and training tens of thousands of new workers and revising all its systems to ensure it can supply the number and type of homes people want to live in.鈥�
鈥淸it鈥檚] very foolish from an industry in receipt of a lot of government largesse. It is the behaviour of a sector that thinks it鈥檚 capable of getting away with anything. It鈥檚 just greed鈥�
Nick Raynsford, Heylo
The problem, says Susan Emmett, head of housing and urban regeneration at right-leaning think-tank Policy Exchange, is that as housing has risen up the political agenda, housebuilders are under a lot more scrutiny. Meanwhile, the level of subsidy enjoyed by major builders, particularly through Help to Buy, which has now had 拢30bn of government money committed to it, has left ministers feeling they have a right to expect more back.
Emmett says: 鈥淥utput has increased, but a lot more is needed. Meanwhile these stories come out that influence people鈥檚 perception of whether housebuilders are really acting in the public interest. It鈥檚 a massive pain for ministers. They鈥檇 desperately like them to play nicely and deliver more.鈥�
Help to profit
Moreover, analysis of the impact of Help to Buy has shown that it has not only supported more construction, but also raised prices overall and boosted housebuilder profits. Alastair Stewart, analyst at Stockdale Securities, has calculated that purchasers are paying 5-7% more for a Help to Buy property than they would otherwise, with the bulk of this increase going directly to housebuilders鈥� bottom lines.
A report from Morgan Stanley last year reached a similar conclusion. Kevin Cammack, analyst at Cenkos, says while Help to Buy has probably boosted production at major builders by 10-15%, it has also underpinned record profitability. 鈥淔or housebuilders, the profit per unit is much higher on a sale with Help to Buy than without. Most housebuilders will spend around 3% on incentives, but with Help to Buy your incentives budget is usually zero 鈥� Help to Buy is your incentive.鈥�
This use of public money explains the level of media anger directed particularly toward Persimmon, where half of sales are supported by Help to Buy. Cenkos鈥� Cammack estimates the additional profit Persimmon can directly attribute to Help to Buy is pretty much what it has committed to pay out in bonuses: 鈥淚t鈥檚 indefensible and it tarnishes the reputation of the sector. It鈥檚 hard not to argue that a significant chunk of their profits are down to a benefit the government has introduced across the whole industry.鈥�
Meanwhile, a similar bonus scheme at Berkeley Group, where Help to Buy aids less than 5% of sales, has generated less publicity. Former Labour housing minister Nick Raynsford, now chair of housing association Heylo, describes Persimmon鈥檚 bonuses as 鈥済rotesque鈥� and 鈥渧ery foolish from an industry in receipt of a lot of government largesse. It is the behaviour of a sector that thinks it鈥檚 capable of getting away with anything. It鈥檚 just greed.鈥�
A Persimmon spokesperson defended the policy, saying it was approved by shareholders in 2012 and was 鈥渄esigned to drive outperformance through the housing cycle and to incentivise the management鈥�, during which period output had soared 70%. He said: 鈥淔rom the launch of our long-term strategy at the start of 2012 to 31 December 2017, the group has made a significant contribution to UK housing supply, delivering 80,700 new homes.鈥�
Persimmon鈥檚 long-term incentive plan
Persimmon devised its long-term incentive plan (LTIP) for executives and 140 senior managers in 2012, before the announcement of Help to Buy. It was contingent upon returning 拢1.9bn in cash to shareholders in special dividends in stages at certain dates.
The incentives allow those in the scheme to buy Persimmon shares at set discounts, dependent upon the vesting date of bonus awards, meaning the exact value of the bonus is set by the price at which those shares are then sold.
However, the total pot is thought to be worth 拢500m-600m (though figures of up to 拢750m have been quoted in the press), with chief executive Jeff Fairburn鈥檚 bonus valued at 拢112m.
Financial director Mike Killoran鈥檚 package, meanwhile, is worth 拢88m and managing director Dave Jenkinson鈥檚 amounts to 拢40m. Executives were able to access the first 40% of their discounted shares from 31 December 2017, with the rest available in 2021.
Cenkos analyst Kevin Cammack comments: 鈥淭he question is, once these bonuses are paid out, how the hell do you motivate these people to stay in the business?鈥�
Disgraceful
Nevertheless, the level of concern about big housebuilders is such that crossbench peer Lord Best earlier this month organised a debate in the House of Lords. He told 精东影视 that he believed 鈥渕ost major 鈥榲olume鈥� housebuilders have let us down鈥�, accusing them of reneging on affordable housing agreements, perpetrating the leasehold homes 鈥渟cam鈥�, 鈥渟hoddy workmanship鈥� and a 鈥渄isgraceful rejection鈥� of the need to train the next generation of workers. He said: 鈥淣ot only is it crystal clear that private sector housebuilders will never get us anywhere near the 300,000 homes we need, but dependency on this sector now means relying on a very small number of huge firms.鈥�
Asked if the industry鈥檚 reputation had been tarnished, putting it under political pressure, a spokesperson for the HBF said that the whole industry 鈥� including local authorities and housing associations 鈥� was under pressure to deliver more homes and that 鈥渢he industry is very conscious of the need to work with all parties to ensure more high-quality homes are provided in the coming years.鈥�
A source close to the government said ministers wanted housebuilders 鈥渢o do more鈥� on supply and that 鈥渢hey have not historically behaved as well as they should have done.鈥� Even more than increasing supply, though, the source said ministers were concerned about build quality. In a speech to the NHBC in November, Javid said that 鈥渢oo many new-build homes are simply not good enough. I see it in the media. I see it my postbag. Roofs that leak, front doors that don鈥檛 properly close, insulation that has been promised but never fitted.鈥�
鈥淗elp to Buy needs to be more targeted [鈥 This may mean making it conditional on caps on excessive bonuses, or requirements to deliver affordable housing鈥�
Susan Emmett, Policy Exchange
His comments follow an all-party parliamentary group report on new housing in 2016, which branded build quality as 鈥渦nacceptable.鈥� Chartered surveyor and peer Lord Lytton says his professional experience backs this up, having encountered numerous problems including 鈥渋nstances of occupiers who couldn鈥檛 get themselves warm, in new houses where insulation has not been put in properly, or even at all.鈥� Lytton says: 鈥淎t the last election many MPs were caught on the stump by voters asking what they were going to do about the poor quality of their new homes.鈥�
Overall customer satisfaction with new homes, measured by survey, has fallen from 90% to 84% since 2014, with 98% of buyers now reporting snags. A spokesperson for the HBF counters that the declines in customer satisfaction levels, which came as output increased significantly, 鈥渉ave been stopped and are now being reversed鈥� and that the industry was now 鈥渕assively focused鈥� on quality. 鈥淪atisfaction levels remain extremely high and are at a level that compares with any other sector or product,鈥� he said.
Higher standards and greater diversity
Nevertheless, a spokesperson for the ministry of housing and local government said it wanted to hold developers to a 鈥渉igher standard鈥� on quality, and repeated Javid鈥檚 pledge to consider setting up a new ombudsman. The spokesperson said: 鈥淭his government is looking to improve redress 鈥� including whether housing, like other sectors, should have a single ombudsman. It could help drive up standards across the whole industry and increase protections for consumers.鈥�
With these concerns in the air, there is increasing consensus 鈥� supported by government and, indeed, the HBF 鈥� of the need to diversify the suppliers of new homes. Since publishing the white paper, the government has committed 拢750m to SMEs, and those using modern methods of construction, allowed local authorities to borrow 拢1bn to build homes, and increased affordable housing funding by 拢2bn.
But critics want the government to do more. Top of the list for many is reform of Help to Buy. Theresa May in October announced a further 拢10bn toward Help to Buy, ensuring its continuation until 2021. The HBF is campaigning for the government to commit beyond that, and says it wants to help government 鈥渟hape the scheme in a way that best provides confidence for the industry.鈥�
However, there are increasing calls, such as by Lord Best, to phase the support out or at least introduce some kind of quid pro quo which requires housebuilders using the subsidy to give something back. This could also potentially free up funding to be directed instead to other players.
Crossbench peer Lord Kerslake, the former head of the civil service, says: 鈥淗elp to Buy needs to be more targeted; the government needs to expect more. This may mean making it conditional on caps on excessive bonuses, or requirements to deliver affordable housing, or only where it鈥檚 needed for scheme viability.鈥�
But any reduction would have significant consequences. Policy Exchange鈥檚 Emmett says: 鈥淎s the market slows, Help to Buy becomes even more important in underpinning sales.鈥� Raynsford says: 鈥淚t鈥檚 got to be phased out, but the problem is you can鈥檛 cut it out without dire consequences. It鈥檚 a drug.鈥� Cammack says housebuilders are frightened change is coming, while industry sources suggest that the HBF is privately concerned that the furore over Persimmon鈥檚 bonuses might persuade the government not to renew Help to Buy.
This raises the stakes for government. Raynsford, for one, doesn鈥檛 have high expectations, viewing the government as too weak to risk investing in other providers. He says: 鈥淲ho else apart from the major builders have ministers got to turn to? Unless they are prepared to put the effort and money in to really exploring alternative providers, then nothing will change.鈥� While the volume housebuilders themselves may take some comfort from this prognosis, it is likely that few others will.
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