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Businesses offering fully flexible working drops to 27% - Dublin Chamber's Business Outlook Survey
Businesses offering fully flexible working drops to 27% - Dublin Chamber's Business Outlook Survey

RTÉ News​

time06-06-2025

  • Business
  • RTÉ News​

Businesses offering fully flexible working drops to 27% - Dublin Chamber's Business Outlook Survey

The number of firms offering full flexibility to staff on the number of days they spend in the office has fallen from 37% in the second quarter of last year to 27% a year later. While just over one third of firms (36%) require staff to present on a number of core days, a slight increase on previous years. The figures have been published today in the latest edition of Dublin Chamber's Business Outlook Survey. Speaking at the launch of the report, Director of Public and International Affairs Aebhric McGibney hybrid and remote working is still a major draw for attracting and retaining talent in a tight labour market. "The hybrid work model remains the predominant workplace arrangement for Dublin firms, with most employees required to spend two or three days in the office per week, with fully flexible arrangements having dropped to 27% in this quarter," said Mr McGibney. "This shows a trend that highlights, while businesses are willing to be flexible, a more structured approach is being settled on with core days being more important. This is down to a number of reasons such as fostering culture and collaboration and increasing productivity."

The Florida housing market is so weak that this giant builder is cutting prices
The Florida housing market is so weak that this giant builder is cutting prices

Yahoo

time16-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

The Florida housing market is so weak that this giant builder is cutting prices

Want more housing market stories from Lance Lambert's ResiClub in your inbox? Subscribe to the ResiClub newsletter. Big Lots store openings update: See the full list of '2nd wave' locations that will reopen for business in May The Florida housing market is so weak that this giant builder is cutting prices Apple canceled 'Mythic Quest.' Then it did something unheard of in the world of streaming TV The 2025 spring housing market is off to a slower than normal start for homebuilders. That's what KB Home—a giant homebuilder ranked No. 545 on the Fortune 1000—told investors last month, echoing a similar sentiment shared by the even larger homebuilder Lennar earlier in the month. 'Demand at the start of this spring's selling season was more muted than what we have seen historically, despite a healthy level of traffic in our communities,' wrote Jeffrey Mezger, CEO of KB Home, in their earnings report. 'Demand at the start of this spring's selling season was more muted than what we have seen historically, despite a healthy level of traffic in our communities. In mid-February, we took steps to reposition our communities to offer the most compelling value, and buyers responded favorably to these adjustments.' Below are six big takeaways from KB Home's earnings. When and where needed, giant publicly-traded homebuilders are making affordability adjustments to maintain home sales pace. Sometimes that means bigger incentives like mortgage rate buydowns. And other times it means outright price cuts. Given market softness, KB Home had to do just that over the past quarter in some markets. 'We thoughtfully and selectively adjusted pricing as needed on a community by community basis to stimulate demand and achieve a higher selling pace,' KB Home Chief Operating Officer Rob McGibney told investors on the company's recent earnings call. 'While base price is the main motivator for our customers, we also provided mortgage related support to our buyers as needed.' McGibney added that: 'Consumers responded to these adjustments. We believe we have found the market.' In Q1 2025, KB Home reported an average sales price of $500,700. For the full 2025 fiscal year, the homebuilder told investors it expected its average sales price to fall between $480,000 and $495,000. On KB Home's latest earnings call, COO McGibney pointed to Florida as the homebuilder's softest-performing state in the first quarter—prompting the company to cut net effective home prices to better align with local market conditions. 'In broad terms, Florida was our softest state in terms of sales demand in the first quarter,' McGibney said. 'Because of that, we took the most pricing action there to find the market.' He noted that most affordability adjustments or price cuts KB Home had to do range from $5,000 to $30,000 per home. However, it 'had to do more in Florida to find that market.' Jacksonville, in particular, has been a focal point. McGibney said the metro is sitting at about seven months of housing supply—above the historical norm—driving the builder to make deeper price adjustments. 'One positive that we see in that [Jacksonville] market is it [inventory] is [now] getting absorbed. So you've got days on market actually down year-over-year despite that higher supply, but it's likely because pricing has moved [down]. So we're seeing that [Jacksonville] market react,' McGibney said. McGibney added that the company has also seen weakness in its Orlando and Tampa communities. 'Our Las Vegas business is one of our largest and strongest performers, having consistently generated the highest gross margins and profitability in the company,' CEO Mezger told investors. During the pandemic housing boom, publicly-traded homebuilders achieved record profit margins as home prices soared and buyer demand ran red hot. Once the national housing demand boom fizzled out in the summer of 2022, many large homebuilders made affordability adjustments where and when needed to maintain their sales pace. That created margin compression. In recent quarters, margin compression has continued as homebuilders have turned again to affordability adjustments to move unsold completed inventory, which is on the rise. 'Excluding inventory related charges, our housing gross profit margin was 20.3%, above the midpoint of our guidance for Q1 2025,' Bill Hollinger, KB Home Chief Accounting Officer, told investors. 'For the year earlier quarter, it was 21.6%. We are forecasting housing gross profit margin for the 2025 Q2 in the range of 19.1% to 19.5% and for the full year [of 2025] in the range of 19.2% to 20%, assuming no inventory related charges.' Hollinger added that: 'Our gross margin outlook for both periods reflects lower selling prices than we anticipated in January, reduced operating leverage on lower delivery volume, and the challenging operating environment.' So far, neither Lennar or KB Home have seen 'immigration policy changes' impact their businesses. 'On the labor, I'd say outside of the normal things that we would deal with, outside of any kind of regulatory change or ICE or immigration policy changes, it's really just been the same,' KB Home COO McGibney told investors. 'We've seen nothing at all related to immigration. I mean, any kind of normal type labor shortage we might see on a day to day basis in a typical year may still be there, but nothing at all related to immigration policy [changes].' Both Lennar and KB Home told investors in late March that they weren't yet seeing impacts from tariffs. 'I haven't seen [impact from tariffs] . . . That may be something that's coming down the road. We haven't seen that yet. As to the lumber, we try to diversify on how we lock [in orders]. And we'll have ninety days, maybe 100 and 120 on the long-term end,' COO McGibney told investors. Note: Since KB Home made these comments, additional tariffs have been announced. ResiClub will continue to monitor homebuilder earnings calls to see if their tune changes this quarter. This post originally appeared at to get the Fast Company newsletter: Sign in to access your portfolio

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