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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Business
Hazel Sheffield

Foxtons share price slides 20% after it warns Brexit will hit profits

Shares in estate agent Foxtons suffered a massive 20 per cent slide on the stock market on Monday morning after the company released a trading update saying that the results of the EU referendum would likely weigh on profits.

Nic Budden, Foxtons chief executive, said in a trading statement on Monday that the referendum and stamp duty changes that came about in April had led many buyers to "sit on their hands", which would hit Foxtons profits in the second half of the year. 

He said that challenging conditions, first reported by the company in April, were likely to continue until the end of the year and that profits would be significantly lower than the year before.

"Recent sales volumes have been slow as uncertainty and higher stamp duty has led many buyers and sellers to sit on their hands. The result of the referendum has increased uncertainty and is likely to mean that these trends continue for at least the remainder of the year," Budden said.

Russell Quirk, founder and CEO of eMoov.co.uk, said that Foxtons may be using Brexit to mask poor performance.

"This comes from a combination of two things. Too much exposure to the London market and a structurally archaic business model that refuses to acknowledge consumer pressure to do a better job for less," Quirk said.

Building firms such as Taylor Wimpey, Persimmon and Barratt were among the biggest losers on the FTSE 100 on Monday morning.

Taylor Wimpey shares were down 15.80 per cent to 114.8p, Barratt was down 15.60 per cent to 371.2p and Persmisson was down 13.03 per cent to 1,322p.

Trading in Taylor Wimpey shares was temporarily suspended mid-morning after they fell more than 8 per cent, triggering a circuit breaker.

Investors are preparting for a drop in the number of people trying to buy a property following the UK's decision to leave the EU. 

In May, the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors said taht the number of homes for sale had declined more widely than at any time since it started collecting data in 1999.

It cited the EU referendum as the biggest reason for the decline in buyer appetite.

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