14 November 2025
LAND SECURITIES GROUP PLC ("Landsec")
Results for the half year ended 30 September 2025 Strong income growth drives increase in EPS outlook
Mark Allan, Chief Executive of Landsec, commented:
"We continue to see clear positive momentum across every part of our business, notwithstanding the wider economic environment. Owning the right real estate has never been more important, so we continue to benefit from our proactive portfolio repositioning over the last few years, and our entire business is also benefitting from a sharper focus on sustainable EPS growth as our primary performance objective, providing greater clarity in terms of priorities and decision making.
"This gives us the confidence to raise both our near-term EPS guidance and medium-term EPS growth potential. With a best-in-class portfolio, effective capital allocation, and a clarity of purpose, priorities and objectives, our business is well positioned to build on our strong performance momentum."
Financial highlights30 Sep 2025 | Prior(1)period | 30 Sep 2025 | Prior(1)period | ||
EPRA earnings (£m)(2)(3) | 192 | 186 | Profit before tax (£m) (4) | 98 | 243 |
EPRA EPS (pence)(2)(3) | 25.8 | 25.0 | Basic EPS (pence) | 13.0 | 32.8 |
EPRA NTA per share (pence)(2)(3) | 863 | 874 | Net assets per share (pence) | 867 | 877 |
Total return on equity (%)(2)(3) | 1.2 | 3.9 | Dividend per share (pence) | 19.0 | 18.6 |
Group LTV ratio (%)(2)(3) | 40.3 | 39.3 | Net debt (£m) | 4,400 | 4,341 |
EPRA EPS(2)(3) up 3.2% to 25.8p, driven by strong 5.2% growth in LFL income and further 6% reduction in overhead costs, supporting 2.2% growth in interim dividend
IFRS profit before tax of £98m(4), as substantial capital recycling of £644m(5) of assets generating no or limited returns resulting in a £67m loss on sale, and a slightly lower EPRA NTA per share (-1.3%)
Group LTV 38.9% pro-forma(6) for net disposal activity post period-end, with net debt/EBITDA of 8.6x
Increase in guidanceLike-for-like net rental income for FY26 expected to grow c. 4-5%, up from initial c. 3-4% guidance
FY26 EPRA EPS growth expected to be at top end of c. 2-4% guidance, before impact from disposal of QAM (-£7m) which turned residual future finance lease income into a cash receipt on sale
Overhead costs expected to reduce to low £60m's by FY27 vs previous target of below £65m
Potential for FY30 EPRA EPS raised from c. 60 pence to c. 62 pence, driven by higher income growth in retail, additional overhead savings, and lower development, implying 4-4.5% CAGR in EPS vs FY25
Target net debt/EBITDA of below 7x within next two years, down from previous target of below 8x
Operational highlights: strong LFL income growth across two market-leading platformsDelivered 5.2% LFL net rental income growth, as customer demand for our best-in-class offices and retail remains strong, with 10% rental uplifts on relettings/renewals highlighting growing reversion
Increased EPRA occupancy by 40bps on a LFL basis to 97.7%, the highest level in almost a decade
Drove 2.5% ERV growth over six months, adding further to attractive income growth potential
Office LFL income grows 6.8%, as customer demand remains focused on high-quality spaceDelivered 6.8% LFL net rental growth, with EPRA occupancy up 50bps to 98.8%, £19m of lettings signed or in solicitors' hands 9% above ERV, and relettings/renewals 6% above previous rent
Drove 3.1% ERV growth, on track vs full year guidance of broadly similar growth as last year's 5.2%
Reversionary potential up to 12%, paving way for further attractive near-term LFL income growth
Set to complete £866m of developments in next 6-9 months at accretive 7.0% gross yield on cost, with positive customer engagement expected to result in meaningful pre-letting over the next six months
Sold £295m of offices well ahead of schedule, as investment market activity continues to pick up gradually, creating opportunity to further accelerate capital recycling in an earnings accretive way
Office portfolio valuation down 1.0%, as receipt of income at QAM ahead of sale and impact of five-yearly business rates review at Piccadilly Lights reduced valuation by 0.8%
Retail-led LFL income up 5.0%, as high sales growth underpins attraction of best destinationsDelivered 5.0% LFL net rental growth, with EPRA occupancy stable at 96.7% (+50bps YoY), £33m of lettings signed or in solicitors' hands 10% above ERV and relettings/renewals +13% vs previous rent
Drove high 7.7% retail sales growth, highlighting the attraction of our top destinations for brands
Target to deliver 4.5-7% CAGR in income from existing portfolio over next five years via combination of capturing growing reversion, turnover income, commercialisation and small capex projects
Drove 2.2% ERV growth, on track vs full year expectation of similar growth as last year's 4.0%
More opportunities coming to market to invest a further £1bn in accretive growth over next 1-3 years
Retail portfolio valuation up 2.3%, reflecting strong leasing and continued growth in income
Active capital recycling and further strengthening of resilient capital base to enhance returnsTargeting net debt/EBITDA of below 7x within next two years vs previous target of below 8x as income grows and development exposure reduces, with LTV expected to reduce to below 35% over time
Sold £644m of low-returning assets, resulting in a cost to NTA of 1.0% but broadly neutral impact on EPS, aside from impact of turning residual QAM finance lease income into a capital receipt on sale
Robust capital base, with average debt maturity of 8.9 years, no need to refinance any debt until 2027,
8.6x net debt/EBITDA and, pro-forma for net disposal activity post period-end, 38.9% LTV
Prioritising new investment in retail in next 12-18 months given attractive income and income growth
Do not expect to commit meaningful capital to new development in next 12-18 months, as committed development reduces to c. £0.2bn by mid-2026 and will remain well below current £1.1bn thereafter
Positive momentum in preparing for medium-term residential-led opportunitySecured detailed planning consent for first 879 homes at Mayfield, Manchester and outline/detailed consents for 2,800 homes at Lewisham, London, so majority of 9,000-home pipeline now has consent
Active engagement with public sector partners as policy measures become more supportive to returns
Opportunity to build £2bn+ platform with higher income growth and lower cyclicality in medium term
Prior period measures are for the six months ended 30 September 2024 other than EPRA NTA per share, net assets per share, Group LTV ratio and net debt, which are at 31 March 2025.
An alternative performance measure. The Group uses a number of financial measures to assess and explain its performance, some of which are considered to be alternative performance measures as they are not defined under IFRS. For further details, see the Financial review and table 14 in the Business analysis section.
Including our proportionate share of subsidiaries and joint ventures, as explained in the Financial review. The condensed consolidated preliminary financial information is prepared under UK adopted international accounting standards (IFRSs and IFRICs) where the Group's interests in joint ventures are shown collectively in the income statement and balance sheet, and all subsidiaries are consolidated at 100%. Internally, management reviews the Group's results on a basis that adjusts for these forms of ownership to present a proportionate share. These metrics, including the Combined Portfolio, are examples of this approach, reflecting our economic interest in our properties regardless of our ownership structure. For further details, see table 14 in the Business analysis section.
IFRS profit before tax of £98m vs prior period IFRS profit before tax of £243m, which benefitted from a valuation surplus of £91m.
Includes disposals that have exchanged but not completed at period end.
Pro-forma figures throughout this announcement reflect the post period-end impacts of committed acquisitions and disposals and transaction-related deferred consideration receipts/payments until 31 December 2026.
A live video webcast of the presentation will be available at 9.00am GMT. A downloadable copy of the webcast will then be available by the end of the day.
We will also be offering an audio conference call line, details are available in the link below. Due to the large volume of callers expected, we recommend that you dial into the call 10 minutes before the start of the presentation.
Please note that there will be an interactive Q&A facility on both the webcast and conference call line. Webcast link: https://webcast.landsec.com/2025-half-year-results
Call title: Landsec Half Year Results 2025
Conference call: https://webcast.landsec.com/2025-half-year-results/vip_connect
Forward-looking statements
These full year results, the latest Annual Report and Landsec's website may contain certain 'forward-looking statements' with respect to Land Securities Group PLC (the Company) and the Group's financial condition, results of its operations and business, and certain plans, strategies, objectives, goals and expectations with respect to these items and the economies and markets in which the Group operates.
Forward-looking statements are sometimes, but not always, identified by their use of a date in the future or such words as 'anticipates', 'aims', 'due', 'could', 'may', 'should', 'expects', 'believes', 'intends', 'plans', 'targets', 'goal' or 'estimates' or, in each case, their negative or other variations or comparable terminology. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance. By their very nature forward-looking statements are inherently unpredictable, speculative and involve risk and uncertainty because they relate to events and depend on circumstances that will occur in the future. Many of these assumptions, risks and uncertainties relate to factors that are beyond the Group's ability to control or estimate precisely. There are a number of such factors that could cause actual results and developments to differ materially from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. These factors include, but are not limited to, changes in the political conditions, economies and markets in which the Group operates; changes in the legal, regulatory and competition frameworks in which the Group operates; changes in the markets from which the Group raises finance; the impact of legal or other proceedings against or which affect the Group; changes in accounting practices and interpretation of accounting standards under IFRS, and changes in interest and exchange rates.
Any forward-looking statements made in these full year results, the latest Annual Report or Landsec's website, or made subsequently, which are attributable to the Company or any other member of the Group, or persons acting on their behalf, are expressly qualified in their entirety by the factors referred to above. Each forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date it is made. Except as required by its legal or statutory obligations, the Company does not intend to update any forward-looking statements.
Nothing contained in these full year results, the latest Annual Report or Landsec's website should be construed as a profit forecast or an invitation to deal in the securities of the Company.
Chief Executive's statement Further improvement in EPS outlook driven by strong income growthJust over six months ago we launched our updated strategy, focused on delivering sustainable income and EPS growth, both in the near term as well as for the longer term. We have made good early progress on the key objectives which underpin this strategy and our operational performance across our best-in-class portfolio continues to strengthen, with occupancy up 40bps to a near decade-high of 97.7%, like-for-like income growth increasing to 5.2%, and uplifts in rental income on relettings/renewals rising to 10%.
Customers remain firmly focused on the best space in offices and major retail destinations. Our portfolio repositioning over the last few years means we continue to benefit from this established trend. Reflecting this, we now expect growth in like-for-like net rental income for this year to be c. 4-5%, up from our initial guidance of c. 3-4%. Combined with continued progress on driving further cost efficiencies, this means we now expect EPS growth for this year to be at the top end of our c. 2-4% guidance, before the impact of the sale of QAM (-£7m), which turned future finance lease income into a cash capital receipt on sale.
As our two on-site London office projects complete in the next nine months, committed development will reduce to c. £0.2bn by mid next year. We do not intend to add meaningfully to this in the next 12-18 months, as we will prioritise acquisition opportunities in retail, and we also intend to move to a structurally lower level of capital employed in development beyond that. Although wider economic uncertainties persist, we see no signs of this impacting customer demand, so as we deliver our strategy, we now see the potential for EPRA EPS to grow to c. 62 pence by FY30. This is up from c. 60 pence and represents
c. 23% growth vs FY25, reflecting higher income growth in retail, further overhead cost savings and lower capital tied up in development. Naturally, we will continue to pursue opportunities to grow this further.
For the half year, EPRA earnings rose £6m to £192m, despite the prior half year benefitting from a £4m increase in the recovery of bad and doubtful debts we had previously provided for, principally on assets where we brought management in-house. EPRA EPS was up 3.2%, or 5.2% adjusted for this £4m prior year benefit, and our dividend is up 2.2%. ERVs were up 2.5% for the six months, with leasing 11% ahead of ERV, and asset values were stable (-0.1%). IFRS profit before tax of £98m was impacted by a
£67m loss on the sale of £644m of assets which generated little or no return, which meant NTA per share was down slightly at -1.3%. Our capital base remains robust, with a net debt/EBITDA of 8.6x and 38.9% pro-forma LTV. This remains a key priority for us and will strengthen further as our income continues to grow and our development exposure reduces. Reflecting this, we now target net debt/EBITDA of below 7x within the next two years and we expect LTV to reduce to below 35% over time.
Table 1: Highlights | |||
Sep 2025 | Sep 2024 | Change % | |
Net rental income (£m) (1) | 284 | 269 | 5.6 |
EPRA earnings (£m)(1) | 192 | 186 | 3.2 |
IFRS profit before tax (£m) | 98 | 243 | (59.7) |
Total return on equity (%) | 1.2 | 3.9 | (2.7) |
EPRA earnings per share (pence)(1) | 25.8 | 25.0 | 3.2 |
Dividend per share (pence) | 19.0 | 18.6 | 2.2 |
Sep 2025 | Mar 2025 | Change % | |
Combined portfolio (£m)(1)(3) | 10,778 | 10,880 | (0.9) |
EPRA Net Tangible Assets per share (pence)(1) | 863 | 874 | (1.3) |
Adjusted net debt (£m)(1) | 4,375 | 4,304 | 1.6 |
Group LTV ratio (%)(1) | 40.3 | 39.3 | 1.0 |
Including our proportionate share of subsidiaries and joint ventures, as explained in the Presentation of financial information in the Financial Review.
Includes owner-occupied property and non-current assets held-for-sale.
The overarching objective of the strategy we set out in February is to deliver sustainable growth in income and EPS, both in the near term and long run, as it is clear that over time, income growth is the main driver of value growth in both real estate and equity markets.
To deliver this strategy, we set out nine key objectives - five for the short to medium term (i.e. the next 1-3 years) and four for the medium to long term (i.e. the next 2-5 years). The distinction between these two timeframes is deliberate, as this distinguishes between what will drive EPS growth in the near term vs our objectives in terms of capital allocation that are expected to underpin growth in income and EPS in the long term. Six months in, momentum on each of our objectives is positive and we expect this to continue in the second half.
In the near term, most of our EPS growth will be driven by our existing platform and the assets we own today. This is what our first five objectives are built on and where we are on track, or ahead of plan:
We continue to capture the growing reversion in our office/retail portfolio, with uplifts on relettings and renewals up to 10% and growth in like-for-like net rental income up to 5.2%;
We have reduced overhead costs by 6% and, with increased savings, now target overhead costs in the low £60m's by FY27 versus less than £65m previously, marking a c. 15% reduction vs FY25;
We have released £72m of capital from pre-development assets which had a modest negative impact on NTA, but adds 1.0% to EPS on an annualised basis, and we expect to deliver half of our three-year target to release £0.3bn of capital from this during the current financial year;
We have exited a third of our retail and leisure parks, which reduces annualised EPS by 1.0% but released £261m of capital from assets which generated no real like-for-like income growth, whilst the income yield we sold at was c. 100-150bps lower than income returns for major retail destinations;
Growing our retail platform by a further £1bn remains our highest conviction call, as we have now fully integrated our recent £0.5bn Liverpool One acquisition and materially outperformed our underwrite assumptions, with clear signs of more acquisition opportunities becoming available in the near future.
As our existing portfolio and platform are well placed to drive EPS growth in the near term, our decisions on development and capital recycling are about making sure that in 3-5 years' time, our asset mix is such that we are still as confident about the income growth prospects of our portfolio at that point, as we are about our current portfolio today. This is what our four longer-term objectives are built on:
Our aim to deliver low to mid-single digit like-for-like income growth p.a. is further underpinned by the new target for 4.5-7% CAGR in retail income we set out at our capital markets event in September;
We plan to release £2bn of capital employed from offices over the next 2-5 years and have so far sold
£295m ahead of schedule. The sale of QAM effectively converted the residual finance lease income on this asset into a capital receipt but aside from this, the impact on EPS is broadly neutral;
We are well on track to reduce office-led development by over 50%, as development commitments are set to come down from £1.1bn to c. £0.2bn by mid-2026. We do not expect to commit any meaningful further balance sheet capital to this in the next 12-18 months and intend to maintain a structurally lower level of development commitments thereafter, although we are seeing clear opportunities to leverage our expertise by working with third party capital;
We have made further early-stage progress towards our medium-term objective of establishing a
£2bn+ residential platform, with a resolution to grant detailed planning consent for the first 879 homes at Mayfield and part outline/part detailed consent for our 2,800-home masterplan in Lewisham since the summer, whilst public sector policy is becoming more supportive, which helps improve viability.
Clear near-term priorities in terms of capital allocationAs we execute our strategy, we maintain a clear framework for our capital allocation decisions. Alongside our views on risk, this is based on how our investments contribute to income and EPS growth in the near term, plus how they impact our portfolio mix such that this growth can be sustained in the medium to longer term. Naturally, we prioritise investments that deliver on both objectives. Beyond that, there is a balance between these two factors - near term EPS growth and impact on our desired portfolio mix - but our decisions will always seek to enhance at least one of these, without distracting from the other.
This framework underpins our conviction in our aim to grow our investment in retail by a further £1bn, given its high income return and the attractive income growth in the best locations. Not all of the retail assets we expect to see coming to market in the near future will meet our criteria, but for the next 12-18 months, this is our main priority. To facilitate this, we plan to recycle further capital out of offices, where investment activity is picking up. We will remain pragmatic about book values in doing so, as the upside to EPS from a c. 200bps pick-up in income return and higher like-for-like income growth is meaningful.
At present, we believe returns for office and residential development are less attractive than investment in retail. As such, we do not plan to commit any meaningful balance sheet capital to new development in the next 12-18 months, although the considerations behind this are different for office than residential.
For office development, we believe returns do not offer sufficient upside relative to the returns we expect on our high-quality existing office assets. Whilst more favourable rental growth or yield shift could improve development returns, we would also benefit from such market trends via our existing £7bn office portfolio. Taking into account the different levels of risk, this means we see little upside in selling these high-quality existing offices to fund the development of new ones using our own balance sheet, although we do see the potential to leverage our platform and expertise in this space by working with third party capital.
The position on residential development is more nuanced, partly as investing in this would shift our asset mix towards the higher income growth and lower cyclicality we are aiming for in the long run. We have a sizeable, deliverable pipeline of 9,000 homes across four projects in areas with a clear need for more housing. Construction could commence here in 2027, taking into account detailed design works, Building Safety Act approvals, and other preparation. Whilst returns are currently insufficient, positive shifts in public sector policy such as the recently announced reduction in affordable housing requirements and Community Infrastructure Levy in London are helpful and could add c. 50-75bps to current net yields on cost of c. 5.0%. Our focus is on securing these policy benefits which could lead to an improved outlook for residential development returns in 12-18 months, but for now capex spend will be very limited.
Regardless of sector mix, having large amounts of capital tied up in development for prolonged periods has a negative impact on our risk-profile and EPS growth, so we plan to move to a structurally lower level of development exposure in the future. Part of this is reflected in our objective to release half of our c.
£0.7bn capital employed in pre-development assets, but we also plan to keep our own exposure to committed development closer to about half of the c. £1bn it has been over the last five years via a combination of lower activity levels and working with capital partners on certain projects.
This means that our balance sheet will have a greater proportion of income generating investments in the future. This supports our objective to grow EPS in a sustainable way but also means that our net debt/ EBITDA measure of leverage will improve, as we have less capital tied up in low or non-yielding assets. As a consequence, we now target net debt/EBITDA of below 7x within the next two years, down from a previous target of below 8x, and we expect our LTV to reduce to below 35% over time.
As part of our capital allocation framework, we also continue to monitor the option of deploying capital in our own shares, from both a near-term and longer term perspective. Based on this framework, we judge investment opportunities in major retail to be more attractive at present and we would also prioritise our commitment to maintaining a strong capital base. This option will, however, remain part of our capital allocation decision framework going forward.
Raising near term EPS guidance and medium-term EPS potentialDriven by the focus and dedication of our highly talented teams across our best-in-class platforms, the operational performance across our office and retail portfolio remains market-leading. As such, we are making good early progress on the key objectives underpinning our focus on delivering sustainable income and EPS growth.
Following the 3.2% growth for the first half, we now expect EPRA EPS growth this year to be at the top end of our initial c. 2-4% guidance, before the impact from the sale of QAM we announced in August. The sale of this 1970's office block releases £245m of capital which effectively generated zero total return, as the asset value reduces in line with the receipt of every remaining rent payment, until the building is vacated at the end of 2028. As part of the sale, we will now receive the residual finance lease income which runs until December 2026 as a capital receipt upon completion of the sale next month, rather than as income across 2025 and 2026. The overall amount of cash we receive is essentially the same, but this will impact reported earnings for FY26 by £7m and for FY27 by £15m. EPS for FY28 onwards is largely unaffected by the disposal.
For FY27, the trajectory of EPS growth will depend on the pace of lease-up of our current London office projects. Between the end of September and next summer we have 840,000 sq ft of projects completing, including our Myo Kings Cross refurbishment (last month), and our developments at Timber Square (March) and Thirty High (June). Combined, these have a net effective rental value of c. £58m with c.
£43m of related incremental annual interest cost. Based on the positive levels of engagement with prospective customers we are seeing, we assume that our two main projects will be on average c. 40% let by the time they complete and all space will fully lease-up in around twelve months post completion.
Combined with continued like-for-like income growth, a reduction of capital tied-up in low-yielding assets, and further overhead cost savings, this means that on this basis we would expect FY27 EPS growth to be broadly similar to the growth we expect for FY26, again before the impact of the sale of the QAM (-£15m), as we will now receive the residual finance lease income that was due next year as upfront cash upon completion of the sale next month.
Earlier this year, we set out the potential for EPRA EPS to grow from 50.3 pence for FY25 to c. 60 pence by FY30, which included the assumed loss of income on QAM. Since then, we set out how we target to grow income across our existing retail platform by 4.5-7% pa at our Capital Markets Event in September, which included a 1-2% contribution from capex investments in smaller projects. At the mid-point of this range, and combined with the lower level of development we are planning for and our increased target for overhead cost savings, we now see the potential for EPS to grow to c. 62 pence by FY30.
We will continue to explore opportunities to further improve this, yet this EPS growth potential is mostly driven by lower overhead costs; capturing the growing reversion in our existing office/retail portfolio; leasing our upcoming office development completions; recycling capital to fund a further £1bn investment in major retail destinations; and reducing our capital employed in lower/non-yielding assets. This implies a
c. 4-4.5% CAGR in EPS over FY25-30 and supports continued growth in dividends. It includes very little upside from recycling capital from offices into residential, as the benefit from building a residential platform is mostly set to come through in the form of higher, less volatile income growth beyond FY30.
OutlookOur strong progress on delivering our strategy means the outlook for our high-quality portfolio remains firmly positive, both in the near term and medium to longer term.
In retail, close to 90% of our assets sit in the top 1% of retail destinations in the UK which provide brands with access to c. 30% of all in-store retail spend. Sales growth in our locations continues to materially outperform the national average, so as a result, these remain the destinations brands are focused on in terms of investing in fewer, bigger, better stores. As new supply of these destinations is zero and occupancy across our existing portfolio is nearing 97%, we now target c. 4.5-7% CAGR in net income through a combination of capturing reversion, turnover growth, commercialisation and targeted capex.
In office, utilisation across our portfolio continues to grow and our successful asset management means our portfolio is now 99% full. Across the wider London market some businesses which downsized space requirements post Covid are now reversing these decisions and as, in the near future, new development supply remains relatively modest, rental values across our portfolio continue to grow. Capturing this in like-for-like income growth is reliant on lease events and will therefore be more balanced over time than it has been over the past six months, yet our attractive 12% reversionary potential continues to support a positive like-for-like rental growth outlook.
As our high-quality office and retail assets make up 91% of our overall income, the outlook for income growth remains firmly positive. In the medium term, our substantial 9,000-home residential pipeline can add further to the attractions of this growing income profile given the strong structural growth prospects, as policy is becoming more supportive and helping to improve development viability.
It has never been more important to own the right real estate. Although we are mindful that macroeconomic challenges remain a risk, the trends which have supported our positive operational performance to date remain very much intact. We have had an active half year in terms of capital recycling, with £644m of disposals, and we expect to see continued momentum in capital recycling in the second half, as we pursue our overarching objective of delivering sustainable income and EPS growth. We will remain pragmatic about book values in doing so, as our principal focus is on ensuring our NTA delivers growing cashflows, growing earnings and growing dividends.
As we continue our journey to a higher income, higher income growth, and lower cyclicality business, and we continue to strengthen our robust capital base, delivering our strategy will unlock significant shareholder value.
Operating and portfolio review OverviewWe have created a high-quality, urban real estate portfolio which produces £656m of annualised rental income and offers potential for material income growth. This combined portfolio was valued at £10.8bn as of September and comprises the following segments:
Office-led places (52% of income): our well-connected, high-quality office-led portfolio, which includes ancillary retail and other commercial space, principally focused on multi-let assets in a small number of key areas in the West End (63%), City & Southwark (29%) and Greater Manchester (8%).
Retail-led destinations (39% of income): our investments in a select number of shopping centres and retail outlets, close to 90% of which sit in the top 1% highest selling retail destinations in the UK.
Residential-led places (2% of income): our investments in four key development projects in London and Greater Manchester, two of which still have a meanwhile use as retail, with planning consent or allocation for c. 9,000 new homes.
Other assets (7% of income): assets in sectors where we have limited scale or competitive advantage and which we therefore plan to divest over time, principally comprising retail and leisure parks.
Our primary focus is delivering sustainable income and EPS growth. In the long run, valuation yields of real estate assets and P/E multiples in equity markets are both broadly stable, so delivering sustainable income and EPS growth will, over time, result in an attractive return on equity for shareholders.
In the near term, most of our income growth will be driven by the assets we already own today. Given our active portfolio repositioning and the investments in our platform in recent years, the outlook for this remains positive. Our capital allocation decisions from here are about ensuring our income growth prospects in 3-5 years are as attractive as they are for our current portfolio today.
We have delivered another set of strong operational results. Like-for-like net rental income was up 5.2%, with strong growth in both offices and retail. Occupancy increased 40bps on a like-for-like basis to a high 97.7% and we secured rental uplifts of 9% on relettings/renewals across the two main parts of our portfolio during the period, up from 8% over the prior year. Overall ERVs increased 2.5% over the past six months, which underpins our future income growth potential. On a like-for-like basis, our gross to net margin was up 1.3ppt due to our continued focus on cost efficiencies. Given our strong leasing pipeline, we expect the positive momentum across these key metrics to be sustained in the second half.
Table 2: Like-for-like income growth
Net rental income £m | LFL net rental income growth % | LFL occupancy change ppt | Gross to net margin % | LFL change in GtN margin ppt | |
Office-led | 151 | 6.8 | 0.5 | 91.6 | 1.2 |
Retail-led | 103 | 5.0 | 0.0 | 81.7 | 1.7 |
Residential-led | 4 | nm | (1.7) | nm | nm |
Other assets | 26 | (2.2) | (1.2) | 96.3 | 1.6 |
Total Combined Portfolio | 284 | 5.2 | 0.4 | 87.7 | 1.3 |
Office-led places (52% of income)
Demand for high-quality office space in locations which offer the right amenities and transport connectivity remains strong. This is not just limited to brand-new buildings, as some businesses are becoming more conscious of the cost of record rents for newly developed space, especially as the additional costs of fitting out this space have jumped over 50% over the past four years. As location and access to interesting amenities remain key to attract the right talent, we continue to see the growing demand for high-quality existing assets translate into meaningful rental growth.
We continue to invest in our places and have seen last year's investments in the public realm at Cardinal Place, Victoria support a significant step up in rental levels, with some of our successful recent lettings nearing £100 per square foot. As such, our 2.3m sq ft Victoria estate is now 100% full. We are seeing similar early benefits from our approach at MediaCity, in Greater Manchester, where we have seen a marked turnaround in performance since we took full control of the estate a year ago, reflected in improved leasing and reduced cost, reflecting the benefits from our operating platform.
Driven by the strong performance of our portfolio, operations and leasing teams, our occupancy remains market-leading, with like-for-like occupancy up 50bps since March to 98.8%, significantly outperforming the wider London office market at 92.1%. We completed 29 lettings and renewals during the half year, totalling £13m of rent, on average 10% ahead of ERV, with a further £6m of lettings in solicitors' hands, 5% above ERV. Uplifts on relettings/renewals during the period were 7%, so alongside operating cost savings and growth in Myo income, this supported 6.8% LFL rental income growth. ERVs were up 3.1% so our reversionary potential now stands at 12%. This means we expect to see continued growth in LFL rental income in the next few years, albeit at more normalised levels than the past six months, due to the greater reliance on lease events to capture reversion now that our portfolio is effectively full.
Last month we opened our seventh Myo flex office, located next to Kings Cross station, where we are just under 50% let, under offer or in active negotiations, with a strong pipeline of further enquiries. Occupancy across our stabilised Myo portfolio is 85%, with a further 2% under offer and rents achieved in line with budget. In total, Myo now makes up 4% of our income in our office-led business.
Retail-led places (39% of income)
The top 1% of all UK shopping destinations provide access to c. 30% of the country's in-store, non-food retail spend, offering brands higher sales densities and productivity than other formats. Close to 90% of our retail assets sit in this top 1%, which underpins their continued outperformance. Total sales across our portfolio were up 7.7% vs the prior period, with footfall up 4.5% - both materially ahead of the BRC benchmarks of 1.5% and 0.9% respectively.
Since FY22, sales growth across our portfolio has outperformed the UK national average by a cumulative 16ppt. In addition, with annual footfall of 152 million and a consumer reach of one in four people in the UK, we provide brands with access to more footfall and a larger consumer reach than any other retail platform in the UK. Supported by the unique data and insights this offers us, we continue to invest in creating the best experience, creating a virtuous circle of growing footfall driving higher sales, which in turn attract the best brands, which then attract more footfall, and so on.
Examples of this are Sephora, where we have realised four of their six new store openings in the UK over the past twelve months, and Inditex who by the end of this year are expected to have signed twelve new stores with us over the past three years. At the same time, we are also continuing to enhance the F&B and leisure offer to add further to the overall consumer experience and increase footfall and dwell time.
All this translates into strong growth in income. Like-for-like occupancy remained stable at 96.7% since March but was up 50bps vs September last year and we expect this to increase further in the second half.
We signed 105 leases totalling £14m of rent on average 11% above ERV, which drove 2.2% ERV growth over six months. Relettings and renewals for the half year were 11% above previous passing rent, up from 7% for FY25 and 3% for the half year to September 2024. This has risen further to 14% for deals in solicitors hands, underlining the growing reversionary potential in our portfolio. As a result, like-for-like net rental income increased 5.0%.
Looking ahead, we have a strong leasing pipeline, with £18m of lettings in solicitors' hands on average 9% ahead of ERV. Our existing assets are nearly full and new supply is non-existent, so we recently set out a target to deliver 4.5-7% CAGR in income across our existing retail platform over the next five years. This reflects a combination of capturing the growing reversion across our portfolio and growth in turnover income (3-4%), growth in commercialisation income such as digital media, events and EV charging (0.5-1%) and the investment of up to c. £200m in smaller accretive capex projects (1-2%).
Residential-led places (2% of income)
At present, the income in this part of our portfolio solely reflects the current income on our retail assets at Finchley Road and Lewisham, which are managed with a view on maintaining development optionality for future residential development. Overall, net income across these assets was broadly stable at £4m.
Other assets (7% of income)
Having sold the majority of our retail parks during the half year, LFL occupancy across our residual retail and leisure parks was down 120bps to 97.3% and, reflecting this, like-for-like income for the period was down 2.2%. However, following a number of challenging years for the cinema industry, the prospects for this sector are improving, which should underpin the income outlook for our remaining assets.
Table 3: Operational performance | |||||
Annualised rental income | Net estimated rental value | EPRA occupancy(1) | LFL occupancy change(1) | WAULT(1) | |
£m | £m | % | ppt | Years | |
West End offices | 166 | 205 | 100.0 | 0.9 | 5.7 |
City/Southwark offices | 89 | 105 | 98.6 | 1.7 | 7.6 |
Manchester offices | 25 | 29 | 95.7 | 2.3 | 4.7 |
Retail and other | 62 | 57 | 96.7 | (0.6) | 5.7 |
Developments | - | 87 | n/a | n/a | n/a |
Total Office-led | 342 | 483 | 98.8 | 0.5 | 6.0 |
Shopping centres | 204 | 206 | 96.3 | (0.2) | 4.8 |
Outlets | 49 | 53 | 98.5 | 1.1 | 2.9 |
Total Retail-led | 253 | 259 | 96.7 | 0.0 | 4.4 |
Developments | 12 | 26 | 86.4 | (1.7) | 6.9 |
Total Residential-led | 12 | 26 | 86.4 | (1.7) | 6.9 |
Retail and leisure parks | 49 | 49 | 97.3 | (1.2) | 8.6 |
Total Other assets | 49 | 49 | 97.3 | (1.2) | 8.6 |
Total Combined Portfolio | 656 | 817 | 97.7 | 0.4 | 5.6 |
1. Excluding developments. | |||||
Acquisitions | |||||
Following £720m of acquisitions in the prior year, we only made £32m of acquisitions during the half year. Our principal new investment was an increase in our stake in Liverpool ONE from 93.7% to 96.5% at a cost of £15m. Since the period-end, we spent £48m on a small, newly developed office in Oval we agreed to forward-purchase in the summer of 2021, with a further £10m consideration deferred for up to 24 months. This has an ERV of £4m and we are seeing positive engagement with prospective customers looking for a high-quality building in a more affordable location.
DisposalsWe have had an active period in terms of capital recycling, with the disposal of £644m of assets since March. £370m of this completed during the half year and £29m since the period end, with a further £245m unconditionally exchanged and expected to complete in early December.
Our principal disposal is the sale of Queen Anne's Mansions (QAM) for £245m, which is set to complete next month. This Victoria office block was developed by Landsec in the 1970's and has been fully let to the Government since, yet they now intend to vacate the property once their lease expires in December 2028. Given its age, the majority of the valuation of the asset is linked to its future redevelopment potential, with the balance of value stepping down in line with the receipt of rental income over the remainder of the current lease, hence the asset generates a c. 0% total return.
We also sold four retail parks, with total proceeds of £261m. Whilst the 6.4% net rental income yield was reasonable, it is c. 100-150bps below major retail destinations and LFL income growth is far lower. In line with our objective to reduce our £0.7bn exposure to pre-development assets by half over three years, we also sold two pre-development sites for £72m which generated a net income yield of -0.4%. In addition, we sold a small City office for £50m, reflecting a net rental income yield of 5.1%.
In total, our disposals release £644m of capital from assets which generated limited or no return at a cost to overall NTA of 1.0%. The residual finance lease income on QAM which would have been received as income over FY25 and FY26 will now be received as a cash capital receipt on sale, but aside from this, the overall impact of these disposals is effectively neutral in terms of EPS. With investment activity in London picking up, we expect further progress in terms of capital recycling in the second half.
Development and investments in existing assetsDuring the half year, we invested £244m in capex, including £118m for our on-site projects in Victoria, Southwark and Manchester, £19m for repositioning traditional office space to MYO flex space, and £23m in pre-development assets. As we are well underway to reduce our capital employed in pre-development assets by half and capex on future residential projects will be tightly controlled pending progress on securing public sector support, pre-development capex is set to reduce in the future. We invested £83m in our existing portfolio, including £35m for smaller projects, leasing and maintenance across our retail portfolio, and £43m across our office portfolio, including £14m for our net zero investment programme.
Current projects
Of our two main on-site office developments, Timber Square is on track to complete by March 2026. At Thirty High, we have seen a few months delay to the programme, so completion is now expected to be around June 2026. Whilst much smaller, last month we also opened our new 82,000 sq ft Myo flex office location at Kings Cross following the repositioning of the existing asset and we completed the acquisition of a newly built 76,000 sq ft office in Oval we agreed to forward purchase in 2021.
Combined, these assets comprise 840,000 sq ft of new, highly sustainable office space, focused on locations with great transport connectivity and attractive amenities. Once fully let, they are expected to produce c. £58m of rental income on a net effective basis, with associated incremental annual interest expense of £43m post completion. All our projects are designed to be multi-let, which means we assume the majority of leasing to happen after completion in our underwrites.
Attracted by the high quality of our product, we are seeing good customer engagement, especially for the nearer term completions. At Timber Square and Oval, we have negotiations, incoming RFPs or other active engagements covering over 110% of the space available. Not all of this will convert into lettings,
but we expect to see some meaningful progress on leasing in the next six months. The pipeline at Myo Kings Cross is even larger, consistent with the flex offer, and we already have close to 50% let, under offer, or in active negotiations. As the completion of Thirty High is still c. 9 months away, we expect to see pre-let activity here to start in the new year.
Clearly, our FY27 earnings are sensitive to the exact pace at which lettings come through. Based on current activity, we assume our two main projects to be on average c. 40% let by the time they complete and all space to fully lease up in around twelve months post completion. By way of sensitivity, for each 10ppt variance in leasing assumptions across the year, the impact on FY27 EPS would be c. 0.9 pence.
Beyond these near-term projects, we recently commenced the development of a £152m office at Mayfield, Manchester, which unlocks the potential residential development in subsequent phases. Office demand in Manchester is strong, with take-up in the first half of 2025 32% above the five-year average. This first office phase is expected to complete in early 2028 and with an expected gross yield on cost of 7.9%, will add £2m to earnings once fully let based on current interest rates. As supply of new office space in Manchester is limited, we are already seeing positive early engagement with prospective customers significantly ahead of the 2028 completion.
We are also on site with a number of smaller projects in retail, such as the extension of Primark's store at White Rose, Leeds to double its footprint; repositioning the former House of Fraser department store at Bluewater for a new 133,000 sq ft Next store; and the creation of a new social eating destination at Trinity, Leeds. Combined capex for this is £43m, with a highly accretive yield on cost of c. 10%.
Table 4: Committed | pipeline | |||||||
Size sq ft | Estimated completion | ERV | Market value | Costs to complete | TDC | Gross yield on TDC | ||
Project | Sector | '000 | date | £m | £m | £m | £m | % |
Thirty High, SW1 | Office | 299 | Q1 FY27 | 30 | 383 | 69 | 420 | 7.1% |
Timber Square, SE1 | Office | 383 | Q4 FY26 | 31 | 354 | 72 | 446 | 7.0% |
Republic, Manchester | Office | 244 | Q4 FY28 | 12 | 24 | 119 | 152 | 7.9% |
Various projects | Retail | 292 | Various | 4 | N/A | 30 | 43 | 9.8% |
Total | 1,218 | 77 | 290 | 1,061 | 7.3% | |||
Potential future pipeline
As part of our aim to invest a further £1bn into major retail destinations over the next 1-3 years, we are planning various highly accretive smaller capex investments in our existing retail assets. These include amongst others the repositioning of Buchanan Galleries in Glasgow; the creation of new social eating concepts in Liverpool and Cardiff; creating an upgraded dining area in Bluewater; and a new waterfront F&B offer at Gunwharf Quays. Individual projects are typically around £10-15m, with potential overall spend of c. £40m p.a. over the next few years, which is expected to deliver a 10%+ yield on cost.
Our success in planning in recent years meant we started the year with more potential future large-scale development projects than we had the balance sheet capacity and risk appetite for. All in all, we had c.
£700m of capital employed in these pre-development assets as of March, but with an income yield of c. 1%, there is significant holding cost to maintaining optionality on this for an extended period. As such, we set out to reduce our capital employed in this area by half over the next three years. Since the start of the year, we have already sold two sites in Southwark, which released £72m of capital, and we expect to release further capital in the second half of the year. This will be immediately EPS accretive and improve our overall return on equity, reflecting the reduction in capitalised pre-development costs.
Post the completion of our two on-site London office schemes, our committed development activity will come down from c. £1bn to c. £0.2bn by mid-2026. At present, we believe returns for new office and
residential development are less attractive than new acquisitions of major retail destinations, so we do not plan to commit any meaningful balance sheet capital to new development in the next 12-18 months.
The considerations behind this are different for office than residential. We set out in May that we would not start any new speculative London office projects before we had secured the majority of the £61m ERV on our on-site schemes in Victoria and Southwark. We are seeing good interest in this, yet at this stage returns on new office developments do not offer sufficient upside vs the returns we expect on our high-quality existing office portfolio. This means we see little upside in selling existing office assets to fund the development of new offices ourselves, although we do see the potential to leverage our platform and
long-standing expertise in this space by bringing projects forward with third party capital.
The position on residential development is more nuanced, in part as investing in this would shift our portfolio mix towards the higher income growth and lower cyclicality we are aiming for in the long term. During the half year, we secured a resolution to grant detailed planning consent for the first phase of 879 homes at Mayfield, adjacent to Manchester's main train station, and since the period-end, we secured a resolution to grant a part outline and part detailed planning consent for our 2,800 homes scheme in Lewisham, south-east London. This comes in addition to the existing outline and part detailed planning consent for 1,800 homes at Finchley Road, north London and our site at MediaCity, Greater Manchester which has an allocation for 2,700 homes.
This means that in total we now have four projects which combined could deliver 9,000 homes over the next decade. Each of these benefit from strong transport connections, scale, and a demonstrable need for more housing. We could see first starts on site in 2027, taking into account detailed design works, Building Safety Act approvals, and site preparation. However, returns currently are not at sufficient levels which is an issue across the wider market, as highlighted by the fact that new housing starts in London fell to 3,248 over the first nine months of 2025, which is down c. 75% over the last three years.
Encouragingly, public sector policy is beginning to shift in a positive direction, for example with the recent announcement in London around a reduction in affordable housing requirements from 35% to 20%, a 50% reduction in the Community Infrastructure Levy, and less onerous design requirements. These measures are supportive and could potentially add c. 50-75bps to current net yields on cost of c. 5.0%. Our focus is on securing these, and other policy benefits elsewhere, which could lead to an improved outlook for residential development returns in 12-18 months, but in the meantime capex spend will be very limited.
Regardless of sector mix, having large amounts of capital tied up in development for prolonged periods has a negative impact on our risk-profile and EPS growth, so we plan to move to a structurally lower level of development exposure in the future. Part of this is reflected in our objective to release half of our c.
£0.7bn capital employed in pre-development assets, but we also plan to keep our own exposure to committed development closer to about half of the c. £1bn it has been over the last five years via a combination of lower activity levels and working with capital partners on certain projects.
Table 5: Pre-development assets | |||||
Current capital employed | Proposed sq ft | Proposed new homes | Indicative TDC | Potential start date | Planning status |
Project £m | '000 | £bn | |||
Office-led | |||||
Old Broad Street, EC2 | 2026 | Consented | |||
Liberty of Southwark, SE1 | 2026 | Consented | |||
Hill House, EC4 | 2026 | Consented | |||
Nova Place, SW1 | 2027 | Consented | |||
Timber Square Phase 2, SE1 | 2027 | Consented | |||
Total c. 290 | 1,350 | 1.9 | |||
Residential-led1 | |||||
Mayfield, Manchester | 1,700 | 0.9 | 2027 | Consented | |
Finchley Road, NW3 | 1,800 | 1.2 | 2027 | Consented | |
Lewisham, SE13 | 2,800 | 1.5 | 2027 | Consented | |
MediaCity Phase 2, Salford | 2,700 | n/m | n/m | Design | |
Total c. 270 | 9,000 | 3.6 | |||
Other opportunities c. 90 | n/m | n/m | Various | ||
Indicative figures given multi-phased nature of schemes; subject to change depending on final scope, planning and design.
Successfully delivering on our objective to drive sustainable income growth over time will underpin growth in property values in the long run, even though in the short term valuations will be affected by changes in valuation yields. Yields were stable over the six months and our strong leasing activity drove 2.5% ERV growth, although the upside of this in terms of the external valuation of our portfolio was offset by a small number of specific factors in our office-led portfolio, so overall values were effectively stable at -0.1%.
Our office portfolio was down 1.0%, as the upside from 3.1% growth in ERVs was offset by a small rise in valuation yields, plus the depreciation in value of QAM and the impact of an increase in business rates at Piccadilly Lights compared to the last review in 2021. The latter two resulted in a -0.8% overall office-led value change but neither will be a continuing factor. Within office, development values were down 1.7%, reflecting some yield softening and a shortfall vs book value on a disposal which completed post the period-end. The valuation of our retail-led portfolio was up 2.3%, with 2.2% ERV growth and valuation yields down marginally. The valuation of our future residential developments and our residual retail and leisure parks was both broadly stable, at +0.6% and -0.5% respectively.
We are seeing a steady pick-up in investment activity in London and major retail, both of which continue to see growing investor interest. Rents for the best assets continue to grow, which means yields for such assets look attractive in a historical context. Credit markets remain supportive, although the pace at which momentum continues to improve from here will likely remain reliant on the outlook for long-term interest rates. As customer demand remains robust, we continue to expect that ERVs for offices and retail will grow by a broadly similar rate as the 4-5% growth they saw last year.
Table 6: Valuation overview
Topped | ||||||||
Market | Surplus / | Valuation | LFL rental value | Net initial | up net initial | Equivalent | LFL equivalent | |
value | (Deficit) | change | change(1) | yield | yield | yield | yield change | |
£m | £m | % | % | % | % | % | bps | |
West End offices3 | 3,087 | (52) | (1.7) | 2.7 | 4.7 | 5.9 | 5.6 | 20 |
City offices | 1,450 | 17 | 1.2 | 2.9 | 4.0 | 5.5 | 6.2 | 8 |
Manchester offices | 262 | 2 | 0.9 | 2.6 | 6.9 | 6.9 | 8.5 | 21 |
Retail and other2 | 1,129 | (15) | (1.4) | 4.7 | 4.4 | 4.6 | 5.0 | (11) |
Developments3 | 1,171 | (20) | (1.7) | n/a | 0.0 | 0.0 | 5.6 | n/a |
Total Office-led | 7,099 | (68) | (1.0) | 3.1 | 4.6 | 5.6 | 5.8 | 12 |
Shopping centres | 2,206 | 48 | 2.3 | 2.2 | 7.3 | 7.9 | 7.8 | (2) |
Outlets | 646 | 14 | 2.3 | 2.1 | 6.1 | 6.5 | 6.8 | (11) |
Total Retail-led | 2,852 | 62 | 2.3 | 2.2 | 7.0 | 7.6 | 7.5 | (4) |
Developments | 298 | 2 | 0.6 | 0.8 | 4.0 | 4.0 | 6.7 | (4) |
Total Residential-led | 298 | 2 | 0.6 | 0.8 | 4.0 | 4.0 | 6.7 | (4) |
Retail and leisure parks | 529 | (2) | (0.5) | 0.0 | 7.7 | 7.9 | 8.3 | (6) |
Total Other assets | 529 | (2) | (0.5) | 0.0 | 7.7 | 7.9 | 8.3 | (6) |
Total Combined Portfolio | 10,778 | (6) | (0.1) | 2.5 | 5.5 | 6.3 | 6.4 | 3 |
Rental value change excludes units materially altered during the period.
Includes owner-occupied property.
Includes non-current assets held-for-sale.
As we grow income and EPS, it is important our growth is sustainable in all aspects. We target to reduce direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions by 47% by 2030 vs 2019/20, including all of our Scope 1,2 and 3 emissions, and reach net zero by 2040. So far, we have reduced our emissions by 33% vs our 2019/20 baseline. We also target to reduce energy intensity by 52% by 2030 vs 2019/20 and remain on track for this, with a 25% reduction vs this baseline so far.
In 2021, we set out a net zero transition investment plan to ensure all our assets would meet a Minimum Energy Efficiency Standard of EPC 'B' by 2030. The cost of this is reflected in our valuations and having finished the first retro-fit of air source heat pumps last year, we are on track to complete the retro-fit of further air source heat pumps at Palace Street and One New Change this year. Including disposals post the period-end, 58% of our portfolio is now rated EPC 'B' or higher, up from 56% in March.
Our pipeline of future developments is tracking a 39% reduction in embodied carbon vs a typical development, but there is a limit to how much of a further reduction is economically achievable. Whilst there is clear evidence that energy efficiency is valuable to customers and investors, there is little evidence customers or investors are willing to pay a premium for buildings with less embodied carbon.
Finally, through our Landsec Futures programme, we continue to improve social mobility in real estate and tackle issues local to our assets. To date, this has created career pathways for 22 interns and supported 14 real estate bursaries. From our 2019/20 baseline, we have so far created £128m of social value and empowered 17,206 people towards the world of work.
Financial review OverviewOur primary focus is to deliver sustainable income and EPS growth. We delivered good performance on this for the half year, as our strong operational results, with growth in like-for-like net rental income of 5.2%, and our continued focus on efficiency improvements resulted in 3.2% growth in EPRA EPS. At the same time, we have recycled £644m of capital out of assets which generated little or no return, improving our future return prospects and further supporting our strong capital base.
Customer demand for our best-in-class space remains robust, reflected in a 40bps rise in occupancy to 97.7% and 10% rental uplifts on relettings and renewals. Growth in like-for-like net rent was ahead of our
c. 3-4% guidance for the year, resulting in a £12m increase in income, and overhead costs were down
£2m, or 6%. This was partly offset by the fact that the prior half year benefitted from a £4m increase in the recovery of bad and doubtful debt provisions, principally driven by the recovery of outstanding debts on assets where we had brought management in house, yet overall, EPRA earnings were up £6m to £192m. The resulting 3.2% increase in EPRA EPS to 25.8 pence supported 2.2% growth in our interim dividend to 19.0 pence, comfortably in line with our policy of a 1.2-1.3x dividend cover on an annual basis.
Our successful leasing drove 2.5% ERV growth, which further enhances our income growth potential, as the external valuation of our portfolio was effectively stable, at -0.1%. The shortfall vs book value on the sale of £644m of low-returning assets meant IFRS profit before tax was £98m and led to a slight 1.3% reduction in NTA per share, which means our return on equity over the six-month period was 1.2%.
We expect EPRA EPS for the full year to be at the top end of our c. 2-4% guidance, before the impact of the sale of the QAM finance lease income (-£7m), which brought forward the receipt of this income to a capital receipt on sale. For FY27, the exact progress in terms of EPS will depend on the pace of leasing our current developments, but based on the positive engagement so far, we would currently expect EPS growth to be broadly similar to FY26, again before the impact of the sale of the QAM finance lease income (-£15m). Looking further ahead, we now see the potential for EPRA EPS to grow to c. 62 pence by FY30, up from c. 60 pence previously, implying c. 4-4.5% CAGR over FY25-30.
All this remains underpinned by our clear commitment to retain a strong balance sheet. Adjusted net debt was up £71m to £4.4bn during the half year, but this reduces to £4.1bn pro-forma for our net disposal activity since the period-end. Pro-forma for these our LTV is 38.9%, whilst our current net debt / EBITDA is 8.6x. We now target net debt / EBITDA of below 7x within the next two years, down from below 8x previously, as a higher proportion of our balance sheet will become income-producing and development exposure reduces. In addition, we expect our LTV to reduce to below 35% over time. With an average debt maturity of 8.9 years, no need to refinance any debt until 2027 at the earliest and £1.1bn of cash and undrawn facilities, our capital base remains strong.
Presentation of financial informationThe condensed consolidated preliminary financial information is prepared under UK adopted international accounting standards (IFRSs and IFRICs) where the Group's interests in joint ventures are shown collectively in the income statement and balance sheet, and all subsidiaries are consolidated at 100%.
Internally, management reviews the Group's results on a basis that adjusts for these forms of ownership to present a proportionate share. The Combined Portfolio, with assets totalling £10.8bn, is an example of this approach, reflecting our economic interest in our properties regardless of our ownership structure.
Our key measure of underlying earnings performance is EPRA earnings, which represents the underlying financial performance of the Group's property rental business, which is our core operating activity. A full definition of EPRA earnings is given in the Glossary. This measure is based on the Best Practices Recommendations of the European Public Real Estate Association (EPRA) which are metrics widely used across the industry to aid comparability and includes our proportionate share of joint ventures' earnings. Similarly, EPRA Net Tangible Assets per share is our primary measure of net asset value.
Measures presented on a proportionate basis are alternative performance measures as they are not defined under IFRS. This presentation provides additional information to stakeholders on the activities and performance of the Group, as it aggregates the results of all the Group's property interests which under IFRS are required to be presented across a number of line items in the statutory financial statements. For further details see table 14 in the Business analysis section.
Income statementWe delivered good progress on our objective to deliver sustainable income and EPS growth, as net rental income across our best-in-class portfolio was up £15m, principally driven by strong like-for-like growth.
Finance expenses increased in line with the increase in average borrowings, but this was offset by a reduction in administrative expenses so EPRA earnings of £192m were £6m ahead of the prior period.
Table 7: Income statement(1)
Office- led £m | Retail-led £m | Six months ended 30 September 2025 Residential- Other led assets Total £m £m £m | Six months ended 30 September 2024 Office- Retail- Residential- Other led led led assets Total £m £m £m £m £m | Change £m | ||||||||
Gross rental income(2) | 166 | 126 | 6 | 27 | 325 | 158 | 98 | 7 | 39 | 302 | 23 | |
Net service charge expense | - | (4) | (1) | (1) | (6) | (3) | (2) | (1) | - | (6) | - | |
Net direct property expenditure | (15) | (19) | (1) | (2) | (37) | (13) | (14) | (2) | (7) | (36) | (1) | |
Net other operating income | (1) | - | - | - | (1) | - | - | - | - | - | (1) | |
Movement in bad/doubtful debts provisions | 1 | - | - | 2 | 3 | - | 5 | 1 | 3 | 9 | (6) | |
Segment net rental income | 151 | 103 | 4 | 26 | 284 | 142 | 87 | 5 | 35 | 269 | 15 | |
Net administrative expenses | (32) | (34) | 2 | |||||||||
EPRA earnings before interest | 252 | 235 | 17 | |||||||||
Net finance expense | (60) | (49) | (11) | |||||||||
EPRA earnings | 192 | 186 | 6 | |||||||||
Capital/other items | |||
Valuation surplus/(deficit) | (6) | 91 | (97) |
Loss on disposals | (55) | (10) | (45) |
Impairment charges | - | (6) | 6 |
Fair value movement on derivatives | (6) | (15) | 9 |
Other | (28) | (2) | (26) |
Profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders of the parent | 97 | 244 | (147) |
Non-controlling interests | 1 | (1) | 2 |
Profit/(loss) before tax | 98 | 243 | (145) |
Including our proportionate share of subsidiaries and joint ventures, as explained in the Presentation of financial information above.
Includes finance lease interest, after rents payable.
Our gross rental income was up £23m to £325m, principally reflecting the benefit of net acquisitions and like-for-like growth. This included £3m of surrender receipts, which was slightly below the £4m in the prior period. In line with the expectation we set out at the start of the year, the release of bad and doubtful debt provisions was down £6m, as the prior period saw a £4m increase in this figure, principally related to the recovery of outstanding debts on assets that had previously been managed externally and we had started to manage in house.
Reflecting the above, our overall net rental income was up £15m to £284m, whilst on a like-for-like basis net rental income was up £12m, or 5.2%. This was well ahead of our c. 3-4% guidance for the full year, reflecting our strong leasing, with increased occupancy, positive uplifts on relettings and renewals, and growth in turnover income. Our focus on costs meant net service charge expenses and direct property expenditure were up just £1m, even though top-line income was up £23m. Adjusted for movements in the recovery of bad and doubtful debt provisions, this meant our gross to net margin improved by 0.7ppt to 86.8%. Looking ahead, we now expect like-for-like net rental income to grow by c. 4-5% this year.
Table 8: Net rental income(1) | |
£m | |
Net rental income for the six months ended 30 September 2024 | 269 |
Gross rental income like-for-like movement in the period(2): | |
Increase in variable and turnover-based rents | 5 |
Operational performance | 3 |
Total like-for-like gross rental income | 8 |
Like-for-like net service charge expense | 2 |
Like-for-like net direct property expenditure | 2 |
Decrease in surrender premiums received | (1) |
Developments(2) | (3) |
Acquisitions since 1 April 2024(2) | 21 |
Disposals since 1 April 2024(2) | (8) |
Movement in bad/doubtful debts | (6) |
Net rental income for the six months ended 30 September 2025 | 284 |
| |
Net administrative expenses |
We reduced net administrative expenses by a further £2m to £32m, as inflation was more than offset by our continued focus on managing costs. We implemented our new data and tech systems late last year, so we are now starting to see the efficiency benefits from this, alongside other organisational savings. This means we still expect net administrative expenses for the full year to be well below £70m.
Since the beginning of the year, we have identified further opportunities to improve efficiency. As such, we now target FY27 overhead costs to come down to the low £60m's, compared to our previous target of less than £65m. This marks a c. 15% reduction in costs over FY26-27 vs last year's £73m. Combined with the savings we have already realised over the past two years, this would imply a reduction of over
£20m vs our £84m of administrative expenses in FY23 and equate to a cost base of less than 60bps of our portfolio value.
The reduction in net administrative expenses and improvement in gross to net margin during the half year resulted in a 0.4ppt improvement in our EPRA cost ratio to 20.4%, although we remain of the view that this is not a measure which is overly useful in its own right. Assets with long leases to a single tenant naturally have lower operating costs than more operational assets such as e.g. residential or shopping centres, yet that does not mean they deliver better income returns or higher income growth. For us, the only thing which matters is the overall net income return, as that is what drives value for shareholders.
Net finance expensesNet interest costs increased by £11m to £60m, which principally reflects the higher level of net debt following the acquisitions of the final stake of MediaCity and Liverpool ONE in the second half of last year. We expect to reduce our net debt over the next 12-18 months due to our planned capital recycling, but as
our net debt for the first half of this year was higher than it was last year, we still expect net finance expenses for the full year to be higher than last year.
Finance expense movements in Capital/other items include the fair value movements on derivatives, caps and hedging and which is not included in EPRA earnings, decreased from a net expense of £15m in the prior period to a net expense of £6m over the last six months. This is predominantly due to the fair value movements of our interest-rate swaps over the period.
Valuation of investment propertiesThe independent external valuation of our Combined Portfolio was virtually unchanged, showing a marginal £6m reduction in value. Our continued strong leasing activity across our high-quality assets resulted in 2.5% ERV growth over six months, but the upside from this was partly offset by some yield softening in London. In addition, the valuation result reflected the ongoing unwind of the value of QAM, in line with the receipt of income ahead of its impending sale; the impact of an increase in business rates at Piccadilly Lights; and the shortfall vs book value on disposals completing post the period-end. The latter will be reflected as loss on disposals rather than valuation deficit in our full year results, but the impact on our IFRS profit and net assets is the same.
IFRS profit after taxSubstantially all our activity during the period was covered by UK REIT legislation, which means our tax charge for the period remained minimal. The IFRS profit after tax of £98m reflects our strong earnings performance, which was partly offset by the shortfall vs book value on a number of low-returning assets we sold since the start of the year and one-off other costs described in the section below. This compares with a prior period IFRS profit after tax of £243m, which benefitted from a valuation surplus of £91m.
Net assets and return on equityIncluding dividends paid, our total return on equity for the six-month period was 1.2%, compared with 3.9% for the prior period. The main difference was due to the fact that the external valuation of our portfolio was flat over the last six months, compared to a small increase in the prior period, and that we saw a shortfall vs book value on the sale of a select number of assets which generated little or no return. The income return at NTA we generated was 2.9%, or 5.9% on an annualised basis.
After the £162m of dividends paid, EPRA Net Tangible Assets, which reflects the value of our Combined Portfolio less adjusted net debt, reduced slightly to £6,448m, or 863 pence per share. This was down 1.3% since March, principally driven by the sale of £644m of low-returning assets, which came at a cost to NTA of 1.0%. In addition, we recognised £8m of restructuring costs, wrote off £12m WIP on a potential future development opportunity and made a number of other small adjustments impacting NTA in respect of certain property provisions totalling £13m.
Table 9: Balance sheet(1)
30 September 2025 £m | 31 March 2025 £m | |
Combined Portfolio Adjusted net debt Other net assets/(liabilities) | 10,778 (4,375) 45 | 10,880(2) (4,304) (46) |
EPRA Net Tangible Assets Shortfall of fair value over net investment in finance leases book value Other intangible assets Excess of fair value over trading properties book value Fair value of interest-rate swaps | 6,448 6 1 (27) 6 | 6,530 8 2 (27) 1 |
Net assets, excluding amounts due to non-controlling interests | 6,434 | 6,514 |
Net assets per share EPRA Net Tangible Assets per share (diluted) | 867p 863p | 877p 874p |
Including our proportionate share of subsidiaries and joint ventures, as explained in the Presentation of financial information above.
Includes owner-occupied property and non-current assets held-for-sale.
Table 10: Movement in EPRA Net Tangible Assets(1) | ||
£m | Diluted per share pence | |
EPRA Net Tangible Assets at 31 March 2025 | 6,530 | 874 |
EPRA earnings | 192 | 26 |
Valuation deficit | (6) | (1) |
Dividends | (162) | (22) |
Loss on disposals | (55) | (7) |
Movement in own shares | (18) | (2) |
Other | (33) | (5) |
EPRA Net Tangible Assets at 30 September 2025 | 6,448 | 863 |
Including our proportionate share of subsidiaries and joint ventures, as explained in the Presentation of financial information above.
Adjusted net debt, which includes our share of JV borrowings, increased by £71m to £4,375m during the half year. We spent £32m on acquisitions and invested £247m in capex, including £116m for our on-site development schemes, with the remainder principally comprising pre-development capex; a number of accretive smaller projects and leasing capex in retail; and investments in our office portfolio, including the creation of new Myo flex office space and our net-zero investment programme. This was partly offset by
£365m of disposal receipts during the period.
Post the September reporting date, we have already sold or exchanged contracts for the unconditional sale of £274m of assets, which combined with a small acquisition, reduce our adjusted net debt from
£4,375m to £4,133m on a pro-forma basis, with further disposals expected in the second half. We have
£238m of committed capex remaining on our two London office developments and Mayfield, of which
£108m is expected to be spent this financial year.
As we prioritise investment in major retail and retaining our balance sheet strength, we do not intend to commit to any meaningful capital to new developments in the next 12-18 months. Meanwhile, future capex on pre-development assets will be minimal pending visibility on the potential for public sector support to improve the return prospects for our residential schemes.
The other key elements behind the increase in net debt are set out in our statement of cash flows and note 9 to the financial statements, with the main movements in adjusted net debt shown below. A reconciliation between net debt and adjusted net debt is shown in note 13 of the financial statements.
Table 11: Movement in adjusted net debt(1) | |
£m | |
Adjusted net debt at 31 March 2025 | 4,304 |
Adjusted net cash inflow from operating activities | (32) |
Dividends paid | 150 |
Capital expenditure | 247 |
Acquisitions | 32 |
Disposals | (365) |
Other | 39 |
Adjusted net debt at 30 September 2025 | 4,375 |
1. Including our proportionate share of subsidiaries and joint ventures, as explained in the Presentation of financial information above. |
In line with our guidance at time of our full year results, average net debt/EBITDA ticked up, reflecting the fact that our two major on-site developments in London are nearing the point of full capital deployment but are not yet producing income, which means this came out at 8.6x for the period.
We previously stated we targeted net debt/EBITDA to be below 8x, but as we move to a structurally lower level of development activity, we now target this to be below 7x within the next two years. The two main drivers for this will be the lease-up of our two on-site developments in London and monetising the rest of the £0.3bn capital employed in pre-development assets we said we would target to exit over the next 1-3 years, as both materially reduce our investment in assets that do not generate income.
The acquisition of Liverpool ONE late last year increased our LTV towards the upper end of our 25-40% target range. Our reported LTV increased slightly during the first half reflected capex spend to 40.3%, but this has come down to 38.9% pro-forma for our net disposal activity since September and we expect our LTV to reduce to below 35% over time. Maintaining our strong capital base remains a key priority for us, so this would be commensurate with AA credit ratings.
Table 12: Net debt and leverage
30 September 2025 | 31 March 2025 | |
Net debt Adjusted net debt(1) | £4,400m £4,375m | £4,341m £4,304m |
Interest cover ratio Net debt/EBITDA (period-end) Net debt/EBITDA (weighted average) | 3.1x 8.6x 8.6x | 3.6x 8.9x 7.9x |
Group LTV(1) Group LTV(1)- pro-forma for net disposal activity since Sep-25 | 40.3% 38.9% | 39.3% nm |
1. Including our proportionate share of subsidiaries and joint ventures, as explained in the Presentation of financial information above.
FinancingOur financial position remains strong. In October, we agreed the first one-year extension option of the full
£2,250m of revolving credit facilities we signed a year ago, which was split evenly across two tenors of 3+1+1 and 5+1+1 years. As a result, our overall debt maturity remains long, at 8.9 years, providing clear visibility and underpinning the resilience of our attractive earnings profile. We had £1.1bn of cash and undrawn facilities at the end of September, providing substantial flexibility, and no need to undertake any refinancing activity until 2027 at the earliest. Our debt is 85% fixed or hedged and in line with the guidance for a slight increase we provided at the start of the year, our average cost of debt was up marginally to 3.6%.
Our gross borrowings of £4,518m are diversified across various sources, including £2,868m of Medium Term Notes (MTNs), £715m of syndicated and bilateral bank loans and £935m of commercial paper. Our MTNs and the majority of bank loans form part of our Security Group, which provides security on a floating pool of assets valued at £9.9bn. This structure provides flexibility to include or exclude assets, and an attractive cost of funding. Our MTNs are currently rated AA and A+ by S&P and Fitch.
Our Security Group has a number of tiered covenants, yet below 65% LTV and above 1.45x ICR, these involve very limited operational restrictions. A default only occurs when LTV is more than 100% or the ICR falls below 1.0x. Our portfolio could withstand a c. 30% fall in value before we reach the 65% LTV threshold and c. 54% before reaching 100% LTV, whilst our EBITDA could fall by c. 60% before we reach the 1.45x ICR threshold and c. 73% before reaching 1.0x ICR.
Table 13: Available facilities(1)
30 September 2025 £m | 31 March 2025 £m | |
Medium Term Notes | 2,868 | 2,868 |
Drawn bank debt | 715 | 778 |
Outstanding commercial paper | 935 | 750 |
Cash and available undrawn facilities | 1,097 | 1,101 |
Total committed credit facilities | 2,650 | 2,590 |
Weighted average maturity of debt(1) | 8.9 years | 9.6 years |
Percentage of borrowings fixed or hedged(2) | 85% | 91% |
Weighted average cost of debt(3) | 3.6% | 3.4% |
Assuming the extensions on both RCF tranches are executed, the first of which happened post period-end; 8.6 years excl. the second extension.
Calculated as fixed rate debt and hedges over gross debt based on the nominal values of debt and hedges.
Including amortisation and commitment fees; excluding this the weighted average cost of debt is 3.4% at 30 September 2025.
The principal risks and uncertainties of the business were set out on pages 38 - 45 of the 2025 Annual Report published in June. The Executive Leadership Team and the Board review these risks regularly and continue to monitor for changes and emerging risks. Though the risk landscape continues to evolve and change over time, they remain the most relevant and the principal risks at the half year are unchanged from those disclosed in the Annual Report except for 'Change Projects Fail to Deliver', which is no longer considered a principal risk. This reflects the successful embedding of our two largest change programmes into the business over the past 12 months.
The macro-economic outlook remains our highest-rated principal risk and has some impact on aspects of our other strategic risks related to the office and retail occupier markets, development strategy and capital allocation. Inflation has picked up slightly and some uncertainty persists around the UK fiscal outlook.
Long-term interest rates and financing costs remain relatively high, which present challenges for the business, however we have maintained our strong operational performance over the first half of the year.
Our nine principal risks and their current outlook are summarised as follows:
Macro-economic outlook - This risk incorporates the potential impacts of changes in the broader economic environment, including inflationary pressures, challenging interest rates, legislative changes, and shifts in business and consumer confidence. Whilst there has been a modest increase in the trend of this risk when considering the increased uncertainty around the UK fiscal outlook, it is not considered significant enough to increase the risk score. For Landsec this risk impacts asset yields, income and therefore valuations, our cost base, and our ability to recycle assets. It may also enable opportunities to acquire assets.
Office, Retail and hospitality occupier markets - The risks associated with these two markets are considered to have remained stable over the period. In both markets, demand continues to focus on the best quality assets in the strongest locations: both characteristics of our portfolio. As a result, despite continued pressure on some areas of the wider market, our operational performance remains strong and our portfolio well-positioned for further growth.
Capital allocation - This risk is considered to have reduced in line with the progress we are making on our capital recycling programme.
Development - This risk is considered to have reduced since the year end as we near completion of two of our major projects. As the majority of the development costs of our committed schemes is already fixed, and no new development commitments are planned in the near future, therefore this risk is expected to reduce further as our current projects near completion.
Information security and cyber threat - This risk is considered to have increased as we continue to review our control environment in response to the significant increase in cyber incidents in the UK in the past 12 months with the evolving sophistication and nature of ransomware attacks.
The three remaining operational principal risks (Health and safety, People and skills, and Climate change transition) have remained stable in the six months since last year end.
Statement of Directors' ResponsibilitiesThe Directors confirm to the best of their knowledge that these condensed consolidated interim financial statements have been prepared in accordance with UK-adopted IAS 34 and that the interim management report includes a fair review of the information required by the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules (DTR) 4.2.7R and 4.2.8R, namely:
an indication of important events that have occurred during the first six months and their impact on the condensed consolidated set of financial statements, and a description of the principal risks and uncertainties for the remaining six months of the financial year; and
material related party transactions in the first six months and any material changes in the related party transactions described in the last annual report.
The Directors of Land Securities Group PLC are listed in our 2025 Annual Report and are maintained on the Land Securities Group PLC website at landsec.com.
By order of the Board
Mark Allan Vanessa Simms
Chief Executive Chief Financial Officer
Independent review report to Land Securities Group PLC ConclusionWe have been engaged by the Company to review the condensed set of financial statements in the half-yearly financial report for the six months ended 30 September 2025 which comprises the unaudited income statement, the unaudited statement of comprehensive income, the unaudited balance sheet, the unaudited statements of changes in equity, the unaudited statements of cash flows and the related notes to the financial statements. We have read the other information contained in the half yearly financial report and considered whether it contains any apparent misstatements or material inconsistencies with the information in the condensed set of financial statements.
Based on our review, nothing has come to our attention that causes us to believe that the condensed set of financial statements in the half-yearly financial report for the six months ended 30 September 2025 is not prepared, in all material respects, in accordance with UK adopted International Accounting Standard 34 and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.
Basis for ConclusionWe conducted our review in accordance with International Standard on Review Engagements 2410 (UK) "Review of Interim Financial Information Performed by the Independent Auditor of the Entity" (ISRE) issued by the Financial Reporting Council. A review of interim financial information consists of making enquiries, primarily of persons responsible for financial and accounting matters, and applying analytical and other review procedures. A review is substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) and consequently does not enable us to obtain assurance that we would become aware of all significant matters that might be identified in an audit. Accordingly, we do not express an audit opinion.
As disclosed in note 1, the annual financial statements of the Group are prepared in accordance with UK adopted international accounting standards. The condensed set of financial statements included in this half-yearly financial report has been prepared in accordance with UK adopted International Accounting Standard 34, "Interim Financial Reporting".
Conclusions Relating to Going ConcernBased on our review procedures, which are less extensive than those performed in an audit as described in the Basis for Conclusion section of this report, nothing has come to our attention to suggest that management have inappropriately adopted the going concern basis of accounting or that management have identified material uncertainties relating to going concern that are not appropriately disclosed.
This conclusion is based on the review procedures performed in accordance with this ISRE, however future events or conditions may cause the entity to cease to continue as a going concern.
Responsibilities of the directorsThe directors are responsible for preparing the half-yearly financial report in accordance with the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.
In preparing the half-yearly financial report, the directors are responsible for assessing the company's ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the directors either intend to liquidate the company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.
Auditor's Responsibilities for the review of the financial informationIn reviewing the half-yearly report, we are responsible for expressing to the Company a conclusion on the condensed set of financial statements in the half-yearly financial report. Our conclusion, including our Conclusions Relating to Going Concern, are based on procedures that are less extensive than audit procedures, as described in the Basis for Conclusion paragraph of this report.
Use of our reportThis report is made solely to the company in accordance with guidance contained in International Standard on Review Engagements 2410 (UK) "Review of Interim Financial Information Performed by the Independent Auditor of the Entity" issued by the Financial Reporting Council. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the company, for our work, for this report, or for the conclusions we have formed.
Ernst & Young LLP London
13 November 2025
Financial statements | |||||
Unaudited income statement | Six months ended | Six months ended | |||
30 September 2025 | 30 September 2024 | ||||
EPRA earnings | Capital and other items Total | EPRA earnings | Capital and other items Total | ||
Notes | £m | £m £m | £m | £m £m | |
Revenue Costs | 5 6 | 430 (195) | 1 (29) | 431 (224) | 372 (153) | 11 (21) | 383 (174) |
235 | (28) | 207 | 219 | (10) | 209 | ||
Share of post-tax profit from joint ventures | 12 | 12 | 10 | 22 | 11 | 5 | 16 |
Loss on disposal of investment properties | - | (55) | (55) | - | (5) | (5) | |
Net (deficit)/surplus on revaluation of investment properties | 10 | - | (15) | (15) | - | 84 | 84 |
Operating profit/(loss) | 247 | (88) | 159 | 230 | 74 | 304 | |
Finance income | 7 | 7 | - | 7 | 7 | - | 7 |
Finance expense | 7 | (62) | (6) | (68) | (51) | (17) | (68) |
Profit/(loss) before tax | 192 | (94) | 98 | 186 | 57 | 243 | |
Taxation | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
Profit/(loss) for the period | 192 | (94) | 98 | 186 | 57 | 243 | |
Attributable to: | ||
Shareholders of the parent | 97 | 244 |
Non-controlling interests | 1 | (1) |
98 | 243 | |
Profit per share attributable to shareholders of the parent: | ||
Basic earnings per share 4 Diluted earnings per share 4 | 13.0p 13.0p | 32.8p 32.7p |
Six months ended 30 September 2024
Total Total £m £mProfit for the period | 98 | 243 |
Other comprehensive profit for the period | - | - |
Total comprehensive profit for the period | 98 | 243 |
Attributable to: | ||
Shareholders of the parent | 97 | 244 |
Non-controlling interests | 1 | (1) |
98 | 243 |
31 March
2025
Notes £m £mNon-current assets | |||
Investment properties | 10 | 9,722 | 10,034 |
Property, plant and equipment | 41 | 42 | |
Intangible assets | 3 | 3 | |
Net investment in finance leases | 20 | 19 | |
Investments in joint ventures | 12 | 568 | 551 |
Trade and other receivables | 145 | 229 | |
Other non-current assets | 29 | 22 | |
Total non-current assets | 10,528 | 10,900 | |
Current assets | |||
Trading properties | 11 | 84 | 81 |
Trade and other receivables | 586 | 467 | |
Monies held in restricted accounts and deposits | 13 | 20 | |
Cash and cash equivalents | 97 | 39 | |
Other current assets | 13 | 4 | |
Non-current assets held-for-sale | 18 | 263 | 110 |
Total current assets | 1,056 | 721 | |
Total assets | 11,584 | 11,621 | |
Current liabilities | |||
Borrowings | 14 | (937) | (752) |
Trade and other payables | (346) | (406) | |
Provisions | 15 | (46) | (44) |
Other current liabilities | (20) | (6) | |
Total current liabilities | (1,349) | (1,208) | |
Non-current liabilities | |||
Borrowings | 14 | (3,717) | (3,802) |
Trade and other payables | (44) | (44) | |
Provisions | 15 | (26) | (30) |
Other non-current liabilities | (13) | (5) | |
Total non-current liabilities | (3,800) | (3,881) | |
Total liabilities | (5,149) | (5,089) | |
Net assets | 6,435 | 6,532 | |
Equity | |||
Capital and reserves attributable to shareholders | |||
Ordinary shares | 80 | 80 | |
Share premium | 319 | 319 | |
Other reserves | 16 | 30 | |
Retained earnings | 6,019 | 6,085 | |
Equity attributable to shareholders of the parent | 6,434 | 6,514 | |
Equity attributable to non-controlling interests | 1 | 18 | |
Total equity | 6,435 | 6,532 | |
The financial statements on pages 28 to 45 were approved by the Board of Directors on 13 November 2025 and were signed on its behalf by:
Mark Allan Vanessa SimmsDirectors
Unaudited statements of changes in equity Attributable to shareholders of the parentOrdinary | Share | Other | Retained | Non- | Total | |
shares | premium | reserves | earnings | Total | controlling interests | equity |
Notes £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m | £m |
At 1 April 2024 Total comprehensive profit for the financial period Transactions with shareholders of the parent: | 80 - | 319 - | 23 - | 5,980 244 | 6,402 244 | 45 (1) | 6,447 243 | |
Share-based payments | - | - | 3 | - | 3 | - | 3 | |
Dividends paid to shareholders of the parent | 8 | - | - | - | (159) | (159) | - | (159) |
Total transactions with shareholders of the parent | - | - | 3 | (159) | (156) | - | (156) | |
Dividends paid to non-controlling interests | - | - | - | - | - | (1) | (1) | |
Issued share capital | - | - | - | - | - | 12 | 12 | |
Total transactions with shareholders | - | - | 3 | (159) | (156) | 11 | (145) | |
At 30 September 2024 | 80 | 319 | 26 | 6,065 | 6,490 | 55 | 6,545 | |
Total comprehensive profit for the financial period Transactions with shareholders of the parent: | - | - | - | 161 | 161 | 1 | 162 | |
Share-based payments | - | - | 4 | (3) | 1 | - | 1 | |
Dividends paid to shareholders of the parent | - | - | - | (138) | (138) | - | (138) | |
Acquisition of non-controlling interests | - | - | - | - | - | (56) | (56) | |
Total transactions with shareholders of the parent | - | - | 4 | (141) | (137) | (56) | (193) | |
Acquisition of subsidiaries Total transactions with shareholders | - | - | - | - | - | 18 | 18 | |
- | - | 4 | (141) | (137) | (38) | (175) | ||
At 31 March 2025 | 80 | 319 | 30 | 6,085 | 6,514 | 18 | 6,532 | |
Total comprehensive profit for the financial period Transactions with shareholders of the parent: | - | - | - | 97 | 97 | 1 | 98 | |
Share-based payments | - | - | (14) | 1 | (13) | - | (13) | |
Dividends paid to shareholders of the parent | 8 | - | - | - | (162) | (162) | - | (162) |
Total transactions with shareholders of the parent | - | - | (14) | (161) | (175) | - | (175) | |
Recognition of redemption liability(1) Total transactions with shareholders | - | - | - | (2) | (2) | (18) | (20) | |
- | - | (14) | (163) | (177) | (18) | (195) | ||
At 30 September 2025 | 80 | 319 | 16 | 6,019 | 6,434 | 1 | 6,435 | |
1. On 8 September 2025, the Group granted a put option to the non-controlling interest in Liverpool ONE that has been recognised as a redemption liability within Other current liabilities at 30 September 2025.
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Land Securities Group plc published this content on December 05, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on December 05, 2025 at 12:17 UTC.



















