Tony Pidgley: Berkeley founder’s bonanza as millions more flow to backers

 

Tony Pidgley stands to gain £23m as part of the £500m windfall to shareholders

 

Russell Lynch
Saturday 05 December 2015 01:18 GMT
Comments
Tom Pidgley stands to gain £23m as part of the £500m windfall to shareholders
Tom Pidgley stands to gain £23m as part of the £500m windfall to shareholders

Berkeley Group’s founder Tony Pidgley is set to add another £23m to his fortune after the housebuilder showered shareholders with an extra £500m windfall.

The company, which focuses on London and the South-east of England, first announced plans four years ago to return £1.7bn, or £13 a share, to investors by 2021. But it dramatically upped the scale of its ambitions yesterday, increasing the programme to £2.2bn. Its shares rose 7 per cent , or 250p, to 3,602p.

The higher cash return target of £16.34 a share by 2021 also gives Mr Pidgley and Berkeley’s senior management a higher hurdle to vault to achieve one of the richest bonus plans in corporate history. Under the 2011 scheme, the top team could share 17 million shares worth £600m if they achieve the target.

Mr Pidgley – who founded the business in the 1970s and once fought off a takeover bid from his own son – owns a 4.5 per cent stake in Berkeley, putting him in line for the extra £23m from the expanded scheme before any shares vest.

He is already worth more than £200m and respected for his ability to pick the highs and lows of the property cycle; two years ago he spent £10.5m on one of Berkeley’s luxury flats in Belgravia.

Berkeley’s managing director, Rob Perrins, insisted that the housebuilder was not saying the market had peaked . He said: “We signalled in June that if we had surplus capital, we would look to return it.

“It is a reflection of the investment we’ve put into the business since 2009 – Berkeley has invested £1.8bn. This is the return,” he said.

“Post-Lehmans gave us a great opportunity to invest in London and we are now on 75 sites and those sites are delivering a higher return.”

But he added: “We are still investing in London – we are not calling the top of the market.”

The announcement came as Berkeley reported a 10 per cent rise in pre-tax profits to £242m for the six months to 30 September, on revenues 11 per cent ahead at £1.14bn. The company sold 2,091 homes at an average selling price of £506,000 and has bought six new sites recently, including National Grid’s former gasworks in Fulham.

Mr Perrins added: “The feelgood factor is there in London and that is coming across... You’ve got very low mortgage rates and an under-supply of homes.”

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in