Annual Report (ESEF) • Mar 8, 2024
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Download Source FileHusCompagniet A/S Annual report 2023 Co-creating the homes of tomorrow – today In 2023, Tina and Jens built a house equipped with renewable energy solutions. With a combination of solar panels and an air-to-water heat pump they now have a home with low energy consumption, something that was on their wish list when they first started their journey with HusCompagniet. “For us, choosing renewable energy sources for our new home was an obvious choice. They work flawlessly and at the same time they give us a very a high level of comfort,” the couple emphasises. Their house is situated north of Copenhagen. Co - creating the homes of tomorrow – today Our purpose Letters from Management Read letters from our Chairperson Claus V. Hemmingsen and our CEO Martin Ravn-Nielsen. The management has taken solid action to address the market downturn and has observed extra careful financial discipline to ensure stability and enable the company to pursue its strategic priorities. Page 8 Updated life-cycle assessment of our standard house In 2023, we have, once again, updated the cli- mate calculation of our standard house with the newest products and data to get an updated status on the achievement of our targets. Page 42 Sustainability Sustainability is an integral part of our strategy, and we consistently pursue our ambitions of operating a responsible business, safeguarding the work environment for our people, and playing an active part in reducing climate change. Page 31 Content Management review Overview 5 At a glance 6 Performance Highlights 7 Sustainability Highlights 8 Letter from the Chairperson 9 Letter from the CEO 10 Consolidated key figures Our business 12 Our markets 16 Equity story 17 Business model 18 Strategy 22 Follow up on 2023 guidance 23 Outlook for 2024 Financial review 25 Financial review 29 Q4 Figures Sustainability 32 Introduction 35 Sustainability governance 38 Environment information 44 Social information 52 Governance information 57 Taxonomy-eligibility and alignment 61 ESG disclosures and data 63 TCFD disclosures Risk Management 67 Risk Management Shareholder information 71 Shareholder information Corporate governance 74 Corporate governance 78 Board of Directors 80 Executive Management Financial statements 82 Consolidated financial statement 128 Parent Company financial statement 138 Statement by Management 139 Independent auditor's report HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 3 / 144 Overview At a glance Performance Highlights Sustainability Highlights Letter from the Chairperson Letter from the CEO Consolidated key figures Management review HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 4 / 144 At a glance HusCompagniet a leading Nordic single- family housebuilder HusCompagniet is a leading provider of detached houses in Denmark. We also facilitate semi-detached houses to both private consumers and professional investors. In 2022 we started offering prefabricated wood-framed houses to the semi-detached segment via our newly acquired factory in Esbjerg, HusCompagniet Production. We also have a presence in Sweden where we produce prefabricated wood-framed houses through our VårgårdaHus brand. The Group operates an asset-light and flexible delivery model with on-site building, primarily on customer-owned land. The construction is outsourced to subcontractors, and visibility of the order book enables a flexible cost base. HusCompagniet has nine offices with showrooms and 46 show houses throughout Denmark and Sweden. In addition, we offer digital sales through our online platform “HusOnline”. 2010 HusCompagniet brand established 395 employees 9 office locations in Denmark and Sweden 28,500 houses built since establishment, trailing 40 years back Co-creating the homes of tomorrow – today Our purpose Our segments Detached Read more On page 13 Semi-detached Read more On page 14 Sweden Read more On page 15 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 5 / 144 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 326 346 401 348 108 Performance Highlights 2.4 bn 4.8/5.0 (2022: 4.7/5.0) Based on more than 5,000 reviews on Trustpilot 1,054 houses built in 2023 (2022: 2,003) 851 houses sold in 2023 (2022: 957) 108m (2022: 348m) EBITDA before special items (DKK) 229m (2022: 152m) Free cash flow (DKK) 4.5% (2022: 8.0%) EBITDA bsi margin EBITDA before special items (DKKm) Revenue (DKK) Segment split Revenue and EBITDA are adjusted for discontinued operations in 2019. Discontinued operations comprise Germany and the Swedish brick house activity closed in September 2020. Semi-detached revenue split 2022 is annualised for HC Production. 71% Detached (2022: 79%) 18% Semi-detached (2022: 13%)* 11% Sweden (2022: 8%) HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 6 / 144 2019 (Base year) 2020 2021 2022 2023 12 11.5 9.3 11.6 6.7 2025-target 30% reduction 2030-target 50% reduction 2022 2023 75 77 2% 2022 2023 83 84 1% 2022 2023 30 41 11% 2022 2023 47 54 7% Proportion of customers in detched segment choosing sor pnes (Denmrk) Sustainability Highlights Empoee we-being Stisfction score (%) Lot score (%) eNPS (%) (employee Net Promoter Score) mNPS (%) (manager Net Promoter Score) Heth nd Sfet LTIf Tot (ost-time injur frequenc – own empoees nd subcontrctors) Cimte - buiding mteris Environment Cimte - Customer use phse 2021 20232022 23% 17% 5% Social 60% of houses built in 2023 have an energy performance that is at least 10% better than NZEB (Nearly zero-energy building) 70% of houses for which climate calculations were made in 2023 are in the voluntary low emissions class (under 8 kg CO 2 e/ m 2 /year) HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 7 / 144 Letter from the Chirperson Navigating uncertainty and preparing for market recovery 2023 was another extremely challenging year in the housebuilding market. Uncertainty persisted throughout the year, and the tough market conditions became the new normal. The pessimistic consumer sentiment entailed a contin- uation of the depressed demand for new houses, how- ever, we benefited from the diligence and decisiveness displayed in 2022 when we adjusted our organisation and business to the adverse market. On this bleak backdrop, we were pleased to deliver performance in line with expec- tations in 2023. Moreover, our organisation remains tuned in to the growth opportunities expected to materialise in the coming years. Strong support from investors In the wake of the macroeconomic turmoil and ensuing industry volatility, we reviewed the financing and capital structure of HusCompagniet in the first half of the year and consequently decided to issue new shares securing gross proceeds of DKK 207 million. At the same time, we entered into new loan agreements to establish long-term financing towards 2028 and support the future development of our business. We were very pleased to receive strong support from both existing and new investors during the turbulent market developments, and we enjoyed great cooperation with our banks throughout the process of refinancing our former loan agreements. The constructive dialogue with investors and lenders during the year has underlined the positive percep- tion of HusCompagniet and highlighted the strength of our robust and flexible business model in uncertain times. We are very thankful of the support from our stakeholders, and we will continue to carry out select strategic invest- ments and develop our commercial initiatives enabling us to deliver on the expectations to a market leader like HusCom- pagniet. While we are maintaining strict financial discipline and are not proposing any dividend payments in 2024, we certainly look forward to be able to do so again as soon as possible. The course is set As we focus on the years ahead, the strategic direction is set and has proven its resilience in a difficult period. We will continue this track, carefully tweaking our approach and offering to continuously improve competitiveness and build a stronger foundation for sustainable and profitable growth. While navigating the rough waters of today, we are preparing for the recovery of tomorrow with new initiatives to clearly differentiate HusCompagniet from competitors, provide best-in-class digital solutions and support – and further accelerate the offering of sustainable designs and construc- tion processes, as well as green energy solutions. We are fully committed to further ascertain ourselves as the leading housebuilder in Denmark. We are deeply grateful to our dedicated colleagues in Hus- Compagniet and the skilled teams of suppliers and subcon- tractors supporting us every day as they are instrumental to the realisation of our customer’s dreams and our ambitions as we co-create the homes of tomorrow – today. Claus V. Hemmingsen Chairperson of the Board HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 8 / 144 Letter from the CEO Maintaining focus and delivering on our promises We faced significant challenges in 2023 in the wake of a dra- matic shift in market sentiments and a deep reduction in our order book. I am proud of the tenacity displayed by our col- leagues enabling us to report financial results in line with our guidance. Even though demand contracted significantly and drove a 47% decline in deliveries, we managed to generate revenue of DKK 2.4 billion and EBITDA of DKK 108 million. It is safe to say that we have proven our ability to adjust our business duly in difficult times. While we saw small signs of recovery in consumer confi- dence in early 2023, the tides unfortunately turned and resulted in a continued stagnating demand for new houses in the second half of the year. Uncertainty rose among in- creasingly cautious consumers on the back of higher interest rates, changes to the Danish real estate tax system as well as continued and intensified geopolitical turmoil. Staying focused In this challenging environment, we maintained our sharp focus on ensuring a high level of customer satisfaction – and we were proud to elevate our industry-leading Trustpilot score further to 4.8 of 5.0. We remain committed to ensuring high customer satisfaction and are pleased that we continue to set the standard for sustainable house building and striv- ing to deliver on this crucial metric in the future. Stellar Trustpilot reviews, significantly improved net pro- moter scores received from our customers, and the strong investor support are all clear votes of confidence for Hus- Compagniet and our business model. With this in mind, we are confident that we are on track and well-positioned in a challenged market where trust, quality, and scale are key to ensure continued competitiveness. Strong concepts and partnerships We are stepping up our efforts to win market shares, strengthen our position across segments, and further im- prove performance when the tides turn again and demand for new houses rebounds. This year, we will take important steps to stand out from the competition in the detached market in Denmark by introducing clearly defined ready- made, custom-made, and tailor-made concepts to cater for the specific demands of relevant customer segments, while developing our market-leading digital tools. Simultaneously, we aim to strengthen and form close part- nerships with professional investors to reap the benefits of early involvement, alignment of interests, and long-term collaboration, which builds trust and creates value for all involved parties. In November, we announced a turn-key contract with leading Nordic property developers NREP for the development and construction of 164 semi-detached DGNB gold-certified houses under the modern housing concept ‘Plushusene’. The project is a nice fit with our am- bitions in the professional segment, which we will continue to pursue. In early 2024, we cut first sod in a 52-unit project for PFA announced in 2023. Such projects and our efforts to strengthen HusCompagniet’s position towards professional investors are strongly supported by the capability of our own production facilities, providing a crucial competitive edge and adding to our sustainability profile. Looking ahead Near-term visibility remains limited as macroeconomic uncertainty persists and slow sales throughout 2023 will dampen activity in 2024. We will continue our targeted investments and strategic initiatives to deliver on our promis- es, and strongly supported by the dedicated efforts from our great employees we will strive to maintain a solid perfor- mance. Martin Ravn-Nielsen Chief Executive Officer HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 9 / 144 Consolidated key figures DKKm 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 Income statement Revenue 2,381 4,330 4,315 3,598 3,496 Gross profit 517 837 875 756 716 Operating profit before depreciation and amortisation EBITDA) before special items 108 348 401 346 326 Special items 0 -32 0 -79 -17 Operating profit before depreciation and amortisation EBITDA) after special items 108 316 401 268 309 Operating profit (EBIT) before special items 62 300 355 299 288 Operating profit (EBIT)* 62 268 355 220 271 Financials, net -39 -27 -20 -45 -51 Profit for the year (continued operations) 17 190 265 159 168 Profit for the year (discontinued operations) -3 -20 0 -66 -168 Profit for the year 15 170 265 92 0 Balance sheet Total assets 3,264 3,572 3,578 3,408 4,528 Contract assets, net 262 626 725 445 676 Net working capital 316 526 517 433 412 Net interest bearing debt (NIBD) 356 768 713 697 832 Equity 2,098 1,881 1,885 1,857 1,777 Cash flow Cash flow from operating activities 249 268 258 141 134 Cash flow from investing activities -20 -117 -22 -31 -43 - Hereof from investment in property, plant and equipment -10 -22 -11 -20 -15 Cash flow from financing activities -9 -192 -261 -152 -115 Free cash flow 229 152 237 110 91 2022 loss is mainly due to currency loss related to intercompany loan DKKm 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 Key figures Revenue growth -45.0% 0.3% 19.9% 2.9% 13.0% Gross margin* 21.7% 19.3% 20.3% 21.0% 20.5% EBITDA margin before special items 4.5% 8.0% 9.3% 9.6% 9.3% EBITDA margin after special items 4.6% 7.3% 9.3% 7.4% 8.8% EBIT margin 2.6% 6.2% 8.2% 6.1% 7.7% Earnings Per Share (EPS Basic), DKK *** 0.7 9.4 13.7 8.0 8.0 Diluted earnings per share (EPS-D) (DKK) 0.7 9.4 13.7 8.0 8.0 Dividend per share, DKK 0 0 7.35 3.0 n.a. Share price end of year 46.5 41.0 118.4 125.0 n.a. Market value (bn) 1.0 0.7 2.4 2.5 n.a. ROIC 2.5% 9.8% 13.2% 8.4% n.a. ROIC (Adjusted for goodwill) 12.2% 37.1% 53.4% 37.1% n.a. NIBD/EBITDA before special items ratio 3.3 2.2 1.8 2.0 2.5 Average number of employees 395 518 455 452 436 ESG key figures CO 2 -e/m 2 delivered (Scope 1+2) - market-based 33 23 18 20 21 CO 2 -e/m 2 delivered (Scope 1+2) - location-based 14 9 8 10 13 Direct CO 2 -e emissions (Scope 1) 402 761 772 776 878 LTIf 6,7 11.6 9.3 11.4 12 Sick leave 4.7% 1.9% 3.5% 2.8% 2.2% Percentage female managers 30% 40% 21% 20% 20% Number of female board members 2/6 2/6 2/6 2/6 1/6 Revenue and EBITDA are adjusted for discontinued operations in 2019. Discontinued operations comprise Germany and the Swedish brick house activity closed down in September 2020. Net working capital comparable figures (2019-2020) are adjusted due to change of method. * Operating profit before depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) before special items and Operating profit (EBIT) before special items, re- spectively, are used as alternative performance measures to reflect a more true and comparable view of the Groups ordinary operations. ** Margins for continued operations *** Earnings per share, basic and diluted are calculated in accordance with IAS 33. Other key figures are calculated in accordance with the key definitions in Section 6.8 2019 numbers exclude discontinued operations which amounts to 47 average full-time employees HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 10 / 144 Our business Our markets Equity story Business model Strategy Follow up on 2023 guidance Outlook for 2024 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 11 / 144 851 units Our markets HusCompagniet is present in Denmark and Sweden, where we facilitate the construction of detached and semi-detached houses for private costumers and professional investors. HusCompagniet’s core market, new-build detached houses in Denmark, is the most stable segment of the homebuilding market with average annual completions of approx. 6,000 houses over the last 40 years. Semi-detached market in Denmark and detached market in Sweden each have similar market sizes of approx. 6,000 houses, but with lower unit prices in both segments. Besides building on new land, the demolition of older houses and building of new instead represents an addition- al opportunity for the detached market in Denmark. The current number of new-build detached houses in Denmark is well below the building boom in the 1960s and 1970s, during which more than 400,000 single-family detached houses were built. This huge stock of time-worn houses represents a growth opportunity due to favourable economics in tearing down an old house and replacing it with a new-build low-en- ergy house instead of renovating the old house. Around 1/3 of HusCompagniet houses sold in 2023 will replace an older house. General market developments in 2023 The continuous increase in interest rates throughout 2022 extended into 2023, creating uncertainties among consum- ers and prompting many to postpone new home purchases. Additionally, the higher cost of capital impacted the afforda- bility of buying a new-build house. Lastly the new housing tax reform added to uncertainties in the new-build market. In a positive turn, inflation stabilised in 2023, leading to a stabilisation of interest rates by the end of the year. Looking into 2024, there is an expectation that interest rates will remain stable, potentially experiencing a slight decrease. The increase in construction costs during 2023 was offset by timely price increases maintaining gross margins in the range of 20%. The stabilisation and potential decrease in interest rates enhance our optimism. However, as considerable uncertain- ty remains, we anticipate a flat or slightly increasing market in 2024. In the challenging market, we have adapted our business, maintained high customer satisfaction, and contin- uously developed the business. We believe HusCompagniet is well-positioned to be the preferred homebuilder when the market recovers. 1/3 of houses sold in 2023 will replace an older house Units sold in 2023 Segment split 68% Detached (2022: 78%) 20% Semi-detached (2022: 14%) 12% Sweden (2022: 8%) HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 12 / 144 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,000 12,000 Denmark – detached In the Danish market for detached houses, HusCompagniet has been market leader since 2011 and today holds an estimated market share around 17%. The four largest competitors together hold a market share of around 30-35%, while the rest of the market is composed of smaller to mid-sized competitors. Since 2007, HusCompagniet has taken a leading role in consolidating the originally highly fragmented market. HusCompagniet aims to gradually increase its market share while improving profitability. Completions - Total detached, Denmark Market and business development In 2023, market size in terms of completions was approx. 5,470 units and declined by 37% compared to 2022. In terms of build- ing permits awarded, market size amounted to approx. 3,370 and declined by 37% compared to 2022, and by 59% compared to 2021. Permits are an indicator of the market activity. It is our view that permits describe the market activity with a delay in the range of 3-6 months from time of sale. In times like these with high vola- tility it is not possible to measure market shares accurately at a specific moment in time. We do believe, however, that our market share is around 17%. The demand for new build increased in the first half of 2023 (after reaching market bottom towards the end of 2022) followed by a stagnation at lower levels in the second half of the year. This was mainly driven by increased uncertainty among our customers due to the macroeconomic situation of higher interest rates, inflation and the new housing tax reform. Overall, the Danish housing market for existing houses and new-builds experienced some vol- atility throughout the year with increasing activity within existing houses towards the end of the year ahead of the new housing tax reform being implemented in 2024. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 13 / 144 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 Market and business development Market size (completions) amounted to 8,224 units in 2023 and increased by 3% year-on-year. In terms of building per- mits awarded, market size amounted to 5,320 and declined by 33% compared to 2022. The semi-detached market has had an average completion rate of approx. 6,000 a year the last 40 years. The market value is approx. half the size of the Detached market due to lower unit prices. We have been delivering semi-detached houses for private customers over the past 10 years. To further grow our position in this market, we are focusing on developing the business-to-business (B2B) segment by offering building and delivery of semi-detached houses to professional investors, who then lease or sell the houses to end users. Average delivery time in the semi-detached segment from sale to delivery is around 1.5 year. The semi-detached market in Denmark is large and highly fragmented, characterised by many small multi-regional construction companies and local builders. The market is similar to the characteristics of the detached market back in 2006. HusCompagniet is aiming at being at the forefront of an organic (non-acquisitive) consolidation of the Danish semi-detached market as well, and in 2023 our market share was approx. 3%. Completions - Total semi-detached, Denmark Denmark – semi-detached We offer the professional investors a highly standardised building process for multiple houses and have built a central- ised project team ensuring an integrated offering. We offer an attractive pricing model, which benefits from our existing supply chain, scale, and competences. In 2021, we achieved a DGNB certification, which is further strengthening our business proposal. We use the capabilities of our factory in Esbjerg to provide wood elements for the B2B business, HusOnline and roof cassettes to our detached business. This makes us less dependent on subcontractors, strength- ens our sustainability offering, and enables the business to become even more scalable. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 14 / 144 Sweden Market and business development In terms of permits, the Swedish market for detached houses declined by 49% to 1,850 units in 2023 from 3,620 units in 2022. The decline is mainly driven by increased uncertainty due to the macroeconomic situation of higher interest rates, inflation and the geopolitical situation. We anticipate a flat or slightly increasing market in 2024 and the number of completions is expected to be lower than in 2023 due to a reduced order book entering into 2024 compared to 2023. The Swedish market for new-build is characterised by a high degree of fragmentation with only a few large players and around 70% of the market is composed by smaller and mid-sized construction companies. HusCompagniet’s Swedish subsidiary, VårgardaHus, decreased its deliveries from 259 in 2022 to 187 in 2023. Our pre-fabricated houses made primarily of wooden frames and wooden facades are sold via our agent sales network. Our network comprises external agents and the relations have been built over the years. We aim to continue to opti- mise our agent network over the coming years. 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 Permits, Total detached, Sweden HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 15 / 144 Flexible business model through cycles • Asset-light structure with outsourced construction and scale benefits from strong relations with suppliers • High visibility in order book and ability to adapt capacity and costs to market fluctuations • Limited financial risk with payment guarantee at the time of order Proof of execution • Danish market leader since 2010 in detached houses • Clear benefits from scale and flexi- ble business model • Leading the consolidation of the Danish detached market • Proven progress in targeting Danish semi-detached and Swedish markets – both highly fragmented markets with attractive growth opportunities • Integrated factories into the internal value-chain to drive scalablity Sustainability • Driving the sustainability agenda as market leader • Facilitating house construction of the future with focus on more sustainable housing • Ongoing initiatives throughout the portfolio to avoid emissions and promote sustainable choices • Increased use of wooden prefab effectively delivered through our factories • Creating a positive impact for both our company, our customers, and society Market drivers Strong structural trends in demographics. Strong growth potential in Danish semi-detached market. Opportunities for harvesting synergies between existing core business and prefab. Equity story Driving profitable business and promoting sustainability whilst benefiting from scale to innovate and disrupt the industry. Digital ambitions • From analogue to digital platform • Professionalising the industry through digitalisation and automation of all elements in the building process across segments • Best-in-class sales process • Improved customer experience with overview and safety from order to delivery • Low-complexity projects • Automation of factories ensuring efficiency and reduced costs • After-sales services to retain customers • Cross-function best-practice across segments HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 16 / 144 On-time deliveries We aim to deliver >98% of detached and semi- detached houses for private and commercial customers on time, approx. 80% on third- party Design & construction Customised solutions let customers built their dream home. We outsource construction to trusted partners for an asset light, flexible and risk-mitigated delivery model. At our Esbjerg factory, we manufacture wood elements enabling our B2B business to scale up and strengthen our sustainability position Sales Customer-centric concept, a one-stop shop with early and extensive interaction Our business Driving performance throughout the value chain Resources People Our diverse workforce and industry experience are at the core of our business Natural resources HusCompagniet houses are built from raw materials, such as timber, aerated concrete, concrete, brick, steel and glass Partners We rely on strong, long-term relations with our material suppliers and subcontractors Innovation Digital and sustainable innovation Our brand Our private and B2B customers know us as a trusted brand in the industry Financial capital We finance investments through cash flow from operations and credit facilities. Financial strength to offer customers bank-guaranteed payment at delivery Value created Customer value • 1,054 houses delivered, providing quality houses at competitive prices • Customer satisfaction score of 4.8 out of 5.0, being highest in the industry Sustainable products • Energy efficient, comfortable houses. Approximately 60% of houses calculated in 2023 have an energy performance above the screening criteria expressed for substantial contribution in the EU taxonomy Planet • 32 kg CO 2 e/m 2 delivered (Scope 1 & 2, market-based) in 2023 • Emissions from the production of building materials for a standard house reduced by 17% compared to 2019 (CO 2 e/m 2 /year) Safety and well-being at work • LTIf total 6.7 – down 44% from 12 in 2019 • LTIf 6.0 for own employees – down 60% since 2019 • eNPS score of 47 Shareholder value • DKK 400m returned to shareholders since listing in 2020 • 2.4 DKKbn in revenue HusCompagniet co-creates houses with our customers and facilitates the construction, primarily on customers’ land, through outsourced subcontractors Business model HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 17 / 144 Strategy At HusCompagniet, we have a shared vision of leading the market evolution and setting the standard for construction of sustainable homes to revise the way people perceive and embrace sustainable living. We drive the sustainability agenda in our sector and urge our stakeholders to participate in promoting a more sustainable behaviour – fulfilling the needs of today without jeopardis- ing the needs of future generations – and driving the green transition of house construction. Our purpose and approach set a clear direction and make us stand out to attract skilled talent and loyal customers, while driving innovation and new thinking in our industry. Our purpose guides our long-term objectives and short-term actions and decisions, enabling us to co-create the homes of tomorrow – today. Incremental changes to strengthen the position Our customer-centric co-creation concept focuses on the construction of homes – primarily on customers’ own land and through outsourced subcontractors – ensuring a low- risk delivery model, which makes HusCompagniet’s business model flexible and adaptable to market cycles. We are continuously calibrating our approach to maintain and strengthen our position across segments by scaling our business efficiently and sustainably. We will continue to strengthen our competitiveness and pursue improved perfor- mance by differentiating our offering through sharply defined value propositions and strong partnerships. To lead the future of house building, we will continue to invest in digitalisation and sustainability, which are fundamental to raising industry standards and driving continuous and profitable growth in all business segments. We are confident that the strategic direction and incremental upgrades of our approach will contribute to a strengthening of our current position, which has been built on dedicated customer focus, continuous innovation, and a key focus on customer-centric, professional end-to-end solutions. Our purpose Co-creating the homes of tomorrow – today HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 18 / 144 Update on business segments Detached market in Denmark The detached market in Denmark is our core market and main business segment in which we aim to strengthen our leadership position through market share gains, while utilis- ing the advantages of our flexible business model to adjust to changes in the market and ensure continued improvement of our profitability. Our strategic initiatives in the single-fam- ily home market in Denmark include measures to clearly differentiate HusCompagniet from competitors and build closer and longer-term customer relationships. We have a solid footprint with eight offices and ten show parks in Denmark and continue to offer country-wide cover- age and local presence to maintain customer proximity. In addition to our physical presence, we also engage digitally with our customers offering best-in-class visualisation tools and the option of selecting a fully online sales process. We leverage our scale to source high volumes, and our brand is widely recognised for high quality and customer service. Moreover, our flexible business model enables us to adapt to supply and demand fluctuations and changes to material prices and thereby safeguard continuous competi- tive offerings to our customers. Progress in the Danish detached market will be driven by a continuous commitment to improve our leading customer experience through strengthening of our digital tools, cus- tomer support and personalised guidance throughout the home building process, lifting our value proposition above the market standard for home building. Our strategy is targeted at three business segments and three key focus areas: Our focus areas Our strategic targets Business segments Detached Strengthen leadership position through market share gains in the Danish detached market through clear differentiation and leading customer experience and digitali- sation. Leverage flexible business model to adjust to market changes while building closer and longer-term customer relationships. Semi-detached Expand footprint in the Danish business-to-business market for semi-detached through standardised solutions and economies of scale. Aim to increase the market share of the semi-detached business through quality- driven and end-to-end partnerships with professional investors. Sweden Continue to adapt to local market preferences and conditions while preparing to accommodate market rebound at prefabricated production facility. Key focus areas Developing our digital platforms Leverage data and be digital front-runners through personalised products and new services. Continue to develop and digitalise internal and external tools and platforms to support our customer journey and to improve scalability. Refining our value propositions and customer journeys Continue to improve our customer journey across our value propositions through differentiated customer-targeted solutions and digitalisation to sustain a scalable platform. Sustainability and design Lead the market evolution and set the standards for sustainable house building and living. Integrate sustainability throughout the value chain, from selection of building mate- rials, making sustainable options available to customers, and through the use phase of the houses after handover and through to final demolition. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 19 / 144 EKSPORTERES SOM HIRES Semi-detached B2B in Denmark Our semi-detached business-to-business segment in Denmark focuses on building and delivering semi-detached houses to professional investors, who rent or sell the houses to end-users. Competition in the Danish market is highly fragmented, with many small multi-regional construction companies and local builders engaged. With our size, profit- ability, element factory, and focused one-stop-shop offering, HusCompagniet has a competitive advantage in this market. We aim to increase our market share and strengthen our presence in the semi-detached segment, positioning Hus- Compagniet as a key player. We will do so by building and strengthening partnerships with professional investors to enjoy mutual scale benefits and reduce risk through early project involvement and ongoing collaboration. Professional investors typically undertake larger projects compared to private investors. We use our highly standard- ised building process “Ready to build” product for multiple houses and have built a centralised project team to ensure a comprehensive one-stop-shop offering. HusCompagniet predominantly builds on customer-owned land, coupled with strategic use of own land plots and development projects. Our factory in Esbjerg was acquired in July 2022 and plays an important role in the development of our semi-detached business as we have introduced a new dimension to our delivery model by manufacturing wooden elements for construction. The combination of building in blocks of mul- tiple units and utilising digital tools ensures a very efficient building process. Sustainability is a key selling point in our business-to-busi- ness offerings, which include DGNB (Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Nachhaltiges Bauen) certified projects. DGNB, originally developed in Germany, but chosen by the Danish building in- dustry as sustainability certification, takes a holistic perspec- tive on sustainability, including environmental, economic, and sociocultural issues. HusCompagniet’s first semi-de- tached project expected to be DGNB certified in 2024, was completed in 2023 and is located in North Zealand com- prising 23 semi-detached houses, specifically designed for the elderly. Furthermore, we have initiated the construction of the first 30 semi-detached houses in a second project, located in Copenhagen, which is expected to receive DGNB gold certification and Swan-label certification. Both projects with NREP as customer. In addition, we have several projects to be DGNB certified in the pipeline of which at least one will commence in 2024. Swedish market segment In our Swedish business, our value proposition is adapted to strong local preferences. Our more than 40 house models are based on a standardised prefabricated concept. The core features of our offering include value for money, responsive customer service and a strong local sales agent structure. Our sales focus in Sweden targets three densely populated hub regions around Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Malmö in a market characterised by significant fragmentation. The headquarters and a modern prefabricated production facility with capacity to absorb increased demand and accommodate a market rebound, are located in Vårgårda, northeast of Gothenburg. Developing our digital platforms Our digital vision is to continuously improve the customer experience and make our platforms scalable, supporting a clear differentiation of HusCompagniet in the market. We use our size and scale to leverage data and become digital front-runners offering personalised products and new services to our customers through digital and partnership channels tailored to customers’ needs at the right time. We will also use our digital platform to promote sustaina- ble design and construction, and we will build a scalable platform that covers the entire value chain and business seg- ments to ensure that we can realise our long-term growth ambitions. In the order-to-delivery process, our services are based on a best-in-class construction planning and pro- ject-management system combined with a safety-incident and inspection system. https://husonline.dk/ HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 20 / 144 Our state-of-the-art customer platform integrates custom- er-relationship management and document-case manage- ment, providing our customers with a comprehensive over- view of their building project. The platform consolidates all relevant documents onto a unified platform and dynamically tracks projects from the initial meeting to delivery, offering customers visibility into the ongoing construction through pictures shared throughout the construction process. The system provides a strong foundation for our continuous de- velopment to support the customer journey through digital tools. Moreover, the recent implementation of a new custom- er-relationship management system included an upgrade of all major IT systems to modern platforms, empowering HusCompagniet to develop and integrate new digital tools at an accelerated pace in support of our digital vision. In 2023, we also launched a new version of our online home building platform – HusOnline – to strengthen our position in the digital homebuilding market. Refining our value propositions and customer journeys Based on deep market insights and understanding of vary- ing customer segments’ preferences, we are sharpening our value propositions in the detached market in Denmark with the introduction of clearly defined concepts – ready-made, custom-made and tailor-made houses – to cater for each customer segment’s specific demands. The refined setup enables us to tailor our offering and provide bespoke services ensuring seamless, efficient, and personalised experiences for our customers. By delivering more relevant and meaningful experiences, we can support our customers from their initial thoughts of building a house through to after the house is completed. Our consistently high ratings on Trustpilot acknowledges our unwavering commitment to customer satisfaction and the exceptional experiences we provide. As part of the efforts to refine our value propositions, we continue to strengthen our HusOnline concept as a key lead generator and separate sales channel as well as a fundamental instrument to advance the market and increase accessibility by simplifying the home building process for a wider audience. Sharpening our focus on tailor-made houses simultaneously provides an opportunity to serve a more affluent segment and develop new products and services, which can contribute positively to our value proposition in the custom-made business. We see an opportunity in the market to establish a national tailor-made brand based on our experience from already building premium houses. Our solid digital foundation enables us to continuously strengthen the customer journeys through solutions such as “MitHus”, which customers can access at all times without having to depend on an available sales force or open show houses. The offering is an important part of the transition towards implementing digital applications along the house purchasing journey. Another key strategic focus area is to drive post-delivery sales. While our current partnership and service selection is limited, our ambition is to establish a partnership programme via a digital platform to provide a broad range of support services for our customers, including among others a maintenance subscription programme. Sustainability and design Sustainability is embedded in our operating framework as an integral part of the strategic agenda, making it a key focus area throughout our business. We have intensified our efforts to integrate sustainability throughout the value chain, from selecting building materials and making sustainable options available to customers, and from the construction process through to the use phase of the houses after hando- ver to the customers. Heating is a critical element in the lifecycle of the house, and the choice of energy sources has a significant impact on emissions. We have set a target aiming for 60% of our houses sold to be delivered with renewable energy sources by 2025. This target was reached in 2022. In 2023, 54% of houses sold in Denmark had district heating, which on average is 70% renewable, and 46% had geothermal or heat pumps installed. 21% of sold detached houses had solar panels in 2023, up from 17% in 2022. We have promoted this choice by including solar panels on all new show houses since Q2 2023. In 2023, we continued our development of new options for outdoor facades with a view to further reducing CO 2 emis- sions, in close dialogue and co-operation with our suppliers. Our 2030 target is to achieve a 70% reduction in lifecycle CO 2 emissions. In our own operations, we now aim to reach zero emissions through a 100% electric vehicle fleet in 2028 as the development in range and infrastructure for larger vans for construction managers has been slower than anticipated. 4.8/5 Trustpilot score in 2023 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 21 / 144 Follow up on 2023 guidance Outlook for 2023 Initial financial outlook for 2023 issued at 9 March 2023. Upgrade in May 2023 On 4 May 2023, we upgraded the full- year 2023 guidance due to expected increase in deliveries. 2023 results Realised 2023 figures are within guidance. EBITDA before special items 108 m(DKK) Operating profit (EBIT) 62 m(DKK) Revenue 2,200 – 2,500 m(DKK) Revenue 2,250 - 2,500 m(DKK) EBITDA before special items 75 - 125 m(DKK) Operating profit (EBIT) 50 - 75 m(DKK) Operating profit (EBIT) 25 - 75 m(DKK) EBITDA before special items 100 - 130 m(DKK) Revenue 2,381 m(DKK) HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 22 / 144 Detached For the Danish detached busi- ness our target is to gradually increase market share whilst pursuing strong margins. Outlook for 2024 HusCompagniet introduces full-year 2024 guidance: Revenue 2,300 - 2,600 m(DKK) Operating profit (EBIT) 30 - 80 m(DKK) EBITDA 80 - 130 m(DKK) Assumptions for the 2024 outlook The outlook comprises fewer guidance points and less quan- tified assumptions than previous years' outlook due to the uncertainties driven by the geopolitical situation combined with higher interest rates. The potential impact from these factors are elements adversely affecting HusCompagniet and during 2022 and 2023, we have experienced some of the consequences resulting in a significant decrease in sales – our financial visibility remains reduced. Previous EBITDA guidance before special items have been replaced with EBITDA guidance (after special items). The 2024 guidance is based on no severe disruption of supply chains emerging and on raw material prices not sig- nificantly exceeding current levels and that the market will slowly pick-up during 2024. Medium-term targets For our three segments we have the following medium - term targets: Forward-looking statements This annual report includes forward-looking statements on various matters, such as expected earnings and future strategies and expansion plans. Such statements are uncertain and involve various risks, as many factors, some of which are beyond our control, may result in actual devel - opments differing considerably from the expectations set out in the 2023 Annual Report. Such factors include, but are not limited to, general economic and business conditions, exchange rate and interest rate fluctuations, the demand for our services and competition in the market. Semi-Detached We aim to increase the market share of the semi-detached business. Wooden-houses For the Swedish business our tar- get is to drive profitable growth in the business and increase market share by means of organic growth and potential acquisitions. • Current expectations for 2024 deliveries are between 800 and 1,000 houses. • Sales in the first two months of 2024 - 112 detached, 48 semi-detached, 11 wooden houses. • No dividend is proposed to shareholders in 2024. Thus no distribution to shareholders will take place in 2024. HusCompagniet expects to return to making dividend payments, once the leverage is back within the long-term target of around 2x net debt to EBITDA. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 23 / 144 Financial review Financial review Q4 Figures HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 24 / 144 Financial review HusCompagniet delivered more than 1,050 houses in 2023 generating a revenue of DKK 2,381 million in line with our guidance. Sales were negatively impacted by sales level below historical average. The macroeconomic situation characterised by increased interest rates and general economic and geopolitical uncertainties affected the results in 2023. After years of consecutive growth, 2023 will be remembered primarily as a year impacted by numerous macroeconomic factors, such as increasing energy prices, high inflation, and rapidly rising interest rates. Adding to the uncertainty was the new housing tax reform in Denmark and a drop in consumer confidence, which negatively affected sales, resulting in a decline of 11% compared to 2022, with 851 houses sold. In 2023, Huscompagniet benefited from the business adjustments made in the second half of 2022, where a number of initiatives were launched. The increase in sales prices supported a strong gross margin in 2023, and reductions in SG&A expenses, which unfortunately also meant letting go of 150+ employees, were crucial in achieving the results in 2023, in line with expectations. While 2023 has been an extraordinary year, we have also maintained focus on our strategic initiatives, preparing for a future rebound in the market and continually navigating in a market with reduced visibility. The building process All of our houses are built by subcontrac- tors, and to ensure that our suppliers and subcontractors meet the high quality we demand, the construction phase is man- aged carefully by our very experienced construction managers. We are highly se- lective in our choice of suppliers in order to ensure the highest quality. As we carefully embrace responsibility for the health and safety of our employees, we are also strongly focused on the health and safety of our subcontractors working at our building sites. We have a Code of Conduct that sets out our standards for safety and working conditions at the building sites, which all subcontractors are required to sign. Increased use of digital solutions is optimising the building pro- cess and leads to improved efficiency. Our average building time for a single family house is among the shortest in the market. HusCompagniet controls all stages of the building process and a house normally takes 17-21 weeks to build (after permits are obtained). HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 25 / 144 Revenue HusCompagniet reported a total revenue of DKK 2,381 million in 2023, down 45.0% from DKK 4,330 million in 2022. The decrease was mainly due to a lower level of work in progress and sales activity compared to 2022. In 2023 the Group delivered 1,054 houses, a decrease of 949 from 2,003 houses delivered in 2022. The average sales price (ASP) in Detached increased from DKK 2.5 million to DKK 2.9 million, driven by a higher proportion of houses delivered in the Zealand region. Revenue in Detached was DKK 1.678 million, a decrease of 51.3% compared to DKK 3,444 million in 2022, driven by fewer sales and work in progress also following a lower order book entering 2023. Semi-detached realised a decrease in 2023 of 19.3%, as rev- enue was DKK 435 million in 2023 against DKK 539 million in 2022. Sales were 171 houses in 2023 compared to 137 houses in 2022 however, the revenue has not materialised due to project timings. Sweden realised a revenue decrease of 22.5%, as 2023 reported DKK 268 million against DKK 346 million in 2022 due to lower sales in 2023. Q1 2022 Q2 2022 Q3 2022 Q4 2022 Q1 2023 Q2 2023 Q3 2023 Q4 2023 FY-22 FY-23 Change Sales 374 358 138 87 226 219 194 212 957 851 -11% Deliveries 480 526 417 580 344 265 213 232 2003 1,054 -47% Gross margin Gross margin increased to 21.7% from 19.3% in 2022. The development is a combination of our ability to adjust prices in a timely manner and also the aquisition of the factory in Esbjerg has played a pivotal role in driving the positive trend. The detached segment was negatively affected by the re-eval- uation of provisions of DKK 15 million made in Q2 2023. Gross margin in Detached increased from 18.5% in 2022 to 19.2% in 2023. The stabilisation in total cost on raw materials and subcontractors have alleviated some of the pressures faced in the previous year, contributing to an improved cost structure. Furthermore, the full effect of the H2 2022 price increases has been realised, providing a more substantial contribution to our margins than in the previous year. Semi-detached gross margin was 24.9% in 2023 against 12.5% in 2022. The acquisition of the Esbjerg factory has been contributing to the positive development in the mar- gins. In Sweden, gross margin was 32.5% in 2023 against 38.1% in 2022. The margin was negatively affected by the write-down of a commercial contract of DKK 9 million. 21.7% Gross margin EBITDA EBITDA before special items was DKK 108 million, down 69.0% compared with DKK 348 million in 2022. This corre- sponds to an EBITDA margin before special items of 4.5% compared to a margin of 8.0% in 2022. Staff cost and other external expenses (SG&A) amounted to DKK 409 million a reduction of DKK 79 million from DKK 489 million in 2022. Detached SG&A decreased DKK 89 million to DKK 272 million in 2023 against 361 million in 2022. The reduction in SG&A is driven in combination with other cost adjustments. Central to these adjustments is our enduring commitment to cost management. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 26 / 144 Semi-detached SG&A increased DKK 43 million to DKK 67 million in 2023 against 38 million in 2022, following an increased strategic focus and the aquisition of the factory in Esbjerg in 2022. In Sweden, the decrease in SG&A expenses from DKK 89 million in 2022 to DKK 70 million in 2023, amounting to a DKK 19 million reduction, is also a result of our cost focus and adjustments to reflect the activity in the market. Special items Special items amount to a cost of DKK 0 million in 2023 compared to DKK 32 million in 2022. Amortisation and depreciation Amortisation and depreciation amounted to DKK 46 million compared to DKK 48 million in 2022. Amortisation main- ly consists of developing projects including ERP system. Depreciation mainly refers to leasing contracts. In 2023, depreciation amounted to DKK 31 million (DKK 33 million in 2022), and amortisation amounted to DKK 15 million (DKK 15 million in 2022). EBIT Reported EBIT amounted to DKK 62 million, a decrease of DKK 206 million or 76.9% from DKK 268 million in 2022. The decrease is a result of the decrease in EBITDA. Net financials Reported net financials were an expense of DKK 39 million compared to DKK 27 million in 2022. The increase was due to an increase in the loan base rate (CIBOR 3-month), as global interest levels increased during 2023 and the refinancing of the bank loan which took place in connection with the offering of new shares. Profit for the year before tax for continued operations Profit for the year before tax from the continued operations was DKK 24 million in 2023, a decrease of DKK 217 million from DKK 241 million in 2022. 2023 was impacted by lower EBITDA and increased financial expenses. Taxation Reported tax for 2023 was DKK 6 million against DKK 50 million in 2022. Net profit Net profit generated was DKK 15 million against DKK 170 million in 2022. Reported loss from discontinued operations was DKK 3 million in 2023 against DKK 20 million in 2022, due to a non- cash effect of currency adjustments on loans received from group entities in 2022. The loan was settled in 2022 hence not affecting 2023. Cash flows Operating activities Net cash generated from operating activities was DKK 249 million compared with DKK 268 million in 2022. Investing activities Net investments of DKK 20 million during 2023, against DKK 36 million in 2022 (excluding acquisition of the factory in Esbjerg). Free cash flow Free cash flow was DKK 229 million against DKK 152 million in 2022, mainly driven by changes in operating activities. Cash conversion was 212% (free cash flow to EBITDA Bsi) primarily due to lower sales relative to deliveries. Financing activities Financing activities were negative of DKK 9 million, against negative of DKK 192 million in 2022. The development is a result of the proceeds following the offering of new shares in 2023 of DKK 207 million off-set by DKK 8 million of trans- action costs and a new facility agreement with the banks, reducing the bank loans with DKK 175 million. Aqusition of own shares used for the RSU programme was DKK 8 million. Balance sheet Financing Net interest-bearing debt totalled DKK 356 million at 31 De- cember 2023 against DKK 768 million at 31 December 2022. The net interest-bearing debt to EBITDA ratio was 3.3x in 2023 compared to 2.2x in 2022. Equity The Group’s equity increased by DKK 218 million in 2023 to DKK 2,098 million from DKK 1,881 million by year end 2022. The increase was driven by the capital raise initiated in May 2023 of DKK 207 million less transaction costs of DKK 8 million and acquistion of own shares related to the RSU programme. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 27 / 144 Net working capital Net working capital totalled DKK 316 million at 31 December 2023, down from DKK 511 million at 31 December 2022. The change was partly caused by a DKK 378 million decrease in contract assets due to low sales activity, a decrease of DKK 62 million in inventory, and a decrease of DKK 65 million in trade and other receivables, partly offset by a DKK 230 million decrease in trade and other payables and DKK 46 million decrease in other liabilities. Contract assets Net contract assets amounted to DKK 262 million compared to DKK 626 million in 2022. Excluding contract liabilities, contract assets amounted to DKK 353 million against DKK 731 million in 2022. The contract work in progress (CWIP) at 31 December 2023 was negatively affected by lower sales in 2023. Order backlog The order backlog (gross) as of 31 December 2023 amount- ed to DKK 1,513 million compared to DKK 2,057 million in 2022. The lower backlog was caused by lower sales in 2023 compared to 2022. Deliveries amounted to 1,054 houses. In 2023, 13.1% of deliveries were houses built on own land (11.1% in 2022). In Detached, the share of own land was 7.3% against 8.0% in 2022. As of 31 December 2023, HusCompagniet’s inventory com- prised 230 land plots (including plots for show houses) and 46 show houses valued at DKK 79 million. Estimates and judgements Please refer to Note 1.2 introduction to significant estimates and judgements and Note 4.4 impairment. Units 2023 2022 Sales 851 957 Detached 579 744 Semi detached 171 137 Sweden 101 76 Deliveries 1,054 2,003 Detached 633 1,427 Semi detached 234 317 Sweden 187 259 2023 2022 Orderbook value (DKKm) gross 1,513 2,057 Detached 1,058 1,244 Semi detached 363 598 Sweden 93 215 Orderbook value (DKKm) net 1,145 1,364 Detached 805 786 Semi detached 248 371 Sweden 93 206 Share of own land (Denmark) 13.1% 11.1% Detached 7.3% 8.0% Semi detached 29.1% 25.2% Discontinued operations During 2020, the Group closed down its German and Swed- ish brick house activities. Reported loss from discontinued operations was DKK 3 million in 2023 against a DKK 20 million loss in 2022. Dividend No dividend is proposed to shareholders in 2024. HusCompagniet A/S The profit for the year in the Parent company, HusCom- pagniet A/S, amounts to DKK 15 million and the equity as of 31.12.2023 amounted to DKK 2,098 million. Events after the balance sheet date No material events have occurred between 31 December 2023 and the date of publication of this annual report that have not already been included in the annual report and that would have a material effect on the assessment of the Group’s financial position. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 28 / 144 Q4 Figures DKKm Q4 2023 Q4 2022* FY 2023 FY 2022 Income statement Revenue 531 980 2,381 4,330 Gross profit 129 195 517 837 Operating profit before depreciation and amortisa- tion (EBITDA) before special items 17 68 108 348 Special items 1 -18 0 -32 Operating profit before depreciation and amortisa- tion (EBITDA) after special items 18 50 108 316 Operating profit (EBIT) before special items 4 55 62 300 Operating profit (EBIT) 6 38 62 268 Financials, net -8 -11 -39 -27 Profit for the year (continued operations) 0 25 17 190 Profit for the year (discontinued operations) 1 -7 -3 -20 Profit for the year 0 19 15 170 Financial position as of 31 December Total assets 3,264 3,572 3,264 3,572 Contract assets, net 262 626 262 626 Net working capital 316 526 316 526 Net interest bearing debt (NIBD) 356 768 356 768 Equity 2,098 1,881 2,098 1,881 * Unaudited ** Operating profit before depreciation (EBITDA) and before special items and Operating proft (EBIT) before special items, repectively, are used as alternative performance measures to reflect a more true and comparable view of the Group's ordinary operations. DKKm Q4 2023 Q4 2022* FY 2023 FY 2022 Cash flow Cash flow from operating activities 91 277 249 268 Cash flow from investing activities -4 -6 -20 -117 - hereof from investment in property, plant and equipment -1 -3 -9 -22 Cash flow from financing activities -7 -258 -9 -192 Free cash flow 86 271 229 152 Key figures Revenue growth -7.0 -18.4% -45.0% 0.3% Gross margin 24.3% 19.9% 21.7% 19.3% EBITDA margin before special items 3.2% 6.9% 4.5% 8.0% EBITDA margin after special items 3.4% 5.1% 4.6% 7.3% EBIT margin 1.0% 3.8% 2.6% 6.2% * Unaudited *** Continued operations HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 29 / 144 Key figures Q4 Revenue HusCompagniet reported total revenue of DKK 531 million in Q4 2023 down 45.9% from DKK 980 million in Q4 2022. The decrease was negatively affected by lower number of deliveries and sales. Deliveries in the quarter comprised 232 houses, down 60.0% from 580 in Q4 2022. Revenue in detached decreased 49.7% down from DKK 786 million in Q4 2022 to DKK 395 million in Q4 2023. The decrease was driven by the low sales during 2023 impacting contracted work-in-progress negatively. The decrease was partly off-set by the average selling price (ASP) which increased 7.9% in detached y-o-y driven by price increas- es introduced in 2022 and 2023. Semi-detached revenue decreased 12.3% or DKK 12 million to DKK 91 million down from DKK 103 million. The decrease was driven by the low sales in 2023 and delay of new projects, reducing the orderbook during the year. Unit price increased to DKK 2.1 million from DKK 1.2 million due to a higher contribution of sales of share of own land. Wooden houses (SE) revenue was DKK 45 million in Q4 2023 down from 91 million, equivalent to a 50.6% decrease. Deliveries in the quarter decreased from 77 houses in Q4 2022 to 28 in Q4 2023, offset by an increase in unit price of 32.8% in the same period. Gross margin Gross profit was DKK 129 million in Q4 2023 against DKK 195 million Q4 2022, corresponding to a margin of 24.3% and 19.9%, respectively. Margin was positively affected by an increased share of own land from 4.8% in Q4 2022 to 10.3% in Q4 2023. Detached realised a margin of 22.7% in Q4 2023 up from 17.0% in Q4 2022 emphasising the focus on cost. Semi-detached margin was 25.0% in Q4 2023 against 22.2% in Q4 2022. The margin is positively impacted by an increase in share of own land from 0% in Q4 2022 to 43.6% Wooden house gross margin was 36.8% in Q4 2023 against 42.6% in Q4 2022. The decrease is in line with previous quarters during the year where we experienced a cost increase. EBITDA before special items Reported EBITDA before special items was DKK 17 million compared with DKK 68 million in Q4 2022, corresponding to an EBITDA margin before special items of 3.2% compared to a margin of 6.9% in 2022. Staff cost and other external expenses (SG&A) amounted to DKK 112 million in Q4 2023 against DKK 127 million in Q4 2022 driven by a cost focus and a strategic adjustment of the workforce executed in 2022. Special items Special items amounted to a gain of DKK 1 million in Q4 2023 due to partly reversals of impairments on leaseholds in 2022 where contracts have been exited prior to expectation. Profit for the period Profit for the period from continued operations was DKK 0 million in 2023. Cash flow Operating activities Net cash generated from operating activities was DKK 91 million compared with DKK 277 million in Q4 2022. The decrease was driven by the reduction in activity in 2023 offset by the tax payment for 2022. Investing activities Net investments of DKK 4 million were made during Q4 2023, against DKK 6 million in Q4 2022. This was mainly driven by investments in property, plant and equipment in the factory as well as digitalisation. Free cash flow Free cash flow was DKK 86 million against DKK 271 million in Q4 2022. Financing activities Financing activities were negative DKK 7 million against nega- tive DKK 258 million in Q4 2022. The financing activities in 2022 were affected by repayment of current debt (RCF). 232 houses delivered in Q4 2023 Units Q4 2023 Q4 2022 Sales 212 87 Detached 160 76 Semi Detached 25 0 Sweden 27 11 Deliveries 232 580 Detached 165 429 Semi Detached 39 74 Sweden 28 77 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 30 / 144 Introduction Sustainability governance Environment information Social information Governance information Taxonomy-eligibility and alignment ESG disclosures and data TCFD disclosures Sustainability HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 31 / 144 Sustainability Introduction About this section In this section, we communicate our sustainability progress, governance, and selected ESG data for 2023 covering Hus- Compagniet A/S and VårgårdaHus AB. The information provided has been prepared in in accord- ance with sections 99a, 99b, 99d and 107d of the Danish Financial Statements Acts. Reference to page 17 for business model as part of section 99a. We disclose eligibility and alignment with the EU taxonomy for sustainable activities on pages 57-60 and report on the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) on pages 63-65. For 2023, the sustainability section has been restructured in preparation for the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Di- rective and the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) which HusCompagniet is required to comply with from 2025 onwards. Sustainability is an integral part of HusCompagniet’s strategy (page 18) and business model (page 17). UN Global Compact HusCompagniet is a signatory of the UN Global Compact and committed to upholding the ten principles of human rights, labour rights, anti-corruption, and the environ- ment. Our response to the Communication on Progress (CoP) questionnaire is publicly available and can be found on https://unglobalcompact.org/what-is-gc/partici- pants/141404-HusCompagniet-A-S Our strategic approach to sustainability A range of sustainable challenges impact our business and our stakeholders. We identify and prioritise key challenges. For house building in particular, we identify what lies within our control and what we can influence in the best possible way. We develop roadmaps, initiatives and programmes to address key challenges. We relate our targets to specific SDGs. See page 33 for SDGs linked to our targets. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 32 / 144 Area Baseline (2019) Target 2025 Target 2030 Related SDGs Environment 1: Climate – building materials • 5.8 kg CO 2 e per m 2 per year from building materials throughout the lifecycle of a house • 3.7 kg CO 2 e per m 2 per year from the production of building materials • 35% reduction in upstream CO 2 emissions from building materials compared to 2019 (2.6kg CO 2 per m 2 per year) • 70% reduction in CO 2 emissions from building materials throughout the lifecycle of a house compared to 2019 (1.7kg CO 2 per m 2 per year) Target 9.4 2: Climate – customer use phase • 48% of houses ordered with one or more on-site renewable energy technologies • 60% of houses ordered with renewable energy sources • Target reached in 2022 (with 45% with renewable heating sources and 55% with district heating, which on average is 70% renewable) • Assess and set new targets accordingly Target 7.1 3: Climate – own operations • 878 tonnes scope 1 CO 2 emissions (owned and leased company vehicles) • 1,536 tonnes scope 2 CO 2 emissions (purchased electricity and heating) • Zero scope 1 emissions through 100% electric owned and leased vehicle fleet Target will not be reached in 2025 but is expected to be reached in 2028 • Carbon-neutral scope 1 and 2 emissions from operations Target 13.3 Social 4: Employee well-being Denmark (2020-baseline): • 2.2% sick leave • Response rate: 89% • Satisfaction score: 77% • Loyalty score: 85% • eNPS: 47 • mNPS: 42 • Maintain sick leave at 2% • Maintain sick leave at 2% Target 8.5 5: Diversity & inclusion • One female out of seven total members on the Board of Directors • 20% females in management at Group level • 40% female members on the Board of Directors • 25% females in management at Group level • Monitor possible new regulatory requirements around gender quotas in Denmark • 40% female members on the Board of Directors • 30% females in management at Group level Target 5.5 Target 10. 3 6: Health & safety • LTIf of 15.2 for own blue and white collar • LTIf of 10.7 for subcontractors • Reduce LTIf by 30% compared to 2019 • Reduce LTIf by 50% compared to 2019 Target 8.3, 8.5 Governance 7: Business conduct • Employee Guidelines for Values and Ethics • Standards of Business Conduct • Only annual targets set - see targets for 2024 on next page • Only annual targets set - see targets for 2024 on next page Target 16.5 8: Sustainable sourcing • Supplier Code of Conduct • Whistle-blower system • Only annual targets set - see targets for 2024 on next page • Only annual targets set - see targets for 2024 on next page Target 12.6 9: Labour rights and human rights • Employee Guidelines for Values and Ethics • Standards of Business Conduct • Only annual targets set - see targets for 2024 on next page • Only annual targets set - see targets for 2024 on next page Target 8.7, 8.8 Target 10. 3 Our targets HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 33 / 144 Ambitions Results 2023 Ambitions 2024 Related SDGs Environment 1: Climate – building materials • 4 out of 10 houses (calculated in 2023) in voluntary low CO 2 emission class • LCA of standard house updated for the second time, showing 17% reduction from the production of building materials and 18% reduction for materials throughout the lifecycle • Wooden frames from HC Production integrated in both semi-detached and detached buildings • Data collected from LCAs to guide customer choices and to prioritise further work • Construction completed on first DGNB project, several other DGNB projects in our pipeline • DGNB consultants trained and hired • Continue preparing for Danish regulatory requirement, including transportation and CO 2 emissions from construction sites in climate calculations • Commit to SBTi (Science Based Targets initiative) for Scope 3 emissions Target 9.4 2: Climate – customer use phase • Further increase in proportion of customers (in detached segment) choosing solar panels (from 17% to 23%) • All show houses built after Q3 2023 are with solar panels • Continue monitoring regulatory requirements from the EU on solar energy Target 7.1 3: Climate – own operations • Continued installing charging infrastructure at offices • Started changing both smaller and larger vans to EVs, and reducing proportion of larger vans • PPA (Power Purchase Agreement) and other similar agreements considered • Continue installing charging infrastructure at offices and employee homes (with company cars) • 40% of fleet to be EVs • Enter PPA (Power Purchase Agreement) or similar agreement • Commit to SBTi for Scope 1 and 2 emissions Target 13.3 Social 4: Employee well-being • 4.7% sick leave (including for the first time, our factory in Esbjerg) • Annual employee satisfaction survey carried out across Danish operations including our production operations as well as our Swedish operations. • Response rate: 90% (up 6 pp compared to 2022) • Satisfaction score: 77% (up 2 pp compared to 2022) • Loyalty score: 84% (up 1 pp compared to 2022) • eNPS: 41 (up 11 compared to 2022) (fulfilling our improvement ambition for 2023, achieved through a more stable organisation) • mNPS: 54 (up 7 compared to 2022) • Use results from employee satisfaction survey to hold dialogue meetings and make action plans • Maintain results from survey at same level Target 8.5 5: Diversity & inclusion • Two females out of six total members on the Board of Directors • 30% females in other management levels at Group level • Two females out of six total members on the Board of Directors • Maintain 30% females in other management levels at Group level Target 5.5 Target 10. 3 6: Health & safety • Reduced overall LTIf from 11.6 in 2022 to 6.7 in 2023, reaching our 2025-target • Continued implementing initiatives and embedding safety in our own and our subcontractors’ culture, among other through the launch of a work environment handbook • Roll out work environment handbook to all departments • Launch of dedicated area on intranet Target 8.3, 8.5 Governance 7: Business conduct • Code of Conduct further integrated into contracts, operations, and HR manuals • Structured Q&A processes with chosen suppliers and subcontractors to ensure compliance with HC Code of Conduct • Continue to work with suppliers and subcontractors to promote good business conduct • Raise awareness internally on business conduct and ethics Target 16.5 8: Sustainable sourcing • Continued dialogue with suppliers on documentation of more sustainable products, among other as input to LCAs • Continue engaging with suppliers in creating more sustainable solutions • Continue focus on adoption of Code of Conduct throughout the supply chain Target 12.6 9: Labour rights and human rights • Continued awareness efforts have been conducted towards suppliers and subcontractors • Structured Q&A processes with chosen suppliers and subcontractors to ensure compliance with HC Code of Conduct • Continue to work with suppliers and subcontractors to promote sound working conditions Target 8.7, 8.8 Target 10. 3 Our Progress in 2023 and Ambitions for 2024 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 34 / 144 Sustainability hierarchy Board of Directors Audit Commmitee Executive Management LCA Steering Committee Business Development (Sustainability Officer) Engineering Technical ESG Steering Committee Group CEO Group CFO Group COO Director, Detached segment Purchasing Director General Counsel Head of HR Head of PR & Marketing Head of Strategy & Business Development Sustainability Officer Sustainability governance The role of the Board and Executive Management The HusCompagniet Board of Directors has the ultimate oversight of sustainability matters, including those related to climate. These matters are on the Board’s annual wheel, and are considered at least once annually, or more frequently as needed. Climate-related risks are an important part of HusCompagniet’s overall ESG risk considerations and are incorporated into strategic discussions, in annual business planning, and in annual reporting. The Executive Management team is responsible for assessing and managing sustainability matters, including climate-related risks. The Group CEO and Group CFO are actively involved in the sustainability strategy process, and the operationalisation of the sustainability focus areas is owned by the Head of Business Development. ESG steering committee In 2022, an ESG Steering Committee was established, counting Executive Management and those responsible for Marketing, Purchasing, and Business Development. In 2023 the committee’s area of focus was extended to encompass social and governance-related topics. Group sustainability The Sustainability Officer (Bæredygtighedsansvarlig), reporting to the Head of Business Development, is responsible for de- veloping HusCompagniet’s sustainability strategy and working with Technical/Purchasing, Engineering, Marketing, Legal, and Human Resources to manage sustainability topics on a day- to-day basis. Sustainability is implemented across HusCom- pagniet and embedded in daily operations with a strong focus on monitoring indirect (Scope 3) emissions in building materials. In 2023, actions were taken to increase waste sorting in offices and on construction sites. Also, new employees are now introduced to HusCompagniet’s sustainability priorities, and sustainability has a dedicated area on the company’s intranet. Life-cycle assessment steering committee In 2023, an LCA (life-cycle assessment) steering committee was established, coordinated by the Sustainability Officer and with participants from Technical, Engineering and Business Devel- opment teams. The purpose of the committee is to oversee the LCAs carried out on every house (both detached and semi-de- tached) since 1 January 2023. To onboard and engage the en- tire organisation, webinars were organised with Sales, Building Design and Construction Managers on the topic of LCA. Inclusion of sustainability in incentive schemes The remuneration of the Executive Management is designed to support the priorities in HusCompagniet’s strategy and thereby ensure that the interests of the company and the sustainable development of HusCompagniet are pursued and that certain short- and long-term goals are achieved. As such, the remu- neration elements consider non-financial objectives, including ESG and strategic elements. Sustainability is embedded in the way we do business throughout HusCompagniet, from Board oversight to integration in our operating model. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 35 / 144 Engaging with the interests and views of stakeholders is critical for HusCompagniet to achieve its vision of paving the market evolution and setting the standard for sustaina- ble construction practices. To change the way people think of sustainable homes and living, we need to engage our stakeholders in the journey. Our key stakeholders encom- pass shareholders, employees, customers (investors and end-users for the semi-detached segment; private custom- ers in the detached segment), suppliers, subcontractors, and municipalities. Shareholders are engaged through annual general meetings and regular reports. Employees participate in engagement via annual employee satisfaction surveys. Customers are engaged through satisfaction surveys (includ- ing NPS (Net Promoter Score), community management and focus groups. We regularly engage suppliers on sustainable sourcing. This engagement helps shape our strategy and operations. For example, results from the annual employee survey are considered by the Executive Management Team, and man- agers are responsible for reviewing the findings with their teams and putting in place concrete action plans. Our stakeholders Shareholders Employees Customers Suppliers Subcontractors Municipalities Engagement and organisation Annual report; annual general meeting; yearly strategy board meeting, where ESG is an inte- grated part of discussions. Annual employee satisfac- tion survey; safety training; intranet; ‘town hall’ meetings. Community management through various channels; cus- tomer satisfaction and oppor- tunity for feedback throughout construction process and customer journey; customer studies. Regular dialogue, signed supplier Code of Conduct in place. Regular dialogue, signed supplier Code of Conduct in place, work environment handbook, safety reporting through project management App. Regular dialogue about building permits and other administrative issues. Purpose and outcome Ensure alignment with ESG strategy and related targets and monitor progress on strategy and targets defined. Monitor employee satisfac- tion and implement action plans, particularly related to work conditions; raise aware- ness on safety issues; inform about sustainability strategy and targets. Understand customer prefer- ences within ESG topics. Secure sustainable sourcing and transparent documenta- tion in relation to ESG. Make sure subcontractors live up to Code of Conduct and achievement of safety targets; inform about need for ESG data collection. Make sure LCA report for each built house lives up to requirements. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 36 / 144 Preliminary double materiality assessment To identify the sustainability topics that are material to our business, we conducted a preliminary double materiality assessment (DMA) in accordance with the requirements of the EU’s European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) in November 2023. The preliminary DMA was conducted with support from ex- ternal consultants. The process began with a full-day work- shop with participation from the executive and management team, representing all aspects of our business from sales to the construction sites. The workshop mapped HusCom- pagniet’s full value chain and assessed materiality from the perspective of: 1. Impact materiality – HusCompagniet’s impact on people or the environment; and 2. Financial materiality – sustainability matters that gen- erate risks or opportunities that could affect HusCom- pagniet’s financial position, financial performance, cash flows, access to finance, or cost of capital A detailed analysis was carried out after the workshop which included scoring each of the sub-topics in the ESRS. The outcome of our preliminary DMA confirmed the materiality of the sustainability topics already part of our ESG work (climate change, workforce, and business conduct), while also identifying new potential material topics, not previously explicitly part of our ESG work. The outcome is in line with the EU Taxonomy, as both Substantial Contribution Criteria (SCC) and Do-No-Signifi- cant-Harm (DNSH) topics for construction of new buildings for climate change mitigation are deemed material. These include Climate Change Mitigation, Climate Change Adapta- tion, Circular Economy, Pollution Prevention and Biodiversity. In 2024, we plan to revisit the DMA to further deepen our understanding of topics and involving a broader range of stakeholders in refining it. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 37 / 144 The impacts of climate change are wide-ranging, from phys- ical events such as flooding, extreme weather events, water, and heat stress to climate-related displacement and subse- quent population movement, all of which have implications for business in the future. The climate transition also presents significant opportunities for HusCompagniet and others. As a house builder, we have an impact on climate change, which we address across the lifecycle of a house. HusCom- pagniet's vision is to set a new standard for sustainable construction and change the way people think and talk about house building and sustainable living. Climate risks and opportunities For HusCompagniet, climate change presents opportunities to bring new, low-carbon house concepts and alternative energy technologies to our customers. It also presents risks that we must mitigate. In 2019, HusCompagniet conducted a detailed assessment of risks and opportunities in line with the TCFD recommendations, which was updated in 2021 and again in 2022. As detailed in the strategy section of our TCFD disclosures (p. 63), the analysis explored the implications to the business model and strategy in the context of three scenarios based on groupings of IEA (International Energy Agency), IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), WEC (World Energy Council) scenarios, and other publicly available scenarios. The analysis determined that our business model can be made resilient in all three scenarios. In 2023, we continued to use these insights when considering long-term exposure, and we plan to refresh the analysis as more data becomes available. Further information on HusCompagniet’s cli- mate-related risks and opportunities can be found in the TCFD disclosures on pages 63-65. Sustainability Environment information Climate change is one of the defining challenges of our time. It is an urgent global threat, and how we respond will determine the trajectory of global warming for generations. Climate change Sources of HusCompagniet’s emissions The Scope 1 and 2 emissions from our own operations ac- count for approximately 3% of HusCompagniet's emissions. These emissions are under HusCompagniet’s direct control, including reaching our ambitious targets for them. However, 97% of HusCompagniet’s emissions in the form of upstream and downstream Scope 3 emissions, are under HusCompagniet’s influence, but not under direct control. Upstream emissions, which represent around 55% of Scope 3 emissions, are mostly derived from the manufacturing of building materials by our suppliers, which often include cement and lime. Downstream emissions represent approximately 45% of Scope 3 emissions and are driven by the customer use-phase of houses built by HusCompagniet. Our role in these phases is more complex and requires engagement with our suppliers upstream and our customers downstream to achieve our targets. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 38 / 144 HusCompagniet's total CO 2 emissions Scope 1 (Diesel and Gasoline) Downstream Downstream transportation and distribution, use of sold products (hereunder energy consumption), end-of-life treat- ment of sold products. Emissions from operations Scope 1 + 2 Value-chain emissions Scope 3 Scope 2 (Electricity, District Heating, Natural Gas) Upstream Purchased goods and servic- es (including production of building materials), upstream transporation and distribu- tion, waste generated in operations, business travel, employee commute, upstream leased assets. 65% 55% 35% 45% 3% 97% HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 39 / 144 Our GHG emissions reduction targets 2030 targets • Reduce the lifecycle CO 2 emissions from building materi- als of HusCompagniet homes by 70% by 2030, from the 2019 baseline year. • Become carbon neutral in our scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2030. 2025 targets • 35% reduction in CO 2 emissions from the production of building materials by 2025, from 2019 baseline year. • 60% of houses ordered with renewable energy sources. This target was considered reached already in 2022 as 45% of houses are with renewable heating sources (geothermal or heat pump), and 55% with district heating, which on average was 70% renewable in 2022. Actions to mitigate climate change To achieve our emissions reduction targets, we are focusing our efforts on the following levers, where we have the big- gest impact. 1. Low-carbon building materials As a large player in our sector, we see potential in leveraging our centralised purchasing and product development efforts to achieve emissions reductions across the value chain. We are in dialogue with all our suppliers about more sustainable products and transparent documentation of climate data. 2. Renewable energy Renewable energy heating solutions have a substantial impact on the total lifecycle CO 2 emissions of a home. For instance, phasing out natural gas heating has reduced emis- sions from the use phase of our houses by 30% compared to 2019. In January 2022, we phased out gas as an energy source in our offering. Phasing out natural gas in households is an important part of achieving Denmark’s common goal of reducing CO 2 emissions by 70% by 2030 (compared to a 1990 baseline). 3. Recycling and reuse In the longer term, we will focus on the end-of-life/demolition phase, starting with materials selection, shifting towards more readily recycled and reused materials, thereby reduc- ing future downstream scope 3 emissions. HusCompagniet has the least influence on the end-of-life phase. We continue to partner with demolition firms that focus on the reuse of materials and encourage circular and other innovations that further close the loop in the lifecycle of a house. 4. Own operations We are reducing Scope 1 and 2 emissions from HusCom- pagniet’s own operations by focusing on switching to electric vehicles and by investigating power purchasing agreements as a means of contributing to actual additional renewable energy production being added to the grid. The latter is a more efficient mean to a transition to renewable energy than the purchase of certificates of origin, that in our opinion do not contribute to this transition. Actions in 2023 Building materials In 2023, the LCA of standard house was updated for the second time, showing 17% reduction from the production of building materials and 18% reduction from materials through- out the lifecycle. Further details on LCAs of our houses are provided on pages 41-43. In the work with reducing CO 2 emissions from building materials, sustainable sourcing continues to be an area of focus and collaboration with suppliers with a view to further improving supply availability and traceability. In 2023, we have increased our efforts to improve transparency through a focus on EPDs (Environmen- tal Product Declarations) of the materials and products we use for our houses. This focus makes it possible to compare different suppliers of similar products as well as products from the same suppliers and is the basis for decision-making when changing to lower-carbon versions of known materials, or to completely new materials. Waste at the construction site is currently not included in LCAs. A crucial first step in the work on waste reduction is obtaining valid and consistent data on actual waste quan- tities of each fraction, and in 2023, we have continued our close dialogue with our waste handling companies, so that we can secure data and document the recycling percentage from every single construction site, which will be neces- sary in order to report according to the EU taxonomy, and also from 2025, according to the ESRS and expected new requirements in the Danish building code. In 2023, in the de- tached segment, increased sorting has been implemented in two municipalities and we expect to gradually roll this out in the whole country. Customer use phase In 2023, the percentage of houses with solar panels in- creased to 23%, compared to 17% in 2022. All show houses built after Q3 2023 are with solar panels. Furthermore, we started offering charging infrastructure for EVs as a standard on all new detached houses, free of charge, in partnership with the electricity supplier “OK”. 17% reduction of CO 2 emissions pr. built m 2 for our standard house, from the production of building materials HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 40 / 144 62% of sold houses have one or more of the following alternative energy sources. 25% of sold houses have installed air source heat pumps 22% of sold houses have installed geo thermal heating pumps 21% of sold houses have installed solar panels Percentage of houses sold with renewable energy sources in 2023 Development in percentage of houses with solar panels. 2021 20232022 23% 17% 5% Own operations We have been working to install electric vehicle (EV) charg- ing stations in all offices and after completing a full roll-out in 2021, we have in 2023 further increased the number of charging stations at some of our large offices as we move to- wards our 2025 target. We are monitoring developments in the EV market closely, and in 2023, we have started replac- ing both smaller and larger vans with EVs and started install- ing charging infrastructure also at employees’ home (with company cars). As part of this process, a downsizing of our vans has been initiated, as smaller vans have longer range. While remaining firmly committed to the full electrification of our fleet, we expect to be able to reach this in 2028. Emissions in 2023 Scope 1 & 2 emissions Scope 1 emissions were down 47% compared to 2022 , and down 54% compared to our base year 2019. This can be ex- plained by the decrease in our activities, and by the transition to electric vehicles, moving emissions from Scope 1 to Scope 2. Scope 2 emissions (market-based) were down 22% com- pared to 2022 and up 28% compared to our base year 2019. As Scope 1, this can be explained by the decrease in our activities, combined with emissions from electric vehicles increasing as our fleet is electrified. The carbon intensity of our operations (market based) in- creased by 41% from 23.1 kg CO 2 e per m 2 to 32.5 kg, due to the decrease in our activities from 2022 to 2023. Scope 3 emissions In 2023, we have, for the second time, updated the climate calculation of our baseline house with the newest products and data to get an updated status on the achievement of our targets. The calculation shows that CO 2 emissions from the building of our baseline house has been reduced by 17% and emissions from materials throughout the entire life cycle has been reduced by 18% compared to 2019. See more details on page 42. Reductions come from aerated concrete and foundations. Scenario calculations & SBTi In 2023, we also made scenario calculations of which further reductions we can expect towards 2025. This shows that by implementing existing, best-in-class low-CO 2 materials, we can expect a reduction of 20-25% in the emission from the production of materials. Such scenario calculations are uncertain, as it is not possible to precisely predict future emissions from existing and potential new suppliers. The calculations also show that if wooden frames are implement- ed in the entire portfolio, the reduction in emissions from the production of materials is 44%. However, when looking at materials throughout the entire lifecycle (which is the focus of our 2030-target), the reduction with wooden frames is 25- 30%, as CO 2 is released at the end of life of wood. These scenarios highlight that our 2025 target, while ambitious, is realistic, even though it is not possible nor our ambition to roll out wooden frames throughout our entire portfolio. In 2023, wooden frames were for the first time implemented in houses for the detached segment. To reach our 2030 target, more radical reductions from ourselves and from our suppliers will be necessary. In 2024, it is therefore our ambition to commit to SBTi (Science-based Targets initiative), and in 2025, to set new targets for Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions (both short-term (5-10 years) and long-term (2050)). HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 41 / 144 Reuse, Recycle and Recovery 2019 2022 2023 Climate – building materials in the lifecycle End of life / Demolition Currently, HusCompagniet has the least influence on the end- of-life phase. Our main contribu- tion is through the selection of more readily recycled or reused building materials. Production of materials Target 2025: 35% reduction of CO 2 emissions from the production of building materials, base year 2019. House construction Living in the house – energy consumption Target 2025: 60% of houses ordered with renewable energy sources. Considered reached with 45% of houses are with renewable heating sources (in 2022) (geothermal or heat pump), and 55% with district heating, which on average is 70% renewable. We use materials which contain secondary (recycled) raw materials (e.g. insulation) and we expect this to increase in the future. We work to prevent waste at the con- struction site by precise quantification and to increase waste sorting. Living in the house: replacement Downstream scope 3 emissions Emissions from replacement of building materials and components throughout the lifecycle of the house (B4). Downstream scope 3 emissions When a house reaches the end of its lifetime and is torn down, how materials are disposed, recy- cled, recovered, and reused have a substantial impact on lifecycle CO 2 emissions (C3-C4). To make status on the achievement of our 2025 and 2030 targets for emissions from building materials, we update the CO 2 figures for the materials where we have either replaced the material, or our suppliers have come up with new CO 2 data. This is done with the help of an external third party: an independent consulting engineer. Upstream scope 3 emissions Emissions from the production of building materials (A1-A3). We continue to partner with dem- olition firms that focus on reuse of materials, and encourage circular and other innovations that further close the loop in the lifecycle of a house. HusCompagniet’s standard house - carbon emissions from materials across the lifecycle of the house 3.7kg CO eq./m/year 0.9 1.3 5.9 3.2 Reduction from 2019 to 2023 17% 0.7 1.3 5.2 A1-A3 B4 C3-C4 Total 3.2 3.1 Reduction from 2019 to 2023 36% 0.9 0.6 Reduction from 2019 to 2023 9% 1.3 1.2 Reduction from 2019 to 2023 18% 5.2 4.8 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 42 / 144 Living up to new regulatory requirements in Denmark In March 2021, the Danish government published the Nation- al strategy for sustainable construction “National strategi for bæredygtigt byggeri”, that set out expected future require- ments for CO 2 emissions from buildings over a life cycle (LCA). We welcome initiatives towards more sustainable housing, and HusCompagniet is well-positioned to meet the requirements. We could even wish for more ambitious requirements. According to the agreement, all new-builds below 1,000 sqm require a climate calculation (a simplified LCA) since 1 January, 2023, and from 2025 there will be introduced a threshold for maximum kg CO 2 e/m 2 /year. In 2023 and 2024, buildings with emissions under 8.0 kg CO 2 e/m 2 /year belong to the voluntary low-emission class. 7 out of 10 houses, for which we have made climate calculations in 2023, are in the voluntary low emission class, and on average, the houses have a global warming potential of 7.7 CO 2 e/m 2 /year. It is worth noting that our climate calculations are not directly comparable to our baseline house, which has therefore been updated separately. This is because the building materials and elements included in the calculations have changed, so that for instance installations are now included in the calcula- tions, and because the generic data used have also been substantially updated. The test phase of the voluntary sustainable building class (to which we contributed back in 2021) was prolonged to December 2023. We monitor any further development of this class closely and take part in an ongoing dialogue with the authorities where we contribute with our perspective. Our own testing of the class back in 2021 has prepared us for any coming regulatory requirements. On a more local level, that of municipalities, we currently see constraints on choice of for example facade materials. These could hinder the introduction of new lower-carbon alterna- tives. Environmental responsibility Our contribution is to further increase the focus on the full life cycle of a home, and the integration of circular thinking and environmental stewardship. We aim to further understand and integrate environmental and biodiversity considerations into our business model, from the ecosystems of the land we build on, to our construction processes and materials. This will include, for instance, increasing the re-use and recyclability of our building materials, and improving waste management on our construction sites as well as our production facilities. Materials used for HusCompagniet houses are mainly locally sourced, reducing the environmental impact of transportation. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 43 / 144 HusCompagniet has a lean structure, and we work with local subcontractors for most of our construction work. This oper- ating model gives us a high degree of agility and efficiency. Our operating model also means that we must maintain a close cooperation with our subcontractors to ensure that they also maintain satisfactory performance on safety, quali- ty, and sustainability standards. Our employees are the most important asset at HusCompagniet, and their knowledge and insights are among our strongest capabilities. We rely on them to facilitate and deliver high-quality homes for families and doing so safely. We support and engage our people through focusing on safety, well-being, diversity, and inclusion. Social information HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 44 / 144 Office Production Show houses For ech show house oction, there re from 1-6 show houses. Gender split Across all group employees in Denmark and Sweden % Profession split Across all group employees in Denmark and Sweden % 20.5% Women 45 Show houses in Denmark 9 office locations in Denmark and Sweden 2 Production facilities in Denmark and Sweden 33% construction managers, service, production 79.5% Men 77% Sales, Design, Engineering, Administration Operations overview HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 45 / 144 Health and safety We start to see the positive effects of our ambitious pro- gramme Tryg Arbejdsplads (Secure Workplace) launched in 2021. A 44% reduction of the lost-time injury frequency (LTIf) for own employees and our contractors compared to 2019 is a strong testimony of our commitment, and with this, we have reached our 2025 target of reducing 30% compared to 2019. Our 2030 target is an LTIf reduction of 50% in 2030, compared to our baseline level from 2019. Working environment policy We have a Working Environment Policy in place to guide us in our ambition to protect our employees and the employees of our subcontractors, suppliers, and customers. In addition to complying with the Danish working environment regula- tions, the policy also covers a range of initiatives to prevent accidents and ensure that all partners comply with the same working environment standards and procedures, as we do. By analysing risks and monitoring accidents we aim to ensure that we have the right capabilities, processes, and tools applicable. To monitor safety for both our own employees and our sub- contractors, we make regular safety and work environment performance reporting. We value transparent and accurate The health and safety of our employees and subcontractors is an unwavering priority for HusCompagniet and we acknowledge that health and safety is an area of constant focus. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 46 / 144 reporting, as it is the outset for improving safety perfor- mance, and we work to push towards complete coverage. As part of our safety reporting, we also have a proactive and preventive safety registration on-site, which is integrated into our online project management system. The system en- ables our construction managers and subcontractors to reg- ister safety incidents and pre-emptive safety risk observa- tion such as near misses, observations, and safety incidents in the app, we already use in the construction process. Our updated Code of Conduct and Supplier Code of Con- duct further detail our expectations of both employees and subcontractors, and we are firmly committed to uphold the highest safety standards on our construction sites. Tryg Arbejdsplads (Secure workplace) Tryg Arbejdsplads is our transformational programme to create a safe and secure workplace for our employees and contractors. The programme includes a broad range of initi- atives including systematic incident & observation reporting, better construction site architecture, special focus on work- ing in heights as well as electricity hazards. The programme also includes initiatives to improve competencies among our own and subcontractors’ employees and more visible leadership through regular site visits, clear communication and follow up. Actions in 2023 During 2023, implementation of the activities under Tryg Arbejdsplads were fully rolled out. Although the full effect among HusCompagniet’s large portfolio of subcontractors will take some time to be measurable, we are adamant that our improved safety performance is the result of our Tryg Arbejdsplads programme. In 2023, we carried out a voluntary workplace assessment, including only psychological aspects. HusCompagniet has decided to conduct this survey on a yearly basis, more fre- quent than the compulsory three yearly cycle. The result of the assessment was satisfactory, as they showed improve- ments for several areas compared to 2022. HusCompagniet additionally launched initiatives during 2023 to further improve safety performance: • A work environment handbook as an effort to create simple and clear access to HusCompagniet’s ambition of best-in-class work environment 6.7 LTIf Total (Lost Time Injury frequency - own employees and subcontractors) • Implementation of safety knives to reduce cutting injuries in our production 2024 focus Maintaining the positive trend will be our key focus for 2024. The following specific activities are planned: • First aid trainings will be held for office-based per- sonnel • Increased focus on electricity related safety • Development of new technical solutions for scaffold- ing and railing Safety performance in 2023 With an overall LTIf of 6.7 accidents per million man- hours, down 44% compared to 2019, we have reached our 2025 target. The strong focus on safety will be main- tained and we hope to continue the positive trend. 2023 LTIf for own employees is 6.0 and 7.1 for subcontractors. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 47 / 144 Employee well-being Meeting our customers’ expectations every day requires us to bring together a broad range of people and skill sets, from sales to architecture and construction management. To improve employee engagement and well-being, we continue to work with development and engagement initiatives that improve team dynamics and communication. HusCompagniet uses a psychometric tool to measure and improve employees’ awareness of strengths and develop- ment areas, and to promote understanding of different per- The physical and mental well-being of our people is of utmost importance to HusCompagniet. sonality types working together. It is part of our goal to en- able better communication both among our employees and in client engagement, and we have had positive feedback and commitment from many employees. In 2023, all new em- ployees were also tested according to the system, with many already completing it during the recruitment process. In 2023, sick leave increased to 4.7%, well above our 2025 target of 2%. Unfortunately, it is due to serious, long-term illness that has struck a number of employees in 2023. It can also partly be explained by the fact that data from our fac- tory in Denmark have been included for the first time, with many blue collar workers, who naturally cannot work from home for instance with a light cold. We do not see the in- crease in sick leave as an expression of a general tendency. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 48 / 144 Training and skills development During the year we continued our emphasis on employee development and improving our capabilities. During 2023, all sales employees (representing 15% of the total workforce) underwent sales training, and several designers/architects used the competence fund to get external sustainability training. Furthermore, an internal training programme for construction managers has been developed. Employee engagement Since 2020, we have been conducting an annual employ- ee satisfaction survey measuring areas such as satisfac- tion and loyalty as well as questions concerning health and safety, diversity and inclusion. In 2023, the survey for the second time also includes employees in HusCom- pagniet Production and VårgårdaHus. The survey yielded a response rate of 90%, with a satisfaction score of 77%, and a loyalty score of 84% - all increasing compared to 2022. As part of the survey, we also achieved an em- ployee Net Promoter Score (eNPS) of 41 compared to 30 in 2022, and a Manager Net Promoter Score (mNPS) of 54 compared to 47 in 2022. 2022 was a challenging year for our employees which was reflected in the 2022 assessment, and with the eNPS score of 41 and the mNPS score of 54, we reached our 2023-aim of improving these scores. In 2023, progress was thus made on all parameters (satisfaction, loyalty, eNPS, mNPS), while the benchmark for our industry goes back. We see our own progress as an expression of employee feedback leading to concrete changes experienced by the employees. However, for employees under 30, scores were consist- ently lower than the other age groups, and this is a point of attention going forward. The results of the survey have been shared with local managers, who are tasked with engaging their teams to develop action plans based on the survey results. Our organisational structure, with smaller teams, is well posi- tioned to anchoring efforts at the local level, with our central HR team following progress on local action plans. As such, the implementation of initiatives will be customised to suit the needs of each department at the discretion of managers, who drive our local efforts to improve employee well-being across our organisation. Employee turnover increased to 34% (including redundan- cies) from 29% in 2022, still influenced by the substantial adaptation to the market situation that the group went through in 2022. We see our own progress as an expression of employee feedback leading to concrete changes experienced by the employees. 77% Satisfaction score in employee survey HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 49 / 144 Diversity & inclusion This section includes our statutory reporting on diversity & inclusion. At HusCompagniet, we strive to provide a diverse and inclusive work environment with equal opportunities. This approach is anchored in our diversity policy which is the overall responsibility of the CEO. The construction sector has traditionally been a male-dom- inated industry, which poses a challenge for the industry and for HusCompagniet. The starting point for improving the gender diversity of our workforce is to monitor the demo- graphics of our employees with the aim to track and improve gender balance over time. (See page 62 for the gender distribution of our workforce). People are encouraged to apply for positions in HusCom- pagniet, irrespective of gender, age, nationality, sexual orientation, religion, political opinions or ethnicity, and decisions regarding recruitment, promotion and dismissal are not influenced by these. Our employees have equal opportunities for career development and management ambitions, which are discussed as part of the yearly perfor- mance reviews. HusCompagniet A/S maintains equal gender representation among the six members of its Board of Directors in compli- ance with the Danish Financial Statements Act, section 99b. HusCompagniet A/S employed less than 50 FTEs during the financial year 2023 and is as such exempted from the requirements to set targets for the underrepresented gender for both Board of Directors and other management levels. HusCompagniet has, however, maintained targets for both Board of Directors and on other management levels on group level and tracks development over the course of the financial year. It is important to us to both maintain and at- tract female talent and to build a pipeline in the organisation to increase female representation at all management levels. Board diversity The tone set at the top management is important, not least when it comes to diversity and inclusion. In 2023, the Board of Directors comprised 2/6 female directors and 4/6 male directors, which constitutes an equal distribution of gender according to the Danish Business Authority's guidelines. Our ambition is to maintain equal gender distribution on the Board of Directors and retain our adjusted 2025 and 2030 target of 40% female directors. The Board of Directors represents comprehensive experi- ence from a wide range of industries as well as diverse sets of competences to reflect the company’s strategy and pur- pose. In 2023, the Board of Directors further strengthened its composition with the election of two new board members contributing with additional competences within areas such as business-to-consumer sales and marketing, production and manufacturing experience and industry knowledge. Management diversity The ratio of women in the Group among executive manage- ment and their direct reports with employee responsibility was 30% in 2023, down from 40% in 2022. The reduction was caused by organisational changes, leaving a vacancy unfilled. The ratio of women with management responsibility in other levels remained unchanged in 2023. HusCompagniet’s ambition is to continue to focus on gender diversity and to increase female representation on other management levels to reach equal representation at group level. HusCompagniet maintains its previously communicated targets of achieving 25% female representation in other management levels by 2025 and 30% by 2030. In 2023, HR initiatives (employment committees, representation at job interviews, development plans) have been taken to increase diversity. In 2023, the ratio of women among executive mangement and their direct reports at Group level was 30% and we aim to maintain female representation in this management level in the Group at or above 30% in 2030. Diversity in management - HusCompagniet A/S Management Level Metric 2023 Board of Directors Total number of members 6 Percentage of underrepresented gender 33% Target in % 40% Year of acheivement of target 2025 Other levels of management Total number of members 2 Percentage of underrepresented gender 0% Target in % - Year of acheivement of target - This includes the executive management in HusCompagniet A/S and their direct reports employed in the same legal entity. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 50 / 144 Respect for labour rights and human rights We work to advance these principles both in our own organ- isation and among our business partners, subcontractors, and suppliers. Our Sustainability Policy, internal Standards of Business Conduct, and Supplier Code of Conduct reflect our commitment to the UN Global Compact (UNGC) and its principles related to human rights and labour rights, among other areas. We respect our employees' right to freedom of association and collective bargaining The construction industry in general has been scrutinised for labour issues, particularly related to vulnerable groups, such as migrant workers. This is a dilemma across geographies because the legal minimum wage may not necessarily reflect a living wage. We have minimum wage requirements inte- grated into our subcontractor agreements and have contrac- tually secured our right to audit. HusCompagniet does not tolerate social dumping and will terminate subcontractors who engage in this practice, and we have a close positive dialogue with unions on these matters. Going forward, we will continue to work with our suppliers and subcontractors to promote sound working conditions and protect human and labour rights throughout HusCom- pagniet’s value chain. In 2023, no breaches of our Supplier Code of Conduct related to human rights were identified. HusCompagniet is committed to respecting human rights and labour rights as set out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the fundamental Conventions of the International Labour Organization (ILO). HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 51 / 144 Working against corruption, and in support of environmental responsibility, human rights, and labour rights throughout our value chain, is an essential part of our license to operate. Our sector is often exposed to challenges related to business ethics, labour relations and working conditions. Through our long-standing, recurring business relationships, we are well-positioned to address responsible business principles in collaboration with suppliers and subcontractors. Governance information HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 52 / 144 Business conduct The Board is responsible for the overall oversight and moni- toring of our business conduct. This is done through annual review of our policies to ensure they are fit for purpose and address the correct issues for the organisation. The Executive Management team ensures awareness of our commitments to business ethics and integrity by setting a clear tone from the top. In 2023, safety at the workplace for both our own employees and for our many subcontractors has been an important topic for the Executive Management team which has resulted in a detailed and operational man- ual on working environment which has been distributed to all subcontractors in 2023 and which will be fully implement- ed in 2024. In 2024, the Executive Management team has together with the Board of Directors decided to promote further awareness to our policies relating to anti-corruption and business ethics by increasing communication to the organisation. This will be done centrally from the Executive Management team and local leaders as well as in direct communication through townhalls, newsletters and on the intranet. Code of Conduct HusCompagniet’s Code of Conduct and Code of Conduct for Suppliers set out our approach to business conduct and are integrated into our contracts, operations, and HR manuals throughout our organisation. They include HusCompagniet’s requirements for employees and business partners on sub- jects such as health, climate and environment, labour rights, business ethics and anticorruption as well as human rights and trade sanctions. The General Counsel is responsible for the Code of Conduct and Code of Conduct for Suppliers which are reviewed annually. Whistleblower system Our whistleblower system provides employees and business partners with a confidential channel for addressing concerns or breaches of our ethical standards without fear of reprisal. The system is operated by an independent third-party provider and can be accessed via HusCompagniet’s intranet and from our public websites. All whistleblower reports are initially considered by an independent law firm and depending on the matter of the report, investigations are made either by an independent law firm or internally. The process of investigation is based on dialogue between our General Counsel and the independent law firm and will always prioritise the interest of the whistleblower and be in compliance with our whistleblower policy. All reports to the whistleblower system are treated confidentially and whistle- blowers are protected from retaliation of any kind. In 2023, we received two whistleblower reports. Both reports were made directly to the company outside of our whistleblower system and forwarded by us to the independent law firm. One report was investigated by an independent law firm and one report was investigated internally. No breaches to our Anti-Corruption Policy or Code of Conduct were identified, but the investigations have implied a need for increase of awareness of our Anti-Corruption Policy and our Code of Conduct. The Executive Management will therefore promote further awareness to our policies relating to anti-corruption and business ethics by increasing communication to the organisation both through local management and through group wide townhalls, newsletters and on the intranet. 2 Concerns of breaches to our Anti-Corruption Policy or Code of Conduct were reported in 2023 HusCompagniet’s approach to business conduct is embedded within the responsibilities of our Board and Executive Management team, anchored in policies, and integrated into our contracts, operations and manuals. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 53 / 144 Anti-corruption and bribery As a company operating in the construction sector, our main business ethics risks lie in our collaboration with third parties. As such, we take active measures to ensure that our business partners understand and uphold our ethical stand- ards. All our suppliers are required to adhere to our Code of Conduct for Suppliers, which reflects our commitment to the UN Global Compact and align with our Anti-Corruption and Business Ethics Policy. When working with suppliers and subcontractors, HusCom- pagniet requires compliance with all applicable regulation. All new contracts as well as renewals of existing contracts require suppliers to sign our Supplier Code of Conduct. All purchasing agreements with suppliers and subcontractors include a requirement to comply with the Supplier Code of Conduct, which includes elements of human and labour rights, anti-corruption, and environmental sustainability. We encourage our suppliers to further promote its principles within their own organisations and supply chains. Non-com- pliance, or where a supplier or subcontractor demonstrates a lack of improvement, may result in termination of the busi- ness relationship. Our construction managers monitor our subcontractors and a list of sanctions for non-compliance has been created. To mitigate the risk of breaches, HusCompagniet negotiates the purchase of key materials categories directly with man- ufacturers, centralising a large portion of our procurement and enabling long-term relations with key materials suppli- ers. Additionally, substantial purchasing decisions are made at the relevant authority level, and approval processes have been put in place. Supplier agreements above a specific threshold must be approved by our Executive Management or Group procurement. Smaller materials categories are sourced from builder merchants, and subcontractors used for the construction process are typically managed locally to enable flexibility. We are aware that flexible and decentralised decision mak- ing have the downside of potential increased risk in terms of business ethics. At HusCompagniet, we have a zero-tolerance policy against corruption and bribery in any form, and we are firmly committed to conducting our business responsibly. Our business operations are regulated by our Anti-Corruption and Business Ethics Policy, which details our approach to combating corruption, and formulates our company’s position on the matter. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 54 / 144 Management of relationships with suppliers HusCompagniet has a lean structure, and we work with local subcontractors for most of our construction work. As such, we maintain close co-operation with our subcontractors to ensure that they maintain satisfactory performance on safety, quality, and sustainability stand- ards. Over the years, we have built long-term, recurring working relationships with our suppliers and subcontrac- tors, which has led to an efficient, standardised operat- ing model across projects. This includes yearly meetings with all subcontractors and suppliers to ensure a continuous dialogue, making it possible to solve any emerging issues early on rather than taking legal actions. In 2023, a work environment handbook, focusing on safety on construction sites, primarily targeting subcontractors, was launched. Project management of construction sites is done using an App, which is also used by subcontractors for safety registra- tions. In 2023, we have continued to proactively making sure that our subcontractors make safety registrations, including near-misses. We also work collaboratively with our business partners to reduce emissions across our value chain and our dialogue focuses on documentation of sustainability and testing new products (for details, see page 40 in the Environmental Information section). Political influence and lobbying activities HusCompagniet does not make any direct or in-kind finan- cial contributions to political parties, elected representa- tives or those seeking political office. HusCompagniet is a member of the national trade and business association Danish Confederation of Industries. We became a member in 2023. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 55 / 144 Data Ethics policy Pursuant to section 99d of the Danish Financial Statement act, we are required to account for our data ethics policy and actions taken during the year. Our data ethics policy guides our processes and use of data. The policy supplements our other policies and guidelines governing ethical, security and personal data-related matters. The policy regulates how we process and use the information and personal data we keep, which are nec- essary to service our customers, complete our building activities and ensure transparency towards our investors. Our data ethics policy is developed according to the data ethics value compass. Our customers are primarily private individuals, and we use personal data to ensure our customers the best possible service. All data is treated with great care and confidentiality and are processed in compliance with our data ethical principles, such as responsible, safe, and justified data processing, also in our collaboration with our suppliers. In 2023, HusCompagniet has updated and implemented a new CRM system and e-mail security system which has strict access controls to limit security risks. External partners are only allowed access to data for a limited period and only related to the work-related needs. Responsible tax policy In line with the latest Danish Corporate Governance recommenda- tions, HusCompagniet is guided by a Tax Policy to ensure compli- ance with applicable regulations, proper behaviour towards public authorities and payment of taxes as required by law. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 56 / 144 On 21 April 2021, the European Commission adopted an ambitious and comprehensive package of measures to help improve the flow of capital towards sustainable activities across the European Union. By enabling investors to re-ori- ent investments towards more sustainable technologies and businesses, these measures will be instrumental in making Europe climate neutral by 2050. They will make the EU a global leader in setting standards for sustainable finance. A successful green transition must include both new-builds and renovation, and we applaud that both activities have been included in the EU Taxonomy for sustainable activities, as long as the relevant technical criteria are met. At Hus- Compagniet, we welcome this development towards a uni- form classification system of sustainable activities, ensuring a level playing field and providing investors and stakehold- ers with clarity on how companies' activities are aligned with the green transition. Furthermore, we see strategic value in the EU Taxonomy, beyond reporting and compliance. Accounting practice Environmental objectives For the HusCompagniet Group, the following two economic activities have been identified as relevant: 7.1 Construction of buildings and 6.5 Transport by motorbikes, passenger cars and light commercial vehicles, which have both been assessed as contributing to environmental objective 1, climate change mitigation. In the context of the HusCom- pagniet Group, this environmental objective has been as- sessed as most relevant to report on. Taxonomy eligibility is characterised as an economic activity that is covered by the Taxonomy-eligibility and alignment 2023 Revenue OPEX CAPEX Taxonomy-eligible activities 7.1 Construction of new buildings 100% 76% 72% 6.5 Transport by motorbikes, passenger cars and light commercial vehicles 0% 0% 20% Taxonomy-non-eligible activities or activities not covered Non-eligible activities 0% 24% 8% Sum of Activities 100% 100% 100% taxonomy regulations delegated acts. Whether an activity is taxonomy-eligible or not says nothing about the sustaina- bility of that activity. To be characterised as sustainable, the activity has to be aligned. Our accounting policies for the calculations are always based on our best interpretation, using external advisory, of the EU taxonomy regulation and delegated acts as well as the currently available guidelines from the European Commission and from Green Building Council Denmark. The latter is a non-profit membership organisation working to promote sustainability in the building industry and has re- cently published a first version of guidance on the taxonomy, developed among others in close dialogue with the industry and Climate Positive European Alliance. KPI - Revenue Numerator – Eligiblity Taxonomy-eligible revenue is calculated as the revenue from the taxonomy-eligible activity stated in the table to the right, which is generated from one of the activities presented. Taxonomy-eligible share of revenue in 2023 was 100% the same as 2022. Activity 7.1: All revenue streams are related to the construc- tion of a house. Approx. 90% is constructed on third party land. For the remaining part, land is owned by HusCom- pagniet. In the sales process land and house will be divided into two contracts for the private customer. Yet, HusCom- pagniet does not speculate in land and will solely sell land in connection with construction of a house. Therefore, it is assessed that revenue stream from land is within scope 7.1. and thus, taxonomy eligible. Numerator – Alignment Taxonomy-aligned revenue is calculated as the portion of the net revneue from the taxonomy-eligible activity stated above, which can be classified as taxonomy-aligned and comply with the screening criteria in the annex to the dele- gated act. Due to a lack of data quality, we report 0% on taxono- my-alignment on activity 7.1 construction of new buildings. In 2022, our expectation was to report alignment for selected semi-detached projects for the financial year 2023 and report alignment for the remaining in 2024 (on environmen- tal objective 1 (climate change mitigation)). However, in the semi-detached segment, due to unclarity (both regarding the criteria itself and how to document compliance with it) around particularly the DNSH (Do No Significant Harm) HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 57 / 144 Proportion of Revenue from products or services associated with Taxonomy-aligned economic activites 2023 Substantial contribution criteria DNSH criteria ('Do Not Significant Harm') Economic activities (1) Code(s) (2) (a) Absolute Revenue (DKK'000) Proportion of Revenue, year N (4) Climate change mitigation (5) Climate change adaptation (6) Water and marine resources (7) Pollution (8) Circular Economy (9) Biodiversity and ecosystems (10) Climate change mitigation (11) Climate change adaptation (12) Water and marine resources (13) Pollution (14) Circular Economy (15) Biodiversity and ecosystems (16) Minimum safeguards (17) Proportion of Taxonomy-aligned or -eligible revenue Category enabling activity (19) Category transitional activity (20) DKK % Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N % E T A. TAXONOMY-ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES A.1 Environmentally sustainable activities (Taxonomy-aligned) Revenue of environmentally sustainable activities (Taxonomy-aligned) (A.1) 0 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% N N N N N N N 0% Of which enabling 0 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% Of which transitional 0 0% 0% 0% A.2 Taxonomy-Eligible but not environmentally sustainable activities (Not Taxonomy-aligned activities) (g) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) Construction of new buildings CCM 7.1 2,381,357 100% EL N N N N N 100% Revenue of Taxonomy-eligible but not environmentally sustainable 100% 100% 100% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 100% A. Revenue of Taxonomy-eligible activities (A.1+A.2) 2,381,357 100% 100% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 100% B. TAXONOMY-NON-ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES Revenue of Taxonomy-non-eligible activites 0.00 0% TOTAL (A + B) 2,381,357 100% criteria for pollution prevention, our investors have not yet demanded taxonomy-aligned projects. Before reporting for the detached segment, we would like to gain experi- ence with taxonomy-aligned semi-detached projects, that in terms of data, are more managable. For objective 1, the technical screening criteria is an ener- gy performance of at least 10% better than NZEB (Nearly Zero-Energy Building). Approximately 60% of houses calculated in 2023 have an energy performance above this threshold. Denominator – Eligibility Net revenue as shown in note 2.1 Segment information. 60% of houses have an energy performance that is at least 10% better than NZEB HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 58 / 144 KPI - OPEX Numerator – Eligiblity Taxonomy-eligible OpEx is calculated as OpEx related to the following economic activities. Taxonomy-eligible share of OpEx in 2023 was 76% against 75% in 2022. The 1 ppt. increase relates to higher maintenance cost of factory equipment. Numerator – Alignment Taxonomy-aligned OpEx is calculated as the proportion of the eligible-OpEx from taxonomy-eligible activities stated below, which can be classified as taxonomy-aligned and comply with the screening criteria in the annex to the delegated act. Due to insufficient data, we report 0% taxonomy alignment for the activity. Denominator – Eligibility Direct non-capitalised costs that relate to: Costs incl. maintenance for short-term leased cars, costs relating to building renovation measures, costs related to main- tenance and repair, and any other direct expenditures relating to day-to-day servicing of assets of property, plant and equipment including wages for employees servicing data centres. Denominator – Alignment The taxonomy-eligible OpEx as defined in the delegated act, related to the relevant activities. Not aligned due to insufficient data quality. Double Counting There is no risk of double counting as all eligible expenses are related to activity 7.1 construction of new buildings. Proportion of OpEX from products or services associated with Taxonomy-aligned economic activities Substantial contribution criteria DNSH criteria ('Do Not Significant Harm') Economic activities (1) Code(s) (2) (a) OpEX (DKK'000) Proportion of OpEX, year N (4) Climate change mitigation (5) Climate change adaptation (6) Water and marine resources (7) Pollution (8) Circular Economy (9) Biodiversity and ecosystems (10) Climate change mitigation (11) Climate change adaptation (12) Water and marine resources (13) Pollution (14) Circular Economy (15) Biodiversity and ecosystems (16) Minimum safeguards (17) Proportion of Taxonomy-aligned (A.1.) or -eligible (A.2.) OpEX, year N-1 (18) Category enabling activity (19) Category transitional activity (20) DKK % Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N % E T A. TAXONOMY-ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES A.1 Environmentally sustainable activities (Taxonomy-aligned) OpEX of environmentally sustainable activities (Taxonomy-aligned) (A.1) 0 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% N N N N N N N 0% Of which enabling 0 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% Of which transitional 0 0% 0% 0% A.2 Taxonomy-Eligible but not environmentally sustainable activities (Not Taxonomy-aligned activities) (g) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) Construction of new buildings CCM 7.1 473 76% EL N N N N N 75% OpEX of Taxonomy-eligible but not environmentally sustainable 473 76% 76% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 75% A. OpEX of Taxonomy-eligible activities (A.1+A.2) 473 76% 76% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 75% B. TAXONOMY-NON-ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES OpEX of Taxonomy-non-eligible activites 148 24% TOTAL (A + B) 621 100% HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 59 / 144 KPI - CAPEX Numerator – Eligiblity Taxonomy-eligible CapEx is calculated as CapEx related to the following economic activities. Taxonomy-eligible share of CapEx in 2023 was 92% compared to 76% in 2022. Due to the cost focus CapEx have to a higher degree been allocated towards eligible costs. Numerator – Alignment Taxonomy-aligned CapEx is defined as the taxonomy-eligi- ble CapEx, which can be classified as being in compliance with the screening criteria in the annex to the delegated act. Due to insufficient data we report 0% alignment on both activity 7.1 construction of new buildings and activity 6.5 Transport by motorbikes, passenger cars and light commercial vehicles. Denominator – Eligibility CapEx as shown in Note 4.1 Goodwill and Intangible assets and note 4.3 Property, plant and equipment and right-of- use assets All CapEx additions are assessed individually. The Tax- onomy-eligible share of investments primarily relates to 7.1. construction of new buildings. Items include, but are not limited to, additions of production facility equipment, investments in development or IT. Denominator – Alignment The taxonomy-eligible CapEx as defined in the delegated act, related to the relevant activities. Not aligned due to insufficient data quality. Double Counting There is no risk of double counting as CapEx allocated to activity 7.1 or 6.5 are not related to both activities. Proportion of CapEX from products or services associated with Taxonomy-aligned economic activities Substantial contribution criteria DNSH criteria ('Do Not Significant Harm') Economic activities (1) Code(s) (2) (a) Absolute CapEX (DKK'000) Proportion of CapEX % Climate change mitigation (5) Climate change adaptation (6) Water and marine resources (7) Pollution (8) Circular Economy (9) Biodiversity and ecosystems (10) Climate change mitigation (11) Climate change adaptation (12) Water and marine resources (13) Pollution (14) Circular Economy (15) Biodiversity and ecosystems (16) Minimum safeguards (17) Proportion of Taxonomy-aligned (A.1.) or -eligible (A.2.) CapEX, year N-1 (18) Category enabling activity (19) Category transitional activity (20) DKK % Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y;N; N/EL (b,c) Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N Y/N % E T A. TAXONOMY-ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES A.1 Environmentally sustainable activities (Taxonomy-aligned) CapEX of environmentally sustainable activities (Taxonomy-aligned) (A.1) 0 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% N N N N N N N 0% Of which enabling 0 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% Of which transitional 0 0% 0% 0% A.2 Taxonomy-Eligible but not environmentally sustainable activities (Not Taxonomy-aligned activities) (g) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) EL; N/EL (f) Construction of new buildings CCM 7.1 19,363 72% EL N N N N N 64% Transport by motorbikes, passenger cars and light commercial vehicle CCM 6.5 5,381 20% EL N N N N N 12% CapEX of Taxonomy-eligible but not environmentally sustainable 24,744 92% 92% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 76% A. CapEX of Taxonomy-eligible activities (A.1+A.2) 24,744 92% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 76% B. TAXONOMY-NON-ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES Revenue of Taxonomy-non-eligible activites 2,208 8% TOTAL (A + B) 26,952 100% HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 60 / 144 v ESG disclosures and data ENVIRONMENTAL ESG data / disclosures Unit 2023 2022 Energy consumption Nasdaq E.3, FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA Total energy consumption mWh 15,357 21,022 Nasdaq E.3 Energy from electricity consumption mWh 12,243 16,468 Nasdaq E.3 Energy from district heating and thermal heating mWh 1,158 1,157 Nasdaq E.3 Energy from natural gas for heating mWh 353 409 Nasdaq E.3 Diesel consumption Liters 135,248 273,064 Nasdaq E.3 Petrol consumption Liters 29,583 29,015 GHG Emissions Nasdaq E.1.1 Total CO 2 -e emissions (Scope 1 & 2) - market-based Metric tonnes 5,630 7,481 Nasdaq E.1.1, FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA Direct CO 2 -e emissions (Scope 1) Metric tonnes 402 761 Nasdaq E.1.2, FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA Indirect CO 2 -e emissions (Scope 2 - market-based) Metric tonnes 5,228 6,720 Nasdaq E.1.2, FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA Indirect CO 2 -e emissions (Scope 2 - location-based) Metric tonnes 2,055 2,272 GHG Intensity Nasdaq E.2 CO 2 -e emissions per m 2 delivered (Scope 1 + 2 - market-based) kg/m 2 32.5 23.1 Nasdaq E.2 CO 2 -e emissions per m 2 delivered (Scope 1 + 2 - location-based) kg/m 2 14.2 9.4 SASB, IF-HB-410a.1 Number of homes with Energimærkning for energy efficiency % 100% 100% SASB, IF-HB-410a.1 Average score of Energimærkning Renewable energy Nasdaq E.5, FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA Renewable energy percentage (market-based) % 33% 31% Nasdaq E.5, FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA Renewable energy percentage (location-based) % 74% 61% SASB, IF-HB-410a.1 Number of homes with Energimærkning for energy efficiency (BR18) and (lavenergi) % 100% 100% SASB, IF-HB-410a.1 Average score of Energimærkning BR18 & Lavenergi BR18 & Lavenergi Downstream emissions: Nasdaq E.1.3 Percentage of homes sold with renewable energy technologies % 62% 51% Land use & ecological impacts SASB F-HB-160a.2 Number of (1) lots and (2) homes sold in regional with High or Extremely High Baseline Water Stress 1 # 23 0 SASB F-HB-160a.1 Number of (1) lots and (2) homes delivered on redevelopment sites 2 # 37% 30% Nasdaq E.7, SASB IF-HB-160a.4 Process to integrate environmental considerations into site selection, design, development and construction 1 Description See page 43 See page 50 1 in our markets (Denmark and Sweden), one area in Sweden has high water stress, according to the World Resources Institute. 2 comprise detached and semi-detached houses in Denmark. Data not available in Sweden. SASB: Home Builders Standard. Nasdaq: Nasdaq ESG Guide 2.0. FSR/NasdaqCPH/CFA: ESG key figures in the annual report. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 61 / 144 3 including redundancies. SASB: Home Builders Standard. Nasdaq: Nasdaq ESG Guide 2.0. FSR/NasdaqCPH/CFA: ESG key figures in the annual report. ENVIRONMENTAL ESG data / disclosures Unit 2023 2022 Climate risks SASB IF-HB-410a.4, TCFD Description of risks and opportunities related to incorporating resource efficiency into home design, and how benefits are communicated to customers Discussion & analysis See TCFD disclosure table page 63 See TCFD disclosure table page 58 SASB IF-HB-420a.2, TCFD Description of climate change risk exposure analysis, degree of systematic portfolio exposure, and strategies for mitigating risks Discussion & analysis See TCFD disclosure table page 63 See TCFD disclosure tabel page 58 SOCIAL ESG data / disclosures Unit 2023 2022 FTE & Turnover FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA FTE (continued operations) # 395 518 Nasdaq S.3, FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA Employee turnover ratio 3 Ratio 34% 29% Health & safety Nasdaq S.7, SASB IF-HB-320a.1 LTI (lost-time injuries) total - own employees and subcontractors # 12 35 Nasdaq S.7, SASB IF-HB-320a.1 LTI own employees - blue and white collar # 4 6 Nasdaq S.7, SASB IF-HB-320a.1 LTI subcontractors # 8 29 Nasdaq S.7, SASB IF-HB-320a.1 LTIf (lost-time injury frequency) total - own employees and subcontractors Frequency 6.7 11.6 Nasdaq S.7, SASB IF-HB-320a.1 LTIf own employees - blue and white collar Frequency 6.0 6.9 Nasdaq S.7, SASB IF-HB-320a.1 LTIf - subcontractors Frequency 7.1 13.4 FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA Sick leave Days per FTE 4.7% 1.9% Diversity Nasdaq S.2, FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA Gender Pay Ratio Ratio 1.1 1.0 Nasdaq S.4, FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA % females in the company % 20.5% 19.0% FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA % females in management % 30% 40.0% Nasdaq S.6 Non-discrimination policy Description See page 50 See page 47 Nasdaq S.9 Child and forced-labour policy Description Sustainability policy Sustainability policy GOVERNANCE ESG data / disclosures Unit 2023 2022 Nasdaq G.1, FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA Gender diversity on the Board of Directors - underepresented gender # 33.3% 33.3% Nasdaq S.1, FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA CEO Pay Ratio Ratio 12.10 16.10 FSR/Nasdaq CPH/CFA Board Meeting Attendance Rate Ratio 95% 93.0% HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 62 / 144 TCFD disclosures TCFD Recommendation 2023 Disclosures Governance Describe the board’s oversight of climate- related risks and opportunities The HusCompagniet Board of Directors has the ultimate oversight of climate-related risks and opportunities and ESG-related issues, including those related to climate. Sustainability and climate are items in the Board’s annual wheel, meaning that climate risks are considered at least once annually, or more frequently as needed. Cli- mate-related risks are an important part of HusCompagniet’s overall ESG risk considerations, and are incorporated into strategic discus- sions, in annual business planning, and in annual reporting. Describe management’s role in assessing and managing climate- related risks and opportunities The Executive Management team is responsible for assessing and managing climate-related risks. The Group CEO and Group CFO are actively involved in the sustainability strategy process, and the oper- ationalisation of the sustainability focus areas is owned by the Head of Business Development. HusCompagniet has a Steering Committee for Sustainability, count- ing Executive Management, Marketing, Purchasing and Business Development, in order to further structure and strengthen our work towards our climate targets. In 2023, social and governance were also included in the scope of this committee’s work. TCFD Recommendation 2023 Disclosures Strategy Describe the climate- related risks and opportunities the organisation has identified over the short, medium, and long term HusCompagniet has conducted an assessment of the risks and op- portunities that we may be exposed to as a result of climate change in accordance with the TCFD recommendations. We have defined the following time frames: 0-3 years is considered to be short-term, 4-10 years to be medium -term, and more than 10 years to be long-term. In 2023, we assessed these adjustments to still be valid. Short-term (0-3 years) risks identified: Political risk from increased prices on emissions or standards; political push to bring new low-carbon products to market before they are fully tested; political preference for incentivising renovations instead of new-builds; tech- nology-related risks from investments in unsuccessful new, renew- able technologies; the physical risks identified were all expected to manifest in the longer term. Medium-term (4-10 years) risks identified: Reputational risks from potential shifts in consumer and market preferences towards low-car- bon products; political ambitions of allocating more landmass to nature, resulting in reduced availability of plots suitable for commer- cial development. Long-term (more than 10 years) risks identified: Physical risks from: Reduced availability of lots without exposure to flooding or other weather hazards available for development; construction times marginally prolonged from chronic changes in weather patterns, such as heavier rainfall and increased temperatures; rising sea levels and heightened risk of flooding may impact the availability of develop- ment plots; increased accuracy in pricing; physical climate risks into mortgage and insurance policies may affect demand. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 63 / 144 TCFD Recommendation 2023 Disclosures Strategy Describe the climate- related risks and opportunities the organisation has identified over the short, medium, and long term HusCompagniet continues to identify the potential opportunities from climate change. To address the current and expected shift in consum- er demand towards more sustainable house offerings, we launched our Climate-Improved House in 2021 and tested it towards the vol- untary sustainable building class. Since then, we have continued to work on integrating solutions from the climate-improved house into our portfolio. Sustainable house offerings might also lead to increased market share in the house market as well as in new markets, as consumer preferences shift towards low-carbon solutions. This development might be further accelerated if increased climate-related damage on the existing property mass results in an increased demand for new houses. Describe the resilience of the organisation’s strategy, taking into consideration different climate-related scenarios, including a 2°C or lower scenario In 2019, we conducted our first qualitative scenario analysis in alignment with the TCFD recommendations. The analysis explored the implications to the business model and strategy in the context of three scenarios based on groupings of IEA, IPCC, WEC scenarios, and other publicly available scenarios. The three scenarios explored were: a scenario based on “business as usual” and current policies, a scenario based on stated political commitments, and a decarbon- isation scenario resulting in no more than a 2°C increase in average global temperatures. Each scenario included an overlay of the physi- cal risks posed by the corresponding temperature increase based on data projecting the physical changes specific to Denmark prepared by DMI in accordance with the IPCC scenarios. The analysis showed that our business model can be made resilient in all three scenarios. In 2023, we continued to use these insights when considering long- term exposure. TCFD Recommendation 2023 Disclosures Risk management Describe the organisation’s processes for identifying and assessing climate- related risks In 2019, the Management conducted a detailed assessment of risks and opportunities in line with the TCFD classifications, which is refreshed on an annual basis. As we continue to work towards our ambitions and targets, risk management procedures will be put into place. HusCompagniet follows the developments of green building standards and certifications closely. We continue to increase our understanding and integration of physical climate risks into deci- sion-making and strategy. Describe the organisation’s processes for managing climate-related risks Climate-related risks are evaluated on an annual basis, and action will be taken if and when needed. We continue to strengthen our ongoing processes for climate risk management. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 64 / 144 TCFD Recommendation 2023 Disclosures Metrics and targets Describe how processes for identifying, assessing, and managing climate- related risks are integrated into the organisation’s overall risk management We identify climate-related risks through the process of prioritising sustainability focus areas. Climate considerations have also informed our product development. Processes for integrating climate-related risks and opportunities were continued in 2023. Disclose the metrics used by the organisation to assess climate-related risks and opportunities in line with its strategy and risk management process See pages 68-69 in this report Disclose Scope 1, Scope 2, and, if appropriate, Scope 3 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and the related risks See pages 39-43 and 61 in this report Describe the targets used by the organisation to manage climate-related risks and opportunities and performance against targets See pages 33-34 in this report Scope 1, 2 and 3 CO 2 emissions are calculated based on the GHG (Greenhouse Gas) Protocol. Scope 1 are direct CO 2 emissions for the burning of fuel or natural gaz. Scope 2 are indirect CO 2 emis- sions from the purchase of electricity. Scope 2 can be calculated as market-based or location-based, where the market-based approach uses emissions factors taking into consideration the purchase of green certificates (in which HusCompagniet has decided not to participate), whereas the location-based approach used emissions factors based on geographical placement. For Scope 3 calculations, average values of phases A1-A3 (Production), B4 (Replacement), C3-C4 (Waste processing and Waste disposal) from LCAs of our houses have been used as input, supplemented by estimates for the upstream and downstream impact categories not included in these phases. LCA: Life Cycle Assessment is a scientific meth- odology for assessing environmental impacts, including carbon footprint, for all the stages of the life cycle of a building, from extraction of raw materials used to manufacture the materials and components the building is made of, to the end of life of the building. DGNB: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Nachaltiges Bauen is a holistic sustainability certification for buildings, originally developed in Germany, that has been chosen by the building industry in Denmark and adapted over the years to the Danish context. Definitions LTIf: Lost Time Injury frequency: Number of lost time injuries occurring in a workplace per 1 million hours worked. eNPS: Employee Net Promoter Score, a scoring system designed to help employers measure employee satisfaction and loyalty within their organization, and more specifically an indicator of whether an employee would recommend others to work in their organization. mNPS: Manager Net Promoter Score, a scoring system designed to help employers measure employee satisfaction and loyalty within their organization, and more specifically an indicator of whether an employee would recommend others to work for their manager. IEA: International Energy Agency. IPCC: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. WEC: World Economic Center. TCFD: Task Force Climate Related Discolosures is an initiative established by the Financial Stability Board (FSB), an international body that monitors and makes recommendations about the global financial system. The TCFD was launched in 2015 with the goal of developing a set of voluntary, con- sistent climate-related financial risk disclosures for use by companies in providing information to inves- tors, lenders, insurers, and other stakeholders. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 65 / 144 Risk Management Risk Management HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 66 / 144 Impact Likelihood Low Low High High 3 4 4 1 2 7 7 5 6 6 5 1 2 3 4 6 7 5 The Board of Directors are responsible for ensuring that the Group’s risk exposure is consistent with its target risk profile. The Board of Directors evaluates to ensure that the appro- priate awareness and management processes are in place. Managing the risk process is part of the Group CFO's day-to- day responsibility and developments in the main risk areas are reported to the Audit Committee and Board of Directors. Risk management is based on ongoing monitoring to identify relevant risks. Our enterprise risk management practice aims to identify, monitor, assess, and mitigate risks as early as possible to manage the likelihood and potential impact. Insurances are assessed on an ongoing basis by Group CFO and the Audit Committee to ensure sufficient coverage is provided to mitigate the day-to-day concerns. An insurance agency reports their assessment on HusCompagniet’s cov- erage to the Board of Directors once a year. Risk Management Macroeconomic risk (unchanged) Supply chain risk (unchanged) IT systems and information (unchanged) Climate change and change in regulation 2022 2023 Risk management matrix 2023 Risk action hierarchy HusCompagniet is exposed to numerous inherent risks, some of which are market-driven, some industry related and some climate-related while others are more directly related to the Group’s reputation. Board of Directors Audit Commmitee Executive Management Our people Health and safety Cyber threats HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 67 / 144 Macroeconomic risk Supply chain risk IT systems and information Climate risks and change in regulation Risk The Group is subject to general macroeconomic conditions, and an economic slowdown could adversely affect demand for the houses and land it sells. The geopolitical situation in the world has had severely negative effects on a number of external factors resulting in a rapidly increasing inflation, increasing interest rates and declining consumer confidence which in combination with new Danish housing tax reform has led to a general general uncertainty leading towards the economic situation resulting in a decline in sales below historical average. Other external factors that could have a negative impact include rate of employment, property prices, and GDP growth. The Group setup means exposure to and reliance on third-party suppliers, contractors, subcontrac- tors, and other service providers in executing its projects. Shortage of materials and/or subcon- tractors may result in price pressure or lack of labour for execution. This could cause liquidity strain due to the "payment at delivery" model and costs in terms of delay penalties. In 2023, the supply chains were less distressed given lower activity in the building industry. The risk of further constraints has increased in connection with the continued geopolitical instability. The Group continues to integrate its IT systems to enhance control and drive effi- ciency. The failure of any of these systems, could restrict the Group’s operations. Fail- ure to comply with data regulations could also trigger significant financial penalties and reputational damage. For HusCompagniet, climate risks and the expect- ed transition to a low-carbon economy can pose financial challenges. Long-, medium- and short-term climate-related risks include market risks such as shifts in consumer preferences towards low-car- bon homes, policy and legal risks stemming from increased regulation, carbon taxes and tariffs. Reg- ulation towards sustainable housing is expected to increase over the coming years, requiring necessary R&D investment in product development from house builders. Mitigation The Group diversifies its business by operating in several business areas and only acquiring a small number of highly selective strategic land plots with a high turnover rate. The Group strives to maintain its share of own land projects at around 20% of total house deliveries in Denmark. The Group also operates a flexible cost base as most construction projects are outsourced to subcon- tractors, which adds resilience to the business model in facing downturns. An order book of minimum six months visibility enables rightsizing in due time and scaling the business accordingly. Strong relationships established with sub- contractors during boom-and-bust periods. The Group reduces its reliance on individual contractors by always engaging with several contractors. An overheated market can be partly mitigated through yearly negotiations on longer-term master agreements, and also by cascading costs to customers. The sustainability journey opens up for a larger variety of materi- als, thus reducing dependency of suppliers. We have a strong position due to our market share. With increased digitalisation of work pro- cesses, critical applications are monitored and managed according to business continuity plan. We ensure segregation of duties on our application to prevent unintended usage. Risk of loss of data is mitigated by a daily backup placed on separate location for 30 days and a disaster recovery strategy is implemented with yearly exercise of disaster recovery. The Group data protection policy was reviewed in 2023. HusCompagniet integrates considerations on cli- mate-related risks and opportunities into our strategy and operations. The Group has since 2019 implement- ed and publicly supported the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclo- sures (TCFD). We have set ambitious targets towards 2025 and 2030 to reduce carbon emissions, and in our efforts to reach the targets set, we continuously expand our low-carbon offerings in terms of materials and renewable energy solutions. The efforts taken also prepares for future regulatory changes. For our semi-detached offerings, it is our expectation and am- bition that we are on a transition towards delivering only projects that are sustainability certified. Top risks HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 68 / 144 Our people Health and safety Cyber threats Risk The Group depends upon its management team and on the expertise of its key personnel and may be unable to attract and retain a highly skilled and experienced workforce. Development of skilled employees is critical to delivery of the Group’s strategy of profit and volume growth through quality and efficiency. The Group’s sub-contractors may fail to operate in accordance with high ethical and safety standards and in accordance with applicable laws and regulation. The cyber threat has continued to increase. With in- creased digitalisation of business processes, cyber-attack could have financial and reputational consequences for HusCompagniet. Malicious hacking activities or theft of sensitive business data, personal employee data or customer data may result in significant business disruption, monetary losses or fines and penalties from authorities. Mitigation HR processes including retaining and recruiting talent are increasingly important to the Group. The Group has a key focus on maintaining an attractive workplace with competitive compensation packages and a long-term incentive programme has been introduced with a view to retaining key personnel. Employee surveys are conducted on regular basis in order to open a line of communication for all employees to provide feedback and help grow the company. It is HusCompagniet's ambition to eliminate work-related injuries. HusCompagniet has increased the training of construction managers and engaging in subcontractors at building sites as well as maintaining a strong focus on safety when onboarding new companies. Training of con- struction managers and subcontractors are ongoing and continuously in development. The Group’s IT strategy comprises a continued effort to protect against cyber threats regarding IT infrastructure and business operations. Ongoing updates and invest- ments in IT equipment and new technology as well as improvements of operating procedures seek to follow good practice. Furthermore, continuous user-awareness campaigns improves user behaviour, which minimize risk of successful cyberattacks. Top risks HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 69 / 144 Shareholder information Shareholder information HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 70 / 144 72% Denmark 1% Treasury shares 8% Europe 18% Other 1% UK Shareholder information The share price HusCompagniet A/S is listed on Nasdaq Copenhagen and has since December 2023 been part of the Copenhagen small-cap index and prior to that the mid-cap index. The share price was at DKK 42 at the beginning of 2023 and closed at DKK 46.5 at year end. In comparison, the Copen- hagen mid-cap index increased 3.0% in the period while the small-cap index increased by 4.2%. Shareholder structure HusCompagniet A/S’ share capital is nominally DKK 108,550,000 divided into 21,710,000 shares, each with a nominal value of DKK 5 and carrying five votes. On 31 December 2023, HusCompagniet had more than 5,600 registered shareholders collectively holding 91.83% of the share capital. At year-end, HusCompagniet A/S had registered major shareholder notifications from the following shareholders: • Lind Value II ApS of holding 15% or more of the share capital and of the voting rights • Danske Bank A/S of holding 10% or more of the voting rights and 5% or more of the share capital • PFA Asset Management of holding 5% or more of the share capital • Investeringsforeningen Danske Invest of holding 5% or more of the share capital • BI Asset Management Fondsmæglerselskab A/S of hold- ing 5% or more of the voting rights • Nordea Funds Ltd. of holding 5% or more of the voting rights HusCompagniet held 230,303 treasury shares at year end, corresponding to 1.06% of the share capital. The treasury shares are held to cover the commitments under the current share-based incentive programme and cancellation. Share-based incentive schemes In total, 197,770 RSUs were issued on 14 April 2023, of which 34,860 were granted to the Executive Management and 162,910 were granted to other employees. The fair value of the RSU grant in the 2020 programme totalled DKK 16 mil- lion and the fair value of RSU grant in 2022 was DKK 8.4. In 2023 the fair value of the RSU grant was DKK 9.3 million. In 2023, an expense of DKK 8.9 million was recognised in the income statement in respect of the incentive programmes (2022 : 6.6 million and 2021: 4.9 million). Capital structure and financing In May 2023, HusCompagniet issued new share capital of nominally DKK 17,500,000 divided into 3,500,000 shares, each with a nominal value of DKK 5 and carrying five votes. In connection with the issuance of new shares, HusCom- pagniet also entered into a new facilities agreement for the purpose of refinancing indebtedness at the time. The primary objective of HusCompagniet’s capital manage- ment is to ensure that it maintains a strong credit rating and healthy capital ratios to support its business and maximise shareholder value. HusCompagniet manages its capital structure and adjusts in response to changes in economic conditions. To maintain or adjust the capital structure, Hus- Compagniet may adjust dividend payments to shareholders, acquire its own shares, or issue new shares. The financial leverage at year end 2023 was 3.3x net debt to EBITDA. According to HusCompagniet’s facilities agreement, the per- mitted maximum leverage ratio - net interest bearing debt divided by last twelve months adjusted EBITDA - started at 3.5x for the 12-month period ending on 30 June 2023. The HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 71 / 144 Jan 2023 Feb 2023 Mar 2023 Apr 2023 May 2023 Jun 2023 Jul 2023 Aug 2023 Sep 2023 Oct 2023 Nov 2023 Dec 2023 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 ratio increases to 4.5x for the 12-month period ending on 31 March 2024, following which it will decrease to 3.75x on 30 June 2024, and for any 12-month period ending on or after 30 September 2024, the leverage ratio must not exceed 3.5x. In case of breach of financial covenants, the banks may demand immediate repayment of the full nominal amount. Management is continuously reviewing the financing and capital structure of HusCompagniet and conclude on that basis that there is an appropriate and justified basis for con- tinuing the current plans and operations of HusCompagniet. Dividend policy The company’s dividend policy has a target initial pay-out ratio of at least 25% by means of dividend, supplemented by means of share buyback for around 25%. The dividend policy is subject to change at the discretion of the Board of Directors, and there can be no assurance that the Group’s performance will facilitate adherence to the dividend policy and that in any given year a dividend will be proposed or declared. No dividend is proposed to shareholders in 2024. HusCompagniet expects to return to making dividend pay- ments, once the leverage is back within the long-term target of around 2x net debt to EBITDA. Insiders and trading windows Members of HusCompagniet A/S’ Board of Directors and Executive Management are listed in the company’s regis- ter of permanent insiders. These persons and their related parties are allowed to buy or sell shares in the company only during the four weeks immediately following the publication of each interim financial report, quarterly trading statements or annual report. If in possession of inside information, such persons are prohibited from trading even during the said four-week period for as long as such information remains inside information. The company may solely buy or sell its own shares during the four-week period immediately follow- ing each interim financial report, quarterly trading statement or annual report, and the company may not trade whilst in possession of inside information. Communication with investors To ensure that capital market participants, including current and prospective shareholders, can make well-informed investment decisions, HusCompagniet hosts conference calls with the Executive Management each quarter follow- ing the release of financial reports and trading statements. The Executive Management also meet current and poten- tial investors on a regular basis at road shows and equity conferences. Investor Relations Contact: [email protected] Financial calendar Deadline for proposals to the agenda of the Annual General Meeting: 28 February 2024 Annual General Meeting: 11 April 2024 Trading statement for the period ending 31 March 2024: 2 May 2024 Interim report for the period ending 30 June 2024: 23 August 2024 Trading statement for the period ending 30 September 2024: 8 November 2024 HusCompagniet share information No. of shares: 21,710,000 Listing: Nasdaq Copen- hagen Trading symbol: HUSCO Index: Nasdaq Copen- hagen small-cap Shareprice 2023 Analyst coverage In 2023, the company was covered by four equity research providers, Carnegie, Danske Bank, Nordea and SEB. The company is not normally available for dialogue about financial matters in the three-week period leading up to the publication of an interim financial report, trading statements or the annual report. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 72 / 144 Corporate governance Board of Directors Executive Management Corporate governance HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 73 / 144 Corporate governance The Board of Directors sets guidelines on the day-to-day re- sponsibilities and obligations of the Executive Management. The Board of Directors and the Executive Management further assess HusCompagniet’s business processes, the or- ganisation, strategy, risks, business objectives and controls. A set of rules of procedure governs the work of HusCom- pagniet’s Board of Directors. These rules are reviewed annu- ally by the Board of Directors and updated as necessary. Board of Directors The Board of Directors consists of six members and has appointed a Chairperson and a Vice Chairperson. All six members of the Board of Directors are at the end of 2023 regarded as independent. The Board of Directors represents broad international business experience and skills consid- ered relevant to HusCompagniet. The Board of Directors evaluates its work on an annual basis, and determines once a year the qualifications, experience and skills needed for the Board of Directors to best perform its tasks. All board members are up for election at each Annual General Meeting. The Board of Directors meets five times a year and holds extraordinary meetings when required. In 2023, the Board of Directors held seven meetings of which one was extraordinary and one was a strategy meeting. The Board’s annual wheel covers all essential areas of the business, including sustainability and climate. The Board attendance rate for 2023 is included in our table shown on page 75 and our ESG table on page 62. Composition and competencies At the Annual General Meeting on 14 April 2023, Claus V. Hemmingsen, Anja B. Eriksson, Ylva Ekborn and Stig Pastwa were re-elected as members of the Board. Michael Troensegaard Andersen and Ole Lund Andersen were elected as new members of the Board. The Board repre- sents comprehensive experience and competencies, which is considered crucial for the further realisation of HusCom- pagniet’s strategic targets. The Board’s competencies are further described on page 78-79. Every year, the Board of Directors conducts a self-evaluation and will engage external assistance for the evaluation at least every third year. As a result of the self-evaluation performed in 2022, the Board of Directors saw a need for certain changes to the Board composition to strengthen its competences within business-to-consumer sales and marketing, industry suppli- er experience as well as increased building industry knowl- edge and production and manufacturing experience. Con- sequently, the Board of Directors proposed for the Annual General Meeting in 2023 to elect Michael Troensegaard Andersen and Ole Lund Andersen as new members of the Board of Directors. In 2023, the annual self-evaluation of the Board of Directors was performed internally without external advisor assis- tance. All board members participated in the evaluation along with the Group CEO and other internal management stakeholders. The self-evaluation consisted of conversations between the Chairperson and each member of the Board of Directors as well as with the Group CEO as a representative of the Executive Management team. This was supplemented by online tools in the form of a questionnaire covering sub- jects such as board composition and dynamics, cooperation between the Board and CEO, strategy development and implementation, meeting structure and effectiveness as well as value contribution of committees and evaluation of the Chairperson. In addition to the online questionnaire, the HusCompagniet has a two-tier management structure comprising the Board of Directors and the Executive Management. There are no overlapping members. The Board of Directors is responsible for the overall and strategic management and proper organisation of the Group’s business and operations. On behalf of the shareholders, the Board of Directors supervises HusCompagniet's organisation, day-to-day management, and results. 33% female board members in 2023 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 74 / 144 self-evaluation also covered four openly phrased questions relating to the productiveness of the Board meetings, the working relationship with the Executive Management teams and the openness of the dialogue in the meetings as well as the risk awareness in the Boards discussions. With the addi- tion of Michael Troensegaard Andersen and Ole Lund Ander- sen to the Board, it is the conclusion of the self-evaluation that the composition of the Board represents the necessary competences relative to the strategy and purpose of the company. These include knowledge of digital transforma- tion, business-to-business experience, executive experience and sales experience within the industry, knowledge of the Swedish market as well as business-to-consumer sales and marketing, industry supplier experience, and a significant building industry knowledge production and manufacturing experience. The self-evaluation furthermore showed that the Board has functioned efficiently with an open, challenging and transparent dialogue between the Board of Directors and the Executive Management team. Both the Board of Directors and the board committees will use the feedback from the self-evaluation to further develop the framework for its activities in the coming year. Diversity HusCompagniet strives towards diversity in the composi- tion of the Board of Directors and Executive Management, including gender, international experience, qualifications, and competencies. HusCompagniet is strongly focused on promoting diversity and equal opportunities as we believe that diversity leads to better performance and decision making. The construction sector has traditionally been and still is a male-dominated sector, which poses a challenge for both HusCompagniet and other companies within the industry. Yet, we aim to reach our ambitious targets and we Board meeting and board committee meeting attendance Board Member since Meetings Audit Committee Meetings Remuneration & Nomination Committee Meetings Election period Claus V. Hemmingsen 2020 7/7 4/4 1 year Anja B. Eriksson 2020 7/7 2/2 1 year Stig Pstw 2021 7/7 4/4 1 year Ylva Ekborn 2019 6/7 4/4 1 year Michael Troensegaard Andersen 2023 5/5 3/3 1 year Oe Lund Andersen 2023 4/5 2/2 1 year Attendance rate 95% 100% 100% * member of audit committee from January to April 2023 (1/1 meetings). ** member of Remunerration & Nomination Committee from January to April 2023 (2/2 metings) Chairperson of the committee Vice Chairperson Member of the committee HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 75 / 144 are compliant with regulatory guidelines. At Board level, we are currently at our previously communicated 2030 target that a minimum of two out of six directors should be females. In 2023, the targets for both 2025 and 2030 have been re- phrased and aligned and our target for both 2025 and 2030 is therefore 40% female representation. According to the definition of the Danish Business Authority’s relevant guide- lines, the Board of Directors has an equal gender distribution with the current composition. According to the Danish Business Authority’s guidelines on equal gender distribution in management, HusCompagniet is exempted from the statutory requirement to set targets for the underrepresented gender as the Company currently is considered to have an equal gender distribution. However, since 2019, HusCompagniet has defined a target for female representation on Group level in other management levels of 25% in 2025 and 30% in 2030. Other management levels at Group level include the Executive Management and their direct reports holding employee responsibility. In 2023, HusCompagniet had a 30% female representation at Group level in other management levels. Guided by the principles of our diversity policy, the Board of Directors ensures that any change in Executive Management is based on pres- entation of a diverse panel of candidates, both in terms of experience, competencies, and gender, and corresponding principles are applied when recruiting to other management levels at Group level. Board Chairpersonship and committees The Board of Directors has established a Chairpersonship consisting of the Chairperson and the Vice Chairperson. They ensure a regular dialogue with the management with monthly meetings as well as ad-hoc sparring. In order to support the Board of Directors, HusCompagniet has established an Audit Committee and a Remuneration & Nomination Committee. The purpose of the Board Commit- tees is to report and make recommendations to the Board of Directors on committee related matters. The overall purpos- es and activities of the Audit Committee and Remuneration & Nomination Committee, respectively, can be found here: https://investors.huscompagniet.com/governance/commit- tees/. Remuneration In our policies and reports, we aim to be transparent in terms of our structure and size. HusCompagniet has adopted a general remuneration structure for the Board of Directors and Executive Management, where targets are closely aligned with the company’s strategy and typically include targets relating e.g., to EBITDA, number of houses sold and delivered as well as strategic and ESG-related targets as deemed relevant by the Board of Directors. CEO pay ratio and gender pay ratios are included in our ESG disclosures (see page 62). Our Remuneration Policy is avail- able here: https://investors.huscompagniet.com/governance/ committees/. The remuneration report for 2023 can be found here: https://investors.huscompagniet.com/files/Govern- ance-documents/RemunerationReport2023.pdf. In 2023, all current Board members have received com- pensation fees. Mads Munkholt Ditlevsen has forfeited his compensation fee for his period of tenure from January 2023 to April 2023. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 76 / 144 Reporting on Corporate Governance HusCompagniet is committed to complying with Corporate Governance standards and creating transparency around the company’s affairs to maintain the trust of the company’s shareholders and stakeholders. HusCompagniet reports on compliance with the Committee on Corporate Governance’s recommendations on Corporate Governance and the Board of Directors reviews the recommendations in force on a reg- ular basis and at least once a year. The Board of Directors and the Executive Management share the committee's views in all material respects. HusCompagniet deviates from just one of the recommendations as the company publishes trad- ing statements for Q1 and Q3 instead of quarterly reports. We believe trading statements will provide shareholders and other relevant stakeholders with sufficient information on the company’s financials. HusCompagniet’s position on the recommendations on Corporate Governance as well as an explanation for why and how HusCompagniet has opted to deviate from a recommendation, can be found in the Corpo- rate Governance statement available here: https://investors. huscompagniet.com/files/Governance-documents/Corporat- eGovernanceStatement2023.pdf. Business policies HusCompagniet has a set of policies to govern and further guide our overall efforts towards responsible business conduct and governance. The relevant policies are available here: https://investors.huscompagniet.com/governance/gov- ernance-documents/. General meeting The next Annual General Meeting will be held on 11 April 2024 at 10.00 (CEST). The General meeting will be a physical meeting and held at Bech Bruun Advokatpartnerselskab, Gdanskgade 18, 2150 Nordhavn, Denmark. In addition, the Annual General Meeting will be webcasted and can be viewed both live and on demand on the company’s investors website and in the shareholders portal. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 77 / 144 Board of Directors Anja B. Eriksson Vice-Chairperson (Independent) Member of the Audit Committee from January 2023 – April 2023 Member of the Remuneration and Nomination Committee from April 2023 Member since: July 2020. Term ends: AGM 2024. Born: 1974 Gender: Female Nationality: Danish Board meeting participation: 7/7 Committee participation: Audit Committee 1/1, Remuneration & Nomination Committee 2/2 Position: Vice President, ATP – Long Term Danish Capital. Education: M.Sc. in Applied Economics and Finance, B.Sc. International Business from Copenhagen Business School, Young Managers Programme and Negotiation Dynamics from INSEAD Business School and High-Performance Boards pro- gramme at IMD Other management positions: Chair: M.J. Eriksson Holding A/S, Board member: M.J Eriksson A/S, Pihl Hold- ings A/S, Veo Technologies A/S, Ferrosan Medical Devices A/S, owner and director F5 Invest ApS. Competencies: Experience from leading roles in the financial and construction industries, with a strong commercial focus, having driven change processes, M&A transactions, sale and HSSE. Holdings 33,326 (unchanged) Stig Pastwa Board member (Independent) Chair of the Audit Committee Member since: April 2021. Term ends: AGM 2024. Born: 1967 Gender: Male Nationality: Danish Board meeting participation: 7/7 Committee participation: Audit Committee 4/4 Position: Professional board member, advisor and investor Education: Graduate Diploma, HD (r) Business Administration, Financial and Management Accounting from Copenhagen Business School. PED from IMD Business School and ADP from London Business School Other management positions: Member of Board of representatives: Hedeselskabet. Board member: Kaplak Partners ApS. Owner and director of SP Holding 2015. Competencies: Commercial and managerial experience, including M&A, ESG and real estate with a strong financial background as both CFO and CEO from executive roles and non-executive directorships in several large Danish and international cor- porations and institutions, both listed and private. Holdings 8,540 (unchanged) Board of Directors Claus V. Hemmingsen Chairperson (Independent) Chair of the Remuneration and Nomination Committee Member since: May 2020. Term ends: AGM 2024. Born: 1962 Gender: Male Nationality: Danish Board meeting participation: 7/7 Committee participation: Remuneration & Nomination Committee 4/4 Position: Non-executive board-member Education: Management Programmes, London Business School and Cornell University, Exec. MBA, IMD; International Directors Programme, INSEAD Other management positions: Chair: DFDS A/S, Innargi A/S, Board member: Rambøll Gruppen A/S, Noble Cor- poration plc, A.P. Møller Holding A/S, A.P. Møller og Hustru Chastine Mc-Kinney Møllers Fond til almene Formaal, Den A.P. Møllerske Støttefond, Bacher Work Wear A/S, Webmore Uniformer A/S, Mærsk Mc-Kinney Møller Center for Zero Carbon Shipping, Global Maritime Forum Fonden, Det Forenede Dampskibs-Sel - skabs Jubilæumsfond, Owner and director of CVH Consulting ApS. Competencies: Competencies and experiences from more than 10 years of vicechair- and chairman- ship in listed companies, executive experience particularly from large corporation within the international maritime and offshore drilling industries, incl. M&A, commer - cial and general management, operational expertise, strategic planning, HSSE & Sustainability, and regulatory affairs. Holdings 65,499 (unchanged) Indirect and direct HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 78 / 144 Ylva Ekborn Board member (Independent) Member of the Audit Committee, Member of Remuneration and Nomination Committee from January 2023 – April 2023 Member since: July 2019. Term ends: AGM 2024. Born: 1975 Gender: Female Nationality: Swedish Board meeting participation: 6/7 Committee participation: Remuneration & Nomination Committee 2/2 and Audit Committee 4/4 Position: CEO of PostNord Sweden & member of PostNord Group Leadership Team Education: M.Sc. in Economics and Business Administration, Stockholm School of Economics Other management positions: Chair: PostNord Strålfors Oy, PostNord Strålfors AS. Board member: PostNord TPL and PostNord Tidningstjänst AB Competencies: Nordic CEO with experience form both B2C and B2B companies. Focus on strategy, operational excellence, digital transformation, business development, and brand & communication. Holdings 20,247 (unchanged) Michael Troensegaard Andersen Board member (Independent) Member of Audit Committee from April 2023 Member since: April 2023. Term ends: AGM 2024. Born: 1961 Gender: Male Nationality: Danish Board meeting participation: 5/5 Committee participation: Audit Committee 3/3 Position: Non-executive board-member Education: MSc. Mechanical Engineering, DTU, Ba. Comm (HD accounting), CBS Other management positions: Chair: Solar A/S, BE Shark Holding ApS, Competencies: Executive experience from industry relevant listed companies (namely H+H International A/S), as well as competences and experience within strategic, structural, and organisational transformation, sustainability, and green transi- tion, together with in-depth knowledge of the European building and building material Industry Holdings 8,474 (acquired in 2023) Ole Lund Andersen Board member (Independent) Member of Remuneration and Nomination Committee from April 2023 Member since: April 2023. Term ends: AGM 2024. Born: 1959 Gender: Male Nationality: Danish Board meeting participation: 4/5 Committee participation: Remuneration & Nomination Committee 2/2 Position: Non-executive board-member Education: BSc. Production Engineering, Copenhagen Teknikum Other managerial positions: Board member: Lars Larsens JYSK Fond, Actona Group A/S, ScanCom Interna- tional A/S, Contino Holding A/S, Nissen Capital A/S Competencies: Executive experience from both B2B and B2C with competences within consum- er directed sales and marketing as well as a strong background within design, production, and manufacturing, both nationally and internationally Holdings 33,898 (acquired in 2023) Board of Directors Indirect and direct HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 79 / 144 Executive Management Martin Ravn-Nielsen Group CEO Born: 1971 Gender: Male Nationality: Danish Year of first employment: 2009 In current position since: 2020 Education: Diploma in Economics and Law from Finansforbundet (Copenhagen) Previous experience: MD NCC Enfamiliehuse Head of sales Eurodan-huse Various leadership positions within HusCompagniet. Holdings 294,117, changed from 283,861 at 31 December 2022 Allan Auning-Hansen Group CFO Born: 1977 Gender: Male Nationality: Danish Year of first employment: 2023 In current position since: 2023 Education: Strategy Execution Program at INSEAD State Authorized Public Accountant M.Sc. in Business Economics and auditing (cand.merc.aud.), Copenhagen Business School B.Sc. in Economics and Business Administration (HA-Almen), Copenhagen Business School Previous experience: Group CEO, CEGO Group Group CFO, Joe & the Juice Group CFO, Danske Spil Group Head of Finance, Qvartz (now Bain) Audit Senior Manager, Deloitte Holdings No current holdning Executive Management Indirect and direct HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 80 / 144 Financial statements Financial statements Consolidated financial statement Parent Company financial statement Statement by Management Independent auditor's report HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 81 / 144 Consolidated financial statement Income statement – consolidated DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Revenue 2.1 2,381,357 4,329,833 Cost of Sales 2.1 -1,864,177 -3,492,916 Gross profit 517,180 836,917 Staff cost 2.2, 2.3 -281,391 -346,287 Other external expenses -127,756 -142,400 Other operating income 0 67 Operating profit before depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) before special items 2.4 108,033 348,297 Special items 2.4 347 -31,939 Operating profit before depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) after special items 108,380 316,358 Depreciation and amortisation 4.1, 4.3 -46,075 -48,343 Operating profit (EBIT) 62,305 268,014 Financial income 5.5 2,301 697 Financial expenses 5.5 -40,830 -27,784 Profit before tax from continuing operations 23,776 240,927 Tax on profit 6.1 -6,437 -50,449 Profit for the period from continuing operations 17,339 190,478 Profit / (loss) after tax for the period from discontinued operations 6.2 -2,683 -20,169 Profit for the period 14,656 170,309 Profits attributable to: Equity owners of the Company 14,656 170,309 DKK Note 2023 2022 Earnings per share: 2.5 Earnings per share (EPS Basic) 0.7 9.4 Diluted earnings per share (EPS-D) 0.7 9.4 Earnings per share (EPS Basic) continuing operations 0.9 10.6 Diluted earnings per share (EPS-D) continuing operations 0.9 10.5 Earnings per share (EPS) (DKK) from discontinued business -0.1 -1.1 Diluted earnings per share (EPS-D) (DKK) from discontinued business -0.1 -1.1 Statement of other comprehensive income DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Profit for the year 14,656 170,309 Other comprehensive income Items that may be reclassified to the income statement in subsequent periods Foreign currency translation differences, subsidiary 1,662 -11,719 Other comprehensive income, net of tax 1,662 -11,719 Total comprehensive income for the year 16,318 158,590 Total comprehensive income attributable to: Equity owners of the Company 16,318 158,590 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 82 / 144 Balance sheet – consolidated DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Assets Non-current assets Goodwill 4.1 2,017,181 2,016,050 Intangible assets 4.1 33,289 37,550 Right-of-use assets 4.3 65,223 76,578 Property, plant and equipment 4.3 94,146 97,394 Deferred tax asset 6.1 32,602 29,254 Other receivables 3.3 15,293 4,151 Total non-current assets 2,257,734 2,260,977 Current assets Inventories 3.1 281,062 343,033 Contract assets 3.2 352,932 731,056 Trade and other receivables 3.3 140,678 217,221 Prepayments 8,405 14,796 Cash and cash equivalents 223,454 5,207 Total current assets 1,006,531 1,311,313 Total assets 3,264,265 3,572,291 DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Equity and liabilities Equity Share capital 5.1 108,550 91,050 Retained earnings and other reserves 1,989,043 1,790,040 Total equity 2,097,593 1,881,090 Liabilities Non-current liabilities Borrowings 5.3 505,871 682,461 Lease liabilities 5.4 51,741 65,689 Provisions 3.4 28,228 22,126 Deferred tax liability 6.1 30,190 42,742 Total non-current liabilities 616,030 813,018 Current liabilities Borrowings 5.3 937 1,045 Lease liabilities 5.4 21,004 23,874 Trade and other payables 5.6 292,288 522,247 Contract liabilities 3.2 90,973 105,041 Prepayments from customers 3.2 2,865 15,312 Provisions 3.4 27,124 28,042 Income tax payable 6.1 19,427 40,750 Other liabilities 3.7 96,024 141,872 Total current liabilities 550,642 878,183 Total liabilities 1,166,672 1,691,201 Total equity and liabilities 3,264,265 3,572,291 Reference to off-balance sheet notes: Related parties 6.4, and Contingent liabilities 3.4 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 83 / 144 Statement of cash flows – consolidated DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Cash flow from operating activities EBITDA, after special items 108,380 316,358 EBITDA, discontinued activities -317 -193 EBITDA 108,063 316,164 Adjustments for non-cash items 6.3 17,954 8,748 Adjustet EBITDA 126,017 324,913 Changes in working capital 3.5 209,564 35,711 Cash flow from operating activities before financial items and taxes 335,581 360,624 Interest received 5.5 2,301 697 Interest elements of lease payments 5.5 -4,333 -5,014 Interest paid 5.5 -36,497 -22,771 Corporation tax paid 6.1 -47,614 -65,065 Net cash generated from operating activities 249,438 268,471 Cash flow from investing activities Investment in assets recognised as property, plant and equipment 4.3 -11,032 -22,401 Sale of assets recognised as property, plant and equipment 1,435 0 Investment in assets recognised as intangible assets 4.1 -10,539 -13,155 Cash outflow on acquisition subsidiaries 4.2 0 -75,252 Cash and cash equivalents of subsidiaries on acquisition date 4.2 0 -5,746 Net cash generated from investing activities -20,136 -116,554 DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Cash flow from financing activities Repayment of long-term debt 5.3 -675,000 -125,000 Proceeds from loans 5.3 500,000 125,000 Repayment of mortgage 5.3 -948 -523 Repayment of lease liabilities 5.3 -23,736 -22,697 Dividends to equity holders 0 -132,276 Acquisition of own shares 5.2 -7,935 -36,821 Capital increase 206,500 0 Transaction costs share issue -8,088 0 Net cash generated from financing activities -9,207 -192,317 Total cash flows 220,095 -40,400 Cash and cash equivalents at 1 January 5,207 55,420 Net foreign currency gains or losses -1,848 -9,813 Cash and cash equivalents at 31 December 223,454 5,207 Cash and cash equivalents Cash at bank 223,454 5,207 Cash and cash equivalents as at 31 December 223,454 5,207 Free cash flow 229,302 151,916 The cash flow statement cannot be inferred from the published financial information only. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 84 / 144 Statement of changes in equity – consolidated DKK’000 Share capital Foreign currency translation reserve Retained earnings Proposed dividend Total 2023 Equity at 1 January 91,050 -10,063 1,800,103 0 1,881,090 Profit for the period 0 0 14,656 0 14,656 Other comprehensive income: Foreign currency translation differences 0 1,662 0 0 1,662 Total other comprehensive income 0 1,662 0 0 1,662 Transactions with owners of the Company and other equity transactions: Capital increase 17,500 0 189,000 0 206,500 Transaction costs capital increase 0 0 -8,087 0 -8,087 Share-based payment 0 0 9,707 0 9,707 Purchase of own shares 0 0 -7,935 0 -7,935 Total transactions with owners of the Company and other equity transactions 17,500 0 182,685 0 200,185 Equity on 31 December 108,550 -8,401 1,997,444 0 2,097,593 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 85 / 144 DKK’000 Share capital Foreign currency translation reserve Retained earnings Proposed dividend Total 2022 Equity at 1 January 100,000 1,656 1,651,050 132,276 1,884,982 Profit for the period 0 0 170,309 0 170,309 Other comprehensive income: Foreign currency translation differences 0 -11,719 0 0 -11,719 Total other comprehensive income 0 -11,719 0 0 -11,719 Transactions with owners of the Company and other equity transactions: Capital reduction -8,950 0 8,950 0 0 Share-based payment 0 0 6,615 0 6,615 Purchase of own shares 0 0 -36,821 0 -36,821 Dividends paid 0 0 0 -132,276 -132,276 Total transactions with owners of the Company and other equity transactions -8,950 0 -21,256 132,276 -162,482 Equity on 31 December 91,050 -10,063 1,800,103 0 1,881,090 Statement of changes in equity – consolidated Capital structure and financing In May 2023, HusCompagniet issued new share capital of nominally DKK 17,500,000 divided into 3,500,000 shares, each with a nominal value of DKK 5 and carrying five votes. In connection with the issuance of new shares, HusCompagniet also entered into a new facilities agreement for the purpose of refinancing the indebtedness at the time. The primary objective of HusCompagniet’s capital management is to ensure that it maintains a strong credit rating and healthy capital ratios to support its business and maximise shareholder value. HusCom- pagniet manages its capital structure and adjusts in response to changes in economic conditions. To maintain or adjust the capital structure, HusCom- pagniet may adjust dividend payments to sharehold- ers, acquire its own shares or issue new shares. The financial leverage at year end 2023 was 3.3x net debt to EBITDA. According to HusCompagniet’s facilities agreement, the permitted maximum leverage ratio - net interest bearing debt divided by last twelve months adjusted EBITDA - started at 3.5x for the 12-month period ending on 30 June 2023. The ratio increases to 4.5x for the 12-month period ending on 31 March 2024, following which it will decrease to 3.75x on 30 June 2024, and for any 12-month period ending on or after 30 September 2024 the leverage ratio must not exceed 3.5x. In case of breach of finan- cial covenants, the banks may demand immediate repayment of the full nominal amount. Management is continuously reviewing the financing and capital structure of HusCompagniet and con- cludes on that basis that there is an appropriate and justified basis for continuing the current plans and operations of HusCompagniet. Dividend policy The company’s dividend policy has a target initial pay-out ratio of at least 25% by means of dividend, supplemented by means of share buyback for around 25%. The dividend policy is subject to change at the discretion of the Board of Directors, and there can be no assurance that the Group’s performance will facili- tate adherence to the dividend policy and that in any given year a dividend will be proposed or declared. No dividend is proposed to shareholders in 2024. HusCompagniet expects to return to making dividend payments, once the leverage is back within the long- term target of around 2x net debt to EBITDA. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 86 / 144 Notes 1 Basis of preparation Note 1.1 General accounting policies 88 Note 1.2 Introduction to significant estimates and judgements 89 Note 1.3 Application of materiality 90 Note 1.4 Climate related risks 90 2 EBITDA Note 2.1 Segment information 91 Note 2.2 Costs including staff costs and remuneration 97 Note 2.3 Share-based payments 98 Note 2.4 Special items 99 Note 2.5 Earnings per share 99 Note 2.6 Financial risk management 100 Note 2.7 Accounting policy 100 Note 2.8 Significant estimates and judgements 102 3 Working capital Note 3.1 Inventories 103 Note 3.2 Contract assets 104 Note 3.3 Trade and other receivables 105 Note 3.4 Guarantee commitments and contingent liabilities 105 Note 3.5 Net working capital 106 Note 3.6 Financial risk management 106 Note 3.7 Other liabilitites 106 Note 3.8 Accounting policy 107 Note 3.9 Significant estimates and judgements 107 4 Investments Note 4.1 Goodwill and Intangible assets 108 Note 4.2 Business combinations 109 Note 4.3 Property, plant and equipment and right-of-use assets 110 Note 4.4 Impairment 111 Note 4.5 Accounting policy 113 Note 4.6 Significant estimates and judgements 114 5 Funding and capital structure Note 5.1 Equity 115 Note 5.2 Treasury shares 116 Note 5.3 Borrowings and non-current liabilities 116 Note 5.4 Lease liabilities 117 Note 5.5 Financial income and expenses 118 Note 5.6 Trade payables 118 Note 5.7 Financial risk management 118 Note 5.8 Accounting policy 120 6 Other disclosures Note 6.1 Tax 121 Note 6.2 Discontinued operations 122 Note 6.3 Other non-cash items 123 Note 6.4 Related parties 123 Note 6.5 Auditor’s fee 124 Note 6.6 Events after the balance sheet date 124 Note 6.7 List of Group companies 124 Note 6.8 Definitions 125 Note 6.9 Accounting policy 126 Note 6.10 Significant estimates and judgements 126 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 87 / 144 1 Basis of preparation Section 1 Basis of preparation Introduction HusCompagniet A/S is a company incorporated and domiciled in Denmark. HusCompagniet A/S and its subsidiaries are collectively referred to in the financial statement as the “Group”. The Group is a leading provider of single-family detached houses in Denmark. The Group’s core activity is the design, sale and delivery of customisable high-quality detached houses in Denmark to consumers predominantly built on-site on third-party (customer-owned) land. The Group also designs, sells and delivers semi-detached houses in Denmark to consumers, predominantly on land owned by the Group, and to professional investors, both on land also owned by the Group and on land owned by investors. Investors in the semi-detached business-to-business segment often lease or sell the houses to end- users. The Group is also present in Sweden, where it produces prefabricated wood-framed detached houses in its factory, which are finalised on-site and in most cases facilitated by third-party sales agents.In July 2022, the Group acquired the entire share capital of Danhaus Production A/S, which has subsequently been renamed HusCompagniet Production A/S. The acquisition of the production facilities intends to strenghten the Groups value chain and increase its ambitions in the B2B market. The Group is in the process of closing down its German and Swedish brick house activities. In accordance with IFRS 5, the activities have in the consolidated financial statements been treated as discontinued operations. Accordingly, the net results of these activities are for year-end 31 December 2023 and 2022 respectively, presented separately in one line in the income statement. The annual report has been approved by the Board of Directors at their meeting 8 March 2024. The annual report will be presented to the shareholders of HusCompagniet A/S for approval at the Annual General Meeting. The accounting policies are, except for the amendment listed in Note 1.1 General accounting policies, unchanged compared to last year. For 2022, a reclassification of DKK 15 million has been made from trade and other payables to long-term provision. Note 1.1 General accounting policies Basis of preparation The consolidated financial statements are prepared in accordance with IFRS® Accounting Standards as adopted by the EU and additional requirements of the Danish Financial Statements Act for class D compa- nies. The consolidated financial statements have been pre- pared on a historical cost basis, except when noted otherwise in the various accounting policies. These consolidated financial statements are ex- pressed in DKK, as it is HusCompagniet A/S’ function- al and presentation currency. All values are rounded to the nearest thousand DKK ‘000. Basis of consolidation The consolidated financial statements comprise HusCompagniet A/S and entities controlled by HusCompagniet A/S. Control is achieved when the Group is exposed to, or has rights to, variable returns from its involvement with the entity and has the ability to affect those returns through its power over the investee. The financial statements of subsidiaries are included in the consolidated financial statements from the date on which control commences until the date on which control ceases. The financial statements for the subsidiaries are prepared for the same accounting period as HusCom- pagniet using consistent accounting policies. On consolidation, intragroup balances and intragroup transactions are eliminated in full. These consolidated financial statements include the accounts of HusCompagniet and its subsidiary com- panies, which are listed in note 6.7. Foreign currency translation Transactions and balances Foreign currency transactions are initially recorded by the Group entities at their respective functional cur- rency rates prevailing at the date of the transaction. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated at the functional currency spot rate of exchange ruling at the reporting date. All differences are recognised in the Income State- ment under financial items. Non-monetary items that are measured in terms of historical cost in a foreign currency are translated using the exchange rates as at the dates of the initial transactions. Group companies On consolidation, the assets and liabilities in foreign operations are translated into DKK at the spot rate of exchange prevailing at the reporting date and their income statements are translated at spot exchange rates prevailing at the dates of the transactions. The exchange differences arising on translation for con- solidation are recognised in Other Comprehensive Income. Any goodwill arising on the acquisition of a foreign operation and any fair value adjustments to the car- rying amounts of assets and liabilities arising on the acquisition are treated as assets and liabilities of the foreign operations, and are translated at the closing rate of exchange. The following notes are presented in Section 1: Note 1.1 General accounting policies 88 Note 1.2 Introduction to significant estimates and judgements 89 Note 1.3 Application of materiality 90 Note 1.4 Climate related risks 90 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 88 / 144 Note 1.1 General accounting policies (continued) Implementation of new or amended standards and interpretations The accounting policies adopted in the preparation of the consolidated financial statements are consistent with those followed in the preparation of the Group’s consolidated annual financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2022, except for the adoption of new standards effective as of 1 January 2024. The Group has not early adopted any standard, interpre- tation or amendment that has been issued but is not yet effective. The Group has adopted relevant new or amended standards (IFRS) and interpretation (IFRIC) as adopted by the EU and which are effective for the financial year 1 January – 31 December 2023. The Group has assessed that the new or amended standards and interpretations have not had any material impact on the Group’s annual report in 2023. The Group expects to implement the new standards when they become effective. It has been assessed that the implementation of the new standards will not have any significant effect on the recognition and measurement of the balance sheet at 1 January 2024. Note 1.2 Introduction to significant estimates and judgements In preparing the consolidated financial statements, management made various judgements, estimates and assumptions concerning present and future events that affected the application of the Group’s ac- counting policies and the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income and expenses. Actual results may differ from these estimates. Estimates and assumptions are reviewed on an ongo- ing basis and have been prepared taking the financial market situation into consideration, but still ensuring that one-off effects which are not expected to exist in the long term do not affect estimation and determina- tion of these key factors. The most significant risks are assessed to be restric- tions on building activities and construction sites re- lated to a lower demand on houses due to a declining economy. Based on the above assumptions the estimates are assessed to be unchanged from previous years. Significant estimates and judgements covering specif- ic accounts are placed in each section to which they relate. Estimates related to risk of impairment and recovera- bility of deferred tax assets are subject to impact from macro economical risks included those related to the war in Ukraine and general geopolitical turmoil. Fluc- tuating interest rates and inflation are also assessed to have an impact on future activities and profits. Please refer to risk management model page 67. Significant judgements Note Classification as special items 2.4 Percentage-of-completion profit recognition 2.8 Compliance with capitalisation criterias for development projects 4.1 Business Combinations - Determining fair value of assets 4.2 Leases - Estimating the incremental borrowing rate and lease period 4.5 Significant estimates Assessment of risk of impairment of inventories 3.1 Assessment of future costs from guarantee provisions 3.9 Assessment of risk of impairment of non-financial assets including goodwill 4.6 Assessment of recoverability of deferred tax assets 6.10 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 89 / 144 Note 1.3 Application of materiality The consolidated financial statements are a result of processing large numbers of transactions and aggregating those transactions into classes according to their nature or function. When aggregated, the transactions are presented in classes of similar items in the consolidated financial statements. If a line item is not individually material, it is aggregat- ed with other items of a similar nature in the consoli- dated financial statements or in the notes. The disclosure requirements are substantial in IFRS and the Group provides these specific required dis- closures unless the information is considered immate- rial to the economic decision-making of the readers of the financial statements or not applicable. Note 1.4 Climate related risks Climate related risks Political risks emerge from potential escalations in emission-related costs, the premature introduction on the market of untested low-carbon products, and a preference for refurbishing existing structures over new-builds. Long-term physical risks encompass the diminishing availability of lots without exposure to flooding or climatic adversities, elongated con- struction durations due to altered weather patterns. Furthermore, the integration of tangible climate risks into the pricing models of mortgages and insurance policies could influence market demand. Reputational risks are underscored by a shift in consumer and mar- ket inclinations towards environmentally sustainable products and the political directive to allocate greater land areas to conservation, potentially curtailing land for commercial development. Currently, management does not believe that climate change has a significant effect on the estimates and judgements related to the impairment assessment. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 90 / 144 2 EBITDA Section 2 EBITDA This section provides information regarding the Group’s performance in 2023, including the effects from special items on EBITDA. The development of cost of sales, other external expenses, staff costs and remuneration, and information about the Group’s low exposure towards currency risk on transaction level is also contained in this section. Note 2.1 Segment information For management purposes, the Group is organised into business units based on its products and services as well as geographical location. The Group has three reportable segments, as follows: • The detached houses in Denmark segment, which comprises brick houses built on sites and plots • The semi-detached houses in Denmark segment, which comprises brick houses built on sites and plots, includes both business-to-business and business-to-consumers. In 2022 an aqusition of a pre-fab factory was completed. The pre-fab facto- ry produces components used in semi-detached production • The Swedish business which comprises detached prefabricated houses Executive Management is responsible for operating results of its business units separately for the purpose of making decisions about resource allocation and performance assessment. Segment performance is for 2023 evaluated based on EBITDA bsi and is meas- ured consistently with operating profit (EBIT) plus amortisation and depreciation in the consolidated financial statements. The Group's depreciation, am- ortisations, financing (including financial income and financial expenses) and income taxes are managed on a Group basis and are not allocated to operating segments. Assets and liabilities are not allocated to segments. A share of 44% semi-detached revenue is produced in the detached segment in 2023. All B2C semi-de- tached houses are built by the detached segment. Some B2B projects are currently being produced by the detached segment to optimise use of capacity. For segment purposes this revenue has been trans- ferred via an inter-segment allocation. The transferred revenue carries a fixed mark-up. Transfer prices between operating segments are conducted on an arm's length basis in a manner similar to transactions with third parties. The following notes are presented in Section 2: Note 2.1 Segment information 91 Note 2.2 Costs including staff costs and remuneration 97 Note 2.3 Share-based payments 98 Note 2.4 Special items 99 Note 2.5 Earnings per share 99 Note 2.6 Financial risk management 100 Note 2.7 Accounting policy 100 Note 2.8 Significant estimates and judgements 102 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 91 / 144 Note 2.1 Segment information (continued) 2023 Denmark SwedenSemi- Total Total Detached detached Wooden continuing discontinued Total DKK’000houseshouseshouses GroupoperationsoperationssegmentsRevenueExternal customers 1,747,700 365,697 267,960 0 2,381,357 0 2,381,357Inter-segment -69,416 69,416 0 0 0 0 0Total revenue 1,678,284 435,113 267,960 0 2,381,357 0 2,381,357Income / (expenses)Cost of goods -1,423,147 -260,142 -180,888 0 -1,864,177 -19 -1,864,196Inter-segment 66,639 -66,639 0 0 0 0 0Segment gross profit 321,776 108,332 87,072 0 517,179 -19 517,161Gross margin 19.2% 24.9% 32.5% n.a. 21.7% n.a. 21.7%Other operating income 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Staff costs -196,265 -61,238 -23,888 0 -281,391 0 -281,391Other operating expenses -75,313 -6,168 -46,274 0 -127,755 -6,607 -134,363Segment EBITDA bsi 50,198 40,925 16,911 0 108,033 -6,626 101,407EBITDA bsi margin 3.0% 9.4% 6,3% n.a. 4.5% n.a. 4.3%Special items 1,924 205 -1,783 0 347 6,309 6,656EBITDA 52,122 41,130 15,128 0 108,380 -317 108,063EBITDA margin 3.1% 9.5% 5.6% n.a. 4.6% n.a. 4.5% * Costs which can not be allocated to one segment HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 92 / 144 Note 2.1 Segment information (continued) 2022 Denmark SwedenSemi- Total Total Detached detached Wooden continuing discontinued Total DKK’000houseshouseshouses GroupoperationsoperationssegmentsRevenueExternal customers 3,683,787 300,049 345,996 0 4,329,833 5 4,329,838Inter-segment -239,508 239,508 0 0 0 0 0Total revenue 3,444,279 539,558 345,996 0 4,329,833 5 4,329,838Income / (expenses)Cost of goods -3,036,635 -242,200 -214,082 0 -3,492,916 -9 -3,492,925Inter-segment 229,928 -229,928 0 0 0 0 0Segment gross profit 637,572 67,430 131,915 0 836,917 -4 836,913Gross margin 18.5% 12.5% 38.1% n.a. 19.3% n.a. 19.3%Other operating income 67 0 0 0 67 0 67Staff costs -264,598 -34,305 -47,383 0 -346,287 0 -346,287Other operating expenses -96,621 -4,098 -41,680 0 -142,400 954 -141,446Segment EBITDA bsi 276,419 29,026 42,852 0 348,297 949 349,246EBITDA bsi margin 8.0% 5.4% 12.4% n.a. 8.0% n.a. 8.1%Special items -23,739 -5,047 0 -3,153 -31,939 -1,143 -33,082EBITDA 252.680 23,980 42,852 -3,153 316,358 -193 316,164EBITDA margin 7.3% 4.4% 12.4% n.a. 7.3% n.a. 7.3% * Costs which can not be allocated to one segment HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 93 / 144 Note 2.1 Segment information (continued) DKK’000 2023 2022Reconciliation of profitSegment EBITDA before special items from continuing operations 108,033 348,297Segment EBITDA before special items from discontinued operations -6,626 949Special items 6,487 -33,082Depreciation and amortisations -46,075 -48,343Financial income 3,209 1,735Financial expenses -41,738 -42,250Loss before tax from discontinued operations 486 13,621Profit before tax from continuing operations 23,776 240,927 DKK’000 2023 2022Revenue from external customersDenmark 2,113,397 3,983,836Sweden 267,960 345,996Sweden (Discontinued operations) 0 -661Germany (Discontinued operations) 0 665Total revenue 2,381,357 4,329,838 The revenue information above is based on the locations of the customers. No individual customer amounts to more than 10% of the consolidated revenue. There have been no new sales in discontinued entitites. DKK’000 2023 2022Non-current operating assetsDenmark 1,913,012 1,915,959Sweden 344,722 345,019Germany 0 0Total non-current operating assets 2,257,734 2,260,977 The non-current operating assets information above is based on the locations of the assets’ physical location. For goodwill the locations are based on the CGU allocation from the purchase price allocations. The locations for the intagible assets is determined based on the legal owner/user. Non-current assets for this purpose consist of property, plant and equipment, right-of-use assets, other receiva- bles, goodwill and intangible assets. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 94 / 144 Note 2.1 Segment information (continued) 2023 Denmark SwedenSemi- Total Total Detached detached Wooden continuing discontinued Total DKK’000houseshouseshousesoperationsoperationssegmentsRevenue per segment and category - Contracted salesSales value, houses sold on customers' building sites 1,508,196 250,375 267,960 2,026,531 0 2,026,531Sales value, houses sold on own building sites 17,176 184,245 0 201,421 0 201,421Total Contracted sales 1,525,372 434,620 267,960 2,227,952 0 2,227,952Revenue per segment and category - Non-contracted salesShow and project houses 121,847 0 0 121,847 0 121,847Other revenue 1,529 493 0 2,022 0 2,022Sale of land plots 29,535 0 0 29,535 0 29,535Total Non-contracted sales 152,911 493 0 153,404 0 153,404Total Revenue 1,678,284 435,113 267,960 2,381,357 0 2,381,357 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 95 / 144 Note 2.1 Segment information (continued) 2022 Denmark SwedenSemi- Total Total Detached detached Wooden continuing discontinued Total DKK’000houseshouseshousesoperationsoperationssegmentsRevenue per segment and category - Contracted salesSales value, houses sold on customers' building sites 3,134,065 364,238 345,996 3,844,299 0 3,844,299Sales value, houses sold on own building sites 190,082 174,669 0 364,751 0 364,751Total Contracted sales 3,324,147 538,906 345,996 4,209,050 0 4,209,050Revenue per segment and category - Non-contracted salesShow and project houses 97,998 0 0 97,998 0 97,998Other revenue 2,120 652 0 2,771 5 2,776Sale of land plots 20,014 0 0 20,014 0 20,014Total Non-contracted sales 120,132 652 345,996 120,783 5 120,788Total Revenue 3,444,279 539,558 345,996 4,329,833 5 4,329,838 The Group is engaged in construction activities in Denmark and Sweden. The Group is in the process of closing down its Ger- man and Swedish brick house acitivities. Please refer to note 6.2 for further disclosure hereof. Non-contracted sales are recognised on delivery (point-in-time). Contracted sales are recognised over time. Payment is typically due at the time of final delivery of the house project, however a small deposit is paid upon contract negotiation. The Group receives a bank guarantee in connection with the start-up of each contract, and is entitled to payment for work performed, including profit, during the project. Con- struction contracts with professional investors may also include payments on account. Contracted sales comprise the sale of houses con- structed on the customers land, or houses sold on own land (semi detached includes land plots) that are covered by a customer contract before construction is started. All contracted sales are fixed price contracts and any changes to the cost price is carried by Hus- Compagniet as an adjustment to the gross profit Conversely, non-contracted sales comprise of: 1. The sale of houses constructed on own land to which no customer contract has been entered into before construction starts. 2. The sale of detached land-plots to which no customer contract has been entered into before purchase and development of the land plots. DKK’000 2023 2022Revenue per continuing and discontinued operationsTotal revenue from continuing operations 2,381,357 4,329,833Total revenue from discontinued operations 0 5Total revenue 2,381,357 4,329,838 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 96 / 144 DKK’000 2023 2022Staff costsWages and salaries 247,954 330,999Hereof capitalised wages and salaries -3,603 -5,854Defined pension contribution plans 18,268 20,857Other social security costs 11,188 13,674Share-based remuneration 8,922 6,615Transferred to Special items -1,338 -20,004Total 281,391 346,287Average number of full-time employees 395 518Number of full-time employees at year-end 393 471 Key management personnel is defined as the Executive Management, and disclosures are provided below. DKK’000 2023 2022Remuneration of Board of DirectorsBase salary and non-monetary benefits 3,263 3,050Total remuneration 3,263 3,050Remuneration of Executive ManagementBase salary and non-monetary benefits 7,311 7,896Share-based remuneration 3,498 1,208Bonus 3,465 2,658Severance Pay 2,703 0Total remuneration 16,977 11,762Other Key Management PersonnelBase salary and non-monetary benefits 4,927 3,220Share-based remuneration 1,135 510Bonus 2,554 1,004Total remuneration 8,616 4,734 DKK’000 2023 2022Remuneration of Executive ManagementMartin-Ravn Nielsen (CEO from May 2020):Salary 4,322 4,325Bonus 2,290 1,469Share-based payment 1,047 667Total 7,659 6,461Mads Dehlsen Winther (CFO from September 2019 to March 2023):Salary 932 3,571Bonus 359 1,189Share-based payment 2,076 542Total 3,367 5,301Jesper Mølskov Høybye (CFO from April 2023 to October 2023):Salary 1,599 0Bonus 816 0Share-based payment 375 0Severance payment 2,703 0Total 5,493 0Allan Auning-Hansen (CFO from November 2023):Salary 458 0Bonus 0 0Share-based payment 0 0Total 458 0 The long-term incentive programme is described in note 2.3. Note 2.2 Costs including staff costs and remuneration HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 97 / 144 Executive Other Total ManagementemployeessharesNumber of shares at January 2022 18,589 108,749 127,338Granted during the year 19,453 55,413 74,866Exercised during the year 0 0 0Forfeited during the year 0 -3,734 -3,734Outstanding at 31 December 2022 38,042 160,428 198,470Outstanding at 1 January 2023 38,042 160,428 198,470Granted during the year 56,631 147,143 203,774Exercised during the year -51,062 -102,124 -153,186Forfeited during the year 0 -31,482 -31,482Outstanding at 31 December 2023 43,611 173,965 217,576Number of restricted shares that may be sold at 31 December 2023 0 0 0 Note 2.3 Share-based payments Share-based payments In accordance with the Company’s Remuneration Policy, individual members of the Executive Manage- ment participate in a long-term incentive programme consisting of restricted share units ("RSUs"), which was implemented on 23 November 2020. Participants of the RSU programme are granted RSUs which entitle the participant to receive for free a number of shares in the Company equivalent to the number of vested RSUs upon vesting as described below. The RSUs will vest over a three-year vesting period. Vesting is not conditional upon achieving any financial or non-financial targets, but is, however, condi- tional upon (i) the participant remaining employed with the Group for a period of three years from the date of grant, or the participant becoming a good leaver during the vesting period in which case only a proportionate portion of RSUs shall vest, and (ii) the participant having complied in all respects with the general terms and conditions as determined by the Board of Directors. Participation in the RSU programme is offered to members of the Executive Management as an ele- ment of remuneration as incentive for the Executive Management to remain focused on value creation and achievement of the Company’s long-term objectives. As determined by the Board of Directors, a selected number of employees of the Company in key posi- tions may also be eligible to participate in long-term incentive programmes on terms similar to those of the Executive Management. Fair value measurement The Group measures share-based payments at fair value at the grant date. The share price of the time of allocation is expensed linearly over the vesting period. For the RSU programme implemented on 20 April 2022 the average remaining term to vesting for ou- standing restriced shares at 31 December was approx. 1.3 years. For the RSU programme implemented on 13 April 2023 the average remaining term to vesting for oustanding restriced shares at 31 December was approx. 2.3 years. The fair value of RSU grant dated in 2022 was DKK 8.4 million and the fair value of RSU grant dated in 2023 was DKK 9.6 million. In 2023, an expense of DKK 8.9 million was recognised in the income statement in respect of the incentive pro- grammes (2022: 6.6 million). The fair value of the RSU at the grant date was calculated based on the share price at grant date. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 98 / 144 Note 2.4 Special items DKK’000 2023 2022Special itemsStrategic organisational changes 2,394 18,509Accrued costs in connection with acquisition of subsidiary -900 2,341Impairment of right-of-use assets -850 7,053Other special items -991 4,036Total special items -347 31,939If special items had been included in the operating profit before special items, they would have been recognised and have effect as follows.Operating costs -835 4,882Employee costs 1,338 20,004Operating profit before depreciation (EBITDA) and special items 503 24,886Profit on disposal of non-current assets and associates, net 0 0Amortisation, depreciation, and impairment losses on intangible and tangible assets -850 7,053Operating profit (EBIT) before special items -850 7,053Strategic organisational changes include severance payments to former senior manage-ment and employees. Cost in connection with acquisition and vendor due dilligence is related to the acquisition of Danhaus Production A/S.Reconciliation of EBITDAOperating profit before depreciation and amortisation 108,033 348,297Special items 347 -31,939Operating profit before depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) after special items 108,380 316,358 The Group presents certain alternative performance measures in the consolidated financial statements that are not defined under IFRS. It is the Manage- ment's belief that these measures provide valuable supplemental information to investors and the Group's management, as they allow for evaluation of trends and the Group's performance. Since such financial measures are not calculated in the same way by all companies they are not always comparable to measures used by other companies. These financial measures should therefore not be considered to be a replacement for measurements as defined under IFRS. Definitions provided in section 6.9 provide information in greater detail regarding definitions of financial performance measures. Management exercises judgment in the identification of special items, considering the nature and circum- stances of each transaction or event. Special items may include, but are not limited to, gains or losses on the disposal of assets, restructuring costs, impairment of assets, and other significant non-recurring items. Note 2.5 Earnings per share DKK 2023 2022Profit for the year 14,665,751 170,308,996Average number of shares 20,290,556 18,210,000Average number of treasury shares -324,852 -169,801Average number of outstanding shares 19,965,704 18,040,199Dilution from share options 217,065 111,604Average number of outstanding shares, diluted 20,182,769 18,151,803 DKK’000 2023 2022Attributable to shareholders of HusCompaniet:Loss from discontinued business -2,683 -20,169Profit from continuing business 17,339 190,478Profit for the year 14,656 170,309In calculating dilution from RSU, 217,065 shares (2022: 111,604), could potentially dilute the profit per share in the future. Earnings per share (EPS) (DKK) 0.7 9.4Diluted earnings per share (EPS-D) (DKK) 0.7 9.4Earnings per share (EPS) (DKK) from continuing business 0.9 10.6Diluted earnings per share (EPS-D) (DKK) from continuing business 0.9 10.5Earnings per share (EPS) (DKK) from discontinued business -0.1 -1.1Diluted earnings per share (EPS-D) (DKK) from discontinued business -0.1 -1.1 The 2023 per share calculations for continuing business and discontinued business are based on corresponding key figures in profit per share. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 99 / 144 Note 2.6 Financial risk management Currency Risk The Group is exposed to currency fluctuations from its activities in Sweden. The subsidiary in the country is not affected, as income and costs are denominated in the local functional currency. The Management continuously assesses the signifi- cance of the Group’s activities denominated in foreign currencies. Total revenue generated in SEK for 2023 amounted to 267 million DKK (2022: 346 million DKK). Due to the reduced continuing business activities related to SEK the Management considers the Groups exposure to SEK as low. Note 2.7 Accounting policy Revenue Revenue comprises completed construction contracts and construction contracts in progress (contracted sales), sale of land plots and show houses, and sales of show houses (non-contracted sales). It is considered appropriate to recognise the sale of properties through divestment of companies in ac- cordance with IFRS 15 and not as divested companies under IFRS 10 as it is an asset that is being divested, not a company with a business. Contracted sales Contracted sales are recognised over time according to percentage-of-completion based on estimated construction time, as all performance obligations are fulfilled on an ongoing basis throughout the construction period. The contracted sales contracts are considered to comprise of only one performance obligation, as all components are considered interre- lated, and any changes to a contract will therefore be recognised as changes to the original contract and not as a separate performance obligation. The Group acts as primarily responsible for the delivery of the performance obligation and carries the risks related to the construction and is therefore considered as the principal. The contracts are not assessed to have a significant financing component. The time value of the transac- tion price for contracts with a duration that exceeds 12 months is assessed insignificant, as the Group does not consume the main part of the costs before the end of the contract phase. Therefore, an adjustment of the transaction price with regards to a financing component in the contracts with customers is not required. Payment is typically due at the time of final delivery of the construc- tion, however a small deposit is paid upon contract negotiation. The Group receives a bank guarantee in connection with the start-up of each contract, and is entitled to payment for work performed, including profit, during the project. Contract modifications are recognised when they have been approved by all parties to the contract. The transfer of control and recognition of revenue are determined using input methods based on construction days incurred relative to total estimated construction time for the contracts, as these methods are considered to best depict the continuous transfer of control. The selling price is measured by reference to the total expected income from each contract and the stage of completion at the reporting date. The stage of completion is determined on the basis of the days incurred and the total expected construction time. If the outcoume of a construction contract cannot be estimated reliably, revenue is only recognised corre- sponding to costs incurred and indirect production costs, if it is probable that these will be recovered. The Group expenses incremental costs of obtaining a contract, as the amortisation period of the asset that the entity otherwise would have recognised is less than one year. Costs in connection with sales work to secure contracts are recognised as costs in the income state- ment in the financial year in which they are incurred. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 100 / 144 Non-contracted sales For non-contracted sales, revenue is recognised in the income statement when the performance obli- gation is fulfilled. This is defined as the point in time when control of the non-contracted construction (sale of land plot or sales of houses constructed on own land for which no customer contract has been entered info before construction starts) is transferred to the customer, the amount of revenue can be measured reliably and collection is probable. The transfer of control to customers takes place according to agreed delivery date. Furthermore, revenue is only recog- nised when it is highly probable that a significant reversal in the revenue amount will not occur. Cost of sales Cost of sales include costs of raw materials, cost of subcontractors and consumables incurred in generat- ing the revenue for the year. Other external expenses Other external expenses include the period’s expens- es relating to the Group’s core activities, including expenses relating to distribution, sale, advertising, administration, premises, bad debts, low-value and short-term leases, etc. Other operating income Other operating income includes income from sec- ondary activities such as gains/losses from sale of property, plant and equipment. Staff costs Staff costs include wages and salaries, including compensated absence, share-based payments and pensions, as well as other social security contribu- tions, etc. made to the Group’s employees. The item is net of refunds made by public authorities. The Group has established a long-term bonus-based share programme (LTI) in accordance with the current remuneration policy. Share-based payments are recognised over the period in which the participant renders the service entitling the participant to the payment. This is, in principle, from the date of grant until the date on which the vesting conditions have been met. The LTI programme is classified as an equity-settled plan. The value of services received as consideration for the granted right to restricted shares is measured at the fair value of the shares at the date of grant. The fair value of the granted right to restricted shares is not subsequently adjusted. The component of the fair value that can be attributed to employees that do not meet the vesting conditions is adjusted and recog- nised over the vesting period. In the consolidated financial statements, the cost is recognised as staff costs and a set-off to the recognised cost is recog- nised in equity over the vesting period. In the parent company, costs associated with the LTI programme related to participants employed by sub- sidiaries are recognised in investments in subsidiar- ies, and a set-off to the recognised cost is recognised in equity over the vesting period. The LTI programme is classified as an equity-settled plan. Special items Special items include significant income and costs of a special nature in terms of the Group’s reve- nue-generating operating activities which cannot be attributed directly to the Group’s ordinary operating activities. Such income and costs include costs related to significant restructuring of processes and fundamental structural adjustment, as well as gains or losses arising in this connection, and which are significant. Special items also include items such as impairment of goodwill, gains and losses on the disposal of activi- ties and transaction cost from business combinations. These items are classified separately in the Income Statement, in order to provide a more accurate and transparent view of the Group’s recurring operating profit. Note 2.7 Accounting policy (continued) HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 101 / 144 Note 2.8 Significant estimates and judgements Construction contracts, including estimated recogni- tion and measurement of revenue and contribution margin At contract inception, management assesses if the contracts involve a high degree of individual customisation and satisfy the criteria for recognition over time. The assessment is based on an analysis of, among other things, the contract provisions on: • The degree of customisation, including the potential alternative use of buildings • The time of transfer of legal title • Payment terms, including options of early termination of contract • Enforceable right to payment for performance completion to date. For construction contracts, management considers if they constitute a single performance obligation and if the recognition of the selling price of contracts over time is best depicted by using an input method based on costs incurred relative to budgeted project costs. Variable elements of consideration are not recog- nised in revenue until it is highly probable that a reversal of the amount of consideration will not occur in future periods. Percentage-of-completion profit recognition A fundamental condition for being able to estimate percentage-of-completion profit recognition is that project revenues and project costs can be estab- lished reliably. This reliability is based on such factors as compliance with the Group’s systems for project control and the project management. The assessment of project revenues and project costs is based on a number of estimates and assessments that depend on the experience and knowledge of project management in respect of project control, training and the prior management of project. There is a risk that the final result will differ from the profit accrued based on percentage-of-completion. At year-end, recognised revenues from contract assets amounted to DKK 355 million (2022: DKK 760 million); refer to note 3.2 Contract assets. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 102 / 144 3 Working capital Section 3 Working capital This section provides information regarding the development in the Group’s working capital. This includes notes to understand the development in construction contracts and related guarantee commitments. Information to understand the Group’s low exposure towards credit risk is also contained in this section. Note 3.1 Inventories DKK’000 2023 2022Raw materials 22,182 26,587Show houses and semi-detached houses 81,876 164,158 Land 177,739 155,294Write-down inventories -735 -3,005Total inventories 281,062 343,033Hereof, unsold inventories 202,860 301,580 Unsold inventories comprise of raw materials, unsold land and unsold houses constructed on own land to which no customer contract has been entered into before construction starts (typically show houses). As these houses are constructed before being sold, they are recognised as inventories, and can therefore not be recognised as contracted work-in-progress. The valuation of show houses involves inherent uncer- tainties due to the subjective nature of market trends, consumer preferences, and the unique characteristics of real estate assets. Management engages in a com- prehensive assessment, considering factors such as: - Current market conditions - Comparable property valuations The following notes are presented in Section 3: Note 3.1 Inventories 103 Note 3.2 Contract assets 104 Note 3.3 Trade and other receivables 105 Note 3.4 Guarantee commitments and contingent liabilities 105 Note 3.5 Net working capital 106 Note 3.6 Financial risk management 106 Note 3.7 Other liabilitites 106 Note 3.8 Accounting policy 107 Note 3.9 Significant estimates and judgements 107 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 103 / 144 Note 3.2 Contract assets DKK’000 2023 2022Selling price of contract assets 354,615 760,375Invoicing on account -92,657 -134,360261,958 626,015Calculated as follows:Contract assets 352,932 731,056Contract liabilities -90,973 -105,041261,958 626,015Prepayments from customers regarding construction contracts not yet started 2,865 15,312 DKK’000 2023 2022Delivery obligationsWithin one year 1,231,415 1,966,382After one year 140,612 90,714 There are no detained payments related to contract assets. Construction contracts (assets/liabilities) Contract assets comprise the selling price of work performed where the Group does not yet have an un- conditional right to payment, as the work performed has not yet been approved by the customer. Contract liabilities comprise agreed, unconditional payments received on account for work yet to be performed. During 2023, the entire contract liability recognised at the beginning of the period has been recognised as revenue. Payment is typically due at the time of final delivery of the house project, however a small deposit is paid upon contract negotiation. The Group receives a bank guarantee in connection with the start-up of each con- tract, and is entitled to payment for work performed, including profit during the project. The decrease in contract assets in 2023 reflects a high level of delivered houses and a decrease in sales compared to last year. Contract liabilities were largely affected by a high level of deposits from larger projects. Delivery obligations are secured orders from cus- tomers, where HusCompagniet is required to build a house for the customer. Credit risk on contract assests is generally managed by regular credit rating of customers and business partners, furthermore bank deposits or bank guar- antees are obtained before the house is build. The credit risk exposure relating to dealing with private counterparties is estimated to be limited. For B2B projects the credit risk is management by obtaining credit rating of customers. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 104 / 144 Note 3.4 Guarantee commitments and contingent liabilities DKK’000 2023 2022Guarantee provision at 1 January 50,168 43,398Exchange rate adjustment 4 0Arising during the year 33,222 40,292Utilised -28,042 -33,522Guarantee provision at 31 December 55,352 50,168Distributed in the balance as follows:Non-current liabilities 28,228 22,126Current liabilities 27,124 28,042 At year-end, the guarantee provision amounted to DKK 55 million (2022: DKK 50 million). Provisions for future costs of guarantee commitments at one and five year reviews of houses delivered are recognised at the amounts expected at the balance sheet date to be required to settle the commitment. As security for the borrowings and other liabilities part of the assets of HC Production A/S has been pledged. The booked value of the pledged assets amount to DKK 53 million. It can be split in the following way: As security for mortgage of DKK 10 million there is a mortgage deed of nom. DKK 40 million in land and buildings, with a booked value of DKK 25 million. Additional commitments: • Owner’s mortgage deed of nom. DKK 5 million in buildings, with a booked value of DKK 25 million. • Company charge of nom. DKK 9 million in the assets of the parent company with a booked value of DKK 28 million. • Transport in income from specific projects nom. DKK 132 million. This estimate is based on calculations, assessments by company management and experiences gained from past transactions. Contingent liabilities The Group is regularly involved in disputes arising out of the normal conduct of its business. In 2021 the Group entered an arbitration which has not been set- tled in 2023. The Group expects a positive outcome of the dispute. Collateral DKK 56 million of cash and short-term deposits is held in restricted accounts and released when the com- pleted houses are delivered to the customers (2022: DKK 61 million). Restricted accounts are classified as other receivables. Guarantees to trade creditors The Company had issued guarantees to trade credi- tors of DKK 76 million as of 31 December 2023 (2022: DKK 76 million). Contractual obligations The Group has no material obligations not already recognised as liabilities in the financial statements. The new loan agreement as of May 2023 between Nordea, Danske Bank and HusCompagniet A/S includes negative pledge. Note 3.3 Trade and other receivables DKK’000 2023 2022Trade receivables 71,321 121,041Provision for expected credit losses -9,943 -9,935Other receivables 94,593 110,267As at 31 December 155,971 221,372Provision for expected credit losses at 1 January -9,935 -16,620Exchange rate adjustment 19 354Arising during the year -737 -295Utilised 142 2,188Reversed 568 4,437Provision for expected credit losses at 31 December -9,343 -9,935 The Group receives security in the form of a bank guarantee or deposit in connection with the start-up of construction contracts and there is therefore limited risk of loss on trade receivables and contract assets in connection with the Group's receivables from sales activities. The Group's trade receivables consist of invoices issued shortly before delivering the house, and no key is delivered until payment is received. Provision for losses on trade receivables in 2022 and 2023 is recognised following the decision to close down of the brick houses in Sweden and Germany. Amounts related to Sweden and Germany are included in discontinued operations. Credit risks are generally managed by regular credit rating of customers and business partners. The credit risk exposure relating to dealing with private counter- parties is estimated to be limited. The risk is further limited as the house is not delivered to the customer before payment has been received. Write-downs for bad and doubtful debts are con- sequently limited except for debt in discontinued business which constitutes the main part of provision for expected credit losses in both 2022 and 2023. Other receivables Other receivables include primarily restricted cash. The cash is located on a restricted bank account until the house is delivered to the customer. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 105 / 144 Note 3.5 Net working capital DKK’000 2023 2022Inventories 281,062 343,033Contract assets 352,932 731,056Trade and other receivables 155,972 221,372Prepayments 8,405 14,796Trade and other payables -292,288 -522,247Contract liabilities -90,973 -105,041Prepayments from customers -2,865 -15,312Other liabilities -96,024 -141,872Total 316,221 525,785 DKK’000 2023 2022Change in working capitalInventories -61,971 27,108Contract assets -378,124 -78,275Trade and other receivables -65,401 46,345Prepayments -6,390 593Trade and other payables 229,959 16,971Contract liabilities 14,068 -20,311Prepayments from customers 12,447 -5,231Other liabilities 45,848 6,252Hereof non-cash fair value adjustment due to businesss combinations 0 -29,162Cash flow effect -209,564 -35,711 Note 3.7 Other liabilitites DKK’000 2023 2022Wages and salaries, payroll taxes, social security costs, etc. 49,742 48,658Holiday obligation 8,912 7,087VAT and duties 31,578 77,493Other costs payable 5,792 8,634Other liabilities 96,024 141,872 Note 3.6 Financial risk management Credit risk HusCompagniet is exposed to customers’ inability to meet their financial obligations. To address this risk, the Group obtains a bank guarantee on the agreed selling price from all customers before construction starts and the customers pay on delivery. In contracts where the scope and price is subsequently changed, the bank guarantee is updated if the Management considers the change to be significant. This elimi- nates the risk of debtor loss, as all payment rights are secured before the houses are delivered. Bank guar- antees are obtained from primarily Danish financial institutions with a high credit rating. Impairment of other receivables amounted to nil in 2023 and 2022. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 106 / 144 Note 3.9 Significant estimates and judgements Guarantee commitments Provisions for future costs due to guarantee com- mitments are recognised at the amount expected to be required to settle the commitment at the balance sheet date. This estimate is based on calculations, assessments by company management and experi- ences gained from past transactions. The most significant key assumption include the cost of expected repairs from year 1 and year 5 reviews of delivered houses. At year-end, guarantee provisions amounted to DKK 55 million (2021: DKK 50 million), refer to note 3.4 Provisions and contingent liabilities. Note 3.8 Accounting policy Inventories Inventories are measured at the lower of cost or net realisable value. The cost price of raw materials includes costs of bringing each product to its present location and con- dition. Cost of raw materials is measured on a first-in/ first-out basis. Work in progress and finished houses (non-contracted construction) The cost of work in progress and finished houses (non- contracted), includes costs of direct materials and labour. The cost price of land plots includes indirect costs such as development costs etc. bringing the land to its present condition. Net realisable value is the estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business, less estimated costs of completion and the estimated costs necessary to make the sale. Work in progress is described further in Note 3.2 Con- tract assets and Note 2.7 Accounting policy. Trade and other receivables Receivables are measured at amortised cost. Write- down to counter losses is made according to the simplified expected credit loss model, after which the total loss is recognised immediately in the profit and loss account at the same time as the receivable is rec- ognised in the balance sheet on the basis of expected loss during the total lifetime of the receivable. Other receivables include restricted cash. Provisions Provisions differ from other liabilities because there is a degree of uncertainty concerning when pay- ment will occur or concerning the size of the amount required to settle the provision. Provisions are recognised in the balance sheet when a legal or informal commitment exists due to an event that has occurred and it is probable that an outflow of resources will be required to settle the commitment and the amount can be estimated reliably. Trade and other payables Trade and other payables are measured at amortised cost, which, in all essentials, corresponds to the net realisable value. Prepayments Prepayments comprise incurred expenses relating to subsequent financial years. Prepayments from customers Prepayments from customers comprise payments received prior to start of construction. Other liabilities Other liabilities which include debt to public author- ities, employee-related costs payable and accruals etc. are measured at amortised cost. Cash and cash equivalents Cash and cash equivalents comprise cash at banks and on hand. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 107 / 144 4 Investments Section 4 Investments In this section the Group's investments are explained. This includes investments in tangible assets, intangible assets and business combinations, and how these are tested for impairment. Note 4.1 Goodwill and Intangible assets Goodwill DKK’000 Goodwill2023Cost at 1 January 2,096,750Exchange rate adjustments 1,131Additions from business combinations 0Disposals -80,700Cost at 31 December 2,017,181Impairment losses at 1 January 80,700Disposals -80,700Impairment losses at 31 December 0Carrying amount at 31 December 2,017,1812022Cost at 1 January 2,112,171Exchange rate adjustments -21,391Additions from business combinations 5,971Cost at 31 December 2,096,750Impairment losses at 1 January 80,700Impairment losses at 31 December 80,700Carrying amount at 31 December 2,016,050 The following notes are presented in Section 4: Note 4.1 Goodwill and Intangible assets 108 Note 4.2 Business combinations 109 Note 4.3 Property, plant and equipment and right-of-use assets 110 Note 4.4 Impairment 111 Note 4.5 Accounting policy 113 Note 4.6 Significant estimates and judgements 114 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 108 / 144 Note 4.1 Goodwill and Intangible assets (continued) Software development Software projectsIntangible assets DKK’000 Trademarksdevelopment in progress Total2023Cost at 1 January 29,166 94,455 12,164 135,785Additions 0 8,386 2,153 10,539Transfered to complerted software development projects 0 10,230 -10,230 0Exchange rate adjustments 0 0 -1,044 -1,044Cost at 31 December 29,166 113,071 3,043 145,280Amortisation and impairment losses at 1 January 29,166 69,068 0 98,234Amortisation 0 13,755 0 13,755Impairment losses 0 0 0 0Exchange rate adjustments 0 1 0 1Amortisation and impairment losses at 31 December 29,166 82,824 0 111,989Carrying amount at 31 December 29,166 30,247 3,043 33,2892022Cost at 1 January 29,166 88,265 5,224 122,655Additions 0 4,349 8,807 13,155Transfered to complerted software development projects 0 1,866 -1,866 0Exchange rate adjustments 0 -26 0 -26Cost at 31 December 29,166 94,455 12,164 135,785Amortisation and impairment losses at 1 January 29,166 53,748 0 82,914Amortisation 0 15,346 0 15,346Impairment losses 0 0 0 0Exchange rate adjustments 0 -26 0 -26Amortisation and impairment losses at 31 December 29,166 69,068 0 98,234Carrying amount at 31 December 29-166 25,386 12,164 37,550 Note 4.2 Business combinations Acquisitions in 2023 The Group made no acquisitions during 2023. Acquisitions in 2022 On 1 July 2022, the Group acquired the entire share capital of Danhaus Production A/S, at a price of DKK 90 million on a debt-free basis. As debt was recognised to DKK 14.7 million the purchase price was agreed to DKK 75.3 million. Of the total consideration, DKK 75.3 million was paid in cash. With the acquisition the Group intends to strenghten its value chain and increase its ambitions in the B2B market. The determination of the preliminary purchase price and the purchase price allocation is not considered final. Based on the measurement of identifiable assets and liabilities at their fair values, the difference between the total consideration and the fair value of the identified net assets was calculated at DKK 6.0 million, which rep- resents the goodwill from the acquisition of Danhaus Pro- duction A/S. Goodwill is not deductible for tax purposes. In addition, the consideration paid for the business combination effectively included amounts in relation to the benefit of expected synergies, revenue growth, future market development and the assembled workforce of Danhaus Production A/S. These benefits are not recognised separately from goodwill because they do not meet the recognition criteria for identifia- ble intangible assets. Assets and liabilitites recognised have been calculat- ed using the subsidiary’s results and adjusting them for differences in the accounting policies between the Group and the subsidiary. Please refer to fair value measurement below. The acquired assets include receivables from sales and other receivables with a fair value measurement of DKK 22,628 thousands. The contractual gross receivable amount is DKK 22,734 thousands, of which DKK 106 thousands were assessed as uncollectible at the time of acquisition. Special items The Group has incurred acquisition costs of DKK 2.3 million in 2022, which are included in special items. Fair value measurement Material net assets acquired for which significant esti- mates have been applied in the fair value assessment have been recognised using the following valuation techniques. Property, plant and equipment Fair value of individual material property, plant and equipment assets has been measured based on exter- nal market valuations carried out by professional ap- praisers and assessments of prices on an active market. Inventory Fair value of inventory has been measured at the updat- ed prices. No impairment of inventory was identified. Trade receivables, payables and contract assests Fair value of trade receivables and trade payables, contract assets and accrued cost of services has been measured at the contractual amount expected to be received or paid. In addition, collectability has been taken into consideration on trade receivables. The amounts have not been discounted, as maturity on trade receivables and payables generally is very short and the discounted effect therefore immaterial. Financial liabilities Lease liabilities have been measured at the present value of the remaining lease payments at the acquisi- tion date discounted using an appropriate incremental borrowing rate. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 109 / 144 Note 4.2 Business combinations (continued) Preliminary purchase price allocation of Assets and liabilitites recognised DKK’000acquisition of Danhaus Production A/SProperty, plant and equipment 66,285Right-of-use assests 6,298Total non-current assets 72,583Inventories 20,513Contract work in progress 5,858Trade receivables and other receivables 6,147Other receivables 16,481Prepayments 475Cash 13,212Total current assets 62,686Bank debt and borrowings 16,962Leasing liabilities 6,623Deferred tax liability 8,891Total non-current liabilities 32,476Trade payables 26,219Prepayment from customers 874Other payables 6,419Total current liabilities 33,512Net assets taken over 69,281Goodwill 5,971Total consideration 75,252Cash payment 75,252Total consideration 75,252DKK’000 Revenue ProfitImpact on revenue and profit/los from acquired business in 2022Danhaus Production A/S (since acquisition date, 1 July 2022) 45,440 -2,410Danhaus Production A/S (Estimated full year) 90,880 -4,820 Note 4.3 Property, plant and equipment and right-of-use assets Right of Other use Right of Right fixtures and assets, use of use fittings, Leasehold motor assets, assets, tools and improve-Land and DKK’000 vehiclespropertyplantsequipmentmentsbuildings Total2023Cost at 1 January 39,033 133,306 5,882 63,360 24,267 61,091 326,938Exchange rate adjustments 0 149 0 118 0 0 267Additions 4,909 472 0 7,840 1,570 1,622 16,413Remeasurement of lease liabilities -194 3,456 0 0 0 0 3,262Disposals -9,915 -15,434 0 -3,012 -4,260 0 -8,264Cost at 31 December 33,833 121,949 5,882 68,306 21,577 62,712 338,616Depreciation and impairment 1January 25,418 75,926 299 30,073 19,930 1,321 152,967Exchange rate adjustments 0 123 0 91 0 0 214Depreciation 6,140 12,477 597 8,648 1,589 2,862 32,313Impairment losses 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Depreciation of disposals -9,165 -15,373 0 -2,671 -3,393 0 -6,246Depreciation and impair-ment 31December 22,393 73,153 896 36,141 18,126 4,183 179,248Carrying amount at 31December 11,440 48,796 4,987 32,165 3,451 58,529 159,368 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 110 / 144 Note 4.3 Property, plant and equipment and right-of-use assets (continued) Right of Other use Right of Right fixtures and assets, use of use fittings, Leasehold motor assets, assets, tools and improve-Land and DKK’000 vehiclespropertyplantsequipmentmentsbuildings Total2022Cost at 1 January 34,654 128,095 0 49,490 24,104 0 236,344Exchange rate adjustments 0 -5,095 0 -1,321 -77 0 -6,493Additions from business combinations 416 0 5,882 6,784 0 59,501 72,583Additions 4,748 149 0 19,392 1,419 1,590 27,298Remeasurement of lease liabilities -566 10,157 0 0 0 0 9,590Disposals -219 0 0 -10,984 -1,179 0 -12,383Cost at 31 December 39,033 133,306 5,882 63,360 24,267 61,091 326.938Depreciation and impairment 1January 18,982 56,058 0 33,754 19,112 0 127,905Exchange rate adjustments 0 -2,130 -4 -717 -206 0 -3,056Depreciation 6,202 15,397 302 7,844 1,931 1,321 32,997Impairment losses 0 6,600 0 0 0 0 6,600Depreciation of disposals 234 0 0 -10,808 -907 0 -11,481Depreciation and impair-ment 31December 25,418 75,926 299 30,073 19,930 1,321 152,967Carrying amount at 31December 13,615 57,380 5,584 33,287 4,337 59,769 173,972 Note 4.4 Impairment Review of the annual impairment test For impairment testing, goodwill is allocated to the three CGU’s (“Detached”, “Semi-detached” and “Wooden houses”), which are also the operating and reportable segments. Among other factors, the Group considers the relationship between its market capi- talisation and the carrying value of assets including goodwill, when assessing for indicators of impair- ment. Impairment tests are performed separately for all three CGU’s once a year or more frequently if indication of impairment excists. Neither in 2023 nor in 2022 did the test however reveal an impairment need. The impairment test is an assessment of whether the cash generating units are expected to be able to generate sufficient positive net cash flow in the future to support the carrying amount of the net assets related to the CGUs. As highlighted under sensitivity changes, the conclusions from the impairment testing is subject to estimation uncertain- ty and possible future changes to key assumptions of future cash flows could result in impairments. Cash Generating Unit The Group’s CGU’s comprise: Detached houses, Semi-detached houses and Wooden houses. The discount rate is determined separately for each CGU to reflect the risks specific to each CGU. The discount rate applied is the weighted average cost of capital (WACC) and reflects the latest market assumptions for the cost of equity and the cost of debt. Key Assumptions The recoverable amount determined in the impair- ment test is based on a value-in-use calculation. To determine the value-in-use, Management is required to estimate the present value of the future free net cash flows based on budgets and strategy for the coming five years (“the budget period”) as well as projections for the terminal period after the budget period. A five-year period is used to reflect a full business cycle. Assumptions used in the estimate of the present value include the discount rate, revenue growth (estimated on basis of expected units to be delivered and expected unit price) and EBIT-margin. Other assumptions include expected required investments, market share and growth expectations in the terminal period. For the impairment test, a five-year budget period was used to estimate the present value. The five-year budget period is used to reflect the future risk, which is impacted by the current geopolitical tur- moil and macroeconomic factors such as uncertainty in the housing markets, inflation, increase in interest rates etc. The expected annual growth rate and the expected margins in the budget period are based on historical experience and the assumptions about expected market developments for each CGU. The long-term growth rate for the terminal period is based on the ex- pected growth in the Danish and Swedish economy, specifically for the house building industry. In 2023, the long-term growth rate in the terminal period is set to 2.2%. Currently, Management does not believe that climate change has a significant effect on the estimates and judgments related to the impairment assessment reference is made to note 1.4. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 111 / 144 Note 4.4 Impairment (continued) CGU Detached Despite ongoing global macroeconomic and geopolit- ical turmoil, we expect that the long-term (terminal pe- riod) demand for new detached houses will remain in- tact compared to the historical levels of new buildings in Denmark. The outlook for CGU detached in 2024 is still influenced by low visibility and some uncertainty. We anticipate that the ongoing geopolitical turmoil will continue to affect revenue in HusCompagniet, particularly in the first half of 2024. However, we anticipate a more positive outlook in the second half of 2024, with a gradual recovery expected from 2025 to 2028. We expect additions in SG&A to support and fuel rebound readiness. Additionally, we anticipate a gradual increase in operating margin during the budget period, approaching 2022 levels, as general market conditions are also expected to improve. CGU Semi-detached Semi-detached business is expected to be negatively impacted by the ongoing global macroeconomic and geopolitical turmoil, although to a lesser degree than what is expected for the detached business. Revenue is expected to decrease in 2024. However, the long term outlook reflects our ambition to gradually increase B2B collaborations. Revenue from HusCom- pagniet Production is expected to increase during the budget period compared to 2023 and be in line with the business case from the acquisition. We expect a gradual increase in the operating margin over the budget period compared to 2023 as a result of the continuous focus on margin improvements and scale. CGU Wooden Houses The outlook for CGU Wooden Houses in 2024 is im- pacted by the decline in housing sales in 2023 which negatively impact the orderbook for 2024. We expect a gradual recovery starting in 2025 and onwards com- ing back to the levels in 2021 and 2022 towards the end of the budget period. Operating profit is generally higher in Sweden compared to Denmark. In 2024 we expect a negative operating margin as a result of a lower order backlog, gradually rebounding towards 2028 as sales levels are expected to rebound. Sensitivity analysis The sensitivity analysis shows the lowest possible operating margin, growth rate or highest possible discount rate in percentage points by which the as- sumptions used can change before goodwill becomes impaired. Key assumptions and other assumptions are subject to estimation uncertainty especially related to the financial impact and length of the current macroe- conomic turmoil and how it will continue to impact the interest rates and sales activities in all segments. 2023 2022Semi-Wooden Semi-Wooden DKK’000 Detacheddetached houses Detacheddetached housesCarrying amount of goodwill 1,760,712 5,971 250,498 1,760,712 5,971 249,367Pre-tax discount rate 11.2% 11.2% 11.2% 10.0% 10.0% 10.0%Budget periodAnnual revenue growth 17.4% 16.1% 8.5% -3.2% 12.0% 1.1%Operating margin 3%-9% 3%-7% -5%-13% 1-9% 3-7% 6-12%Terminal periodGrowth rate 2.2% 2.2% 2.2% 2.0% 2.0% 2.0%Operating margin 9.0% 7.2% 12.7% 9.1% 7.2% 12.2%Sensitivity analysisOperating margin – decline (percentage points) 7.7% 3.3% 1.3% 0.2% 1.7% 2.4%Revenue growth in budget period – allowed decline (percentage points) 2.5% 19.5% 2.5% 0.5% 8.8% 5.3%Discount rate – allowed increase (percentage points) 1.4% 9.5% 1.0% 0.1% 3.1% 2.0% HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 112 / 144 Note 4.5 Accounting policy Goodwill At the acquisition date, goodwill is recognised in the balance sheet at cost as described under Business combinations. Subsequently, goodwill is measured at cost less accumulated impairment losses. Goodwill is not amortised but is tested for impairment at least once a year. Goodwill is written down to the recov- erable amount if the carrying amount is higher than the computed recoverable amount. The recoverable amount is computed as the present value of the ex- pected future net cash flows from the enterprises or activities to which the goodwill is allocated. Impair- ment of goodwill is not reversed. The carrying amount of goodwill is allocated to the Group’s cash-generating units at the acquisition date. Identification of cash-generating units is based on the management structure and independent cash inflows. Intangible assets Trademarks Trademarks are initially recognised at cost. Subse- quently, trademarks are measured at cost less accu- mulated amortisation and impairment. Trademarks are amortised on a straight-line basis over their estimated useful lives up to no more than 10 years. Trademarks are tested for impairment on an annual basis using the relief-from-royalty method and based on future free cash flows expected to be generated by the individual trademark during the following five years and projections for subsequent years. Software development projects In-progress and completed software development projects that are clearly defined and identifiable where the technical equality, sufficient resources, and a potential future market or potential for use in the group can be demonstrated and where it is intended to manufacture, market or use project. These assets are recognised as intangible assets if the cost price can be reliably determined and there is sufficient reasonable assurance that future earnings or the net selling price may cover production, sales, administration and development costs. Other development costs are recognised in the income statement under other external costs, as costs likely to be held. Development costs are measured at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment losses. Cost includes salaries, depreciation and other costs attibutable to the Group’s development activities and borrowing costs from specific and general borrowing that relate directly to the development of develop- ment projects. Upon completion of the development work, develop- ment projects are amortised on a straight-line basis over the assessment period economic life from the time the asset is ready for use. The amortisation period usually constitutes 3-5 years. The amortisation basis is reduced by any write- downs. Property, plant and equipment Land and buildings, plant and machinery and fixtures and fittings, other plant and equipment are measured at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment losses. Cost comprises the purchase price and costs of materials, components, suppliers, direct wages and salaries and indirect production costs until the date when the asset is available for use. Depreciation is provided on a straight-line basis over the expected useful lives, which are 10-30 years for buildings, 3-5 years for operating assets and equip- ment, and 3-5 years for leasehold improvements. Business combinations Acquisitions of businesses are accounted for using the acquisition method. The cost of an acquisition is measured as the consideration transferred for assets acquired and liabilities assumed in the business com- bination measured at fair value on acquisition date. Deferred tax related to the revaluations is recognised. The most significant assets acquired generally com- prise goodwill, property, plant and equipment and inventory. The consideration paid for a business consists of the fair value of the agreed consideration in the form of the assets transferred, equity instruments issued, and liabilities assumed at the date of acquisition. Any adjustments after 12 months has been and will be recognised in income statement as a fair value adjust- ment of the consideration payable. Lease agreements The Group has lease contracts for leaseholds, vehicles and other equipment used in its opera- tions. Lease of leaseholds generally has lease terms between 3 and 5 years, while vehicles generally have lease terms between 5 and 6 years. Generally, the Group is restricted from assigning and subleasing the leased assets. There are several lease contracts that include extension and termination options and variable lease payments. These options are negotiat- ed by management to provide flexibility in managing the leased-asset portfolio and align with the Group’s business needs. Management exercises judgement in determining whether these extension and termination options are reasonably certain to be exercised. The lease obligation is measured at amortised cost using the effective interest rate method. The lease obligation is remeasured when changes in the under- lying contractual cash flows occur from e.g. changes in an index or a borrowing rate, changes in determin- ing whether extension and termination options are reasonably certain to be exercised. The Group recognises right-of-use assets at the commencement date of the lease (i.e. the date the underlying asset is available for use). Right-of-use assets are measured at cost, less any accumulated depreciation and impairment losses, and adjusted for any remeasurement of lease agreements. Subse- quently the right-of-use asset is measured at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment losses. The right-of-use asset is adjusted for changes in the lease obligation as a consequence of changes in lease terms or changes in the cash flows of the lease agreement upon changes in an index or a borrowing rate. Right-of-use assets are depreciated on a straightline basis over the shorter of the lease term and the esti- mated useful lives of the assets, as follows: Leaseholds: 3-5 years Cars: 5-6 years The Group presents lease assets and lease obliga- tions separately in the balance sheet. The Group also has certain leases of other equipment with lease terms of 12 months or less and leases of office equipment with low value. The Group applies the short-term lease and lease of low-value assets’ recognition exemptions for these leases. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 113 / 144 5 Funding and capital structure actions) or when they need to be adjusted to reflect the terms and conditions of the lease. The Group es- timates the incremental borrowing rate using observa- ble inputs (such as market interest rates) when avail- able and is required to make certain entity-specific estimates (such as the subsidiary’s stand-alone credit rating). In determining its incremental borrowing rate, the Group groups its lease assets in two categories in which the Group assesses that the lease agreements and the underlying assets in each category have the same characteristics and risk profile. The categories are as follows: • Leaseholds • Cars The Group determines its incremental borrowing rate for the above categories in relation to the first recognition in the balance sheet. Moreover, it is de- termined in connection with subsequent changes in the underlying contractual cash flows upon changes in the estimation of a changed assessment of the use of the extension or termination options or in case of altered agreements. In the determination of the incremental borrowing rate for leaseholds the Group has performed its determi- nation based on an interest rate from a mortgage loan with a loan maturity that resembles the maturity of the lease agreements. The rate on the financing of the part where a mortgage loan cannot be accomplished, has been estimated based on a reference rate with a supplement of a credit margin from the Group’s existing credit facilities. The Group has adjusted the credit margin for lessor’s right to take back the asset in case of violation of the lease payments (secured debt). The Group has determined its incremental borrowing rate on lease agreements regarding cars with basis on a reference rate with a credit margin from the Company’s existing credit facilities. The applied incremental borrowing rates are 5-6%. Note 4.6 Significant estimates and judgements Impairment of non-financial assets Impairment exists when the carrying value of an asset or cash generating unit (CGU) exceeds its recoverable amount, which is the higher of its fair value less costs of disposal and its value in use. The fair value less costs of disposal calculation is based on available data from binding sales transac- tions, conducted at arm’s length, for similar assets or observable market prices less incremental costs of disposing of the asset. The value in use calculation is based on a Discounted Cash Flow model. The cash flows are derived from the budget for the next five years and do not include restructuring activities that the Group is not yet committed to or significant future investments that will enhance the performance of the assets of the CGU being tested. The recoverable amount is sensitive to the discount rate used for the DCF model as well as the expected future cash-inflows and the growth rate used for the terminal period. These estimates are most relevant to goodwill with indefinite useful lives recognised by the Group. The key assumptions used to determine the recover- able amount for the different CGUs, including a sen- sitivity analysis, are disclosed and further explained in Note 4.4. Business Combinations Key assumptions for the methods applied in deter- mining the fair value is based on the present value of future cash flows, churn rates or the expected cash flows related to the specific asset. Estimates and methodologies used, can have a material impact on the respective values and ultimately the amount of the fair values recognised for identifiable assets and liabilities of the acquired business. Transferred, equity instruments issued, and liabilities assumed at the date of acquisition. If part of the consideration is contingent on future events, such consideration is recognised at fair value. Subsequent changes in the fair value of contingent consideration are recognised in the income statement. A positive excess (goodwill) of the consideration transferred over the fair value of the identifiable net assets acquired is recorded as goodwill. If uncer- tainties regarding identification or measurement of acquired assets, liabilities or contingent liabilities or determination of the consideration transferred exist at the acquisition date, initial recognition will be based on provisional values. Any adjustments in the provisional values, including goodwill, are adjusted retrospectively, until 12 months after the acquisition date, and comparative figures are restated Leases - Estimating the incremental borrowing rate The Group cannot readily determine the interest rate implicit in the lease. Therefore, it uses its incremen- tal borrowing rate to measure lease liabilities. The incremental borrowing rate is the rate of interest that the Group would have to pay to borrow over a similar term, and with a similar security, the funds necessary to obtain an asset of a similar value to the right-of-use asset in a similar economic environment. The incre- mental borrowing rate therefore reflects what the Group ‘would have to pay’, which requires estimation when no observable rates are available (such as for subsidiaries that do not enter into financing trans- HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 114 / 144 5 Funding and capital structure Section 5 Funding and capital structure This section includes information regarding the Group’s capital structure, and information on how the activities and investments of the Group are funded. Information regarding the Group’s exposure towards liquidity and interest rate risk is also included in this section. Note 5.1 Equity Nominal Number DKK’000valueof shares2023Share capitalShare capital at 1 January (issued and fully paid) 91,050 18,210,000Increase of share capital 17,500 3,500,000Share capital at 31 December 108,550 21,710,0002022Share capitalShare capital at 1 January (issued and fully paid) 100,000 20,000,000Reduction of share capital -8,950 -1,790,000Share capital at 31 December 91,050 18,210,000 The Company’s share capital is nominally DKK 108,550,000 divided into 21,710,000 shares of DKK 5 each or multiples hereof. The following notes are presented in Section 5: Note 5.1 Equity 115 Note 5.2 Treasury shares 116 Note 5.3 Borrowings and non-current liabilities 116 Note 5.4 Lease liabilities 117 Note 5.5 Financial income and expenses 118 Note 5.6 Trade payables 118 Note 5.7 Financial risk management 118 Note 5.8 Accounting policy 120 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 115 / 144 Note 5.3 Borrowings and non-current liabilities DKK’000 2023 2022Borrowings Non-current liabilities 557,612 748,150Current liabilities 21,941 24,920Total carrying amount 579,553 773,069Nominal value 595,502 789,024Interest-bearing borrowings, incl. lease liabilities Interest-bearing borrowings at 1 January 773,069 768,381Additions 5,381 4,897Additions from business combinations 0 17,827Repayment of long-term debt -675,000 -125,000Proceeds from loans 500,000 125,000Repayment of mortgage -948 -523Repayment of lease liabilities -23,736 -22,697Other (amortised cost, reassesment leasing liabilities IFRS 16 etc.) 663 8,579Exchange rate adjustments 124 -3,395Interest-bearing borrowings at 31 December 579,553 773,069 Note 5.2 Treasury shares Number of shares 2023 2022Treasury shares at 1 January 209,989 1,683,058Acquisition of treasury shares 173,500 316,931Cancellation of treasury shares 0 -1,790,000Transfers related to RSU programme -153,186 0Treasury shares at 31 December 230,303 209,989Market value of treasury shares based on quoted share price at 31 December, DKK million 10,709,090 8,609,549 Until 1 November 2025, the Board of Directors are au- thorised to approve the acquisition of shares (treasury shares), on one or more occasions, with a total nomi- nal value of up to 10% of the share capital of the Com- pany from time to time, provided that the Company’s hold of treasury shares after such acquisition does not exceed 10% of the share capital. The consideration paid for such shares may not deviate more than 10% from the official price quoted on Nasdaq Copenha- gen at the date of the acquisition as determined by the Board of Directors. Based on this authorisation, the Board of Directors has authorised Executive Management to initiate share buy-backs of treasury shares to fully cover the Company’s obligations under its long-term incentive programme. The treasury shares are held for the purpose of cancellation and HusCompagniet's commitments under RSU incentive programmes. In 2023, a share buy back of 173,500 shares was initiated and completed. The share buy back amounted to DKK 8 million. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 116 / 144 Interest Average Carrying DKK’000 Currencyrateinterest rateamount2023 Bank borrowings DKK Floating 5.75% 506,808Commitments on leasing agreements DKK Fixed-rate 5.81% 72,745579,5532022 Bank borrowings DKK Floating 2.06% 683,506Commitments on leasing agreements DKK Fixed-rate 5.85% 89,563773,069 Note 5.4 Lease liabilities DKK’000 2023 2022Lease liabilitiesMaturity of lease liabilitiesDue within 1 year 21,004 23,874Due between 1 and 5 years 43,026 55,228Due after 5 years 8,715 10,461Total lease liabilities at 31 December 72,745 89,563Lease liabilities recognised in balance sheetHereof short-term lease liabilities 21,004 23,874Hereof long-term lease liabilities 51,741 65,689Amounts recognised in income statementInterest expenses related to lease liabilities 4,333 5,014Costs related to leases less than 12 months (included in cost of sales) 0 0Costs related to leasing contracts of low value (included in operating expenses) 107 0Total amount recognised in income statement 4,440 5,014 Reference is made to note 4.3 for statement of right-of-use assets in connection with lease liabilities. Note 5.3 Borrowings and non-current liabilities (continued) HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 117 / 144 Note 5.7 Financial risk management HusCompagniet's Group’s activities and capital structure are exposed to a variety of financial risks: Market risks (including currency risk, interest rate risk and price risk), credit risk and liquidity risk. Group management oversees the management of these risks in accordance with the Group’s risk management policies. This section includes description of the risks related to liquidity risk and interest rate risk. Please refer to section 2 for description of currency risk, and section 3 for description of credit risk. Liquidity risk The Group does not receive payment until construc- tion is finished and the house is handed over to the client. Accordingly, the Group needs sufficient credit facili- ties to fund constructions in progress. The Group continues monitoring the need of liquidity. 31 December 2023, the Group has an undrawn credit facility of DKK 250 million to ensure that the Group is able to meet its obligations (2022: DKK 400 million). The Management considers the credit availability to be sufficient for the next 12 months. The financial leverage at year-end 2023 was 3.3x net debt to EBITDA before special items. The leverage ratio - Net interest bearing debt divided with LTM adjusted EBITDA may not exceed 3.5x end of quarters according to the current bank agreement. The cash flows presented on the next page are non-discounted amounts, on the earliest possible date at which the Group can be required to settle the financial liability. Floating interest payments on bank borrowings have been determined applying a forward curve on the underlying interest rate at the reporting date. Note 5.5 Financial income and expenses DKK’000 2023 2022Financial income Interests received from banks 2,252 310Exchange rate gains 0 281Other financial income 48 105Total financial income 2,301 697Financial expensesInterest paid to banks 31,695 18,694Interest lease liabilities 4,333 5,014Exchange rate losses 887 33Other financial cost 3,915 4,044Total financial expenses 40,830 27,784Net financials -38,529 -27,088 Note 5.6 Trade payables DKK’000 2023 2022Trade and other payables Trade payables 237,580 463,935Accrued trade payables 54,708 58,312Total trade payables 292,288 522,247 All amounts are short-term. The carrying values of trade payables are considered to be a reasonable approximation of fair value. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 118 / 144 Note 5.7 Financial risk management (continued) Due within Due between Due between Due after Total contractual Carrying Contractual maturity analysis of financial liabilities DKK’0001 year1 and 3 years3 and 5 years5 yearscash flowamount2023Non-derivative financial liabilities Trade and other payables 292,288 0 0 0 292,288 292,288Bank borrowings 29,968 59,935 59,935 506,763 656,601 506,808Lease liabilities 23,613 32,958 16,843 8,924 82,338 72,745Total non-derivative financial liabilities 345,869 92,893 76,778 515,687 1,031,227 871,8412022Non-derivative financial liabilities Trade and other payables 522,247 0 0 0 522,247 522,247Bank borrowings 23,148 699,258 2,236 5,818 730,460 683,506Lease liabilities 26,850 38,520 19,560 17,677 102,608 89,563Total non-derivative financial liabilities 572,245 737,778 21,796 23,495 1.355,315 1.295,316 The presented cash flows are non-discounted amounts, on the earliest possible date at which the Group can be required to settle the financial liability. Floating interest payments on bank borrowings have been determined applying a forward curve on the underlying interest rate at the reporting date. Interest rate risk HusCompagniet is exposed to fluctuations in market interest rates primarily related to the Group's long- term loan with floating rates. The bank agreement expires in 2026 with a two year extention option. At 31 December 2023 the Group's long-term debt is kept at floating rates based on the 3M CIBOR with a variable interest rate based on the quarterly leverage ratio. If the interest rate increased (decreased) by 1% the effect on interest during 2023 would have been DKK 5 million (2022: DKK 6.7 million, 2021: 6.7 million). HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 119 / 144 6 Other disclosures Note 5.8 Accounting policy Equity Dividends The expected dividend payment for the year is disclosed as a separate item in equity. Proposed divi- dends are recognised as a liability at the date they are adopted by the Annual General Meeting (declaration date). Foreign currency translation reserve The reserve comprises currency translation adjust- ments arising on the translation of financial state- ments of foreign subsidiaries from their functional currencies into the presentation currency used by HusCompagniet. Financial income and expenses Financial income and expenses comprise interest income and expenses including interest on leases, cost of permanent loan facilities, gains and losses on securities, receivables, payables and transactions denominated in foreign currencies, amortisation of financial assets and liabilities, etc. Financial assets Financial assets are measured at amortised cost. The Group determines the classification of its financial assets at initial recognition. All financial assets are recognised initially at fair value plus, in the case of assets not at fair value through profit or loss, directly attributable transaction costs. Financial liabilities All financial liabilities are recognised initially at fair value and, in the case of loans and borrowings, carried at amortised cost. This includes directly attrib- utable transaction costs. The Group’s financial liabilities comprise trade paya- bles, borrowings and other payables. Note 5.7 Financial risk management (continued) DKK’000 2023 2022Categories of financial assets and financial liabilitiesCash (financial assets at amortised cost) 223,454 5,207Receivables (financial assets at amortised cost) 155,971 221,372Bank borrowings (financial liabilities at amortised cost) 506,808 683,506Lease liabilities (financial liabilities at amortised cost) 72,745 89,563Trade and other payables (financial liabilities at amortised cost) 292,288 522,247 It is estimated that the fair value of financial assets and liabilities corresponds to carrying amount in balance sheet. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 120 / 144 6 Other disclosures Section 6 Other disclosures This section includes other disclosures required by IFRS or additional disclosures required by the Danish Financial Statements Act. Note 6.1 Tax DKK’000 2023 2022TaxTax for the year can be specified as follows:Tax on profit from continued operations 6,438 50,449Tax on profit from discontinued operations 2,197 6,547Income taxes in the income statement 8,634 56,996Current tax continued operationsTax for the year from continued operations can be specified as follows:Income tax 22,796 57,426Movement in deferred tax -15,891 -7,193Adjustment relating to previous years -468 216Income taxes in the income statement 6,437 50,449Profit before tax 23,775 240,927Tax rate, Denmark 22.00% 22.00%Calculated tax at the applicable rate for continued operations 5,231 53,004Non-taxable income -2,095 -5,788Expenses not deductible for tax purposes 4,876 2,245Adjustments related to prior years -467 216Effective change in tax rate 0 0Other -1,108 772Tax expense for the year 6,437 50,449Effective tax rate, % 27.08% 20.94% Expenses not deductible for tax purpose primarily relates to costs related to aquisition of DanHaus Production A/S. The following notes are presented in Section 6: Note 6.1 Tax 121 Note 6.2 Discontinued operations 122 Note 6.3 Other non-cash items 123 Note 6.4 Related parties 123 Note 6.5 Auditor’s fee 124 Note 6.6 Events after the balance sheet date 124 Note 6.7 List of Group companies 124 Note 6.8 Definitions 125 Note 6.9 Accounting policy 126 Note 6.10 Significant estimates and judgements 126 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 121 / 144 Note 6.1 Tax (continued) DKK’000 2023 2022Deferred taxDeferred tax at 1 January -13,488 -10,531Recognised in profit or loss, continued business 15,891 -7,193Recognised in profit or loss, discontinued business -1,359 3,701Adjustments relating to prior years 1,332 92Exchange differences 36 443Deferred tax at 31 December 2,412 -13,488 Deferred tax is presented in the statement of financial position as follows: Deferred tax Deferred tax Deferred tax Deferred tax DKK’000asset 2023liability 2023asset 2022liability 2022Intangible assets 178 0 0 3,071Right-of-use assets and property, plant and equipment 5,776 -12,540 4,215 10,394Construction contracts 0 -17,650 0 29,277Other payables 5 0 5 0Tax loss carried forward 26,643 0 25,034 0Deferred tax 32,602 -30,190 29,254 42,742 Note 6.2 Discontinued operations In 2019, the Group decided to close down its German activities and to focus on its original core market segments. The decision was driven by the difficulty of establishing a network of suppliers to support its business and of establishing significant brand recog- nition in a new large market. Also in 2019, the Group decided to cease its Swedish brick-house business activities due to the substantial differences in the supply and sales process in Sweden as compared to Denmark and due to Swedish customer preferences for wood rather than brick houses. The German and Swedish brick house activities were closed down dur- ing September 2020. The closing of the discontinued operations are proceeding as expected. The closing is expected to be finalised in 2024. Costs incurred in 2023 have been on a lower level. Fi- nance costs are mainly related to currency exchange losses from intercompany loans and tax on profit/ (loss) are related to adjustment of deferred tax and income taxes for the year. DKK’000 2023 2022Corporation tax payableCorporation tax payable at 1 January 40,750 44,998Foreign exchange adjustments -12 547Adjustment of corporation tax related to prior year -308 -216Current tax including jointly taxed subsidiaries, from continued business 23,139 57,642Current tax including jointly taxed subsidiaries, from discontinued business 838 2,846Corporation tax regarding previous years tranferred from other receivables 0 0Corporation tax paid during the year -44,980 -65,066Tax related to financial instruments 0 0Corporation tax payable at 31 December 19,427 40,750 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 122 / 144 Note 6.3 Other non-cash items DKK’000 2023 2022Movements in provisions recognised in the income statement 6,559 -8,345Movement in provisions regarding discontinued business 0 0Non-cash financial items 11,395 17,093Other non-cash items 17,954 8,748 Non-cash financial items consists of share based payments, equity movements from previous years, write down on right-of-use assets and other adjustments. Note 6.4 Related parties Transactions with Executive Management & Board of Directors Transactions with the Executive Management & Board of Directors include transactions with companies controlled by the Executive Management & Board of Directors. Reference is made to note 2.2 and note 2.3. Related parties with a significant influence HusCompagniet A/S has no related parties with control of the Group and no related parties with significant influence other than key management personnel in the form of the Board of Directors and the Executive Management. Significant transactions between the Group and related parties with a significant influence There were no transactions between the Group and related parties with a significant influence besides remuneration in 2023 (2022: no transactions besides remuneration). Note 6.2 Discontinued operations (continued) DKK’000 2023 2022Revenue 0 5Expenses -317 -198Impairment 0 0Operating income -317 -193Finance costs -169 -13,428Profit / (loss) before tax from discontinued operations -486 -16,621Tax on profit / (loss) -2,197 -6,547Profit / (loss) after tax for the period from discontinued operations -2,683 -20,169Earnings per share (EPS) (DKK) from discontinued business -0.1 -1.1Diluted earnings per share (EPS-D) (DKK) from discontinued business -0.1 -1.2 The net cash flows generated / (incurred) by the business segments brick houses in Sweden and the operations in Germany are, as follows: Financing costs are mainly related to currency exchange losses from intercompany loans. Tax on profit/ (loss) are mainly related to adjustment of deferred tax and income tax. DKK’000 2023 2022Operating cash flow -5,015 -3,222Investing cash flow 0 0Financing cash flow 2,252 -6,100Net cash inflow / (outflow) 2,763 -9,322 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 123 / 144 Note 6.5 Auditor’s fee Group ParentFees to auditors DKK’000 2023 2022 2023 2022Audit services 2,208 2,221 669 813Other assurance engagements 44 0 15 0Tax advice services 64 0 64 0Other non-audit services 30 240 0 212Total 2,346 2,461 748 1,025 The fee for non-audit services and assurance engagements delivered by EY Godkendt Revisionspartnerselskab to the Group amounts to DKK 0,1 million (2022: DKK 0,2 million) and consists of other assurance engagements, tax and VAT advisory services and other services. Note 6.6 Events after the balance sheet date No material events have occurred between 31 December 2023 and the date of publication of this annual report that have not already been included in the annual report and that would have a material effect on the assessment of the Group’s financial position. Note 6.7 List of Group companies Investment in Group companies comprise the following at 31 December 2023. Country of % equity interestName incorporation 2023 2022HusCompagniet Holding A/S Denmark 100% 100%HusCompagniet Danmark A/S Denmark 100% 100%RækkehusCompagniet A/S Denmark 100% 100%HusCompagniet Production A/S Denmark 100% 100%Svenska Huscompagniet AB (Discontinued) Sweden 100% 100%VårgårdaHus AB Sweden 100% 100%HusCompagniet Sverige AB Sweden 100% 100%Svenska HusCompagniet Fastighetsutveckling AB Sweden 100% 100%Svenska HusCompagniet Fastighetsutveckling Allerum 1 AB Sweden 100% 100%Svenska HusCompagniet Fastighetsutveckling Allerum 2 AB Sweden 100% 100%Die Haus-Compagnie GmbH (Discontinued) Germany 100% 100% Die Haus-Compagnie GmbH, Deutschland sind eine vollständig konsolidierte Tochtergesellschaft, die Freistellungsbestimmung in § 264, Absatz 3 HGB nutzen. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 124 / 144 Note 6.8 Definitions Definition of key figures and ratios The financial ratios under consolidated key figures have been calculated as follows: Gross margin Gross profit x 100 Revenue EBITDA margin EBITDA before special items x 100 before special items Revenue EBITA margin EBITA after special items x 100 after special items Revenue Earnings per share Profit for the year excl. non-controlling interests Average number of outstanding shares Diluted earnings per share Profit for the year excl. non-controlling interests Diluted average number of outstanding shares Dividend per share Proposed dividend for the year Number of shares at the end of the year Market value Number of outstanding shares x share price end of year NIBD/EBITDA Net interest bearing debt, year-end before special items EBITDA before special items Average selling price House delivered revenue Number of houses delivered Return on invested Operating profit (EBIT) before special items x 100 capital before tax Average invested capital Free cash flow Cash flow from operating activities + Cash generated from investment activites Glossary EBITDA before special items: Operating profit before depreciations, amortisations, financial items, tax and special items EBITDA: Operating profit before depreciations, amor- tisations, financial items and tax EBIT: Operating profit before financial items and tax Net working capital (NWC): Trade receivables, other receivables and other current operating assets less trade payables, other payables, prepayments and other current operational liabilities Net interest bearing debt: Cash less bank loans and other loans less bank debt less lease liabilities Special items: Special items comprise non-recurring income and expenses, reference to note 2.4 Margin before special items: Consists of defined margins adjusted for special items ASP (average selling price): House delivered revenue / Number of houses delivered Invested capital: NWC + property, plant and equip- ment, right-of-use (ROU) assets, intangible assets including goodwill and customer relationships less long-term provisions Order book Delivery obligations are secured orders from custom- ers, where HusCompagniet are required to build a house for the customer Key figures and ratios ESG key figures have been calculated in accordance with FSR - Danish Auditors, CFA Society Denmark and Nasdaq’s 15 suggestions on standardised ESG key figures for the annual report * Earnings per share (EPS) and diluted earnings (EPS-D) are determined in accordance with IAS 33 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 125 / 144 Note 6.9 Accounting policy Current income tax The parent company is jointly taxed with all Danish subsidiaries. The current Danish corporation tax is allocated between the jointly-taxed companies in pro- portion to their taxable income. The jointly-taxed com- panies are taxed under the on-account tax scheme. Tax for the year comprises current tax and changes in deferred tax for the year. The tax expense relating to the profit (loss) for the year is recognised in the income statement, and the tax expense relating to amounts recognised in other comprehensive income is recognised in other comprehensive income. Current tax payable is recognised in current liabilities and deferred tax is recognised in non-current liabil- ities. Tax receivable is recognised in current assets and deferred tax assets are recognised in non-current assets. Deferred tax Current tax payable and receivable is recognised in the balance sheet as tax computed on the taxable income for the period, adjusted for tax on the taxable income of prior periods and for tax paid on account. Deferred tax is measured using the balance sheet liability method on all temporary differences between the carrying amount and the tax value of assets and liabilities. Where alternative tax rules can be applied to determine the tax base, deferred tax is measured based on the planned use of the asset or settlement of the liability, respectively. Deferred tax assets, including the tax value of tax loss carry-forwards, are measured at the expected value of their utilisation; either as a set-off against tax on future income or as a set-off against deferred tax liabilities in the same legal tax entity. Any deferred net assets are measured at net realisable values. Deferred tax is measured according to the tax rules and at the tax rates applicable at the balance sheet date when the deferred tax is expected to crystal- lise as current tax. Changes in deferred tax due to changes in the tax rate are recognised in the income statement. Discontinued business Discontinued operations are a considerable compo- nent of the entity the operations and cash flows of which can be clearly distinguished, operationally and for financial reporting purposes, from the rest of the entity and that have either been disposed of or is clas- sified as held for sale and expected to be disposed of within one year according to a formal plan. Net profit / (loss) from discontinued operations and value adjust- ments after tax of the associated assets and liabilities and gains / losses on sale are presented as a separate line in the income statement. Revenue, expenses, value adjustments and tax of discontinued operations are disclosed in the notes. Assets and related liabilities for discontinued operations are reported as separate line items in the balance sheet without restatement of comparative figures. Cash flows from the operating, investing and financing activities of discontinued operations are disclosed in note 6.2. Note 6.10 Significant estimates and judgements Recovery of deferred tax assets Deferred tax assets are recognised for all unused tax losses, to the extent that it is considered likely that tax surpluses in which deficits can be offset. Determin- ing the amount recognised for deferred tax assets are based on estimates of the likely timing and the amount of future taxable profits. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 126 / 144 Parent Company HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 127 / 144 Parent Company financial statement Income statement – parent DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Revenue 2 24,653 20,982 Staff cost 3 -24,464 -20,823 Other external expenses -4,729 -4,628 Operating profit before depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) before special items -4,540 -4,469 Special items 4 1,891 -5,249 Operating profit before depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) after special items -2,649 -9,718 Depreciation and amortisation 0 0 Operating profit (EBIT) -2,649 -9,718 Share of result from subsidiaries after tax 7 80,402 205,166 Financial income 55 4 Financial expenses 5 -77,293 -32,498 Profit before tax 515 162,955 Tax on profit 6 14,141 7,354 Profit for the year 14,656 170,309 Profits attributable to: Equity owners of the Company 14,656 170,309 Statement of other comprehensive income DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Profit for the year 14,656 170,309 Other comprehensive income Items that may be reclassified to the income statement in subsequent periods Foreign currency translation differences, subsidiary 1,662 -11,720 Other comprehensive income, net of tax 1,662 -11,720 Total comprehensive income for the year 16,318 158,590 Total comprehensive income attributable to: Equity owners of the Company 16,318 158,590 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 128 / 144 Balance sheet – parent DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Assets Non-current assets Investments in subsidiaries 7 3,528,975 3,446,760 Total non-current assets 3,528,975 3,446,760 Current assets Income tax receivable 6 13,903 26,526 Receivables from affiliated companies 7,185 3,172 Total current assets 21,088 29,698 Total assets 3,550,063 3,476,458 DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Equity and liabilities Equity Share capital 108,550 91,050 Retained earnings and other reserves 1,989,043 1,790,040 Total equity 2,097,593 1,881,090 Liabilities Non-current liabilities Borrowings 10 497,075 672,825 Total non-current liabilities 497,075 672,825 Current liabilities Credit institutions 7,388 5,462 Trade and other payables 914 3,010 Payables to affiliated companies 937,270 909,041 Other liabilities 9,823 5,031 Total current liabilities 955,395 922,543 Total liabilities 1,452,470 1,595,369 Total equity and liabilities 3,550,063 3,476,458 Reference to off-balance sheet notes: Other disclosures 12. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 129 / 144 Statement of cash flows – parent DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Cash flow from operating activities EBITDA, after special items -2,649 -9,718 EBITDA -2,649 -9,718 Adjustments for non-cash items 9 9,707 6,615 Adjustet EBITDA 7,058 -3,103 Changes in working capital 8 2,696 2,667 Cash flow from operating activities before financial items and taxes 9,754 -435 Interest paid -77,238 -32,493 Corporation tax received 26,526 7,335 Net cash generated from operating activities -40,958 -25,593 Cash flow from financing activities Change in intercompany balances 24,303 191,134 Repayment of long-term debt 10 -675,000 -125,000 Proceeds from loans 501,178 128,556 Dividends from own treasury shares 0 0 Dividends to equity holders 0 -132,276 Acquisition of own shares -7,935 -36,821 Capital increase 206,500 0 Transaction costs share issue -8,088 Net cash generated from financing activities 40,958 25,593 Total cash flows Cash and cash equivalents at 1 January 0 0 Net foreign currency gains or losses 0 0 Cash and cash equivalents at 31 December 0 0 DKK’000 Note 2023 2022 Cash and cash equivalents Cash at bank and on hand 0 0 Cash and cash equivalents as at 31 December 0 0 Bank overdrafts 0 0 Net cash and cash equivalents as at 31 December 0 0 The cash flow statement cannot be inferred from the published financial information only. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 130 / 144 Statement of changes in equity – parent DKK’000 Share capital Revaluations reserve under the equity method Retained earnings Proposed dividend Total 2023 Equity at 1 January 91,050 1,129,713 660,327 0 1,881,090 Profit for the period 0 0 14,656 0 14,656 Reserve for net revaluation according to equity method 0 80,402 -80,402 0 0 Other comprehensive income: Foreign currency translation differences, subsidiary 0 1,662 0 0 1,662 Total other comprehensive income 0 1,662 0 0 1,662 Transactions with owners of the Company and other equity transactions: Capital increase 17,500 0 189,000 0 206,500 Transaction costs capital increase 0 0 -8,087 0 -8,087 Value of share-based payment 0 0 9,707 0 9,707 Purchase of own shares 0 0 -7,935 0 -7,935 Total transactions with owners of the Company and other equity transactions 17,500 0 182,685 0 200,185 Equity on 31 December 108,550 1,211,777 777,266 0 2,097,593 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 131 / 144 Statement of changes in equity – parent DKK’000 Share capital Revaluations reserve under the equity method Retained earnings Proposed dividend Total 2022 Equity at 1 January 100,000 936,266 716,440 132,276 1,884,982 Profit for the period 0 0 170,309 0 170,309 Reserve for net revaluation according to equity method 0 205,166 -205,166 0 0 Other comprehensive income: Foreign currency translation differences, subsidiary 0 -11,719 0 0 -11,719 Total other comprehensive income 0 -11,719 0 0 -11,719 Transactions with owners of the Company and other equity transactions: Capital reduction -8,950 0 8,950 0 0 Value of share-based payment 0 0 6,615 0 6,615 Purchase of own shares 0 0 -36,821 0 -36,821 Dividends paid 0 0 0 -132,276 -132,276 Total transactions with owners of the Company and other equity transactions -8,950 0 -21,256 -132,276 -162,482 Equity on 31 December 91,050 1,129,713 660,327 0 1,881,090 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 132 / 144 Parent Company financial statements Notes Note 1 Summary of significant accounting policies Basis of preparation The seperate financial statements are prepared in accordance with IFRS® Accounting Standards as adopted by the EU and additional requirements of the Danish Financial Statements Act for class D compa- nies. The separate financial statements have been- prepared on a historical cost basis, except as noted in the various accounting policies. These separate financial statements are expressed in DKK, as this is HusCompagniet’s functional and presentation currency. All values are rounded to the nearest thousand DKK ‘000. The accounting policies of the Parent Company are unchanged from last year and identical to the accounting policies in the consolidated financial state- ments, with the following exceptions. Investments in subsidiaries The Company’s investments in subsidiaries are ac- counted for using the equity method. Under the equity method, the investments in subsid- iaries are initially recognised at cost. The carrying amount of the investment is adjusted to recognise changes in the Company’s share of net assets of the subsidiary since the acquisition date. Goodwill relating to the subsidiary is included in the carrying amount of the investment and is not tested for impair- ment individually, but on Group level. The statement of profit or loss reflects the Company’s share of the results of operations of the subsidiary. Any change in OCI of those investees is presented as part of the Company’s OCI. In addition, when there has been a change recognised directly in the equity of the subsidiary, the Company recognises its share of any changes, when applicable, in the statement of changes in equity. Unrealised gains and losses result- ing from transactions between the Company and the subsidiaries are eliminated in the subsidiary. The aggregate of the Company’s share of profit or loss of a subsidiary is shown on the face of the statement of profit or loss outside operating profit and represents profit or loss after tax of the subsidiary. The financial statements of the subsidiaries are pre- pared for the same reporting period as the Company. When necessary, adjustments are made to bring the accounting policies in line with those of the Company. After application of the equity method, the Company determines whether it is necessary to recognise an impairment loss on its investment in its subsidiaries. At each reporting date, the Company determines whether there is an impairment indicator. If there is such evidence, the Company calculates the amount of impairment as the difference between the recovera- ble amount of the subsidiary and its carrying value, and then recognises the loss as ‘Share of profit of a subsidiary’ in the income statement. Net revaluation reserve to the equity method The net revaluation reserve according to the equity method comprises net revaluations of equity invest- ments in Group entities compared to cost compris- ing i.a. recognised shares of profit/loss and foreign exchange adjustments less dividends. The reserve can be eliminated in case of losses, reali- sation of equity investments or changes in accounting estimates. The reserve cannot be recognised at a negative amount. Significant judgement and estimates Reference is made to the consolidated financial state- ments on page 90. In this section Note 1 Summary of significant accounting policies 133 Note 2 Revenue 134 Note 3 Costs including staff costs and remuneration 134 Note 4 Special items 135 Note 5 Finance costs 135 Note 6 Income taxes 136 Note 7 Investments in subsidiaries 136 Note 8 Changes in working capital 136 Note 9 Adjustments for non-cash items 137 Note 10 Borrowings 137 Note 11 Auditor's fee 137 Note 12 Other disclosures 137 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 133 / 144 Note 3 Costs including staff costs and remuneration DKK’000 2023 2022 Staff costs Wages and salaries 23,413 22,989 Other social security costs 19 13 Share based payment 3,271 1,895 Movement in bonus provision -3,295 -2,233 Transferred to special items 1,056 -1,841 Total 24,464 20,823 Average number of full-time employees 3 2 Number of full-time employees at year-end 3 3 DKK’000 2023 2022 Remuneration of Board of Directors Base salary and non-monetary benefits 3,263 3,050 Total remuneration 3,263 3,050 Remuneration of Executive Management Base salary and non-monetary benefits 7,311 7,896 Share-based remuneration 3,498 1,208 Bonus 3,465 2,658 Severance Pay 2,703 0 Total remuneration 14,732 11,762 Remuneration of Executive Management Base salary and non-monetary benefits 4,927 3,220 Share-based remuneration 1,135 0 Bonus 2,554 0 Total remuneration 8,616 3,220 Note 2 Revenue The Company was engaged in the below related parties transactions: DKK’000 2023 2022 Sales of services (Management fee and allocated income) from subsidaries 24,653 20,982 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 134 / 144 Note 3 Costs including staff costs and remuneration (continued) Note 4 Special items DKK’000 2023 2022 Strategic organisational changes 0 1,077 Accrued costs in connection with acquisition and vendor due dilligence -900 2,331 Other special items -991 1,841 Total special items -1,891 5,249 DKK’000 2023 2022 Reconciliation of EBITDA Operating profit before depreciation and amortisation -4,540 -4,468 Special items 1,891 -5,249 Operating profit before depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) after special items -2,649 -9,718 Other special items includes severance payment for senior management. Note 5 Finance costs DKK’000 2023 2022 Interests paid to banks 31,740 15,243 Intra-group interest expenses 41,642 13,784 Exchange rate losses -2 14 Other financial cost 3,914 3,457 Total financial costs 77,293 32,498 * Interest income and expenses from financial assets and financial liabilities measured at amortised cost. DKK’000 2023 2022 Remuneration to the Executive Management Martin-Ravn Nielsen (CEO from May 2020): Salary 4,322 4,325 Bonus 2,290 1,469 Share-based payment 1,047 667 Total 7,659 6,461 Mads Dehlsen Winther (CFO from September 2019 to March 2023): Salary 932 3,571 Bonus 359 1,189 Share-based payment 2,076 542 Total 3,367 5,302 Jesper Mølskov Høybye (CFO from April 2023 to October 2023): Salary 1,599 0 Bonus 816 0 Share-based payment 375 0 Severance Pay 2,703 Total 5,493 0 Allan Auning-Hansen (CFO from November 2023): Salary 458 0 Bonus 0 0 Share-based payment 0 0 Total 458 0 Part of the management remuneration is partly paid by group companies. The long term incentive programme is described in note 2.3 in Group. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 135 / 144 Note 6 Income taxes DKK’000 2023 2022 Current tax Income tax -14,038 -7,354 Movement in deferred tax 0 0 Adjustment relating to previous years -101 0 Income taxes in the income statement -14,141 -7,354 Profit before tax 515 162,955 Tax rate, Denmark 22.00% 22.00% Tax at the applicable rate 113 38,850 Non-taxable income -17,688 -45,136 Expenses not deductible for tax purposes 3,434 1,932 Tax expense for the year -14,141 -7,354 Effective tax rate, % -27.67% -5% Deferred tax Deferred tax at 1 January Recognised in profit or loss 0 0 Exchange differences 0 0 Deferred tax at 31 December 0 0 Corporation tax receivable Corporation tax receviable at 1 January 26,526 27,149 Adjustment of corporation tax at 1 January, from deferred tax 0 0 Current tax including jointly taxed subsidiaries 14,141 7,354 Corporation tax received during the year -26,526 -7,335 Adjustment related to prior year -238 -642 Corporation tax receivable at 31 December 13,903 26,526 Note 7 Investments in subsidiaries Investments in subsidiaries DKK’000 2023 2022 Cost at 1 January 2,317,057 2,317,057 Additions 0 0 Cost at 31 December 2,317,057 2,317,057 Share of result at 1 January 1,129,703 936,254 Share of results 80,553 205,166 Other comprehensive income 1,662 -11,717 Share of results at 31 December 1,211,918 1,129,703 Net book value 3,528,975 3,446,760 Reference is made to note 6.7 in the consolidated financial statements for overview of subsidiaries. Note 8 Changes in working capital DKK’000 2023 2022 Increase / (decrease) in trade and other payables 2,697 2,667 Total 2,697 2,667 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 136 / 144 Note 9 Adjustments for non-cash items DKK’000 2023 2022 Non-cash financial items 9,707 6,615 Other non-cash items 9,707 6,615 Note 10 Borrowings DKK’000 2023 2022 Interest-bearing borrowings, 1 January 672,825 672,058 Additions 500,000 125,000 Other (amortised cost, etc.) -750 767 Repayments -675,000 -125,000 Interest-bearing borrowings, 31 December 497,075 672,825 Investments in subsidiaries have been provided as security for the Group's balances with Nordea and Danske Bank, covering all bank borrowings. Note 11 Auditor's fee Fees to auditors DKK’000 2023 2022 Audit services 669 813 Other assurance engagements 15 0 Tax advice services 64 0 Other non-audit services 0 212 Total fees to auditors appointed at the Annual General Meeting 748 1,025 The fee for non-audit services and assurance engagements delivered by EY Godkendt Revisionspartnerselskab to the Group amounts to DKK 0.1 million (2022: DKK 0.2 million) and consists of other assurance engagements and tax and VAT advisory services. Note 12 Other disclosures For the following disclosures reference is made to the consolidated financial statements: • Guarantee commitments and contingent liabilities (note 3.4) • Equity (note 5.1) • Related parties (note 6.4) • Events after the balance sheet date (note 6.6) • Receivables and payables from affiliated companies at 31 December 2023 stated in the balance sheet relates primarily to tax payments in joint taxation and cash pool. Balances are interdependant and settled on an ongo- ing basis. No write-downs have been made on balances in 2023 or 2022. There are no losses on Group receivables, so an expected credit loss is considered to be very limited. The Parent has provided collateral for bank loan amounting to DKK 750 million in 2023 comprise bank loan of DKK 500 million and DKK 250 million RCF (2022: DKK 1,075 million). HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 137 / 144 Statement by Management Statement by Management The Board of Directors and the Executive Board have today discussed and approved the annual report of HusCom- pagniet A/S for 2023. The annual report has been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted by the EU and additional requirements of the Danish Financial Statements Act. In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements and the parent company financial statements give a true and fair view of the financial position of the Group and the Parent Company at 31 December 2023 and of the results of their operations and cash flows for the financial year 1 January – 31 December 2023. Further, in our opinion, the Management's review gives a fair review of the development in the Group's and the Parent Company's activities and financial matters, results for the year, cash flows and financial position as well as a descrip- tion of material risks and uncertainties that the Group and the Parent Company face. We recommend that the annual report be approved at the Annual General Meeting. Virum, 8 March 2024 Executive Management: Martin Ravn-Nielsen Allan Auning-Hansen Group CEO Group CFO Board of Directors: Claus V. Hemmingsen Anja B. Eriksson Chairperson Vice chairperson Stig Pastwa Ylva Ekborn Michael Troensegaard Andersen Ole Lund Andersen HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 138 / 144 Independent auditor's report Independent auditor's report To the shareholders of HusCompagniet A/S Report on the audit of the Consolidated Financial Statements and Parent Company Financial Statements Opinion We have audited the consolidated financial statements and the parent company financial statements of HusCompagniet A/S for the financial year 1 January – 31 December 2023, which comprise income statement, statement of other com- prehensive income, balance sheet, statement of cash flows, statement of changes in equity and notes, including account- ing policies, for the Group and the Parent Company. The consolidated financial statements and the parent company financial statements are prepared in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards as adopted by the EU and additional requirements of the Danish Financial Statements Act. In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements and the parent company financial statements give a true and fair view of the financial position of the Group and the Parent Company at 31 December 2023 and of the results of the Group's and the Parent Company's operations and cash flows for the financial year 1 January – 31 December 2023 in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards as adopted by the EU and additional requirements of the Danish Financial Statements Act. Our opinion is consistent with our long-form audit report to the Audit Committee and the Board of Directors. Basis for opinion We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (ISAs) and additional requirements applicable in Denmark. Our responsibilities under those standards and requirements are further described in the "Auditor's responsibilities for the audit of the consolidated financial statements and the parent company financial state- ments" (hereinafter collectively referred to as "the financial statements") section of our report. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion. Independence We are independent of the Group in accordance with the International Ethics Standards Board for Accountants' Inter- national Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants (IESBA Code) and the additional ethical requirements applicable in Denmark, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibil- ities in accordance with these requirements and the IESBA Code. To the best of our knowledge, we have not provided any prohibited non-audit services as described in article 5(1) of Regulation (EU) no. 537/2014. Appointment of auditor Subsequent to HusCompagniet A/S being listed on Nasdaq Copenhagen, we were initially appointed as auditors of HusCompagniet A/S on 12 April 2021. We have been reap- pointed annually by resolution of the general meeting for a total consecutive period of three years up until the financial year 2023. Key audit matters Key audit matters are those matters that, in our professional judgement, were of most significance in our audit of the financial statements for the financial year 2023. These mat- ters were addressed during our audit of the financial state- ments as a whole and in forming our opinion thereon. We do not provide a separate opinion on these matters. For each matter below, our description of how our audit addressed the matter is provided in that context. We have fulfilled our responsibilities described in the "Audi- tor's responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements" section, including in relation to the key audit matters below. Accordingly, our audit included the design and performance of procedures to respond to our assessment of the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements. The results of our audit procedures, including the procedures performed to address the matters below, provide the basis for our audit opinion on the financial statements . HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 139 / 144 Key audit matter Description of key audit matter How our audit addressed the key audit matter Recognition and measurement of construction contracts and related revenue recognition Accounting policies and information regarding revenue recognition related to construction contracts are disclosed in notes 2.1, 2.7, 2.8 and 3.2 to the consolidated financial statements. The Group’s main activity and revenue comes from sale and delivery of detached and semi-detached houses under construction contracts with private customers or professional investors, where the delivery of the houses typically extends over a longer period. Due to characteristics of the projects and in accordance with the accounting policies, HusCompagniet recognizes and measures revenue on these construction contracts over time based on input-based accounting methods as the performance obligation usually is considered fulfilled throughout the construction. Recognition and measurement of construction contracts involve estimates and judgments by Management to assess percentage-of-completion at the balance sheet date, cost of completion of the houses, including costs related to warranties or disputes. Changes to these accounting estimates during the construction phase, can have a material impact on revenue, production costs and results. Therefore, we consider recognition of construction contracts as a key audit matter in respect of the financial statements. Our audit procedures included: • Assessment of the assumptions and methodology applied by Management to calculate the sales value of construction contracts and recognition and accrual of revenue. We have considered the approach taken by Management, assessed key assumptions and obtained corroborative evidence for the explanations provided by comparing key assumptions to past performance, contract estimate, our past experience of similar transactions and Management’s forecast supporting the calculated sales value. • Analysis of selected contracts to assess and compare recognised revenue, including any contract modifications, and production cost to contract estimate, current project economy and the latest forecast of cost to complete, including any costs related to warranties or disputes. • Discussions of the status of houses in progress with members of Management, the finance function and project management. • For the purpose of assessing dispute and/or litigation, we obtained letters of attorney from the Group’s external and internal attorneys and discussed with members of Management and the finance function cases subject to disputes to provide an assessment hereof. • Focused on ensuring that policies and processes for performing management estimates have been applied consistently to uniform contracts and in accordance with previous years. Valuation of goodwill Accounting policies and information regarding goodwill and impairment testing of goodwill are disclosed in notes 4.1, 4.4, 4.5 and 4.6 to the consolidated financial statements. Valuation of goodwill is significant to our audit due to the carrying value of goodwill and the risks related to Management’s assessment of the future timing and amount of cash flows that are discounted to project the recoverability of the carrying amount of goodwill. Management’s assessment is subject to uncertainty related to their expectations of the negative impact on future building activity from macroeconomic conditions, interest rates and inflation. Management applies significant assumptions when estimating the future sales volumes, sales prices, margins, discount rates and growth rates when projecting the recoverability of the carrying amount of goodwill as well as judgement when defining cash-generating units. Therefore, we consider valuation of goodwill as a key audit matter in respect of the financial statements. Our audit procedures in relation to valuation of goodwill included: • Assessment of the discounted cash flow models prepared by Management, including consideration of the cash-generation units defined by Management and the valuation methodology applied. We evaluated the factors used by Management in their definition of cash-generating units. • Testing of the mathematical accuracy of the discounted cash flow models prepared by Management to project the recoverability of the carrying amount of goodwill. We reconciled the applied estimates of future cash flows to the most recent approved Management budgets to ensure internal consistency. • Evaluating the key assumptions and input data applied by Management based on our knowledge of the business and industry together with available supporting evidence such as available budgets and externally observable market data related to market volumes, inflation rates and interest rates etc. • Evaluating the sensitivity analysis on the assumptions applied in the valuations prepared by management in note 4.4 to the consolidated financial statement. HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 140 / 144 Statement on the Management's review Management is responsible for the Management's review. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the Management's review, and we do not express any assurance conclusion thereon. In connection with our audit of the financial statements, our responsibility is to read the Management's review and, in doing so, consider whether the Management's review is materially inconsistent with the financial statements, or our knowledge obtained during the audit, or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. Moreover, it is our responsibility to consider whether the Management's review provides the information required by relevant law and regulations. Based on our procedures, we conclude that the Manage- ment's review is in accordance with the financial statements and has been prepared in accordance with the requirements of relevant law and regulations. We did not identify any ma- terial misstatement of the Management's review. Management's responsibilities for the financial statements Management is responsible for the preparation of consol- idated financial statements and parent company financial statements that give a true and fair view in accordance with IFRS Accounting Standards as adopted by the EU and addi- tional requirements of the Danish Financial Statements Act and for such internal control as Management determines is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error. In preparing the financial statements, Management is re- sponsible for assessing the Group's and the Parent Com- pany's ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting in preparing the financial statements unless Management either intends to liquidate the Group or the Parent Company or to cease operations, or has no realistic alternative but to do so. Auditor's responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance as to whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor's report that includes our opinion. Reasona- ble assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guar- antee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs and additional requirements applicable in Denmark will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of the financial statements. As part of an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs and additional requirements applicable in Denmark, we exercise professional judgement and maintain professional scepti- cism throughout the audit. We also: • Identify and assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to fraud or error, design and perform audit procedures responsive to those risks and obtain audit evidence that is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion. The risk of not detecting a material misstatement resulting from fraud is higher than for one resulting from error, as fraud may involve collusion, forgery, intentional omissions, mis- representations or the override of internal control. • Obtain an understanding of internal control relevant to the audit in order to design audit procedures that are ap- propriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Group's and the Parent Company's internal control. • Evaluate the appropriateness of accounting policies used and the reasonableness of accounting estimates and related disclosures made by Management. • Conclude on the appropriateness of Management's use of the going concern basis of accounting in preparing the financial statements and, based on the audit evidence obtained, whether a material uncertainty exists related to events or conditions that may cast significant doubt on the Group's and the Parent Company's ability to continue as a going concern. If we conclude that a material un- certainty exists, we are required to draw attention in our auditor's report to the related disclosures in the financial statements or, if such disclosures are inadequate, to modify our opinion. Our conclusions are based on the audit evidence obtained up to the date of our auditor's HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 141 / 144 report. However, future events or conditions may cause the Group and the Parent Company to cease to continue as a going concern. • Evaluate the overall presentation, structure and contents of the financial statements, including the note disclo- sures, and whether the financial statements represent the underlying transactions and events in a manner that gives a true and fair view. • Obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence regard- ing the financial information of the entities or business activities within the Group to express an opinion on the consolidated financial statements. We are responsible for the direction, supervision and performance of the group audit. We remain solely responsible for our audit opinion. We communicate with those charged with governance re- garding, among other matters, the planned scope and timing of the audit and significant audit findings, including any significant deficiencies in internal control that we identify during our audit. We also provide those charged with governance with a statement that we have complied with relevant ethical requirements regarding independence, and to communicate with them all relationships and other matters that may rea- sonably be thought to bear on our independence, and where applicable, actions taken to eliminate threats or safeguards applied. From the matters communicated with those charged with governance, we determine those matters that were of most significance in the audit of the consolidated financial state- ments and the parent company financial statements of the current period and are therefore the key audit matters. We describe these matters in our auditor's report unless law or regulation precludes public disclosure about the matter. Report on compliance with the ESEF Regulation As part of our audit of the Consolidated Financial Statements and Parent Company Financial Statements of HusCom- pagniet A/S, we performed procedures to express an opinion on whether the annual report of HusCompagniet A/S for the financial year 1 January – 31 December 2023 with the file name HusCompagniet-2023-12-31-en.zip is prepared, in all material respects, in compliance with the Commis- sion Delegated Regulation (EU) 2019/815 on the European Single Electronic Format (ESEF Regulation) which includes requirements related to the preparation of the annual report in XHTML format and iXBRL tagging of the Consolidated Financial Statements including notes. Management is responsible for preparing an annual report that complies with the ESEF Regulation. This responsibility includes: • The preparing of the annual report in XHTML format; • The selection and application of appropriate iXBRL tags, including extensions to the ESEF taxonomy and the anchoring thereof to elements in the taxonomy, for all financial information required to be tagged using judge- ment where necessary; • Ensuring consistency between iXBRL tagged data and the Consolidated Financial Statements presented in human readable format; and • For such internal control as Management determines necessary to enable the preparation of an annual report that is compliant with the ESEF Regulation. Our responsibility is to obtain reasonable assurance on whether the annual report is prepared, in all material re- spects, in compliance with the ESEF Regulation based on the evidence we have obtained, and to issue a report that includes our opinion. The nature, timing and extent of proce- dures selected depend on the auditor’s judgement, includ- ing the assessment of the risks of material departures from the requirements set out in the ESEF Regulation, whether due to fraud or error. The procedures include: • Testing whether the annual report is prepared in XHTML format; • Obtaining an understanding of the company’s iXBRL tagging process and of internal control over the tagging process; • Evaluating the completeness of the iXBRL tagging of the Consolidated Financial Statements including notes; • Evaluating the appropriateness of the company’s use of iXBRL elements selected from the ESEF taxonomy and the creation of extension elements where no suitable element in the ESEF taxonomy has been identified; HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 142 / 144 • Evaluating the use of anchoring of extension elements to elements in the ESEF taxonomy; and • Reconciling the iXBRL tagged data with the audited Con- solidated Financial Statements. IIn our opinion, the annual report of HusCompagniet A/S for the financial year 1 January – 31 December 2023 with the file name HusCompagniet-2023-12-31-en.zip is prepared, in all material respects, in compliance with the ESEF Regulation. Copenhagen, 8 March 2024 EY Godkendt Revisionspartnerselskab CVR no. 30 70 02 28 M ikkel Sthyr State Authorised Public Accountant mne26693 Morten Weinreich Larsen State Authorised Public Accountant mne42791 HusCompagniet Annual report 2023 143 / 144 Design and production: Noted HusCompagniet A/S Agerøvej 31A DK-8381 Tilst (+45) 75 64 57 99 www.HusCompagniet.dk CVR: 36972963 Annual reportAuditor's report on audited financial statementsParsePort XBRL Converter2023-01-012023-12-312022-01-012022-12-31894500SWECYCFZ58R246Reporting class DOpinionBasis for Opinion894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31894500SWECYCFZ58R2462022-01-012022-12-31894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-12-31894500SWECYCFZ58R2462022-12-31894500SWECYCFZ58R2462021-12-31894500SWECYCFZ58R2462022-12-31ifrs-full:IssuedCapitalMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31ifrs-full:IssuedCapitalMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-12-31ifrs-full:IssuedCapitalMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462022-12-31ifrs-full:ReserveOfExchangeDifferencesOnTranslationMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31ifrs-full:ReserveOfExchangeDifferencesOnTranslationMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-12-31ifrs-full:ReserveOfExchangeDifferencesOnTranslationMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462022-12-31ifrs-full:RetainedEarningsMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31ifrs-full:RetainedEarningsMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-12-31ifrs-full:RetainedEarningsMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462022-12-31HUS:DividendsProposedOrDeclaredBeforeFinancialStatementsAuthorisedForIssueButNotRecognisedAsDistributionToOwnersRecognisedInEquityMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31HUS:DividendsProposedOrDeclaredBeforeFinancialStatementsAuthorisedForIssueButNotRecognisedAsDistributionToOwnersRecognisedInEquityMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-12-31HUS:DividendsProposedOrDeclaredBeforeFinancialStatementsAuthorisedForIssueButNotRecognisedAsDistributionToOwnersRecognisedInEquityMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462021-12-31ifrs-full:IssuedCapitalMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462022-01-012022-12-31ifrs-full:IssuedCapitalMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462021-12-31ifrs-full:ReserveOfExchangeDifferencesOnTranslationMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462022-01-012022-12-31ifrs-full:ReserveOfExchangeDifferencesOnTranslationMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462021-12-31ifrs-full:RetainedEarningsMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462022-01-012022-12-31ifrs-full:RetainedEarningsMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462021-12-31HUS:DividendsProposedOrDeclaredBeforeFinancialStatementsAuthorisedForIssueButNotRecognisedAsDistributionToOwnersRecognisedInEquityMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462022-01-012022-12-31HUS:DividendsProposedOrDeclaredBeforeFinancialStatementsAuthorisedForIssueButNotRecognisedAsDistributionToOwnersRecognisedInEquityMember894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMember1894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMember2894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMember1894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMember2894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMember3894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMember4894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMember5894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMember6894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMember1894500SWECYCFZ58R2462023-01-012023-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMember2894500SWECYCFZ58R2462022-01-012022-12-31cmn:ConsolidatedMemberiso4217:DKKiso4217:DKKxbrli:sharesxbrli:pure
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