What do the Affordable Homes Programme 21-26 strategic partnership grant allocations tell us?

Nathan Pickles, 08 December 2021

At the start of September, Homes England announced that it had awarded £5.2bn of grant to 31 strategic partnerships to complete nearly 90,000 affordable homes by 2028. This works out at an average grant rate of approximately £57,600 per home. Somewhat unsurprisingly, the average grant rate of all successful bids fell closely in line with the total amount of grant that Homes England announced would be available under its 2021-2026 Affordable Homes Programme – this was £7.39bn to deliver 130,000 homes, equating to approximately £56,800 grant per home.

We can work out from government press releases that the total programme comprises nearly 50% on home ownership tenures (in line with Homes England’s original guidance), around 14% on social rent, and with the 36% balance on mostly affordable rent. The £57,600 programme average grant per unit therefore comprises a mix of quite different underlying tenure grant rates. Average grant rates of somewhere around £45,000-55,000 for ownership tenures and £65,000-75,000 for combined rented tenures would make sense (with social rent alone being considerably higher).

The step up in the grant per unit is substantial versus previous “Wave 1” strategic partnerships, which were awarded on average £44,000 per home. The £14,000 increase in grant rate could be explained by at least three cost factors in appraisals:

  1. Modern Methods of Construction (MMC) cost premium - the Homes England programme requires 25% MMC delivery, although this should in theory be offset by savings elsewhere in the appraisal.
  2. Decarbonisation premium - delivering homes to higher EPC ratings to future proof new stock.
  3. Land/build costs inflation over recent years.

In committing to build nearly 90,000 affordable homes by 2028 at a fixed average grant rate of £57,600, the delivery risk being taken on by registered providers is substantial. Registered providers will need to keep a very close eye on appraisal risk factors which could undermine programme viability over coming years, not least build cost inflation and interest rates, both of which have recently increased, which will translate into a higher grant rate required in appraisals. Accurate modelling and robust stress testing of the programme in a financial planning context will be critical.

Homes England strategic partnership grant allocations

Grant can be thought of as the balancing item in a scheme appraisal – the amount of subsidy required for an affordable housing development to “stack up”, usually meaning it meets a minimum net present value (NPV) or internal rate of return (IRR) hurdle rate. Both not-for-profit housing associations and for-profit registered providers perform a similar appraisal analysis and target similar ungeared levels of investment return of c5-6%.

Given this, it is interesting to note the very wide distribution of grant per units awarded to the 31 strategic partnerships, including for the first time four for-profit strategic partners (Sage, Vistry, Legal and General, and McCarthy Stone) themselves also exhibiting a wide distribution of grant rates:

Strategic partnership

Grant awarded

Homes committed 

Grant / unit (£000s)

Region / catergory

Metropolitan Thames Valley £62.6m 1,500 42 Mixed
Sage £73.5m 1,750 42 For profit
Onward £152.4m 3,208 48 North
EMH and Midland Heart £171.7m 3,551 48 Midlands
LiveWest £123.6m 2,550 48 South West
Great Places £240.8m 4,920 49 North
Sanctuary  £99.5m 2,000 50 Mixed
Sovereign £166.9m 3,338 50 South East
Torus £140.3m 2,736 51 North
Clarion £249.7m 4,770 52 Mixed
Riverside £80.8m 1,530 53 North
Platform £250m 4,680 53 Midlands
Vistry £83m 1,474 56 For profit
Greensquare Accord £212.9m 3,755 57 Mixed
Places for People £250m 4,403 57 Mixed
Longhurst and NCHA £230m 3,935 58 Midlands
Thirteen £191.3m 3,270 59 North
Legal and General £125.5m 2,121 59 For profit
Karbon £131.5m 2,200 60 North
Guinness and Stonewater £250m 4,180 60 Mixed
Bromford £239.9m 4,000 60 Midlands
Together £249.9m 4,047 62 North
Flagship £93m 1,500 62 East
McCarthy Stone £93.9m 1,500 63 For profit
Accent £210.2m 3,305 64 Mixed
Curo and Swan £160.4m 2,425 66 Mixed
Vivid £105.6m 1,550 68 South East
Orbit £103.9m 1,500 69 Midlands
Aster £144m 1,550 74 South West
Abri £250m 3,218 78 South East
Hyde £250m 3,000 83 Mixed
Total £5,157m 89,466 57.6

The specific tenure mixes of each bid are unknown and this factor may explain some of the outliers, with the extreme cases being c£25,000 away from the mean in each direction. Metropolitan Thames Valley and Sage were each awarded £42,000 per unit each which could be explained by having a very high weighting (possibly 100%) of shared ownership in their bid. At the other end of the scale, Hyde were awarded £83,000 per unit which seems only explainable by having very high social rent weighting in the bid.

However, it would seem reasonable to conclude that many of the bids are likely to be fairly comparable, given Homes England guidance that around 50% should be on ownership tenures, and likely low weighting of social rent in most cases. Grouping the grant per unit awards into £5,000 increments reveals that nearly 60% of strategic partnerships bid between £50,000-65,000 per unit.  Interestingly, regional differences in costs and rents translate into relatively modest differences in the average grant per unit between regions, with a spread of only £10,000 grant per unit between housing associations in the north of England and housing associations in the south east, as seen in the table below.

Grant / unit (£000s)

Number of strategic partnerships

%

Below 45 2 6%
45-49 5 16%
50-54 5 16%
55-59 9 29%
60-64 4 13%
65-69 3 10%
70+ 3 10%
Total 31 100%

Region / category

Units

Grant award (£m)

Grant / unit (£000s)

North 21,911 1,187 54
Midlands 17,666 996 56
South West 4,100 238 58
South East 8,106 523 64
East 1,500 93 62
For profit 6,845 376 55
Mixed 29,338 1,745 59
Total 89,446 5,157 57.6

Greater London Authority (GLA) strategic partnership grant allocations

The GLA’s strategic partnership grant allocations released at around the same time were even more revealing (see table below). The average grant per unit awarded across 53 strategic partnerships, which included 24 housing associations and two for-profit registered providers, with the rest local authorities, was approximately £118,000. This can be largely explained by the 57% programme allocation to social rent delivery in London (which requires the most grant), with the balance on home ownership tenures (shared ownership and rent to buy).

Most housing association bids were clustered around £100,000-125,000 blended grant per unit, with a balanced weighting between social rent and ownership tenures in their bids. ReSI was awarded £45,000 per unit for a 100% affordable home ownership bid, and nearly half of the local authorities were successful at grant rates of £150,000-200,000 per unit for mostly 100% social rent bids. It seems quite likely that most housing associations were also bidding in the region of £150,000-200,000 grant per unit for social rent.

The grant rates that Homes England and GLA have awarded to strategic partners therefore reveal some interesting and useful information for registered providers who are looking to benchmark their appraisal methodology against regional and national housing associations and the competing for-profits.

Strategic partnership

Grant awarded

Homes committed

Social rent

Affordable home ownership

Grant / unit (£000)

% Social rent

Catergory

Estuary Housing Association £1.3m 30 16 14 42 53% Housing association
ReSI Homes £56.3m 1,250 - 1,250 45 0% For profit
London Borough of Bromley £38m 535 535 - 71 100% Local authority
TBG Open Door Homes £3.8m 48 10 38 79 21% Local authority
London Borough of Wandsworth £23.4m 289 138 151 81 48% Local authority
London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham £32.3m 394 186 208 82 47% Local authority
London Legacy Development Corporation £67.7m 825 149 676 82 18% Local authority
City of London £16.5m 200 150 50 83 75% Local authority
London Borough of Havering £35.2m 395 161 234 89 41% Local authority
Places for People £4 44 44 - 90 100% Housing association
London Borough of Lambeth £28.2m 311 212 99 91 68% Local authority
Poplar of HARCA £21.2m 227 145 82 94 64% Housing association
London Borough of Barking and Dagenham £171 1,757 573 1,184 97 33% Local authority
Notting Hill Genesis £126.8 1,265 577 688 100 46% Housing association
L&Q £55.1m 539 154 385 102 29% Housing association
Croydon Chruches Housing Association £12.5m 120 50 70 104 42% Housing association
City of Westminster Council £24.1m 230 106 124 105 46% Local authority
RHP £13.9m 131 80 51 106 61% Housing association
London Borough of Ealing £109.6m 1,032 561 471 106 54% Local authority
London Borough of Harrow £44.4m 411 219 192 108 53% Local authority
One Housing Group Ltd £41.7m 386 252 134 108 65% Housing association
London Borough of Barnet £23.5m 217 105 112 108 48% Local authority
The Guinness Partnership £32.7m 300 150 150 109 50% Housing association
Hyde Housing Association £163.8m 1,476 590 886 111 40% Housing association
Southern Housing Association £33.5m 300 100 200 112 33% Housing association
A2Dominion £56m 500 300 200 112 60% Housing association
Catalyst Housing £118.9m 1,000 535 465 119 54% Housing association
Clarion Housing Group £240m 2,000 1,250 750 120 63% Housing association
Peabody £120m 1,000 500 500 120 50% Housing association
Optivo £180.8m 1,500 825 675 121 55% Housing association
Octavia Housing £55.1m 450 225 225 123 50% Housing association
Network Homes £122.5m 1,000 500 500 123 50% Housing association
Riverside Housing Association £18.8m 151 90 61 124 60% Housing association
Metropolitan Housing Trust £128.8m 1,035 538 497 124 52% Housing association
PA Housing £181.7m 1,455 930 525 125 64% Housing association
Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames £13.1m 105 105 - 125 100% Local authority
Newlon Housing Trust £15.8m 120 80 40 132 67% Housing association
Phoenix Community Housing Association £10m 73 48 25 137 66% Housing association
Hexagon Housing Association £24.9m 180 90 90 138 50% Housing association
London Borough of Southwark £126.5m 852 664 188 148 78% Local authority
London Borough of Enfield £166.6m 1,119 824 295 149 74% Local authority
Cromwood Housing £11.3m 75 75 - 150 100% For profit
London Borough of Camden £86.6m 569 569 - 152 100% Local authority
London Borough of Lewisham £70m 456 285 171 153 63% Local authority
London Borough of Sutton £10.1m 65 54 11 155 83% Local authority
London Borough of Brent £111.7m 701 701 - 159 100% Local authority
London Borough of Tower Hamlets £32m 194 194 - 165 100% Local authority
London Borough of Greenwich £38.1m 230 230 - 166 100% Local authority
London Borough of Newham £91.7m 550 500 50 167 91% Local authority
London Borough of Hounslow £93.2m 540 540 - 173 100% Local authority
London Borough of Hackney £17.5m 100 100 - 175 100% Local authority
London Borough of Haringey £127.5m 647 647 - 197 100% Local authority
London Borough of Waltham Forest £15.4m 77 77 - 200 100% Local authority
Total £3,464.5m 29,456 16,739 12,717 118