26 February 2025
MORGAN SINDALL GROUP PLC
('Morgan Sindall' or 'Group')
The Partnerships, Fit Out and Construction
Services Group
RESULTS FOR THE FULL YEAR (FY) ENDED 31 DECEMBER
2024
This announcement
contains information that qualified, or may have qualified, as
inside information for the purposes of Article 17 of the Market
Abuse Regulations (EU) 596/2014 (MAR). The person responsible for
making this announcement is Kelly Gangotra, Chief Financial
Officer.
Record full year performance reflecting the high
quality, strength and depth of the Group's operations
|
FY 2024
|
FY 2023
|
Change
|
Revenue
|
£4,546m
|
£4,118m
|
+10%
|
Operating profit - adjusted1
|
£162.6m
|
£141.3m
|
+15%
|
Profit before tax - adjusted1
|
£172.5m
|
£144.6m
|
+19%
|
Earnings per share - adjusted1
|
278.8p
|
247.7p
|
+13%
|
Period end net cash
|
£492m
|
£461m
|
+£31m
|
Total dividend per share
|
131.5p
|
114.0p
|
+15%
|
|
Operating profit - reported
|
£162.0m
|
£140.6m
|
+15%
|
Profit before tax - reported
|
£171.9m
|
£143.9m
|
+19%
|
Basic earnings per share - reported
|
281.4p
|
254.2p
|
+11%
|
1 'Adjusted' is defined as
before intangible amortisation of £0.5m and exceptional building
safety charge of £0.1m. (FY 2023: before intangible amortisation of
£2.9m and exceptional building safety credit of
£2.2m)
FY 2024 Summary:
· Strong revenue growth once again delivers
record results
o Revenue
up 10%to £4.5bn
o Adjusted profit
before tax up 19%to
£172.5m
o PBTA margin
expansion to 3.8% (FY 2023: 3.5%)
· Continued balance
sheet strength
o Net cash of £492m
(FY 2023: £461m)
o Average daily net
cash of £374m (FY 2023: £282m)
· High quality
secured order book at £11.4bn, up 28%, driven by Mixed Used
Partnerships
o Partnerships
£6.3bn, up 62% (FY 2023: £3.9bn)
o Fit Out £1.4bn, up
31% (FY 2023: £1.1bn)
o Construction
Services £3.7bn, down 6%2 (FY 2023: £3.9bn)
· Total dividend up
15% to 131.5p per share (FY 2023: 114.0p)
· Medium-term targets increased for four out of
six of the Group's divisions
2 Includes an adjustment to
remove the revenues of the unexpired term of the contracts which
Property Services had negotiated an early release from, excluding
this adjustment growth of the order book for Construction Services
is 4% on the prior year.
· Continued
leadership in sustainability
o MSCI 'AAA' rating
retained again for Group's ESG performance
o CDP 'A' rating for
Group's leadership on climate change (FY 2023: 'A' rating)
· Divisional
highlights
o A strong
performance from Partnership
Housingin a slowly recovering housing market; operating
profit1 increasing by 18% to £36.1m (FY 2023: £30.5m)
and revenue up 3% to £861m (FY 2023:
£838m). Average capital employed over the year
increased to £338m, in line with our investment strategy (FY 2023:
£255m).
o Trading remained
subdued due to the phasing of project completions in Mixed Use Partnerships, delivering
operating profit1 of £1.5m (FY 2023: £14.8m) and average
capital employed over the year of £87m (FY 2023: £99m). Exceptional
growth in its secured order book of 124% to £4.1bn, reflecting the
success in converting several sizeable, preferred bidder schemes
into new and secured long-term partnership agreements.
o Fit Outdelivered another significant
and market-leading performance in the year; operating profit up 38%
to £99m (FY 2023: £71.8m), revenue up 18% to £1,300m (FY 2023:
£1,105m) with an operating margin of 7.6% (FY 2023: 6.5%).
o Constructiondelivered a strong
performance; operating profit1 up 19% to £30.9m (FY
2023:
£25.9m), revenue up 8% to £1,044m (FY 2023: £967m)
with an operating margin of 3.0%, achieving its medium-term
targets.
o A robust
performance from Infrastructure; revenue up 18% to
£1,047m (FY 2023: £887m) with an operating margin of 3.7% (FY 2023:
4.3%). Operating profit of £38.5m, in line with the prior year, due
to the timing and phasing of project starts and completions (FY
2023: £38.5m); also achieving its medium-term targets.
o Successful
completion of the business remediation programme for Property Servicesin December
2024. Full year operating
losses1 of £17.8m impacted by exit costs from an early
release from a small number of contracts and a review of contract
assets (FY 2023: operating loss £16.8m). The business is now positioned to
return to profit in 2025.
o As a result of
current performance, market position held together with future
prospects, the medium-term targets for Mixed Use Partnerships, Fit
Out, Construction and Infrastructure have been upgraded as of
February 2025.
1 Adjusted before intangible
amortisation of £0.5m and exceptional building safety charge of
£0.1m
Commenting on today's results, Chief Executive, John Morgan
said:
"2024 was another record year for the Group,
reflecting the high quality of our diverse operations underpinned
by the talent and commitment of our people, delivering significant
double-digit growth for both adjusted profit before tax and the
full year dividend, supported by our high-quality order
book.
Throughout the year we have continued to make
significant strategic and operational progress across the Group and
remain well positioned to support the Government's affordable home
and social infrastructure plans over the medium-term, a result of
which is that we have upgraded medium-term targets for four out of
six of the Group's divisions. In addition, our balance sheet,
supported by a substantial average daily cash position, has allowed
us to focus on making the right decisions to drive long-term
sustainable growth while also supporting the returns to
shareholders in the year.
Looking ahead, while there is continued uncertainty
in the wider macroeconomy, we remain positive for the year ahead.
Together with our high-quality and growing order book spread across
a wide number of sectors, we are well-positioned for the future and
on track to deliver an outcome for 2025 which is in line with our
current expectations."
Morgan Sindall
Group
John Morgan Kelly Gangotra
Brunswick Jonathan Glass Nina Coad
|
Tel: 020 7307
9200
Tel: 020 7404
5959
|
Presentation
· There will
be an analyst and investor presentation at 09.00am at Deutsche
Numis, 45 Gresham Street, London EC2V 7BF on 26 February 2025.
Coffee and registration will be from 08.30am
· A copy of
these results is available at: www.morgansindall.com
· The
presentation will be available via live webcast from 09.00am on 26
February 2025 at www.morgansindall.com.
Note to Editors Morgan
Sindall Group
Morgan Sindall Group plc, the Partnerships, Fit Out
and Construction Services Group, reported annual revenues of £4.5bn
in full year 2024, employing over 8,000 employees and operating in
the public, regulated and private sectors. It reports through six
divisions of Partnership Housing, Mixed Use Partnerships, Fit Out,
Construction, Infrastructure and Property Services.
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Reflecting the continued progression of the Group,
and our strategy aligned to structural growth drivers, with
balanced end markets, Morgan Sindall has evolved from the
Construction and Regeneration Group to the Partnerships, Fit Out
and Construction Services Group it is today.
Morgan Sindall's recognised expertise in
Partnerships is displayed
through its market positions in affordable housing (through its
Partnership Housing division) and in mixed use regeneration
development (through the Mixed Use Partnerships division). Both
businesses within this segment reflect a deep understanding of
creating partnerships, developed over many years and their ability
to provide solutions for complex projects through various
partnerships. As a result, its capabilities are aligned with
sectors which support the UK's current and future regeneration and
affordable housing needs.
Fit Outis
the market leader in its field and delivers a consistently strong
operational performance and together with Construction Services, it
generates cash resources to support the Group's investment in
affordable housing and Mixed use regeneration.
Through Construction Services the Group is also
well positioned to meet the demand for ongoing investment in the
UK's physical infrastructure, while its geographically diverse
construction activities are focused on key areas of education,
healthcare and commercial. The Group also has a business in
Property Services which is focused on response and planned
maintenance activities provided to the social housing and the wider
public sector.
Under the three strategic lines of business of
Partnerships, Fit
Out and Construction Services, the Group
is organised into six reporting divisions as follows:
Partnershipscomprise the following
operations:
·
Partnership
Housing: Focused on working in partnerships with local
authorities and housing associations. Activities include
mixed-tenure developments, building and developing homes for open
market sale and for social/affordable rent, 'design & build'
house contracting and refurbishment.
·
Mixed Use
Partnerships: Focused on transforming the urban landscape
through partnership working and the development of multi-phase
sites and mixed use placemaking.
Fit Out
·
Focused on the fit out of office space with opportunities in
commercial, central and local government offices and further
education.
Construction
Servicescomprise the following operations:
·
Construction: Focused on the
education, healthcare, commercial, industrial, leisure and retail
markets.
·
Infrastructure:
Focused on the energy, nuclear, rail, highways, water and defence
markets. It also includes the BakerHicks engineering design
activities.
·
Property
Services: Focused on response and planned maintenance
activities provided to the social housing and the wider public
sector.
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In addition to presenting the financial performance
of the business on a statutory basis, adjusted performance measures
are also disclosed. Refer to the Other Financial Information
section which sets out the basis for the calculations. These
measures are not an alternative or substitute to statutory UK IAS
measures, however, are seen as more useful in assessing the
performance of the business on a comparable basis and are used by
management to monitor the performance of the Group.
In all cases the term 'adjusted' excludes the impact
of intangible amortisation of £0.5m and an exceptional building
safety charge of £0.1m. For FY 2023, 'adjusted' excluded the impact
of intangible amortisation of £2.9m and the exceptional building
safety credit of £2.2m.
Summary Group financial results
The Group delivered a strong performance in 2024,
with a significant contribution from the Fit Out division. The
results were another record for the Group and reflected the
strength and diversity of the Group's operations and the talent and
commitment of its people.
Group revenue increased by 10% up to £4,546m (FY
2023: £4,118m), while adjusted operating profit increased by 15% to
£162.6m (FY 2023: £141.3m). Adjusted operating margin was 3.6%,
20bps higher than the prior year (FY 2023: 3.4%).
The Group continued to benefit from higher interest
rates on its cash balances compared to the prior year period, with
a net finance income of £9.9m (FY 2023: £3.3m) resulting in
adjusted profit before tax of £172.5m, up 19% (FY 2023:
£144.6m).
The adjusted tax charge for the period was £42.0m
(statutory tax charge of £40.2m), an effective rate of 24.3% on
adjusted profit before tax (UK statutory rate for the year of
25%).
The adjusted earnings per share increased 13% to
278.8p (FY 2023: 247.7p), while the statutory basic earnings per
share of 281.4p was up 11% (FY 2023: 254.2p).
General market conditions
While market conditions have been relatively stable
over the past year, the Group is cognisant of the uncertainty in
the current macroeconomic environment and the effect it may have on
the broader markets that the Group operates in. Elsewhere, while
cost increases have been more manageable throughout the year, the
Group hopes to mitigate the impact of the employer national
insurance increases announced in the recent Budget over the
forthcoming year.
UK construction and regeneration programmes continue
to benefit from sustained government investment commitments. This
continues to support the Group's market sectors which remain
structurally secure particularly in housing, mixed use schemes,
construction, and infrastructure (primary areas in the UK targeted
for growth). Liquidity issues across the supply chain remains a
common theme requiring additional vigilance during both the
pre-construction and delivery phases of projects, with their
ongoing stability under regular review. The Group's exposure to
this risk is largely mitigated by the diligence taken before
project commencement, and the fact that no division is overly
reliant on any one supplier.
The pace of recovery in the UK housing market
remained subdued this year, tempered by affordability constraints
impacted by high mortgage rates. In Partnership Housing, the partnership
model focusing on long-term partnerships with the public sector,
has continued to provide some level of resilience and cushion
against the impact of the softness in housing for sale activity.
While the demand for contracting has remained strong throughout the
year, the sales rates of private homes on its mixed- tenure sites
have shown gradual recovery during 2024. The Group remains positive
that the
government has set out its ambitions for affordable
home targets together with its broad framework for delivery, which
we believe will bring about some positive momentum over the medium
term, together with its intentions around planning reforms which
currently remain challenging.
In Mixed Use
Partnerships, the combination of elevated build cost
inflation and high interest rates continued to present short-term
challenges on the timing of some of its development schemes prior
to their commencement, although not significantly material to the
overall portfolio of schemes and their future financial performance
over the medium to long-term. Similar to Partnership Housing, this
division is currently exposed to a challenging planning
environment.
The market for Fit
Out'sservices has continued to be very strong, with a number
of positive structural changes in the market; however some
normalisation seems likely following the recent period of
exceptional performance. Looking ahead, the main drivers continue
to be business or market changes impacting the tenant,
lease-related events, the requirement for greater energy efficiency
from offices, the move towards more flexible and collaborative
workspaces, the use of office space as a tool for enhancing staff
retention and brand image, and office relocations to the regions
with clients requiring increasingly complex projects.
In both Construction and Infrastructure, the
market environment remains stable due to the diversification of the
segments in which they operate within. Where projects are currently
underway, most include appropriate inflationary protection within
the overall contract pricing, and this is not seen as a significant
risk. Where projects are being priced for future delivery, funding
constraints, and inflation to a lesser degree in some areas,
continues to place some project budgets under pressure, which in
turn has led to some delays in decision-making and project
commencement. However, the impact of this has not been material and
in the majority of cases, any client budget constraints are being
addressed by adjustments to project scopes, thereby allowing
projects to proceed.
In Property
Services, local authority and housing association clients
are increasingly focused on housing maintenance and on the general
state of repair of their housing stocks. In the delivery of
existing reactive maintenance services, while cost inflation and
particularly labour inflation have severely impacted the
profitability for some contracts during the prior and current year,
contract pricing and exit renegotiations were concluded over the
year for several contracts limiting the exposure for the remaining
unexpired term for those contracts.
Divisional headlines
Against the backdrop of a housing market downturn
last year, there has been gradual but modest recovery during 2024,
Partnership Housing
revenues climbed up slightly by 3% to £861m (FY 2023:
£838m), as contracting work continued to provide a
shield effect against the subdued housing market. Operating profit
was up 18% to £36.1m (FY 2023: £30.5m).
Mixed Use
Partnerships, which holds a long-term development portfolio,
was substantially impacted by the duration of time that has lapsed
between scheme completions in the prior year and a lower level of
completions this year. As a result, operating profit fell from
£14.8m in FY 2023 to just £1.5m in FY 2024. The return on capital
in the year was 2% (FY 2023: 15%).
Fit Out
delivered another excellent result, with profit and margin both
increasing significantly. Revenues were up 18% to £1,300m (FY 2023:
£1,105m) supporting the significant growth to both operating profit
and margin. Operating profit was up 38% to £99m (FY 2023: £71.8m)
with an expansion to its operating margin to 7.6% (FY 2023:
6.5%).
Both Construction
and Infrastructure continued to maintain their disciplined
focus on operational delivery and contract selectivity during the
year. Construction revenues increased by 10% to £1,044m (FY 2023:
£967m), while operating profit increased 19% to £30.9m (FY 2023:
£25.9m) resulting in an operating margin of 3% (FY 2023: 2.7%).
Elsewhere, Infrastructure revenues increased by 18% to
£1,047m (FY 2023: £887m) with an operating profit of
£38.5m in line with last year due to the phasing of project starts
and completions, resulting in an operating margin of 3.7% (FY 2023:
4.3%).
Property
Services completed its business remediation plan in December
2024, which included a negotiated exit from a small number of
contracts through mutual agreement, a review of contract assets
together with some operational restructuring related to key
existing contracts. The outcome of which led to the division making
an operating loss in the year of £17.8m (FY 2023: operating
loss
£16.8m). As a result of the above actions taken, the
business is now positioned to return to profit in 2025.
Secured order book
In the year, the Group's high-quality secured order
book enjoyed substantial growth, principally led by Mixed Use
Partnerships, closing at £11,419m, up 28% on the prior year end
position (FY 2023:
£8,920m). Maintaining contract selectivity and
bidding discipline to ensure there remains the appropriate risk
balance in the order book continues to be of critical importance to
the future success of the Group.
Balance sheet & cash
Net cash at the year-end was £492m (FY 2023: £461m)
and the average daily net cash for the year was
£374m (FY 2023: £282m). Of this total, £49m was held
in jointly controlled operations or held for future payment to
designated suppliers (JVs/PBAs).
Operating cash flow for the year was an inflow of
£134.8m (FY 2023: inflow of £189.0m), which included an adjusted
working capital outflow of £34m. The operating cash flow
represented 83% of adjusted operating profit as the Group increased
its net investment in Partnership Housing by
£100.4m, where it has continued to invest in
developing its new sites.
Looking ahead, the Group currently expects that the
average daily net cash for 2025 will be in excess of £330m.
The Group's Capital Allocation Framework is set out
in the separate section below.
Dividend
The proposed final dividend has increased by 15% to
90.0p per share (FY 2023: 78.0p), resulting in a total dividend for
the year of 131.5p per share (FY 2023: 114.0p), an increase of 15%.
This represents dividend cover of 2.1x and reflects the result for
the year, the strong balance sheet and the Board's confidence in
the long-term prospects for the Group.
As part of the Capital Allocation Framework set out
below, the Board operates a formal dividend policy such that
dividend cover is expected to be in the range of 2.0x-2.5x on an
annual basis.
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Group outlook for 2025
While there is continued uncertainty in the wider
macroeconomy, we remain positive for the year ahead. Together with
its high-quality and growing order book spread across a wide number
of sectors, the Group is well-positioned for the future and on
track to deliver an outcome for 2025 which is in line with its
current expectations.
The 2025 outlook for each division is detailed in
the Divisional Review.
Medium-term divisional targets
To provide a framework for future performance, each
division operates to a medium-term financial target or set of
targets (the 'target' or 'targets') and are referred to in the
Divisional Review.
The medium-term targets were originally set in
February 2022, with subsequent upgraded revisions made to Fit Out
in February 2023 and then again in August 2023, while the target
for Property Services was downgraded in August 2023 to reflect its
current performance.
As a result of current performance, market position
held together with future prospects, the medium- term targets for
Mixed Use Partnerships, Fit Out, Construction and Infrastructure
have been upgraded as of February 2025.
Division
|
Medium-term target
|
Partnership
Housing
|
Operating margin of 8% / return on capital up
towards 25%
(Unchanged)
|
Mixed Use
Partnerships
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|
Return on capital up towards 25%
(previously 3-year
rolling average return on capital towards 20%)
|
Fit Out
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|
Annual operating profit of £60m - £85m
(previously £50m -
70m)
|
Construction
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|
Operating margin of 3.0% - 3.5% pa Revenue >
£1bn
(previously 2.5% -
3.0% pa and Revenue of £1bn)
|
Infrastructure
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|
Operating margin of 3.75% - 4.25% pa Revenue >
£1bn
(previously 3.5% -
4.0% pa and Revenue of £1bn)
|
Property
Services
|
Annual operating profit of £7.5m
(Unchanged)
|
Increased medium-term target
updated in February 2025
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The Board's single, overarching principle governing
capital allocation is a commitment to maintain a strong balance
sheet and to hold significant net cash balances at all times. This
will provide a stable and firm foundation for the Group to make
sound decisions for its long-term development, thereby enhancing
its competitive advantage and future work winning.
As stated in the Group Operating Review above, the
Group's net cash at 31 December 2024 was £492m (FY 2023: £461m) and
the average daily net cash for the year was £374m (FY 2023: £282m).
The year end cash position included £49m held in jointly controlled
operations or held for future payment to designated suppliers.
Across 2024, the lowest net cash balance on any one
day in the year was £293m (FY 2023: £195m). Of this, £54m was held
in jointly controlled operations or held for future payment to
designated suppliers. The Board uses this net cash balance on the
lowest day of the year as the initial reference point from which it
then considers its application of its capital allocation hierarchy.
This allows it to balance the needs of all stakeholders whilst
enhancing the Group's market competitiveness and capabilities and
maintaining its financial strength.
The Group's capital allocation hierarchy
comprises:
A. Maintaining a strong balance
sheet
(i) to
enhance its competitive advantage and win future work
Fundamental to the Group's organic growth strategy
is engaging in long-term partnerships with its public and private
sector clients, whether it be through joint ventures or other
arrangements in its Partnership activities, or through frameworks
in its Construction activities.
When assessing the suitability of long-term
partners, potential clients are increasingly looking for security
and assurance of long-term solvency and the availability of cash
resources to ensure their partners can fulfil their long-term
contractual obligations. A strong balance sheet and significant
levels of net cash are considered by the Group as a key market
differentiator and a competitive advantage when bidding and winning
future work to support the future growth of the business.
(ii) to
ensure downside protection - maintaining a 'buffer' in the event of
a macro downturn
Maintaining significant levels of net cash is
considered as key to offsetting any potential consequence of a
future downturn in the economy and reduction in revenue in the
activities of Construction, Infrastructure and Fit Out.
These activities operate with a negative working
capital model, which in turn can lead to cash outflows in the event
of declines in revenue. Maintaining a net cash 'buffer' therefore
allows the Group to continue with its strategy of disciplined
contract selectivity and prudent approach to risk management
throughout the whole economic cycle.
B. Maximising investment in
Partnership activities to drive sustainable growth
Significant opportunities are expected to arise
through the medium and long term to invest in the existing business
to support and accelerate the organic growth of these
activities.
Specifically, investment in Partnership Housing and
Mixed Use Partnerships is a strategic priority:
Ø For Partnership Housing, the growth
potential remains substantial despite the short-term market
headwinds. The medium-term target is for an operating margin of 8%
and for return on capital to be up towards 25% on an annual
basis.
The capital employed has increased significantly
over the last 5 years, up from an average of
£152m in 2019 to an average of £338m in 2024. The
scalability of the partnership housing model provides the potential
to further increase the capital employed significantly above
current levels over the medium to long term.
Ø Within Mixed Used Partnerships, its
development activities across multi-phase sites and place making
are targeted to generate return on capital up towards 25% on an
annual basis over the medium term.
The capital employed has reduced over the last 5
years, down from an average of £102m in 2019 to an average of £87m
in 2024. Notwithstanding this reduction, based on the investment
profile of schemes already secured, the sizeable new schemes at
preferred bidder stage as well as the identified pipeline of future
opportunities, the capital employed in the division will increase
over the medium term, albeit modestly.
C. Ordinary returns to
shareholders
Ordinary dividends are considered by the Board to be
an important component of shareholder returns. The Board has
previously formally adopted a dividend policy such that dividend
cover is expected to be in the range of 2.0x-2.5x on an annual
basis.
D. Investment by acquisition to
accelerate sustainable growth
Any acquisition activity will likely be targeted
towards the Group's partnership activities, primarily Partnership
Housing. The focus would be on opportunities to complement the
existing organic growth strategy by acquiring pre-existing
partnership development schemes, land options, positions in
existing schemes from third parties or businesses which can
complement or reinforce the division's position in the partnerships
sector.
Other potential acquisition opportunities across the
Group's construction and fit out activities would only be
considered where they would accelerate growth through the existing
divisional structure and capabilities.
E. Special returns to
shareholders
The Board will continue to assess the needs of the
business and the optimum balance sheet structure within the context
of the overarching principle governing capital allocation and the
hierarchy A-D described above. Any capital then deemed surplus
above these requirements may be returned to shareholders.
Such returns would be in the form of either share
buybacks or special dividends, with the method of distribution to
be determined by the Board at the time based on prevailing
conditions.
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The Group continues to prioritise the delivery of
improved environmental, social and governance (ESG) outcomes which
are pivotal to winning work and building trust among our customers.
By taking consistent action against five Total Commitments, our
divisions are driving sustainable growth while creating shared
value for the communities we serve.
In early 2025, the Group retained its 'AAA' MSCI
rating for the fourth consecutive year and an 'A' for CDP Climate
for the fifth year1. Furthermore, we were listed as a
'2024 European Climate Leader' by the Financial Times for our
progress in reducing global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. In
August, the Group published its first Climate Transition Plan,
which details our strategy for how we will meet our medium-term
science-based targets to achieve a 60% reduction in our Scope 1 and
2 emissions2 and a 42% reduction in our Scope 3
emissions3 by 2030, as well as our longer-term net zero
target to achieve a 90% reduction in our Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions
by 20454.
In addition to our decarbonisation focus, the Group
continued to support the UK's housing, regeneration, development
and infrastructural needs while delivering long-term value for
business and society. We use a variety of third-party verified
methodologies to track and assess the impact our activities have on
society. To date, the Social Value Portal's TOM's framework has
determined that the Group has delivered £4.6 billion in social
value through the creation of local jobs, support of regional
businesses and contribution to safer and healthier
communities5. Our divisions also continued to implement
initiatives to support educational, environmental and community
projects throughout 2024.
For full details of our ESG progress, please refer
to the responsible business section in our 2024 Annual Report &
Accounts and our 2024 Responsible Business Data Sheet which will be
published on 20 March 2025 at: www.morgansindall.com.
(a) Environmental
Morgan Sindall Group was the third construction
company globally to submit its carbon targets for validation by the
Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) in 2017 and, in 2023, we
revalidated our commitments to align to a more ambitious
1.5oC reduction scenario. Subsequently, we retained our
target to reduce Scope 1 and 2 and emissions by 60% for 2030, while
adding a new stretch target to deliver a 90% reduction by 2045
against a 2019 baseline. We also set a Scope 3 reduction commitment
targeting a 42% reduction by 2030 and a 90% reduction by 2045
against a 2020 baseline.
As of 2024, the Group remains on track to achieve
its medium-term climate ambitions6. Since 2019, we have
achieved a 44% reduction in our Scope 1 and 2 emissions. This year,
the Group updated its Scope 3 inventory to improve data collation,
this has enabled us to externally report our Scope 3 emissions
across all relevant categories for the first time to drive progress
against our long-term net zero target6. We also
undertook internal decarbonisation audits across each of our
divisions to identify further opportunities to achieve emissions
reductions.
Beyond our direct operations, we continued to
empower customers, teams and partners to reduce and avoid emissions
associated with projects. Since 2020, our RICS-approved carbon
intelligence tool CarboniCA has been used on around 650 projects,
including 218 new projects in 2024. Our industry- leading software
undertakes a Whole Life Carbon Assessment (WLCA) of a project to
highlight its most carbon-intensive elements and recommend
lower-carbon alternatives. By deploying this early in the design
phase, CarboniCa can generate significant emissions savings for
customers.
We invest in high-quality projects located in the UK
that enhance biodiversity and contribute to a healthier climate. In
2024, we continued to work on our three legacy natural capital
projects which, as well as helping to address climate change,
support the Group in tackling residual emissions through credible
carbon offset certification. Work was completed on the planting of
nine woodlands and 270,000 trees at the Blenheim Estate in
Oxfordshire as part of the Dorn & Glyme Woodlands project. At
the end of 2024, the project was validated by the Woodland Carbon
Code and, due to our critical investment, 70,000 Peatland Carbon
Units (PCUs) were released, of which the Group owns
20,0007.
A summary of environmental highlights from across
the Group in 2024 includes:
· 44% reduction in
Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions since 2019
· 1% increase
in Scope 3 emissions since 2020 baseline
· 72% of the
Group's fleet are hybrid and electric vehicles (FY 2023:
64%)
· > 650
projects have implemented CarboniCA, our intelligent carbon
software since 2020
· 97% of total
waste diverted from landfill in 2024 (FY 2023: 94%)
(b) Social
With over 80 offices and a nationwide supply chain
network, our activities have a broad reach across the UK.
Furthermore, with hundreds of projects up and down the country, we
recognise the opportunity we have to make a positive impact on the
communities where we live and work.
Our longstanding relationships with our supply chain
partners are essential to the successful delivery of projects. In
2024, we grew our Morgan Sindall Supply Chain Family of preferred
suppliers to 414 members (FY 2023: 406), who continue to benefit
from tailored training, on-site advice, access to contract
information and dedicated relationship management teams. We also
believe in supporting local businesses wherever we can, which
aligns with our responsible business strategy and ethos of building
strong partner relationships. In 2024, 62% of Group spend was with
regional small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
Our people are the lifeforce of our business and we
depend on them to deliver services that delight our customers every
day. In 2024, we reinforced our commitment to zero harm by setting
new leading health and safety indicators. We hope that these new
indicators will drive further reductions in our lost time incident
rate (LTIR) which fell marginally to 0.23 in 2024 (FY 2023: 0.24).
We also continued to support and develop our people, delivering
over 26,000 training days (3.2 days per employee), in addition to
securing new opportunities for the next generation of leaders by
providing apprenticeship roles, graduate schemes, structured
training initiatives and student placements.
As a business that operates at the heart of
communities, it is vital that we identify ways to accurately
measure and increase the social and economic impact our projects
have on society. In July 2024, we launched the Built Environment
Bank (formerly known as the Social Value Bank) in partnership with
the Housing Associations' Charitable Trust (HACT) - an online tool
to measure the value and wellbeing we are creating within our
supply chain and through our work. Our divisions continued to
participate in wide range of social value activities during the
year, including educational programmes, community initiatives and
environmental projects. We hope to improve data capture of this
great work through the Built Environment Bank in the months and
years to come.
A summary of social highlights from across the Group
in 2024 includes:
· £4.6 billion
delivered in social value to date as determined by the Social Value
Portal
· 97.7% of
supplier invoices paid within 60 days in the second half of
2024
· 62% of Group
spend was with regional SMEs and 77% with Supply Chain Family
members
· Lost time
incident rate (LTIR) reduced to 0.23 against a 2025 target of 0.21
(FY 2023: 0.24)
· > 26,000
training days delivered (representing an average of 3.2 training
days per employee)
1.
The Group uses MSCI and CDP
to gauge its ongoing responsible business performance. Both MSCI
and CDP provide decision support services for the global investment
community and are used by most major
stakeholders.
2. Scope 1 and 2 emissions
include those generated from owned or controlled sources and
indirect emissions from purchased electricity.
3. The Group's Scope 3
emissions refer to the 15 emissions categories from the GHG
Protocol Scope 3 Standard. The Group has excluded categories 2, 9,
13 and 14 as these represent > 1% of total emissions. Scope 3
emissions account for the vast majority of our total
footprint.
4. Our net zero targets are
approved by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) and the
remaining 10% of residual carbon emissions will be offset using
high quality UK-based offsets.
5. The Social Value Portal is
an accounting tool based on the national Themes, Outcomes and
Measures (TOMSTM) framework. The TOMS framework is
compatible with all major ESG frameworks, endorsed by the Local
Government Association, and used by many public
sector organisations across the UK
to measure social value creation. Our £4.6bn figure was accurate as
of December 2024, and represents total contribution of projects
logged in the portal since October 2023. More detail can be found
in our 2024 annual report.
6. The Group's medium-term
science-based targets refer to a 60% reduction in Scope 1 and 2
emissions and a 42% reduction in Scope 3 emissions by 2030, with
our long-term targets aiming for a 90% reduction across all our
carbon emissions (Scope 1, 2 and 3) by 2045.
7. The Group's 20,000 owned
PCUs will be used to offset its residual emissions as part of its
net zero targets.

The following Divisional Review is given on an
adjusted basis, unless otherwise stated. Refer to Note 15 for
appropriate reconciliations to the comparable UK IAS measures.
Headline results by business segment (vs FY
2023)
|
Revenue
|
Operating
Profit
|
Operating
Margin
|
£m
|
Change
|
£m
|
Change
|
%
|
Change
|
Partnership Housing
|
861
|
+3%
|
36.1
|
+18%
|
4.2%
|
+60bps
|
Mixed Use Partnerships
|
91
|
-51%
|
1.5
|
-90%
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Fit Out
|
1,300
|
+18%
|
99.0
|
+38%
|
7.6%
|
+110bps
|
Construction
|
1,044
|
+8%
|
30.9
|
+19%
|
3.0%
|
+30bps
|
Infrastructure
|
1,047
|
+18%
|
38.5
|
-
|
3.7%
|
-60bps
|
Property Services
|
223
|
+21%
|
(17.8)
|
-6%
|
(8.0)%
|
+110bps
|
Group/Eliminations
|
(20)
|
n/a
|
(25.6)
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Total
|
4,546
|
+10%
|
162.6
|
+15%
|
3.6%
|
+20bps
|
Group secured order book1
by division
The Group's secured order book1 at 31
December 2024 was £11,419m, up 28% when compared to the prior year.
The divisional split is shown below.
|
FY 2024
|
FY 2023
|
Change
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
Partnership Housing
|
2,174
|
2,034
|
+7%
|
Mixed Use Partnerships
|
4,085
|
1,825
|
+124%
|
Fit Out
|
1,439
|
1,098
|
+31%
|
Construction
|
952
|
796
|
+20%
|
Infrastructure
|
1,883
|
1,689
|
+11%
|
Property Services
|
887
|
1,478
|
-40%
|
Inter-divisional
eliminations
|
(1)
|
-
|
|
Group secured
workload1
|
11,419
|
8,920
|
+28%
|
1 The 'secured order book' is
the sum of the 'committed order book', the 'framework order book'
and (for Partnership Housing and Mixed Use Partnerships) the
Group's share of the gross development value of secured schemes
(including the development value of open market housing schemes).
Of these amounts, £6,164.5m relates to performance obligations to
be satisfied for in-progress contracts at the year
end.
The 'committed order book' represents the Group's share of
future revenue that will be derived from signed contracts or
binding letters of intent. The 'framework order book' represents
the Group's expected share of revenue from the frameworks on which
the Group has been appointed. This excludes prospects where
confirmation has been received as preferred bidder only, with no
formal contract or binding letters of intent in
place.
Partnership Housing
|
FY 2024
£m
|
FY 2023
£m
|
Change
|
Revenue
Operating profit1 Operating margin
|
861
36.1
4.2%
|
838
30.5
3.6%
|
+3%
+18.0%
+60bps
|
Average capital employed1,2
|
337.8
|
254.5
|
+£83.3m
|
(last 12 months)
|
|
|
|
Capital employed1,2 (at
year end)
|
318.7
|
234.4
|
+£84.3m
|
ROCE1,3 (last 12 months)
|
11%
|
12%
|
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|
In Partnership Housing, the division continued to
grow its long-term partnerships with the public sector. Throughout
the year, while we have seen a modest improvement in the housing
market, demand for contracting with the public sector has remained
strong, shielding the impact of a gradual recovery of open market
sales within the mixed-tenure activities. The division continued to
optimise construction of the contracted affordable homes on
mixed-tenure sites to maintain activity.
Reflecting the above, revenue was up 3% to £861m (FY
2023: £838m), driven by Contracting which was up 19% to £564m
(66% of divisional total) compared to the prior year. Mixed-tenure revenue
declined by 19% to £297m (34% of divisional total) compared to the
prior year.
Notwithstanding the composition of the divisions
revenue, both contracting and mixed-tenure activities achieved
stronger margins over the year, led by contract type, mix of
schemes delivered and other income (note 7), resulting in operating
profit1 increasing by 18% to £36.1m (FY 2023: £30.5m)
with an operating margin of 4.2% (FY 2023: 3.6%).
Despite the challenging macroeconomic environment,
the longer-term development of the business and its partnerships
with local authorities and housing associations has continued with
planned momentum. Reflective of this ongoing activity and
investment in future growth, the average capital
employed1 for the last 12-month period increased by
£83.3m to £337.8m (FY 2023: £254.5m). The capital
employed1 at the end of the year was £318.7m, an
increase of £84.3m on the prior year (FY 2023: £234.4m). As a
result of the higher average capital employed, the overall
ROCE2 for the last 12- month period reduced slightly to
11% (FY 2023: 12%) due to continued investment in the partnership
activities.
The division continues to maintain a high-quality
secured order book, through ongoing successful client engagement
leading to work being awarded through frameworks or through direct
negotiation. The secured order book at the year end was £2,174m, 7%
higher than the prior year end (FY 2023:
£2,034m) and with 58% of its total value for 2026
and beyond providing long-term visibility of workload.
Mixed Tenure
Good progress was made with the strategy of
increasing the number and size of mixed-tenure sites. At the year
end, the division had 66 active mixed-tenure sites at various
stages of construction and sales, up from 61 at the prior year end,
with an average of 166 open market units per site (up from 163 at
the prior year end). Average site duration is 47 months, providing
long-term visibility of activity.
During the year, 1,808 units were completed across
open market sales and social housing (including through its joint
ventures) compared to 1,923 units in 2023, noting that the number
of open market sales within this increased by 5% to 874. The
average sales price was £237k, which was broadly in line with the
prior year average of £239k.
Of the total divisional order book, the amount
relating to mixed-tenure activities increased by 12% to
£1,310m (2023: £1,167m). In addition, the amount of
mixed-tenure business in preferred bidder
status, or already under development agreement but
where land has not been drawn down, was
£1,200m at the year end (FY 2023: £821m).
Work won in the year included: 727 units as the
division moved into phases 2 and 3 at South Thamesmead, in joint
venture with Peabody; the 500-unit Grahame Park development in
north London in partnership with the London Borough of Barnet; a
350-unit development in Williton, Somerset with Aster Group; a
309-unit development in Balderton, Newark; a 290-unit scheme at the
Elm Grove Estate in partnership with Sutton Council; 176 units in
Winchburgh, West Lothian; a 115- unit scheme in Haverfordwest,
Pembrokeshire with Pobl Group; 112 units on phase 4 of the
Castleward development in Derby with Riverside; and 82 units in
Primrose Hill in partnership with Birmingham City Council.
Elsewhere, good progress continued to be made on
other mixed-tenure schemes, in partnerships with Riverside, Clarion
Housing, L&Q, Together Housing Group, Repton Property
Developments (owned by Norfolk County Council), the Borough Council
of King's Lynn & West Norfolk, Flagship Group, Pobl Group, West
Sussex County Council, Suffolk County Council and Homes
England.
Contracting
Partnership Housing continued to experience robust
levels of demand with clients awarding work either through
frameworks or direct negotiation.
The total number of equivalent units built increased
by 15% to 3,299, up from 2,865 in the prior year. Of the total
divisional order book, the contracting secured order book remained
on a par with the prior year end at £863m (FY 2023: £867m), of
which c40% is for 2026 and beyond.
Key contracting schemes awarded in the year
included: an £80m, 321-unit project at Leaside Lock in East London
for The Guinness Partnership; a £14m, 70-unit development in Castle
Gresley for East Midlands Homes; an £11m, 38-unit scheme at Saffron
Lane for Leicester City Council; a £10m, 45-unit development in
Isleham, Cambridgeshire for Havebury Housing Partnership; a £10m,
56-unit scheme in Baginton, Warwickshire for Platform Housing
Group; a £9m, 55-unit scheme at Crick Road, Portskewett for
Candleston Homes; a £40m, 87-unit scheme at Carlton Dene for
Westminster City Council; and a number of retrofit and
refurbishment projects for local authorities and housing
associations.
Divisional outlook for Partnership Housing
Partnership Housing's medium-term targets are to
generate a return on average capital employed up towards 25% and to
deliver an operating margin of 8%.
Looking ahead to 2025, while we expect another year
of modest recovery in the housing market due to the uncertainty
over the timing of future interest rate changes, solid profit
growth is still expected in the year, while the return on average
capital employed1,2 is expected to be in line with 2024
levels as we continue to invest. We remain confident over the
medium-term fundamentals of the sector and remain well positioned
to support the Government's affordable home plans across the
country over the forthcoming years.
The average capital employed1,2 is
expected to increase up towards c£380m to £400m, reflecting the
increased scale of the business and stage of its developments.
1 Before exceptional Building
Safety Charge of £2.7m (FY 2023: £nil). See Note 2 of the
consolidated financial statements
2 Capital Employed is
calculated as total assets (excluding goodwill, intangibles and
cash) less total liabilities (excluding exceptional Building Safety
provisions, corporation tax, deferred tax, inter-company financing
and overdrafts)
3 Return On Average Capital
Employed = (Adjusted operating profit plus interest from JVs)
divided by average capital employed
Mixed Use Partnerships
|
FY 2024
£m
|
FY 2023
£m
|
Change
|
Revenue
Operating profit1
|
91
1.5
|
185
14.8
|
-51%
-89.9%
|
Average capital employed2
|
86.9
|
98.6
|
£(11.7)m
|
(last 12 months)
|
|
|
|
Capital employed2 at
period end
|
94.4
|
79.7
|
+£14.7m
|
ROCE3 (last 12 months)
|
2%
|
15%
|
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|
ROCE3 (average last 3 years)
|
12%
|
16%
|
Mixed Use Partnership's profits were significantly
lower than previous years due to fewer project completions
occurring in the year resulting in an operating profit1
of £1.5m (FY 2023: £14.8m). However, excellent progress was made
securing new long-term agreements for future projects. The
ROCE3 for the last 12 months was 2%, significantly down
on the prior year, based on average capital employed2 of
£86.9m, as a result of project completion phasing.
Despite the modest profit contribution, key
contributors to performance during the year were profit and
development fees generated from activity in Salford Central, Talbot
Gateway in Blackpool, Stroudley Walk, Lewisham Gateway and Forge
Island in Rotherham; and profit from a land sale in Hucknall, East
Midlands.
At the end of the year, the division's order book
amounted to £4,085m, substantially ahead of the prior year end (FY
2023: £1,825m), reflecting the success the division has had in
converting a number of sizeable, preferred bidder schemes into new
and secured long-term partnership agreements. These include:
· a
30-year partnership with Arden Cross Limited (land-owning
consortium) to deliver development at the HS2 Interchange Station
in Solihull. This nationally strategic and regionally significant
site will deliver commercial space expected to employ c27,000
people alongside an Innovation District, anchored by a HealthTech
campus and up to 3,000 new homes;
· a
development agreement with Solihull Council to regenerate Mell
Square, an iconic shopping hub in the heart of Solihull town
centre, with a mix of uses including an improved retail offer, new
public spaces, leisure facilities and homes; and
· a new
partnership with Homes England and Pension Insurance Corporation,
to deliver over 3,000 low-carbon, low-energy homes for rent
nationally, with a focus on affordable homes.
In addition, Mixed Use Partnerships was named by
Manchester City Council as delivery and investment partner for the
long-term regeneration of Wythenshawe Civic, with plans to deliver
a new public square, shops, workspace, community and cultural space
and more than 1,750 new homes, including significant affordable
housing.
Through ECF, the division's strategic partnership
with Homes England and Legal & General, the following
agreements and partnerships were entered into during the
year:
· a
development agreement with Wolverhampton City Council, to create a
new city centre neighbourhood with 1,000 new homes (including
affordable), enhanced market square with green spaces, and new
shops, cafes and restaurants;
· a
development agreement with Bradford Council to create a new
sustainable, city centre neighbourhood with 1,000 new homes
alongside shops, workspace, community parks and public space. ECF
secured £29m of funding to commence the scheme;
· a
partnership with West Northamptonshire Council to explore the
regeneration of Greyfriars in Northampton town centre. The 25-acre
site will provide homes, retail and leisure and the reimagining of
the Corn Exchange, a heritage asset at the heart of the town
centre; and
· an
agreement with Stevenage Borough Council, to explore the
regeneration of up to 30-acres of land around Stevenage railway
station, that will focus on addressing the long-term needs of the
local community, delivering new, high-quality homes and employment
space, amenity and green space, a new railway station and a new
theatre.
The division secured planning permission for: the
final phases of Stockport Exchange, which will create new
workspace, shops and a public square in the town centre; a new
heart for Prestwich Village in Bury including new homes, a
community hub and public space; the market-led revival and Town
Hall refurbishment in Earlestown, St Helens; 90 affordable homes
designed to Passivhaus standards at Oldfield Basin, Salford
Central; and at Weston M6 in Basford East, hybrid consent was
secured for a new state-of-the-art commercial and business park
totalling 1.2 million sq ft of space and wellbeing- led green
space. In addition, ECF secured planning permission for the
Crescent Innovation zone, which is part of the Crescent Salford
programme and includes 933 new homes, 1.7 million sq ft of new
commercial innovation, academic and research floorspace, active
ground-floor space and a new movement hub, along with significant
improvements to public spaces.
During the year, good progress was made at Stroudley
Walk in Bromley-by-Bow to create 274 homes, with 50% available for
London Affordable Rent or shared ownership, and a 215,000 sq ft
Civil Service Hub at Talbot Gateway, Blackpool, which will
accommodate more than 3,000 civil servants.
Completions in the year included 256 mixed-tenure
homes at Hale Wharf, Tottenham Hale through the Waterside Places
partnership with the Canal & River Trust; the final phase of
Lewisham Gateway, delivering 649 homes for rent, retail space, food
and beverage space, workspace and a multiplex cinema; Forge Island
in Rotherham, a leisure destination including a new cinema,
restaurants and public space; 113 affordable homes at Northshore in
Stockton-on-Tees; a 144-bed Holiday Inn at Talbot Gateway,
Blackpool; and a new bridge connecting communities at Brentford
Lock West.
The ECF partnership also made good progress on
existing schemes. Work completed at Eden, a 115,000 sq ft
workplace, designed to be 'net zero carbon in operation' with space
let to accountancy firm BDO and law firm TLT, and a collection of
96 affordable, Passivhaus homes at Greenhaus, both in Salford. At
Manor Road Quarter in Canning Town, the first phase of 355 homes
was completed, including 140 affordable homes handed over to
Metropolitan Thames Valley Housing. Construction commenced on
Willohaus, a collection of 100 affordable, Passivhaus homes, and
major infrastructure project, Salford Rise, as part of the
240-acre, mixed-use regeneration of Salford Crescent, as well as
196 build-to-rent homes at New Bailey, Salford Central.
Divisional outlook for Mixed Use Partnerships
The increased medium-term target for Mixed Use
Partnerships is to generate a return on capital up towards 25%.
While the division has experienced a substantial
increase to its development order book for a number of long-term
sizeable schemes, profits (and the resulting ROCE1,3) in
2025 will continue to be moderate and similar to 2024 levels. The
average capital employed for the year is expected to be between
c£105m and £115m.
1 Before exceptional Building
Safety Credit of £5.9m (FY 2023: Credit of £13.7m). See Note 2 of
the consolidated financial statements
2 Capital Employed is
calculated as total assets (excluding goodwill, intangibles and
cash) less total liabilities (excluding exceptional Building Safety
provisions, corporation tax, deferred tax, inter-company financing
and overdrafts)
3 Return On Average Capital
Employed = (Adjusted operating profit plus interest from JVs)
divided by average capital employed
Fit
Out
|
|
|
|
|
FY 2024
|
FY 2023
|
Change
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
Revenue
|
1,300
|
1,105
|
+18%
|
Operating profit
|
99.0
|
71.8
|
+37.9%
|
Operating margin
|
7.6%
|
6.5%
|
+110 bps
|
Fit Out delivered another market-leading performance
in the year, enjoying significant growth for both revenue and
operating profit. With revenue increasing by 18% to £1,300m (FY
2023: £1,105m), operating profit was up 38% to £99.0m (FY 2023:
£71.8m) resulting in strong margin expansion to 7.6% (FY 2023:
6.5%), strongly influenced by the exceptional volumes and
operational leverage. The division's focus on consistent
operational delivery and enhanced customer experience continues to
underpin its excellent performance in the year, complemented by a
high-quality workload through disciplined and focused bidding,
which in turn supports the division's strong brand reputation and
market position.
The overall balance of the business has been
reasonably consistent over recent years, with any movements in
geography, type of work and sectors served not indicative of any
longer-term trends.
The London region continued to generate a strong
proportion of the division's revenue, accounting for 72% of revenue
(FY 2023: 64%), while other key geographies served out of offices
in the Thames Valley, Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds and Glasgow
covered the remaining 28% of revenue (FY 2023: 36%).
There was no significant change to the market
sectors served. The commercial office market remained the largest,
contributing 86% of revenue (FY 2023: 80%), with higher education
amounting to 6% of revenue (FY 2023: 10%), government/local
authority representing 6% (FY 2023: 8%), and retail banking and
other sectors covering the remaining 2% of revenue (FY 2023:
2%).
In terms of type of work delivered in the year, 86%
related to traditional fit out work (FY 2023: 85%), while 14%
related to 'design and build' (FY 2023: 15%). The proportion of
revenue generated from the fit out of existing office space
remained relatively constant at 82% (FY 2023: 79%), with the
remainder attributable to the fit out of new office space. Of the
fit out of existing office space, 46% of the work was refurbishment
'in occupation' compared to 54% where work was performed in
non-occupied space.
The market for Fit Out remains strong, with a number
of different factors driving demand: lease events and significant
project requirements in the London commercial office market;
upcoming public and private sector schemes outside of London;
carbon-driven planning restrictions for new buildings and energy
efficiency of existing office space; and the continuation of
re-purposing of office space to accommodate new ways of
working.
At the year end, the secured order book was £1,439m,
an increase of 31% from the previous year end (FY 2023: £1,098m).
Of this total, £1,187m (83%) relates to 2025, 45% higher than it
was at the same time last year for the 12-month look ahead, which
continues to underpin the visibility and confidence for the
forthcoming year.
Commercial
Commercial fit out projects won in London during the
period included 380,000 sq ft for PwC at More London; 355,000 sq ft
for A&O Shearman at 2 Broadgate in London; 277,000 sq ft for
Latham & Watkins on Leadenhall Street; 156,000 sq ft for
Unilever in Kingston-upon-Thames; 158,000 sq ft for Travers Smith;
129,000 sq ft for JLL at 1 Broadgate in London; 101,000 sq ft fit
out for Investec on Gresham Street; 83,000 sq ft for Wise in
Worship Square, London; 56,000 sq ft for Standard Chartered Bank;
48,000 sq ft for Rabobank London on London Wall; 37,000 sq ft for
OMERS and Oxford Properties; 26,000 sq ft for Motability Operations
at 22 Bishopsgate; 24,000 sq ft for Johnson Matthey at Gresham
Street; and 8,500 sq ft for AstraZeneca at Pancras Square.
Regional project wins in the period included 185,000
sq ft for a UK consumer, corporate and wealth and private banking
franchise in Northampton; 152,500 sq ft for Lloyds Banking Group in
Birmingham; 43,000 sq ft for Bruntwood Estates in Manchester;
32,000 sq ft for an electric vehicle design and manufacturing
company in Bicester; 27,000 sq ft for Evelyn Partners in Bristol;
20,000 sq ft across two floors for Vodafone in Newbury; and 12,700
sq ft across two projects for VISA in Basingstoke.
Commercial fit out projects on site or completed in
London during the year included 1.2 million sq ft for Citi in
Canary Wharf; 110,000 sq ft for a professional services firm in
London; 109,000 sq ft for Aviva at 80 Fenchurch Street; 114,000 sq
ft for law firm Reed Smith near Spitalfields; two projects
totalling 99,500 sq ft for Deloitte at New Street Square; 51,500 sq
ft for Berkeley Estate Asset Management in Mayfair; 40,000 sq ft
for British Land on Bishopsgate; 17,000 sq ft for Boston Consulting
Group on Charlotte Street; and an 11,000 sq ft fit out for Burges
Salmon at New Street Square.
Regional projects on site or completed during the
year included 160,000 sq ft for Lloyds Banking Group in Leeds;
144,000 sq ft for Wirral Borough Council; 50,000 sq ft for Dojo in
Bristol; 44,000 sq ft for Samsung in Cambridge; 27,000 sq ft for
Arup in Bristol; and 20,000 sq ft for Sky in Leeds.
Science & Research and Higher Education
Projects won in the year included 310,000 sq ft for
British Land at 1 Triton Square in London; 64,000 sq ft for Kings
College London; 29,000 sq ft at Newcastle University; a 29,000 sq
ft library refurbishment at the University of Wolverhampton; and
two projects totalling 25,000 sq ft at Anglia Ruskin
University.
Projects on site or completed during the year
included a 150,000 sq ft HQ for GSK in London's Life Sciences Hub,
known as the Knowledge Quarter; 100,000 sq ft at Durham University
School of Business; five projects totalling 45,000 sq ft for Queen
Mary University; upgrade works at the Francis Crick Institute as
their project partner; 27,500 sq ft for Aston University; and a
12,500 sq ft fit out of Keele University's Clinical Skills
department.
Design & Build
Projects won and continuing on site during the year
included 120,000 sq ft for Wood Group at Green Park in Reading;
50,000 sq ft for Mapletree at Green Park in Reading; 23,000 sq ft
for Ultra Maritime in High Wycombe; and 6,000 sq ft for Molton
Brown in Bishop's Stortford in Essex.
Projects won and completed during the year included
50,000 sq ft for Accrue Capital in Maidenhead; 30,000 sq ft of
fully-fitted labs and office space for Stanhope at MediaWorks in
White City Place; 38,000 sq ft for Aurora Energy Research in
Oxford; 21,000 sq ft for Kajima Properties (Europe); 24,000 sq ft
for Greystar on Finsbury Square; 18,000 sq ft for Sage UK in
Winnersh Triangle, Reading; 15,000 sq ft for Wavestone at Exchange
Square in London; 13,500 sq ft for Smiths Group plc; 8,600 sq ft
for Centiva; 8,000 sq ft for Spin Master Toys in Marlow; 8,000 sq
ft for AEW UK Investment Management; 7,000 sq ft for Trinity Life
Sciences in the Scalpel in London; and 7,000 sq ft for Just Climate
(by Generation) in London.
Frameworks
Projects won under frameworks and corporate
partnerships included £30.0m of works for the Mayor's Office for
Policing and Crime (MOPAC), with a future order book of £30.3m;
£21.4m of works through Procure Partnerships, with a future order
book of £9.6m; £11.2m of works through Pagabo, with a future order
book of £3.5m; £7m of works through the Southern Construction
Framework; £3.2m of works through Construction West Midlands
Framework; and two projects through Scape to the value of
£3.6m.
Divisional outlook for Fit Out
The increased medium-term
target for
Fit Out
is to
deliver an
average annual
operating profit
of £60m-
£85m.
Based on the timing of projects in the order book
and the current visibility the division has of future workload for
the forthcoming year, the division is expected to have another
strong year in 2025, with profit towards the top end of this
revised target range.
Construction
|
|
|
|
|
FY 2024
|
FY 2023
|
Change
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
Revenue
|
1,044
|
967
|
+8%
|
Operating profit1
|
30.9
|
25.9
|
+19.3%
|
Operating margin1
|
3.0%
|
2.7%
|
+30bps
|
1 Before exceptional Building
Safety Credit of £0.1m (FY 2023: Charge of £11.5m).
Construction's revenue increased by 8% to £1,044m
(FY 2023: £967m), while operating profit increased by 19% to £30.9m
(FY 2023: £25.9m), resulting in an operating margin of 3.0% (FY
2023: 2.7%); this was at the top end of its targeted range for its
operating margin of 2.5%-3.0%. The strong profit performance was
driven by improving the overall quality of earnings through
disciplined contract selectivity and operational delivery together
with prudent risk management within its order book.
The division had a strong year of winning new work,
with the secured order book at £952m, 20% ahead of the prior year
(FY 2023: £796m). Of the total, £771m (81% by value) is secured for
2025, this compares to £652m (82% by value) of work which was
secured for the year ahead at the start of last year. In addition
to the total order book, there continues to be a significant amount
of suitable work available in the market, much of which is being
generated through negotiated or existing frameworks. At the end of
the year, the division had £1,179m of work at preferred bidder
stage, providing confidence of a sizeable ongoing workload (FY
2023: £1,284m) for the forthcoming period.
Education
Project wins included a £51m new build 930 place
secondary school in Dumfries, Scotland; the Nine Elms £50m two form
entry and Special Education Needs (SEN) primary school in
Battersea; the 900 place, £50m Willows High School and SEN facility
in Cardiff; a £34m secondary academy at Callerton in
Newcastle-upon-Tyne for the Department for Education (DfE); the
£25m Ravensdale Special Education Needs and Disabilities (SEND)
school in Mansfield for Derby City Council; the £19m Carleton High
School in Pontefract; Maendy (£14m) and Goetre (£20m) primary
schools in South Wales; and the 420 place, £13m Cable Wharf Primary
and SEN school in Kent for Kent County Council and the DfE to
support a growing residential development.
During the year, work progressed on the Orbiston
Community Hub, a £42m facility accommodating two primary schools,
family learning centre and community centre near Glasgow; the £32m,
1,900 place all-through school in Abergavenny; and the £21m new
build and refurbishment of the School of Veterinary Medicine at the
University of Central Lancashire.
Completions in the year included: the 150 place,
£35m Alconbery SEN school in Huntingdon; the £18m Pear Tree SEND
school in Stockport; the £13.9m Little Reddings Primary School in
Bushey, delivered via the DfE's School Rebuilding Programme; a £12m
facility for Middlesbrough College to deliver training in
specialist engineering; an £11m, three-storey teaching block for
Castle School in Thornbury, Bristol; Limebrook School in Maldon,
Essex, a new 420-place primary school and nursery; the London
Institute for Healthcare Engineering (£24m), a state-of-the-art
life sciences facility for King's College London and Guy's and St
Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust; and a £19.5m 'Living Lab' public
science centre for Anglia Ruskin University.
Healthcare
Project wins included a £35m theatre and ward
expansion and refurbishment at Harrogate District Hospital; a £32m
expansion to create a new 48-bed ward block and imaging facility at
Milton Keynes University Hospital; a £9m extension to The Grange
University Hospital's emergency department in Cwmbran; and a £9m
redevelopment of Bradford Royal Infirmary's maternity
department.
During the year, work progressed at the £24m Alder
Hey Hospital surgical neonatal intensive care unit, the first
specialist facility of its kind in the UK; a new £14m community
diagnostic centre at St Margaret's Hospital, Epping for The
Princess Alexandra Hospital NHS Trust; and multiple upgrades for
Mid and South Essex Foundation Trust's Broomfield Hospital in
Chelmsford. Elsewhere, work completed on the Norfolk and Norwich
University Hospital's £25m, community diagnostic and assessment
centre.
Other Sectors
In other sectors, project wins included the £86m
Devonshire Gardens mixed use, redevelopment scheme for Railpen in
Cambridge; a £27m life sciences development in King's Cross; a £32m
redevelopment and upgrade of a household waste recycling centre and
waste transfer station in Aldridge, West Midlands for Walsall
Metropolitan Council; a £32m major public realm development for
Plymouth City Council; a £10.5m upgrade to Ashford Fire Station in
Kent; and the £10m redevelopment of Reading Central Library. The
£43m residential project in New Bailey Salford for English Cities
Fund, being carried out in collaboration with Mixed Use
Partnerships, made good progress in the period, while other
completions included five fire station projects across the UK,
including the new £15.4m Cosham Fire Station in Portsmouth.
Divisional outlook for Construction
The increased medium-term target for Construction is
to deliver an operating margin between 3.0% and 3.5% per annum with
an annual revenue target in excess of £1bn.
For 2025, based upon its secured order book together
with the timing of projects at preferred bidder stage expected to
convert into contract and commence in the year, its operating
margin is expected to be towards the lower end of the revised range
and revenues expected to slightly exceed £1bn.
Property Services
|
|
|
|
|
FY 2024
|
FY 2023
|
Change
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
Revenue
|
223
|
185
|
+21%
|
Operating (loss)1
|
(17.8)
|
(16.8)
|
-6.0%
|
Operating margin1
|
-8.0%
|
-9.1%
|
+110bps
|
1 Before intangible
amortisation of £0.5m (FY 2023: £2.9m)
In 2023 the division reported an operating loss due
to cost pressures and operational challenges, and initiated a
business remediation programme, which concluded at the end of 2024.
Under the leadership of the new management team, the division
successfully negotiated both the resetting of pricing levels and
KPI levels for a number of contracts, together with early releases
from a small number of underperforming contracts by way of mutual
agreement. The latter resulted in exit costs recorded in the first
half of 2024.
Elsewhere the division carried out a review of
existing contract assets, with impairments recognised, while also
concluding its operational restructuring efforts across a number of
its key contracts, to achieve efficiencies with improvement plans
now implemented.
The impact of the above events has resulted in an
operating loss1 in the year of £17.8m (FY 2023: loss of
£16.8m). While revenue increased by 21% to £223m (FY 2023: £185m),
the growth is driven by increased volumes of planned repair works
for existing clients seeking to improve the condition of their
residential assets. While the remediation programme was underway
during the year, only a small number of less material contracts
were bid for.
At the year end, the secured order book was £887m,
down 40% from the prior year (FY 2023:
£1,478m), as revenues were removed for the unexpired
term for those contracts for which the division had negotiated an
early release from. Of the order book remaining, 78% is for 2026
and beyond.
During the year, the division secured a two-year
contract with The Guinness Partnership to deliver planned works in
the London and South regions and was awarded a place on the Pagabo
facilities management framework, which will support further
expansion into this market. The division continues to work with
four existing contracts to deliver retrofit and decarbonisation
works under the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero's
(DESNZ) Social Housing Decarbonisation Fund Wave 2.1, with a
combined two-year value of £31m.
Divisional outlook for Property Services
The medium-term target for Property Services is to
deliver £7.5m operating profit per annum.
Following the successful completion of the
remediation programme, the division is now positioned to return to
a modest profit in 2025.
Infrastructure1
|
|
|
|
|
FY 2024
|
FY 2023
|
Change
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
|
Revenue
|
1,047
|
887
|
+18%
|
Operating profit
|
38.5
|
38.5
|
-
|
Operating margin
|
3.7%
|
4.3%
|
- 60bps
|
Infrastructure delivered another strong performance
in the year, with both profits and margin influenced by the timing
and nature of projects delivered through its frameworks, while
still ensuring a high-quality operational delivery across the
business. Revenue increased by 18% to £1,047m (FY 2023: £887m) with
operating profit of £38.5m, in line with the prior year (FY 2023:
£38.5m) supported by an operating margin of 3.7% in the middle of
its targeted range of 3.5% - 4.0% (FY 2023: 4.3%).
Infrastructure's order book of £1,883m was 11% up
compared to the prior year (FY 2023: £1,689m). The order book
continues to remain long term in nature, with around 98% derived
through existing frameworks. The division continues to remain
focused on the key sectors of energy, nuclear, rail, highways,
water and defence, with visible opportunities in defence. Its
markets have significant long- term committed investment programmes
in place, largely driven by government and regulatory objectives.
The division continues to see its clients awarding large long-term
frameworks with its delivery partners, awarding projects focused on
delivering the strategic outcomes over the term of the
framework.
Energy
The division secured a position on the £9bn Great
Grid Partnership, as part of the Accelerated Strategic Transmission
Investment (ASTI) projects. The Great Grid Partnership will build
new electricity network infrastructure required to reduce the UK's
reliance on fossil fuels by connecting 50GW of offshore wind by
2030. In Scotland, the division secured a position as a strategic
partner on ScottishPower's £5.4bn
programme of contracts to deliver the biggest rewiring of the
electricity grid since its inception. The partnership will run for
an initial five years, with the option to extend up to 10 years.
Elsewhere, work continued at Dinorwig in Wales, and commenced at
ZA, in Hertfordshire as part of the RIIO T2 electricity
construction EPC (Engineer, Procure and Construct) framework for
National Grid. Work also continued in Shetland for Scottish and
Southern Electricity Networks (SSEN), which includes an 11km, 132KV
twin circuit underground cable project and construction of Gremista
substation; this project will play a key role in the connection of
the Viking wind farm, capable of generating 500MW.
Nuclear
Decommissioning works continued for Sellafield on
the Infrastructure Strategic Alliance and the
£1.6bn Programme and Project Partners contract. In
addition, work progressed on the 10-year Clyde Commercial Framework
for the Defence Infrastructure Organisation, while works completed
on the D58 facility for BAE Systems in the year.
Rail
The division secured a position on the CP7 Eastern
Framework for Network Rail, a £3.5bn framework which lasts through
to 2029, adding to its position on the £2bn CP7 Wales and Western
Framework secured in 2023. Announced late in 2024, the division was
appointed by Network Rail as delivery partner for the overhaul of
the Liverpool Street station roof at £22m. Work continued on the
remodelling of Colindale station for Transport for London,
including a new ticket hall and step-free access. Elsewhere, works
continued to progress on the extension to Beckton Depot and a
project to upgrade Surrey Quays station, both for Transport for
London as part of its London Rail Infrastructure Improvement
Framework.
Several schemes for Network Rail continued to
progress at pace, including the Bangor to Colwyn Bay line, as part
of the CP6 Wales and Western framework, the lift scheme at
Liverpool Central station as part of the Merseyrail framework, and
the Northumberland Line extension project.
Highways
The division continued to deliver the £87m, M27
project as part of the National Highways' Concrete Roads programme
to replace the concrete surface of motorways on major A roads in
England, while work completed on the A11 and A12 schemes, part of
the same framework, improving traffic flow and safety for local
commuters.
Water
Work continued on various environmental improvement
projects and wastewater treatment upgrades as part of the long-term
AMP7 framework with Welsh Water, and the division's 30-year plus
relationship with Welsh Water continues following its appointment
on the AMP8 framework. Adding to its water portfolio, the division
also secured a position on AMP8 with Wessex Water, as a capital
delivery partner over a five-year period. In addition, civil
engineering works continued to make good progress on the west
section of the Thames Tideway 'super sewer' project to help prevent
pollution in the River Thames, with the project on target to
complete in 2025.
Design
In the BakerHicks design business, HMP Highland
received the final go-ahead for construction. Having been involved
from the feasibility design stage, BakerHicks will continue to
deliver multi-disciplinary services, including architectural,
building information modelling (BIM), civil and structural,
mechanical and electrical, and principal designer services. The new
facility is set to be the first net zero prison in Scotland, with
improved education and health facilities to help with
rehabilitation. Work continued during the year on an innovative
feed additive facility for East Dunbartonshire Council in Dalry,
North Ayrshire to reduce methane emissions from cattle.
Divisional outlook for Infrastructure
The increased medium-term target for Infrastructure
is to deliver an operating margin between 3.75% and 4.25% per
annum, with an annual revenue target in excess of £1bn.
For the full year, based upon the timing of projects
and the projected type of work, its operating margin is expected to
be in the middle of the revised range, while revenues are expected
to be closer to £1bn. This is underpinned by their continued focus
on long-term client relationships, disciplined contract
selectivity, risk management and project delivery.
1 Design results are reported
within Infrastructure

1.
Net finance income.Net
finance income was £9.9m, an increase of £6.6m compared to FY
2023.
|
FY 2024
|
FY 2023
|
Change
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Interest income on bank
deposits
|
17.4
|
10.8
|
+6.6
|
Interest receivable from joint
ventures
|
0.8
|
-
|
+0.8
|
Loan arrangement and commitment
fees
|
(2.2)
|
(2.0)
|
-0.2
|
Interest expense on lease
liabilities
|
(3.8)
|
(2.5)
|
-1.3
|
Other
|
(2.3)
|
(3.0)
|
+0.7
|
Total net finance
income
|
9.9
|
3.3
|
+6.6
|
2.
Tax.A reported tax charge
of £40.2m is shown for the year (FY 2023: £26.2m). This equates to
an effective tax rate of 23.4% on profit before tax. The adjusted
tax charge is £42.0m (FY 2023: £29.9m).
|
FY 2024
|
FY 2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Profit before tax
|
171.9
|
143.9
|
Less: share of
underlying1 net profit of joint ventures
|
(4.5)
|
(14.1)
|
Profit before tax
excluding joint ventures
|
167.4
|
129.8
|
Statutory tax rate
|
25%
|
23.5%
|
Current tax charge
at statutory rate
|
(41.9)
|
(30.5)
|
Tax on underlying1
joint venture profits2
|
(1.5)
|
(2.6)
|
Tax on exceptional items
|
1.6
|
1.5
|
Other non-deductible expenses
|
0.2
|
0.7
|
Prior year adjustments
|
1.6
|
4.2
|
Other adjustments
|
(0.2)
|
0.5
|
Tax charge as
reported
|
(40.2)
|
(26.2)
|
Tax on amortisation
|
(0.1)
|
(0.7)
|
Tax on exceptional items
|
(1.7)
|
(3.0)
|
Adjusted tax
charge
|
(42.0)
|
(29.9)
|
1 Underlying net profit of
joint ventures excludes the exceptional building safety charge of
£1.4m related to joint ventures (FY 2023: credit of £4.1m).
2 Certain of the Group's
joint ventures are partnerships for which profits are taxed within
the Group rather than within the joint venture.
|
3.
Net working capital.'Net
Working Capital' is defined as 'Inventories plus Trade & Other
Receivables (including Contract Assets), less Trade & Other
Payables (including Contract Liabilities)' adjusted as below.
|
FY 2024
|
FY 2023
|
Change
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Inventories
|
476.0
|
344.7
|
+131.3
|
Trade & Other Receivables1
|
664.2
|
713.5
|
-49.3
|
Trade & Other Payables2
|
(1,256.8)
|
(1,210.7)
|
-46.1
|
Net working
capital
|
(116.6)
|
(152.5)
|
+35.9
|
1 Adjusted to exclude
capitalised arrangement fees and accrued interest receivable of
£2.3m (FY 2023: £2.2m).
2 Adjusted to exclude accrued
interest payable of £0.5m (FY 2023: £0.3m).
4.
Cash flow. Operating cash
flow was an inflow of £134.8m (FY 2023: inflow of £189.0m). Free
cash flow was an inflow of £107.0m (FY 2023: inflow of
£171.4m).
|
FY 2024
|
FY 2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Operating profit -
adjusted
|
162.6
|
141.3
|
Depreciation
|
33.1
|
26.8
|
Share option expense
|
10.5
|
6.6
|
Reversal of impairment of joint
venture
|
(5.1)
|
-
|
Share of underlying1
net profit of joint ventures
|
(4.6)
|
(14.1)
|
Other operating items
2
|
10.0
|
0.9
|
Change in working capital3&4
|
(33.8)
|
59.7
|
Net capital
expenditure (including repayment of
finance leases)
|
(42.1)
|
(33.8)
|
Dividends and interest received
from joint ventures
|
4.2
|
1.6
|
Operating cash
flow
|
134.8
|
189.0
|
Income taxes paid
|
(43.9)
|
(25.2)
|
Net interest received (non-joint
venture)
|
16.1
|
7.6
|
Free cash
flow
|
107.0
|
171.4
|
1 'Underlying net profit of
joint ventures' excludes the exceptional building safety charge of
£1.4m related to joint ventures (FY 2023: credit of £4.1m).
2 'Other operating items'
includes increase on building safety receivable (£9.3m) and
increase in provisions (£8.7m) less building safety provision
movements (£7.3m) and a gain on disposal of PPE
(£0.7m).
3 'Change in working capital'
excludes movement on building safety receivable (£9.3m).
4 Includes net investment in
Partnership Housing activities of £100.4m.
5.
Net cash.Net cash at 31
December 2024 was £492.4m, as a result of a net cash inflow of
£31.7m from 1 January 2024, with movements summarised as:
£m
|
Net cash at 1
January 2024
|
460.7
|
Free cash flow (as above)
|
107.0
|
Dividends
|
(56.1)
|
Other1
|
(19.2)
|
Net cash at 31
December 2024
|
492.4
|
1 'Other' includes the
purchase of shares in the Company by the employee benefit trust
(£47.2m) and net capital advances to JVs (£1.2m) less proceeds from
the exercise of share options (£19.5m) and proceeds from the issue
of new shares (£9.7m).
6.
Capital employed by strategic
activity.An analysis of capital employed in the Partnershipactivities shows an increase
of £99.0m since the prior period, split as follows:
Capital employed1,2 in Partnerships
|
FY 2024
£m
|
FY 2023
£m
|
Change
£m
|
Partnership Housing
|
318.7
|
234.4
|
+84.3
|
Mixed Use Partnerships
|
94.4
|
79.7
|
+14.7
|
|
413.1
|
314.1
|
+99.0
|
1 Total assets (excluding
goodwill, intangibles, inter-company financing and cash) less total
liabilities (excluding corporation tax, deferred tax, inter-company
financing and overdrafts).
2 Adjusted to exclude
building safety receivables and provisions.
An analysis of the capital employed in Construction Servicesand Fit Outshows a decrease of £56.6m since
the prior period, split as follows:
Capital employed1,2 in Construction Services and
Fit Out
|
FY 2024
£m
|
FY 2023
£m
|
Change
£m
|
Construction
|
(250.1)
|
(216.5)
|
-33.6
|
Infrastructure
|
(80.6)
|
(87.0)
|
+6.4
|
Fit Out
|
(96.6)
|
(105.6)
|
+9.0
|
Property Services
|
22.4
|
60.8
|
-38.4
|
|
(404.9)
|
(348.3)
|
-56.6
|
7.
Exceptional Building Safety
charge. The total exceptional building safety charge of
£0.1m arose as a result of a better estimate of expected costs and
recoveries. This includes a charge of £1.4m that has been
recognised in respect of the Group's share of constructive and
legal obligations to remediate legacy building safety issues within
JVs, and this has been recognised within the Group's share of net
profit of joint ventures. A net credit of £1.3m has been recognised
in cost of sales.
|
FY 2024
£m
|
FY 2023
£m
|
Net additions on building safety
provisions
|
(8.0)
|
(18.4)
|
Insurance and recoveries
recognised in receivables
|
9.3
|
16.5
|
Exceptional building safety
credit/(charge) within cost of sales
|
1.3
|
(1.9)
|
Exceptional building safety
(charge)/credit within joint ventures
|
(1.4)
|
4.1
|
Total exceptional building safety (charge)/credit
|
(0.1)
|
2.2
|
8.
Dividends.The Board of
Directors has proposed a final dividend of 90.0p per share, an
increase of 15% on the prior year final dividend (FY 2023: 78.0p).
This will be paid on 15 May 2025 to shareholders on the register on
25 April 2025. The ex-dividend date will be 24 April 2025.
9.
Principal risks and
uncertainties.The Board continues to take a proactive
approach to recognising and mitigating risk with the aim of
protecting and safeguarding the interests of the Group and its
shareholders in the changing environment in which it operates.
Details of the principal risks facing the Group and
mitigating actions will be included in the 2024 Annual Report which
will be published on 20 March 2025. The following are still
considered to be relevant risks and uncertainties for the Group at
this time and are summarised below (in no order of magnitude):
Economic change
and uncertainty- UK construction continues to benefit from
sustained government investment commitments. This continues to
support the Group's market sectors which remain structurally secure
particularly in housing, mixed use schemes, construction and
infrastructure (primary areas in the UK targeted for growth). In
addition, the Group's diversity of offering and strong balance
sheet protects the business from cyclical changes in individual
markets.
Exposure to UK
residential market - The Group's long-term public sector
partnerships models, Government commitments and the UKs Affordable
Housing need complement its product position. Prior headwinds have
slightly eased during the reporting period and there are some signs
of recovery in the market, although interest rate trajectory will
likely impact scale and timing. Planning constraints continue to
contribute to reduced sales volumes and in Regeneration, cost
inflation on some schemes is impacting viability in turn slowing
down conversion.
Health and safety
incident- Failure to protect the health, safety and
wellbeing of its key stakeholders could damage the Group's
reputation as a responsible employer and affect its ability to
secure future work.
Talent attraction
and retention- Talented people are needed to provide
excellence in project delivery and customer service. Skills
shortages in the construction industry will remain an issue for the
foreseeable future.
Partner insolvency
or adverse change of behaviour- There is a heightened risk
of supply chain partners trading with strained finances as a result
of prior macro challenges and more recent main contractor demise.
Whilst such failures have been limited to date, our teams are
acutely aware and have increased due diligence activities as well
as providing help and assistance where appropriate. In some
limited circumstances we have supported key partners
with more favourable terms to assist their cash flow while
obtaining assurance on production progress and forms of
guarantee.
Inadequate funding
- A lack of liquidity could impact our ability to continue
to trade or restrict our ability to achieve market growth or invest
in regeneration schemes.
Mismanagement of
working capital and investments - Poor management of working
capital and investments leads to insufficient liquidity and funding
problems.
Poor contract
selectivity and/or bidding - The quality of the Group's
public and regulated industry sectors should safeguard future
performance, allowing the Group to continue selecting the right
projects and in sectors where it has proven capability. Post
inflationary customer budgets are now more realistic but, in some
instances, do result in preconstruction periods taking longer.
Poor project
delivery -Improved inflationary backdrop is allowing bids to
include sensible contingency allowances. In addition, the Group's
longstanding supply chain relationships and focus on customer
experience continue to mitigate any significant issues and disputes
should they arise.
Cyber activity/
failure to invest in IT - Cybercrime continues its
prevalence and to counter this the Group's investment in IT
continues to increase in order to meet the future needs of the
business in terms of expected growth, security, and innovation, and
enables its long-term success. It is also essential to avoid
reputational and operational impacts and loss of data that could
result in significant fines and/or prosecution.
Climate
change - Failure to protect the environment in which we work
by reducing carbon emissions and waste and to fully consider
potential environmental risks on projects could cause delays to
projects and damage the Group's reputation.
Cautionary forward-looking statement
These results
contain forward-looking statements based on current expectations
and assumptions. Various known and unknown risks, uncertainties and
other factors may cause actual results to differ from any future
results or developments expressed or implied from the
forward-looking statements. Each forward-looking statement speaks
only as of the date of this document. The Group accepts no
obligation to publicly revise or update these forward-looking
statements or adjust them to future events or developments, whether
as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except
to the extent legally required.
Consolidated income statement
For the year ended 31 December
2024
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
Revenue
|
|
4,546.2
|
4,117.7
|
Cost of sales
|
|
(4,016.3)
|
(3,670.1)
|
Gross profit
|
|
529.9
|
447.6
|
Analysed as:
|
|
|
|
Adjusted Gross profit
|
|
528.6
|
449.5
|
Exceptional building safety
items
|
3
|
1.3
|
(1.9)
|
Impairment loss on contract
assets
|
|
(21.0)
|
(2.8)
|
Administrative expenses
|
|
(360.0)
|
(324.0)
|
Share of net profit of joint
ventures
|
|
3.2
|
18.2
|
Other operating income
|
|
9.9
|
1.6
|
Operating profit
|
|
162.0
|
140.6
|
Analysed as:
|
|
|
|
Adjusted Operating profit
|
|
162.6
|
141.3
|
Exceptional building safety
items
|
3
|
(0.1)
|
2.2
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
|
(0.5)
|
(2.9)
|
Finance income
|
|
18.2
|
10.8
|
Finance expense
|
|
(8.3)
|
(7.5)
|
Profit before tax
|
|
171.9
|
143.9
|
Analysed as:
|
|
|
|
Adjusted Profit before
tax
|
|
172.5
|
144.6
|
Exceptional building safety
items
|
3
|
(0.1)
|
2.2
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
|
(0.5)
|
(2.9)
|
Tax
|
4
|
(40.2)
|
(26.2)
|
Profit for the year
|
|
131.7
|
117.7
|
Attributable to:
|
|
|
|
Owners of the Company
|
|
131.7
|
117.7
|
Earnings per share
|
|
|
|
Basic
|
6
|
281.4p
|
254.2p
|
Diluted
|
6
|
271.5p
|
250.4p
|
There were no discontinued
operations in either the current or comparative years.
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income
For the year ended 31 December
2024
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Profit for the year
|
131.7
|
117.7
|
Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or
loss:
|
|
|
Foreign exchange movement on
translation of overseas operations
|
(0.3)
|
0.2
|
Net (loss)/gain arising on
revaluation of cash flow hedges
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
|
(0.4)
|
0.2
|
Other comprehensive (expense)/income
|
(0.4)
|
0.2
|
Total comprehensive income
|
131.3
|
117.9
|
Attributable to:
|
|
|
Owners of the Company
|
131.3
|
117.9
|
Consolidated statement of financial position
At 31 December 2024
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
Goodwill and other intangible
assets
|
|
218.1
|
218.6
|
Property, plant and equipment
|
|
95.1
|
86.0
|
Investment property
|
|
0.6
|
0.8
|
Investments in joint ventures
|
7
|
111.9
|
106.6
|
Non-current assets
|
|
425.7
|
412.0
|
Inventories
|
|
476.0
|
344.7
|
Contract assets
|
|
224.6
|
270.6
|
Trade and other receivables
|
8
|
453.5
|
461.6
|
Current tax assets
|
|
6.6
|
-
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
12
|
544.2
|
541.3
|
Current assets
|
|
1,704.9
|
1,618.2
|
Total assets
|
|
2,130.6
|
2,030.2
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
Contract liabilities
|
|
(110.4)
|
(95.8)
|
Trade and other payables
|
9
|
(1,130.3)
|
(1,087.0)
|
Current tax liabilities
|
|
-
|
(1.9)
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
(22.6)
|
(19.1)
|
Borrowings
|
12
|
(51.8)
|
(80.6)
|
Provisions
|
10
|
(85.1)
|
(76.7)
|
Current liabilities
|
|
(1,400.2)
|
(1,361.1)
|
Net current assets
|
|
304.7
|
257.1
|
Trade and other payables
|
9
|
(16.6)
|
(28.2)
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
(44.1)
|
(44.7)
|
Deferred tax liabilities
|
|
(2.1)
|
(8.7)
|
Provisions
|
10
|
(20.4)
|
(19.4)
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
(83.2)
|
(101.0)
|
Total liabilities
|
|
(1,483.4)
|
(1,462.1)
|
Net assets
|
|
647.2
|
568.1
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
|
2.4
|
2.4
|
Share premium account
|
|
65.7
|
56.0
|
Other reserves
|
|
0.9
|
1.3
|
Retained earnings
|
|
578.2
|
508.4
|
Equity attributable to owners of the Company
|
|
647.2
|
568.1
|
Total equity
|
|
647.2
|
568.1
|
Consolidated cash flow statement
For the year ended 31 December
2024
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
Operating activities
|
|
|
|
Operating profit
|
|
162.0
|
140.6
|
Adjusted for:
|
|
|
|
Exceptional building safety
items
|
|
2.1
|
13.7
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
|
0.5
|
2.9
|
Underlying share of net profit of
equity accounted joint ventures
|
|
(4.6)
|
(14.1)
|
Depreciation
|
|
33.1
|
26.8
|
Share-based payments
|
|
10.5
|
6.6
|
Gain on disposal of property,
plant and equipment
|
|
(0.7)
|
(0.1)
|
Reversal of impairment on
investments in joint ventures
|
|
(5.1)
|
-
|
Repayment of shared equity loan
receivables
|
|
-
|
0.4
|
Increase in provisions excluding
exceptional building safety items
|
10
|
8.7
|
1.4
|
Additional pension contributions
|
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
Operating cash inflow before movements in working
capital
|
|
206.5
|
178.0
|
Increase in inventories
|
|
(131.3)
|
(10.8)
|
Decrease in contract assets
|
|
46.0
|
24.0
|
Decrease/(increase)
in receivables
|
|
7.8
|
(107.8)
|
Increase in contract liabilities
|
|
14.6
|
21.6
|
Increase in payables
|
|
29.1
|
116.2
|
Movements in working capital
|
|
(33.8)
|
43.2
|
Cash inflow from operations
|
|
172.7
|
221.2
|
Income taxes paid
|
|
(43.9)
|
(25.2)
|
Net cash inflow from operating activities
|
|
128.8
|
196.0
|
Investing activities
|
|
|
|
Interest received
|
|
18.0
|
10.0
|
Dividends from joint ventures
|
|
4.2
|
1.6
|
Proceeds on disposal of property,
plant and equipment
|
|
1.9
|
2.0
|
Purchases of property, plant and
equipment
|
|
(18.2)
|
(14.3)
|
Purchases of intangible fixed
assets
|
|
-
|
(0.3)
|
Capital advances to joint
ventures
|
|
(29.1)
|
(44.2)
|
Capital repayments from joint
ventures
|
|
27.9
|
34.2
|
Net cash inflow/(outflow) from investing activities
|
|
4.7
|
(11.0)
|
Financing activities
|
|
|
|
Interest paid
|
|
(1.9)
|
(2.4)
|
Dividends paid
|
5
|
(56.1)
|
(48.1)
|
Repayments of lease liabilities
|
|
(25.8)
|
(21.2)
|
Proceeds on issue of share
capital
|
|
9.7
|
0.1
|
Payments by the Trust to acquire
shares in the Company
|
|
(47.2)
|
(11.3)
|
Proceeds on exercise of share
options
|
|
19.5
|
4.0
|
Net cash outflow from financing activities
|
|
(101.8)
|
(78.9)
|
Net increase in cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
31.7
|
106.1
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the
beginning of the year
|
|
460.7
|
354.6
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year
|
12
|
492.4
|
460.7
|
Cash and cash equivalents presented in the Consolidated cash
flow statement include bank overdrafts. See note 12 for a
reconciliation to Cash and cash equivalents presented in the
Consolidated statement of financial position.
|
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
For the year ended 31 December
2024
|
Share capital
|
Share premium account
|
Other reserves
|
Retained earnings
|
Total equity
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
1 January 2023
|
2.4
|
55.9
|
1.1
|
436.8
|
496.2
|
Profit for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
117.7
|
117.7
|
Other comprehensive income
|
-
|
-
|
0.2
|
-
|
0.2
|
Total comprehensive income
|
-
|
-
|
0.2
|
117.7
|
117.9
|
Share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
6.6
|
6.6
|
Tax relating to share-based
payments1
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2.7
|
2.7
|
Issue of shares at a premium
|
-
|
0.1
|
-
|
-
|
0.1
|
Purchase of shares in the Company
by the Trust
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(11.3)
|
(11.3)
|
Exercise of share options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
4.0
|
4.0
|
Dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(48.1)
|
(48.1)
|
1
January 2024
|
2.4
|
56.0
|
1.3
|
508.4
|
568.1
|
Profit for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
131.7
|
131.7
|
Other comprehensive expense
|
-
|
-
|
(0.4)
|
-
|
(0.4)
|
Total comprehensive (expense)/income
|
-
|
-
|
(0.4)
|
131.7
|
131.3
|
Share-based payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
10.5
|
10.5
|
Tax relating to share-based
payments1
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
11.4
|
11.4
|
Issue of shares at a premium
|
-
|
9.7
|
-
|
-
|
9.7
|
Purchase of shares in the Company
by the Trust
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(47.2)
|
(47.2)
|
Exercise of share options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
19.5
|
19.5
|
Dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(56.1)
|
(56.1)
|
31 December 2024
|
2.4
|
65.7
|
0.9
|
578.2
|
647.2
|
1 Tax relating to share-based payments includes a current tax
credit of £5.8m (2023: £nil) and a deferred tax credit of £5.6m
(2023: credit of
£2.7m).
Notes to the consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
1 Basis of
preparation
General information
The financial information for the
year ended 31 December 2024 set out above does not constitute the
Company's statutory accounts as defined by section 434 of the
Companies Act 2006. A copy of the statutory accounts for 2023 was
delivered to the Registrar of Companies and those for 2024 will be
delivered following the Company's Annual General Meeting. The
auditor reported on those accounts: their report was unqualified,
did not draw attention to any matters by way of emphasis without
qualifying their report and did not contain a statement under
s498(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.
This preliminary announcement has
been prepared solely to assist shareholders in assessing the
strategies of the Board and in gauging their potential to succeed.
It should not be relied on by any other party or for other
purposes. Forward looking statements have been made by the
directors in good faith based on the information available to them
up to the time of their approval of this preliminary announcement.
Such statements should be treated with caution due to the inherent
uncertainties, including both economic and business factors,
underlying any such forward looking information. Actual future
results may differ materially from those expressed in or implied by
these statements.
While the financial information
included in this preliminary announcement was prepared in
accordance with the recognition and measurement criteria of UK
adopted International Accounting Standards ('IAS') and
International Financial Reporting Standards ('IFRS'), this
announcement does not itself contain sufficient information to
comply with IFRS.
The consolidated financial
statements will be available in March 2025. A copy will be
delivered to the Registrar of Companies following the Company's
Annual General Meeting.
Further information on the Group, including the slide
presentation document which will be presented at the Group's
results meeting on 26 February 2025, can be found on the Group's
corporate website www.morgansindall.com.
Going concern
In determining the appropriate
basis of preparation of the financial statements, the directors are
required to consider whether the Group and Company can continue in
operational existence during the going concern period, which the
directors have determined to be until 28 February 2026.
As at 31 December 2024, the Group
held cash of £544.2m, including £23.1m (2023: £26.1m) which is the
Group's share of cash held within jointly controlled operations,
and total overdrafts repayable on demand of £51.8m (together net
cash of £492.4m). Should further funding be required, the Group has
significant committed financial resources available including
unutilised bank facilities of £180m (2023: £180m), of which £165m
matures in October 2027 and £15m matures in June 2027. The Group's
secured order book at 31 December 2024 is £11.4bn (2023: £8.9bn),
of which £4.1bn relates to the 12 months ended 31 December
2025.
The directors have reviewed the
Group's forecasts and projections for the going concern period,
including sensitivity analysis to assess the Group's resilience to
the potential financial impact on the Group of any plausible losses
of revenue or operating profit which could arise from one of the
principal risks to the business occurring. The analysis also
includes a reasonable worst-case scenario in which the Group's
principal risks manifest in aggregate to a severe but plausible
level involving the aggregation of the impacts of a number of these
risks. The modelling showed that the Group would remain profitable
throughout the going concern period and there is considerable
headroom above lending facilities such that there would be no
expected requirement for the Group to utilise the bank facility,
which underpins the going concern assumption on which these
financial statements have been prepared. As part of the sensitivity
analysis the directors also modelled a scenario that stress tests
the Group's forecasts and projections, to determine the scenario in
which the headroom above the committed bank facility would be
exceeded. This model showed that the Group's operating profit would
need to deteriorate substantially for the headroom to exceed the
committed bank facility. The directors consider there is no
plausible scenario where cash inflows would deteriorate this
significantly. However, as part of their analysis the Board also considered further mitigating actions
at their discretion, such as a reduction in investments in working
capital, to improve the position identified by the reasonable
worst-case scenario. In all scenarios, including the reasonable
worst case, the Group is able to comply with its financial
covenants, operate within its current facilities, and meet its
liabilities as they fall due.
Accordingly, the directors consider
there to be no material uncertainties that may cast significant
doubt on the Group's ability to continue to operate as a going
concern. They have formed a judgement that there is a reasonable
expectation that the Group and Company have adequate resources to
continue in operational existence for the going concern period
which they determine to be until 28 February 2026. For this reason,
they continue to adopt the going concern basis in the preparation
of these financial statements. The period until 28 February 2026
has been assessed as appropriate following consideration of the
budgeting cycles and typical contract lengths undertaken across the
Group.
Changes in accounting policies
There have been no significant
changes to accounting policies, presentation or methods of
preparation since the Group's latest annual audited financial
statements for the year ended 31 December 2023.
2 Business segments
For management
purposes, the Group is organised into six operating divisions:
Partnership Housing, Mixed Use Partnerships, Fit Out, Construction,
Infrastructure and Property Services, and this is the structure of
segment information reviewed by the Chief Operating Decision Maker
(CODM). The CODM is determined to be the Board of directors and
reporting provided to the Board is in line with these six
divisions, which have been considered to be the Group's operating
segments.
The
six operating divisions' activities are as follows:
·
Partnership Housing:
Lovell Partnerships Limited is focused on working in partnerships
with local authorities and housing associations. Activities include
mixed-tenure developments, building and developing homes for open
market sales and for social/affordable rent, design and build house
contracting and planned maintenance and refurbishment.
·
Mixed Use Partnerships: Muse
Places Limited is focused on transforming the urban landscape
through partnership working and the development of multi-phase
sites and mixed-use regeneration.
·
Fit Out: Overbury plc
specialises in fit out and refurbishment in commercial, central and
local government offices and further education. Morgan Lovell plc
provides office interior design and build services direct to
occupiers.
·
Construction: Morgan Sindall
Construction focuses on education, healthcare, commercial,
industrial, leisure and retail markets.
·
Infrastructure: Morgan
Sindall Infrastructure focuses on energy, nuclear, rail, highways,
water and defence markets. Infrastructure also includes the
BakerHicks design activities based out of the UK and Switzerland.
· Property
Services: Morgan Sindall Property Services Limited provides
response and planned maintenance for social housing and the wider
public sector.
Group
activities represent costs and income arising from corporate
activities which cannot be meaningfully allocated to the operating
segments. These include the costs of the Group Board, treasury
management, corporate tax coordination, Group finance and internal
audit, insurance management, company secretarial services, Group
general counsel services, information technology services, finance
income and finance expense.
Notes to the consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
The Group reports its segmental
information as presented below:
Year ended 31 December 2024
|
Partnership
Housing
|
Mixed Use Partnerships
|
Fit Out
|
Construction
|
Infrastructure
|
Property Services
|
Group Activities
|
Eliminations
|
Total
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
External revenue
|
855.9
|
90.5
|
1,299.2
|
1,043.3
|
1,034.1
|
223.2
|
-
|
-
|
4,546.2
|
Inter-segment revenue
|
5.3
|
-
|
1.1
|
0.8
|
12.9
|
-
|
-
|
(20.1)
|
-
|
Total revenue
|
861.2
|
90.5
|
1,300.3
|
1,044.1
|
1,047.0
|
223.2
|
-
|
(20.1)
|
4,546.2
|
Impairment loss on contract
assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(21.0)
|
-
|
-
|
(21.0)
|
Adjusted operating profit/(loss) (note
15)
|
36.1
|
1.5
|
99.0
|
30.9
|
38.5
|
(17.8)
|
(25.6)
|
-
|
162.6
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.5)
|
-
|
-
|
(0.5)
|
Exceptional operating items
|
(2.7)
|
5.9
|
-
|
0.1
|
-
|
(3.4)
|
-
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
33.4
|
7.4
|
99.0
|
31.0
|
38.5
|
(21.7)
|
(25.6)
|
-
|
162.0
|
Finance income
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
18.2
|
Finance expense
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(8.3)
|
Profit before tax
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
171.9
|
Other information:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation
|
(2.6)
|
(0.8)
|
(3.0)
|
(2.5)
|
(18.9)
|
(4.2)
|
(1.1)
|
-
|
(33.1)
|
Average number of employees
|
1,193
|
108
|
1,121
|
1,533
|
3,080
|
1,097
|
110
|
-
|
8,242
|
Notes to the consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
Year ended 31 December 2023
|
Partnership
Housing
|
Mixed Use Partnerships
|
Fit Out
|
Construction
|
Infrastructure
|
Property Services
|
Group Activities
|
Eliminations
|
Total
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
External revenue
|
821.2
|
185.3
|
1,104.8
|
945.2
|
876.0
|
185.2
|
-
|
-
|
4,117.7
|
Inter-segment revenue
|
16.3
|
-
|
0.4
|
21.4
|
10.7
|
-
|
-
|
(48.8)
|
-
|
Total revenue
|
837.5
|
185.3
|
1,105.2
|
966.6
|
886.7
|
185.2
|
-
|
(48.8)
|
4,117.7
|
Impairment loss on contract
assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2.8)
|
-
|
-
|
(2.8)
|
Adjusted operating profit/(loss)
(note 15)
|
30.5
|
14.8
|
71.8
|
25.9
|
38.5
|
(16.8)
|
(23.4)
|
-
|
141.3
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2.9)
|
-
|
-
|
(2.9)
|
Exceptional operating items
|
-
|
13.7
|
-
|
(11.5)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2.2
|
Operating profit/(loss)
|
30.5
|
28.5
|
71.8
|
14.4
|
38.5
|
(19.7)
|
(23.4)
|
-
|
140.6
|
Finance income
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
10.8
|
Finance expense
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(7.5)
|
Profit before tax
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
143.9
|
Other information:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation
|
(2.4)
|
(1.1)
|
(2.9)
|
(2.5)
|
(14.6)
|
(2.6)
|
(0.7)
|
-
|
(26.8)
|
Average number of
employees
|
1,131
|
97
|
1,031
|
1,430
|
2,788
|
1,105
|
107
|
-
|
7,689
|
Segment assets and liabilities are
not presented as these are not reported to the CODM.
Notes to the consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
3 Exceptional building safety
items
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
Net additions on building safety
provisions
|
10
|
(8.0)
|
(18.4)
|
Insurance and recoveries
recognised in receivables
|
|
9.3
|
16.5
|
Exceptional building safety
credit/(charge) within cost of sales
|
|
1.3
|
(1.9)
|
Exceptional building safety
(charge)/credit within joint ventures
|
7
|
(1.4)
|
4.1
|
Total exceptional building safety
(charge)/credit
|
|
(0.1)
|
2.2
|
During 2022 the Partnership
Housing division signed the Developers Pledge (the "Pledge") with
the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government ("MHCLG")
(then the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities
("DLUHC")) setting out the principles under which life critical
fire-safety issues on buildings that they have developed of 11
metres and above are to be remediated. A letter was also received
from DLUHC requesting information to assess whether it may be
appropriate for Mixed Use Partnerships to also commit to the
principles of the Pledge as part of its commitment to support the
remediation of historic cladding and fire safety defects over and
above its obligations under the new Building Safety Act. The Group
subsequently signed the Developer Remediation Contract in March
2023 on behalf of all of its divisions.
An exceptional charge of £48.9m
was recognised in 2022 due to the materiality and irregular nature
of creating provisions arising because of the Pledge.
In the current year, the legal and
constructive obligations related to the Pledge (including
reimbursement of grants provided by the Building Safety Fund), the
Building Safety Act and associated fire safety regulations have
been reassessed based on further information. The overall movement
in the building safety items is a net charge of £0.1m and is shown
separately as an exceptional item consistent with prior year
treatment.
Included in the £0.1m exceptional
building safety charge (2023: £2.2m credit) is a £1.4m charge
(2023: £4.1m credit) that has been recognised in respect of the
Group's share of constructive and legal obligations to remediate
legacy building safety issues within joint ventures, and this has
been recognised within the Group's share of net profit of joint
ventures. The remaining net credit of £1.3m (2023: £1.9m charge)
has been recognised in cost of sales.
At the reporting date the Group
had not yet made any reimbursements to the Building Safety Fund for
amounts previously granted and drawn on any of the developments for
which the Group has taken responsibility for. As notified by the
DLUHC, any repayments will only be requested upon final completion
of all the relevant works. On this basis, any repayments are only
likely to commence towards the middle of 2025 at the
earliest.
Notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
4 Tax
Tax expense for the year
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Current tax:
|
|
|
Current year
|
40.1
|
16.9
|
Adjustment in respect of prior
years
|
1.1
|
4.7
|
|
41.2
|
21.6
|
Deferred tax:
|
|
|
Current year
|
1.7
|
13.5
|
Adjustment in respect of prior
years
|
(2.7)
|
(8.9)
|
|
(1.0)
|
4.6
|
|
|
|
Tax expense for the year
|
40.2
|
26.2
|
UK corporation tax is calculated
at 25.0% (2023: 23.5%) of the estimated taxable profit for the
year. The table below reconciles the tax charge for the year to tax
at the UK statutory rate:
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
Profit before tax
|
|
171.9
|
143.9
|
Less: post-tax share of profits
from joint ventures
|
7
|
(4.5)
|
(14.1)
|
|
|
167.4
|
129.8
|
UK corporation tax rate
|
|
25.00%
|
23.50%
|
Income tax expense at UK
corporation tax rate
|
|
41.9
|
30.5
|
Tax effect of:
|
|
|
|
Adjustments in respect of prior
years:
|
|
|
|
Relating to exceptional
Items
|
|
-
|
(2.0)
|
Other
|
|
(1.6)
|
(2.2)
|
Expenses for which no tax relief
is recognised:
|
|
|
|
Proportion of exceptional
items
|
|
(1.6)
|
(1.5)
|
Proportion of share-based
payments
|
|
(0.8)
|
(1.3)
|
Other non-deductible expenses
|
|
0.6
|
0.6
|
Tax liability upon underlying
joint venture profits1
|
|
1.5
|
2.6
|
Other
|
|
0.2
|
(0.5)
|
Tax expense for the year
|
|
40.2
|
26.2
|
1 Certain of the Group's joint ventures are partnerships for
which profits are taxed within the Group rather than within the
joint venture.
Notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
5 Dividends
Amounts recognised as
distributions to equity holders in the year:
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Final dividend for the year ended
31 December 2023 of 78p per share
|
36.5
|
-
|
Final dividend for the year ended
31 December 2022 of 68p per share
|
-
|
31.5
|
Interim dividend for the year
ended 31 December 2024 of 41.5p per share
|
19.6
|
-
|
Interim dividend for the year
ended 31 December 2023 of 36p per share
|
-
|
16.6
|
|
56.1
|
48.1
|
The proposed final dividend for
the year ended 31 December 2024 of 90.0p per share is subject to
approval by shareholders at the AGM and has not been included as a
liability in these financial statements.
6 Earnings per share
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
Profit attributable to the owners
of the Company
|
|
131.7
|
117.7
|
Adjustments:
|
|
|
|
Exceptional building safety
items
|
3
|
0.1
|
(2.2)
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
|
0.5
|
2.9
|
Tax relating to the above
adjustments
|
|
(1.8)
|
(3.7)
|
Adjusted earnings
|
|
130.5
|
114.7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Number of
shares (millions)
|
Number
of
shares
(millions)
|
Basic weighted average number of
ordinary shares
|
|
46.8
|
46.3
|
Dilutive effect of share options
and conditional shares not vested
|
|
1.7
|
0.7
|
Diluted weighted average number of
ordinary shares
|
|
48.5
|
47.0
|
Basic earnings per share
|
|
281.4p
|
254.2p
|
Diluted earnings per share
|
|
271.5p
|
250.4p
|
Adjusted earnings per share
|
|
278.8p
|
247.7p
|
Diluted adjusted earnings per
share
|
|
269.1p
|
244.0p
|
The average market value of the
Company's shares for the purpose of calculating the dilutive effect
of share options and long-term incentive plan shares was based on
quoted market prices for the year. The average share price for the
year was £28.05 (2023: £18.57).
A total of 1,806 share options
that could potentially dilute earnings per share in the future were
excluded from the above calculations because they were
anti-dilutive at 31 December 2024 (2023: 2,535,887).
Notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
7 Investments in joint
ventures
Investments in equity-accounted
joint ventures are as follows:
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
1
January
|
|
106.6
|
84.0
|
Equity-accounted share of net
profits:
|
|
|
|
Underlying share of net
profits
|
|
4.6
|
14.1
|
Exceptional building safety
(charge)/credit
|
3
|
(1.4)
|
4.1
|
|
|
3.2
|
18.2
|
Capital advances to joint
ventures
|
|
29.1
|
44.2
|
Capital repayments by joint
ventures
|
|
(27.9)
|
(34.2)
|
Non-cash impairment reversal -
other operating income
|
|
5.1
|
-
|
Dividends received
|
|
(4.2)
|
(1.6)
|
Reclassification from funding
obligations payable
|
|
-
|
(4.0)
|
End of period
|
|
111.9
|
106.6
|
During 2024, an exceptional
building safety charge of £1.4m (2023: credit of £4.1m) has been
recognised in respect of the Group's share of constructive and
legal obligations to remediate legacy building safety issues within
joint ventures.
8 Trade and other receivables
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
Amounts falling due within one year
|
|
|
|
Trade receivables
|
|
300.2
|
320.9
|
Amounts owed by joint ventures
|
13
|
15.8
|
21.1
|
Prepayments
|
|
16.1
|
17.8
|
Insurance receivables
|
|
23.1
|
21.7
|
Other receivables
|
|
29.0
|
31.3
|
|
|
384.2
|
412.8
|
Amounts falling due after more than one year
|
|
|
|
Trade receivables
|
|
69.3
|
48.8
|
|
|
69.3
|
48.8
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other receivables
|
|
453.5
|
461.6
|
The directors consider that the
carrying amount of trade and other receivables approximates to
their fair value. Trade receivables are stated after provisions for
impairment losses of £1.3m (2023: £1.5m).
Retentions held by customers for
contract work included within trade receivables at 31 December 2024
were
£129.1m (2023: £105.3m). These
will be collected in the normal operating cycle of the company
including £69.3m (2023: £48.8m) that fall due in more than one
year. The company manages the collection of retentions through its
post completion project monitoring procedures and ongoing contact
with clients to ensure that potential issues that could lead to the
non-payment of retentions are identified and addressed
promptly.
The Group holds third party
insurances that may mitigate the contract and legal liabilities
described in note 10 - Provisions and note 11 - Contingent
liabilities. Insurance receivables are recognised when
reimbursement from insurers is virtually certain.
Notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
9 Trade and other payables
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
Trade payables
|
|
211.1
|
202.2
|
Amounts owed to joint ventures
|
13
|
0.2
|
0.2
|
Other tax and social security
|
|
139.3
|
142.8
|
Accrued expenses
|
|
729.8
|
703.9
|
Deferred income
|
|
7.1
|
3.8
|
Land creditors
|
|
30.8
|
20.7
|
Other payables
|
|
12.0
|
13.4
|
Current
|
|
1,130.3
|
1,087.0
|
Land creditors
|
|
15.3
|
25.5
|
Other payables
|
|
1.3
|
2.7
|
Non-current
|
|
16.6
|
28.2
|
The directors consider that the
carrying amount of trade payables approximates to their fair value.
No interest was incurred on outstanding balances. Non-current other
payables have been discounted by £1.3m (2023: £4.3m) to reflect the
time value of money.
Retentions withheld from
subcontractors included in trade payables amount to £95.5m (2023:
£88.8m).
10
Provisions
|
Building Safety
|
Self- insurance
|
Contract
&
legal
|
Other
|
Total
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
1 January 2023
|
38.3
|
19.8
|
15.7
|
3.1
|
76.9
|
Reclassifications
|
0.3
|
-
|
3.7
|
-
|
4.0
|
Utilised
|
(0.9)
|
(1.3)
|
(5.2)
|
(0.3)
|
(7.7)
|
Additions
|
26.3
|
3.9
|
10.6
|
0.8
|
41.6
|
Released
|
(7.9)
|
(3.2)
|
(6.5)
|
(1.1)
|
(18.7)
|
1
January 2024
|
56.1
|
19.2
|
18.3
|
2.5
|
96.1
|
Utilised
|
(7.3)
|
(1.3)
|
(7.6)
|
-
|
(16.2)
|
Additions
|
11.9
|
4.3
|
21.5
|
1.1
|
38.8
|
Released
|
(3.9)
|
(3.0)
|
(5.2)
|
(1.1)
|
(13.2)
|
31 December 2024
|
56.8
|
19.2
|
27.0
|
2.5
|
105.5
|
Current
|
56.8
|
1.2
|
27.0
|
0.1
|
85.1
|
Non-current
|
-
|
18.0
|
-
|
2.4
|
20.4
|
31 December 2024
|
56.8
|
19.2
|
27.0
|
2.5
|
105.5
|
Notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
Building Safety provisions
Management have reviewed legal and
constructive obligations arising from the Developers Pledge, the
Building Safety Act and other associated fire regulations. Where
obligations exist, these have been evaluated for the likely cost to
address, including repayments of the Building Safety Fund. As a
result of this review process provisions are recognised, as
reported in the table above, excluding those recognised in joint
ventures. The provision is expected to be utilised in the next two
years, with repayments to the Building Safety Fund commencing in
2025.
See note 3 for further
detail.
The Group also holds third party
insurances that may mitigate the liabilities. Third party insurance
reimbursement in respect of these provisions has been recognised as
a separate asset, but only when the reimbursement is virtually
certain. See notes 3 and 8 for details of mitigating insurance
receivables recognised at the period end.
Note 11 includes details of
contingent liabilities related to building safety.
Self-insurance provisions
Self-insurance provisions comprise
the Group's self-insurance of certain risks and include £11.5m
(2023: £10.0m) held in the Group's captive insurance company,
Newman Insurance Company Limited (the ''Captive'').
The Group makes provisions in
respect of specific types of claims incurred but not reported
(IBNR). The valuation of IBNR considers past claims experience and
the risk profile of the Group. These are reviewed periodically and
are intended to provide a best estimate of the most likely or
expected outcome.
Contract and legal provisions
Contract and legal provisions
include liabilities, loss provisions, defect and warranty
provisions on contracts that have reached completion.
The Group also holds third party
insurances that may mitigate the liabilities. Third party insurance
reimbursement is recognised as a separate asset, but only when the
reimbursement is virtually certain. See note 8 for details of
mitigating insurance receivables recognised at the period
end.
Note 11 includes details of
contingent liabilities related to claims.
Other provisions
Other provisions include property
dilapidations and other personnel related provisions.
11
Contingent
liabilities
Group banking facilities and
surety bond facilities are supported by cross guarantees given by
the Company and participating companies in the Group. There are
contingent liabilities in respect of surety bond facilities,
guarantees and claims under contracting and other arrangements,
including joint arrangements and joint ventures entered into in the
normal course of business. As at 31 December 2024, contract bonds
in issue under uncommitted facilities covered £194.9m of contract
commitments of the Group, of which £19.4m relates to joint
arrangements and £nil relates to joint ventures (2023: £174.7m, of
which £22.3m related to joint arrangements and £nil related to
joint ventures).
Contingent liabilities may also
arise in respect of subcontractor and other third party claims made
against the Group, in the normal course of trading. These claims
can include those relating to cladding/legacy fire safety matters,
and defects. A provision for such claims is only recognised to the
extent that the Directors believe that the Group has a legal or
constructive obligation as a result of a past event and it is
probable that an outflow of economic benefit will be required to
settle the obligation. However, such claims are predominantly
covered by the Group's insurance arrangements. Recoveries under
insurance arrangements are recognised as insurance receivables when
they are considered virtually certain.
Notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
Building Safety
At 31 December 2024, provisions in
respect of liabilities arising from the Developers Pledge, the
Building Safety Act and other associated fire regulations totalled
£63.7m (2023: £61.6m), including those related to joint
ventures.
The ongoing legislative and
regulatory changes in respect of legacy building safety issues
create uncertainty around the extent of remediation required for
legacy buildings, the liability for such remediation, recoveries
from other parties and the time to be considered. It is possible
that as remediation work proceeds, additional remedial works are
required that may not have been identified from the reviews and
physical inspections undertaken to date. The scope of buildings and
remediation works to be considered may also change as legislation
and regulations continue to evolve.
Uncertainties also exist in
respect of the timing and extent of expected recoveries from other
third parties involved in developments.
12
Net cash Net
cash
Net cash is defined as cash and cash equivalents less borrowings and non-recourse project financing
as shown
below:
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
544.2
|
541.3
|
Bank overdrafts presented as
borrowings due within one year
|
(51.8)
|
(80.6)
|
Cash and cash equivalents reported in the Consolidated cash
flow statement
|
492.4
|
460.7
|
Net cash
|
492.4
|
460.7
|
Included within cash and cash
equivalents is £23.1m (2023: £26.1m) which is the Group's share of
cash held within jointly controlled operations. Additionally there
is £26.0m included within cash and cash equivalents that is held
for future payment to designated suppliers (2023: £13.9m). There is
a third party charge of £0.3m (2023: £0.5m) on a bank account in
Switzerland for the purpose of rental guarantees for offices
occupied by BakerHicks.
The Group has £180m of committed
loan facilities maturing more than one year from the balance sheet
date, of which £15m matures in June 2027 and £165m in October 2027.
These facilities are undrawn at 31 December 2024.
Average daily net cash during 2024
was £374.2m (2023: £281.7m). Average daily net cash is defined as
the average of the 366 (2023: 365) end-of-day balances of the net
cash (as defined above) over the course of a reporting period.
Management use this as a key metric in monitoring the performance
of the business.
13
Related party
transactions
Transactions between the Company
and its subsidiaries, which are related parties, have been
eliminated on consolidation and are not disclosed in this note.
During the year, Group companies entered into transactions to
provide construction and property development services with related
parties, all of which were joint ventures, not members of the
Group, amounting to £136.5m (2023: £186.4m). At 31 December 2024,
amounts owed to the Group by joint ventures was £15.8m (2023:
£21.1m) and amounts owed by the Group to joint ventures was £0.2m
(2023:
£0.2m) including joint venture
funding obligations.
Notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
Remuneration of key management personnel
The Group considers key management
personnel to be the members of the group management team, and sets
out below in aggregate, remuneration for each of the categories
specified in IAS 24 'Related Party Disclosures'.
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Short-term employee benefits
|
11.2
|
9.5
|
Post-employment
benefits
|
0.2
|
0.1
|
Termination benefits
|
-
|
0.3
|
Share-based payments
|
3.3
|
1.9
|
|
14.7
|
11.8
|
Directors' transactions
There have been no related party
transactions with any director in the year or in the subsequent
period to 25 February 2025.
Directors' material interests in contracts with the
Company
No director held any material
interest in any contract with the Company or any Group company in
the year or in the subsequent period to 25 February
2025.
14
Subsequent
events
There were no subsequent events
that affected the financial statements of the Group.
15
Adjusted
Performance Measures
In addition to monitoring and
reviewing the financial performance of the operating segments and
the Group on a statutory basis, management also use adjusted
performance measures which are also disclosed in the annual report.
These measures are not an alternative or substitute to statutory
IFRS measures but are seen by management as useful in assessing the
performance of the business on a comparable basis. These financial
measures are also aligned to the measures used internally to assess
business performance in the Group's budgeting process and when
determining compensation. The Group also uses other non-statutory
measures which cannot be derived directly from the financial
statements. There are four alternative performance measures used by
management and disclosure in the annual report which
are:
'Adjusted'
In all cases the term
'adjusted' excludes the impact of intangible amortisation and
exceptional items. This is used to improve the comparability of
information between reporting periods to aid the use of the annual
report in understanding the activities across the Group's
portfolio.
Below is a reconciliation between
the reported Gross profit, Operating profit and Profit before tax
measures on a statutory basis and the adjustment made to calculate
Adjusted Gross profit, Adjusted Operating profit and Adjusted
Profit before tax.
Adjusted basic earnings per share
and adjusted diluted earnings per share is the statutory measure
excluding the post-tax impact of intangible amortisation and
exceptional items, and the deferred tax charge arising due to
changes in UK corporation tax rates. See note 6 for a detailed
reconciliation of the adjusted EPS measures.
Notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements
For the year ended 31 December
2024
Gross profit
|
Operating profit
|
Profit before tax
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2024
|
2023
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Reported
|
529.9
|
447.6
|
162.0
|
140.6
|
171.9
|
143.9
|
Adjust for: exceptional building safety items1
|
|
(1.3)
|
1.9
|
0.1
|
(2.2)
|
0.1
|
(2.2)
|
Adjust for: amortisation of intangible assets
|
|
-
|
-
|
0.5
|
2.9
|
0.5
|
2.9
|
Adjusted
|
528.6
|
449.5
|
162.6
|
141.3
|
172.5
|
144.6
|
Reported tax charge
|
|
|
|
|
|
(40.2)
|
(26.2)
|
Adjust for: tax relating to
amortisation
|
|
|
|
|
|
(0.1)
|
(0.7)
|
Adjust for: tax relating to
exceptional items
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1.7)
|
(3.0)
|
Adjusted profit after tax / earnings
|
6
|
|
|
|
|
130.5
|
114.7
|
1 The exceptional building
safety items includes amounts recognised in cost of sales (£1.3m
credit (2023: £1.9m charge)) and share of net
profit of joint ventures (£1.4m charge (2023: £4.1m credit)).
See note 3.
|
'Net cash'
Net cash is defined as cash and cash equivalents less
borrowings and non- recourse project financing. Lease liabilities
are not deducted from net cash. A reconciliation of this number at
the reporting date can be found in note 12. In addition, management
monitor and review average daily net cash as good discipline in
managing capital. Average daily net cash is defined as the average
of the 366 (2023: 365) end of day balances of the net cash over the
course of a reporting period.
'Operating cash flow'
Management use an
adjusted measure for operating cash flow as it
encompasses other cashflows that
are key to the ongoing operations of the Group such as repayments
of lease liabilities, investment in property, plant and equipment,
investment in intangible assets, and returns from equity accounted
joint ventures. Operating cash flow can be derived from the cash
inflow from operations reported in the consolidated cash flow
statement as shown below.
Operating cash flow conversion is
operating cash flow divided by adjusted operating profit as defined
above.
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Notes
|
£m
|
£m
|
Cash inflow from operations -
reported
|
|
172.7
|
221.2
|
Dividends from joint ventures
|
7
|
4.2
|
1.6
|
Proceeds on disposal of property,
plant and equipment
|
|
1.9
|
2.0
|
Purchases of property, plant and
equipment
|
|
(18.2)
|
(14.3)
|
Purchases of intangible fixed
assets
|
|
-
|
(0.3)
|
Repayments of lease liabilities
|
|
(25.8)
|
(21.2)
|
Operating cash flow
|
|
134.8
|
189.0
|
'Return on capital employed'
Management use return
on capital employed (ROCE) in assessing the
performance and efficient use of
capital within the Regeneration activities. ROCE is calculated as
adjusted operating profit plus interest received from joint
ventures divided by average capital employed. Average capital
employed is the 12-month average of total assets (excluding
goodwill, other intangible assets and cash) less total liabilities
(excluding corporation tax, deferred tax, intercompany financing,
overdrafts and exceptional building safety items).
We confirm to the best of our
knowledge:
1.
The financial statements, prepared in accordance
with the applicable set of accounting standards, give a true and
fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit
or loss of the Company and the undertakings included in the
consolidation taken as a whole;
2.
The strategic report includes a fair review of
the development and performance of the business and the position of
the Company and the undertakings in the consolidation taken as a
whole, together with a description of the principal risks and
uncertainties they face; and
3. The annual report and financial statements, taken as a whole,
are fair, balanced and understandable and provide the information
necessary for shareholders to assess the Company's performance,
business model and strategy.
The contents of this announcement,
including the responsibility statement above, have been extracted
from the annual report and accounts for the year ended 31 December
2024 which will be available on publication at http://www.morgansindall.com.
Accordingly, this responsibility statement makes
reference to the financial statements of the Company and the Group
and to the relevant narrative appearing in that annual report and
accounts rather than the contents of this announcement.
This
responsibility statement was approved by the Board on 25 February
2025 and is signed on its behalf by:
John Morgan
Kelly Gangotra
Chief Executive
Chief
Financial Officer