London, March 4, 2026, 11:10 GMT
- Vistry shares tumbled over 20% after the company warned about thinner margins in 2026.
- Greg Fitzgerald, Executive Chair and CEO, plans to leave his role as chair this May.
- The builder said paying down debt takes priority over handing more capital back to shareholders.
Shares of Vistry Group tumbled Wednesday after the UK homebuilder flagged a profit margin squeeze expected in 2026 and disclosed that Executive Chair and CEO Greg Fitzgerald intends to step down, pushing the stock to lows not seen in nearly ten years. Reuters
This update arrives while UK builders are increasingly resorting to discounts and incentives just to maintain private-buyer demand—moves that eat right into their margins. Investors haven’t hesitated to hit anything resembling a price war.
Vistry’s statement comes as leadership is set to shift. Fitzgerald has been serving as both chair and chief executive; the board now plans to separate those roles once he steps down.
Vistry logged adjusted pre-tax profit of 268.8 million pounds for 2025, on revenue totaling 4.16 billion pounds, according to its full-year results statement. The group flagged better early 2026 sales: so far, it’s selling at a rate of 1.42 homes per site per week, with a forward order book standing at 4.5 billion pounds as of March 3. “Sales volumes are already benefitting from the targeted use of pricing initiatives and incentives,” CEO Fitzgerald said. Net debt stood at 144.2 million pounds at the end of 2025; Vistry is aiming to swing to net cash of about 100 million pounds by the close of 2026. The company has 29 million pounds left on its current buyback and is pausing additional returns for the time being. Investegate
The company announced Fitzgerald is set to exit his role as chair at the annual general meeting on May 13, though he’ll keep the CEO position for as long as 12 months while they look for someone to take over. “After over 45 years in the sector, it is the right time for me to retire,” he said. Investegate
Vistry’s margin pressure hasn’t gone unnoticed among peers. Persimmon has turned to incentives to keep sales moving. Over at Barratt Redrow, a CEO retirement announcement this week drove home just how fast priorities can change for public homebuilders. Reuters
Vistry is leaning on targeted pricing to move inventory and boost cash flow later this year. The company cites anticipated partner demand in the back half, tied to funding advancing for its Social and Affordable Homes Programme pipeline.
The whole plan hinges on sustaining early sales traction—and making sure those incentives don’t get baked in as standard. If the spring selling period cools off, completions drag, or build costs climb, reaching the net-cash target gets trickier—particularly with a CEO transition underway.