Housebuilder shares rise sharply ahead of Budget announcement

house pricesHousebuilder share prices climbed on Tuesday as investors positioned themselves ahead of the chancellor’s Budget, betting that the the construction sector will escape any heavy new taxes and may even benefit from fresh support. The rally underscores growing confidence that the government is preparing to put housing delivery at the heart of its economic strategy.

The sharp rise in stock prices has intensified speculation that the chancellor could announce a new stimulus package aimed at boosting demand – potentially echoing initiatives such as Help to Buy or another scheme designed to support first-time buyers and kick-start new-build sales.

Investors appear to be pricing in the possibility of measures that would both strengthen demand and give developers greater certainty over future sales pipelines. Some expect tweaks to stamp duty to unlock activity, while others believe the government may prioritise further planning reforms or targeted incentives to accelerate housebuilding.

Regardless of what is announced by the chancellor today, Tuesday’s market reaction shows just how closely the sector is watching the Budget, with all major housebuilders seeing share price hikes, led by Barratt Redrow at 3.2%.

The BBC’s business editor, Simon Jack, posted on X last night: “Housebuilder shares all up sharply – Barratt, Taylor W. Redrow. Markets either think inflation forecast from OBR tomorrow is more benign than expected nailing on further interest rate falls or there’s something in budget on help to buy?”

The chancellor Rachel Reeves will deliver the Budget Statement following today’s Prime Minister’s Questions at 12.30pm.

 

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2 Comments

  1. Anonymous Coward

    What’s required is to reduce the relative cost of housing compared to take home pay.

    More housing stock would be one element of the solution.

    I would suggest that perhaps salary multiple caps in the name of responsible lending would also be useful.

    What is NOT needed are any incentives to builders, or apparent reductions in SDLT, or any other inflationary measures that just make housing ever more unaffordable.

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  2. Fromrichmond

    Yes but
    No one wants to reduce their price they just delay a move
    No builder is going to be anxious to build in a market that has zero consumer confidence and little demand
    Reducing the lending multiples of salaries would help to stop rising prices albeit they are falling now
    Ageed no incentive needed let the market determine

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