Summary: M J Gleeson Group Ltd disclosed an unscheduled trading update that a flagship Gleeson Land sale - accounting for roughly half of its projected plot sales for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2026 - will not close before the end of the year and has been pushed into the first half of FY2027. The company said this delay, together with two smaller postponed deals, will reduce adjusted group profit before tax by about A37.5 million versus market forecasts. The announcement prompted a sharp share price reaction.
M J Gleeson stock slid 4.3% in the trading session to trade at 233p after the unscheduled update. At one point the shares reached a session low of 227.99p, moving close to their 52-week low of 225p and marking a decline of more than 45% from the 52-week high of 430p.
The company said the delay centres on a principal Gleeson Land site disposal that alone represents approximately half of the divisions anticipated plot sales for the fiscal year to June 30, 2026. That disposal will not complete before the current year-end and has been moved into the first half of the next financial year, FY2027. Two additional, smaller transactions have also been deferred.
Management quantified the aggregate impact of the timing changes, saying the shortfall is expected to reduce adjusted group profit before tax by around A37.5 million relative to market expectations.
Chief Executive Graham Prothero characterised the wider backdrop as challenging, noting that "housebuilders, in the south of England, are reviewing and reappraising their land buying strategies" and that these conditions are expected to continue into the next financial year. He also said he remained confident that demand for prime-quality sites would persist.
The wider market offered limited support for the shares. The FTSE 100 had been broadly flat in recent sessions, edging up 0.02% on June 8, while sector peers such as Vistry Group and Barratt Redrow have also faced headwinds as national housebuilders reassess land acquisition activity amid softer conditions in southern England.
Macro factors highlighted by the update include the Bank of Englands decision to hold its benchmark rate at 3.75% and the recent easing of UK inflation to 2.8%. The company and market observers pointed to ongoing mortgage affordability pressures as continuing to weigh on housing market sentiment.
Taken together, the company-specific timing miss, the weaker land transaction environment in parts of southern England, and broader sector pressures - including planning delays and cost inflation cited by market participants - produced a concentrated sell-off in M J Gleesons shares. Investors reacted to the near-term earnings shortfall even as management emphasised the long-term quality of its land portfolio.
Key points
- M J Gleeson said a key Gleeson Land disposal - about half of the division's expected plot sales for FY2026 - has been delayed into H1 FY2027, contributing to a 4.3% share price fall to 233p.
- The company expects the delay plus two smaller deferred transactions to reduce adjusted group profit before tax by around A37.5 million versus market expectations.
- Sector and macro context: FTSE 100 broadly flat (up 0.02% on June 8), peers such as Vistry Group and Barratt Redrow also under pressure, with mortgage affordability and land buying strategies affecting activity in southern England.
Risks and uncertainties
- Timing risk: The deferred completion of the flagship site into FY2027 creates short-term earnings volatility for the company and could influence near-term cash flow and profit metrics in the housebuilding sector.
- Market environment risk: A continuing reassessment of land acquisition strategies among southern England housebuilders could further delay transactions across the sector, affecting land-led revenues for national builders.
- Housing sentiment risk: Ongoing mortgage affordability pressures, despite lower inflation and an unchanged Bank of England rate at 3.75%, may constrain demand and slow plotting and sales activity for housebuilders.