Is the Persimmon share price heading back to £30?

The Persimmon (LSE:PSN) share price is currently 60% lower than it was during the summer of 2021.

And to my surprise, the shares are now trading for 20% less than they were in April 2020, when building sites across the country were closed due to Covid-19.

When the stock was last at £30, the base rate was 0.1%, the company’s dividend was 235p, and the run rate for mortgage approvals was over 200k a quarter.

Will these good times return soon?

Period UK house completions UK mortgage approvals Persimmon share
price (£)
Base rate (%)
Q1 2020 34,940 190,684 19.17 0.10
Q2 2020 16,880 60,780 22.86 0.10
Q3 2020 36,800 229,314 24.73 0.10
Q4 2020 43,260 295,958 27.67 0.10
Q1 2021 47,190 249,011 29.40 0.10
Q2 2021 44,930 227,396 29.59 0.10
Q3 2021 43,290 199,400 26.68 0.10
Q4 2021 42,410 201,213 28.56 0.25
Q1 2022 42,850 205,883 21.51 0.75
Q2 2022 52,040 181,091 18.63 1.25
Q3 2022 43,140 189,189 12.38 2.25
Q4 2022 39,220 141,106 12.17 3.50
Q1 2023 Not available 81,135* 12.56 4.25
*January 2023 and February 2023 only

Interesting

To try and tame inflation, the Bank of England (BoE) has increased interest rates 11 times in 17 months. This has affected disposable incomes and confidence in the housing market, with mortgage approvals currently half what they were in the last quarter of 2020.

The International Monetary Fund recently predicted that interest rates will fall to pre-pandemic levels once inflation is sustainably lower. The BoE expects inflation to be back below its 2% target by early 2024.

If correct, history tells me that consumer confidence will then return and people will want to buy houses once more.

Reaping dividends

Persimmon shareholders have enjoyed some generous returns in recent times.

When the company’s share price was last above £30, the annual dividend was 235p, giving a yield close to 8%.

Earlier this year, given the uncertain economic outlook, the payout was cut to 60p. The shares are now yielding around half what they were in 2021. But they are still above the FTSE 100 average.

Last week, the directors announced that they are expecting to sell (complete) around 9k homes in 2023. Assuming an average pre-tax profit of £65k per house, this would give earnings this year of £585m.

Based on the current number of shares in issue, a 60p dividend will cost £192m.

Persimmon has a reputation for returning a large proportion of its profits to shareholders. For example, in 2020 its dividend was equivalent to 96% of pre-tax earnings. This makes me think that the directors are being cautious. I wouldn’t be surprised to see a hike in the dividend to around £1 a share.

But we are a long way from seeing a payout of 235p, which would cost around £750m.

Financial year Revenue (£m) Underlying profit before tax (£m) Completions Pre-tax profit per completion (£)
2018 3,738 1,091 16,449 66,314
2019 3,649 1,048 15,855 66,105
2020 3,328 863 13,575 63,580
2021 3,611 967 14,551 66,442
2022 3,816 1,007 14,868 67,696

The good times are coming again

I see no reason why Persimmon shares will not reach £30 again. But it may take a few years.

I believe the company will want to be building at least 14,000 houses a year before the dividend is restored to 2020 levels. And this probably won’t happen until 2025 at the earliest.

I expect an increase in completions from current levels will be driven by lower interest rates on the back of falling inflation. And with an election due before January 2025, all political parties will be looking to attract voters. I’m sure promises will be forthcoming of new schemes to help first-time buyers to get on the housing ladder. This should also help reignite the market.

I already own shares in Persimmon. But if I didn’t, I’d be happy to have the stock in my portfolio.

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