dreamcatcher
- 13 Feb 2013 16:58

Crest Nicholson has been building new homes for over four decades and is firmly established as a leading developer with a passion for not just building homes, but creating vibrant sustainable communities. Our mission is to improve the quality of life for individuals and communities, both now and in the future, by providing better homes, work places, retail and leisure spaces. Most importantly, we place our customers at the heart of everything we do.
Our development portfolio ranges from contemporary city centre apartments and townhouses to traditional detached family homes and complex regeneration schemes. The success of long term partnership developments such as Park Central in Birmingham, as well as innovative low carbon developments including One Brighton, ICON and Avante, underline the Group's determination to lead the industry in its quest to create innovative development solutions which positively contribute towards achieving a sustainable future.
In today's low carbon world, it is our unrivalled vision and values in design, customer service, innovation and environmental stewardship that set us apart. Responding to the challenges posed by climate change and urban renewal forms an integral part of our approach, positioning us well to lead in the complex and challenging process of delivering sustainable communities.
I am particularly proud of the recognition that we have achieved for our contribution to the built environment. To be bestowed with The Queens Award for Enterprise in Sustainable Development category in 2007 was a real honour. This 5 year accolade is proof of our continued commitment to producing high quality developments that champion the very best principles in sustainability and design. It demonstrates our unquestionable passion in delivering communities where people genuinely want to live, work and play.
Ultimately however, the greatest accolade comes directly from our purchasers and nine out of ten have said that they would be happy to recommend Crest Nicholson to a friend. While both the House Builders Federation and our own independent consultants verify that our customer satisfaction is improving year on year, we will not become complacent. Our priority is to continue to build on this track record and deliver our customers with a home and level of service that continues to surpass expectations.
http://www.crestnicholson.com/

mentor
- 05 Jul 2016 10:20
- 106 of 175
Bought back again @348.88p
order book strong again 44 v 28
and all the sector is on the bounce at the moment apart from TEF
mentor
- 05 Jul 2016 10:25
- 107 of 175
HARRYCAT
- 05 Jul 2016 13:37
- 108 of 175
Soc Gen today:
"The British exit from the EU comes at a time when the property cycle looks set to reverse under a fast-rising speculative supply. While the final outcome is unpredictable, the past two cycles and our rental value forecasts suggest property prices may fall 25% peak-to-trough this time, and that share prices could still have 19% to give back. We fear the recent sector rebound could simply be a dead cat bounce."
mentor
- 07 Jul 2016 15:43
- 109 of 175
358p +23.00 (+6.87%)
Had reached 360p this morning and it looks like is aiming for that point again after finding some support at 350p during this afternoon
mentor
- 08 Jul 2016 09:39
- 110 of 175
369.20p +16.70p (+4.74%)
A very good rise today as the rest of builders are also on the rise
mentor
- 10 Jul 2016 23:59
- 111 of 175
From the Saturday Mail - Market Report
The best performers on the FTSE 100 were Berkeley and Taylor Wimpey, up 8 per cent, or 9.4p, to 131.5p.
But there were also significant rises for Redrow, up 6 per cent, or 17.7p, to 308.5p, Crest Nicholson, up 8.4pc, or 29.4p, to 381.9p, Barratt Developments, up 7 per cent, or 24.1p, to 373.2p, Galliford Try, up 5.7 per cent, or 44.5p, to 829.5p, Bovis, up 12 per cent, or 79.5p, to 739.5p, and Countryside Properties, up 7.3 per cent, or 14.5p, to 211.9p.
Neil Wilson, stock market analyst at broker ETX Capital, said: ‘Investors are taking advantage of this attractive entry point with strong bids for Taylor Wimpey, Barratt Developments and Persimmon, but they remain starkly lower versus their pre-Brexit levels.
‘UBS’s vote of confidence for Britain’s property sector also suggests the knee-jerk reaction in sterling this week may have been overdone and there could be some upside for the pound to consider.’...............
mentor
- 11 Jul 2016 10:25
- 112 of 175
Another good day and on moving over 400p will aim for the last intraday high of 406p

mentor
- 11 Jul 2016 12:37
- 113 of 175
415p +33.10p (+8.67%)
once the 406p was gone the share price has spike up as the FTSE is also moving forward
Currently the best stock of the house builders on % terms
mentor
- 12 Jul 2016 08:42
- 114 of 175
428.80p +14.60 (+3.52%)
The stock still roaring ahead as most house builders, but it seems the ones that fell more are the once that are gaining most now.
mentor
- 12 Jul 2016 10:50
- 115 of 175
Close bargain T+6 @ 423.80p
a gain of 75p or 21.47% on 5 working days
Balerboy
- 27 Jul 2016 17:14
- 116 of 175
Missed this one . Wish I'd bought back in yesterday at 408 p.
dreamcatcher
- 25 Aug 2016 18:05
- 117 of 175
Again good recovery underway since brexit.
dreamcatcher
- 02 Sep 2016 16:59
- 118 of 175
2 Sep Deutsche Bank 514.00 Hold
dreamcatcher
- 04 Oct 2016 19:59
- 119 of 175
4 Oct
Canaccord...
450.00
Buy
4 Oct
Deutsche Bank
514.00
Hold
mentor
- 11 Oct 2016 14:33
- 120 of 175
Bought some @ 420.60p
Should be ready for a bounce from this point. Large retracement and big drop for the last 3 days.
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Housebuilders buoyed by £5 billion fund for new homes -Evening Standard - RUSSELL LYNCH Monday 3 October 20161
Moving higher: Shares in Barratt Developments, Bovis Homes, Taylor Wimpey and Telford Homes rose today
The Treasury’s £5 billion plans to boost housebuilding lifted shares in the UK’s biggest players amid hopes of tackling the UK’s “chronic” housing shortage.
Housebuilding shares have been ravaged by the Brexit vote but Chancellor Philip Hammond and Business Secretary Sajid Javid have unveiled a £2 billion fund to speed up building by using public land as well as a £3 billion loan pot for the smaller housebuilders frozen out of the market by a lack of bank funding since the financial crisis.
The Government also plans to relax planning rules with a presumption in favour of residential development.
News of the extra stimulus — as well as the likelihood of further Bank of England rate cuts — lifted a host of quoted firms by up to 2% today. Barratt Developments rose 4.9p to 499.2p, Taylor Wimpey added 2.8p to 156.9p, and Bovis Homes cheered 11p to 886p.
Alan Brown, chief executive of the sector’s biggest private player, Cala Homes, said: “This is very good news. People forget that we have a chronic housing shortage, we’re short of a million houses. Unless we as an industry and an economy get this solved, we are going to have some significant social problems going forward.”
His comments came as Cala posted record profits for a fourth year running, with pre-tax profits up 18% to £60.1 million in the year to June 30.
Brown — who reported no adverse impact from the referendum — wants to build Cala into a £1 billion-turnover business by 2020.
Jon Di-Stefano, chief executive of London-focused Telford Homes, added: “It sounds extremely encouraging, especially the funding for SMEs. There are a lot of sites that should be being done by smaller builders, but they have not got the funding to do it.”
mentor
- 11 Oct 2016 16:53
- 121 of 175
On the charting front they are now at below lower Bollinger Band ( buy signal ), and recovering today from the earlier marked down will finished with a good Candlestick

hlyeo98
- 17 Oct 2016 14:57
- 122 of 175
The candlestick didn't work... need a torchlight I think... still going down - sub 400p now
mentor
- 17 Oct 2016 15:31
- 123 of 175
Your @rse was interfering it seems
There was no light at the end of the tunnel
-------------------
and we thought you were dead and buried
pushed?
the hospital needed your bed?
mentor
- 17 Oct 2016 15:55
- 124 of 175
Why housebuilders are off the boil - By Lee Wild | Fri, 14th October 2016 - 13:21
Why housebuilders are off the boil
Share prices have soared Friday, led by Tesco (TSCO), Man Group (EMG) and the miners, at least partially repairing the damage done by a three-day sell-off this week. However, gains would have been more impressive but for grim construction data, which has demolished the housebuilders.
According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), construction output fell by 1.5% in August from July, much worse than forecasts for 0.2% growth. We're told not to read too much into one month's data, but even the three-month number shows a decrease of 1.3% from the previous period.
It's hardly panic stations, but shares in both Countrywide (CWD) and Crest Nicholson (CRST) have fallen 1.5% Friday, and there are losses at Galliford Try (GFRD), Bovis Homes (BVS), Taylor Wimpey (TW.) and Bellway (BWY). Only Persimmon (PSN) and Barratt Developments (BDEV) are better.
All are still way above their post-referendum lows, true, but momentum has clearly been lost from the recovery in recent weeks.
And that's despite the latest RICS survey which showed a further rebound in activity following the summer lull. The buyer enquiries balance swung from -4.8 in August to +8.3 last month and both sales and price expectations increased in September.
"The recovery in the survey is not unexpected, in our view, and reflects the uncertain environment in the run-up to and post the EU referendum in June, with conditions having now shown signs of normalising," explains broker UBS.
The decline in ONS construction data was driven largely by a 5.1% dive in historically volatile infrastructure output, which had actually risen by 6.1% the month before. The annual figure shows a decline of 9.3%, the sixth consecutive month of year-on-year decreases.
But ONS senior statistician Kate Davies points out that the monthly construction data can be "quite erratic", adding: "As the fall this month is led by infrastructure, it seems unlikely that post-referendum uncertainties are having an impact."
And UBS still believes UK housebuilders "look attractive" given general net cash balance sheets. Still down around 20% since June, the sector trades on 1.4 times price/tangible net asset value (P/TNAV) on 2017 estimates, a price/earnings (PE) ratio of 7.4 times, and dividend yield of 7%.
"Trading patterns since the referendum show sales rates up c3% year-on-year for the sector average, despite the tough comparison basis from 2015," says UBS. "The secondary market indicators have generally been weaker, which we believe in part likely reflects changes in stamp duty legislation. The RICS survey reflects the secondary market and suggests some sequential improvement in this regard."
BAYLIS
- 18 Oct 2016 11:26
- 125 of 175
sold bdev today.