D.R. Horton posts
FeedPosted Aug 29th 2009 1:00PM by Louis Navellier (RSS feed)
Filed under: D.R.Horton (DHI), Stocks to Buy, Housing
D.R. Horton (NYSE: DHI) saw its earnings-per-share plunge from a profit of $3.90 in 2006 to a staggering loss of $8.34 last year. Fortunately, the worst is behind us. This year D.R. Horton will probably lose about $1 per share.
I don't like to see any loss, but this is a huge improvement. In fact, I think there's even a good chance D.R. Horton could start posting some earnings gains by next year.
D.R. Horton is also a buy.
Next: Home builder stock #3
Posted Aug 2nd 2009 12:30PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Forecasts, Comcast Cl'A' (CMCSA), Dean Foods (DF), Economic data
Last week's Fed Beige Book report and GDP numbers suggested that the economy may be stabilizing, and this coming week will bring plenty of economic data to confirm or deny that suggestion. On the schedule are consumer credit, construction spending, factory orders, and pending home sales for June, the employment situation, the Import Price Index, and new motor vehicle sales for July, as well as the ISM Manufacturing and Non-manufacturing Indexes for July.
The week will also bring quarterly reports from home builders Beazer Homes USA Inc. (NYSE: BZH), D.R. Horton Inc. (NYSE: DHI), and Pulte Homes Inc. (NYSE: PHM). Yet again, analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expect all three to have narrowed their losses in the most recent quarter. However, they've all tended to post deeper-than-expected losses in recent quarters as well. Analysts also expect to see their revenue down 45% or more for the past quarter. They forecast long-term EPS growth of 7% or more, but none of these homebuilders has a First Call consensus buy recommendation, not surprisingly. Short interest is falling off for Beazer and D.R. Horton, and D.R. Horton and Pulte have been reporting positive cash flow from operations, but all three of them said they had more long-term debt than cash in hand last time around. Mortgage insurer PMI Group Inc. (NYSE: PMI) is likewise expected to report that it narrowed its second-quarter loss.
Continue reading The week in preview: Seeking more signs of economic stability
Posted Jun 3rd 2009 8:20AM by Steven Mallas (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, D.R.Horton (DHI), Lennar Corp'A' (LEN), Toll Brothers (TOL)
Hovnanian Enterprises (NYSE: HOV), a home builder whose related companies include Toll Brothers (NYSE: TOL), Lennar Corp. (NYSE: LEN), and D.R. Horton (NYSE: DHI), reported Q2 results on Tuesday after the bell. The company reported a loss of $1.50 per share (the results included a gain related to debt extinguishment). That unfortunately did not meet analyst expectations according to Trey Thoelcke's earnings preview. Analysts were looking for a loss of $1.26 per share.
However, things do look better. Last year at this time, the loss recorded by Hovnanian was a whopping $5.29 per share. Revenues, however, plummeted to $398 million from over $770 million. Analysts were expecting only $348 million according to the preview.
Continue reading Hovnanian's Q1 shows an improvement
Posted Aug 6th 2008 9:09AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Market matters, Centex Corp (CTX), D.R.Horton (DHI), Freep't McMoRan Copper (FCX), Stocks to Buy, Stocks to Sell, Housing, Cramer on BloggingStocks
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says they should be punished for trying an end run on taxpayers. Love
Centex (NYSE:
CTX) (
Cramer's Take), sell
Horton (NYSE:
DHI) (
Cramer's Take)? That's how I feel after reading Horton's pathetic plea to bring back down-payment assistance for this industry, which remains unpunished for all it did to foment the housing crisis.
Yesterday, in one of our "Wall Street Confidential" series, I opined that Centex was shaping up to be one of the better builders after making so many right moves in the last year to preserve capital. I didn't care for industry leader D.R. Horton, though.
And that was before I read the outrageous comments from Horton CEO Don Tomnitz in Market Watch yesterday, where he decried that the new housing law didn't include more down-payment assistance loans from the FHA. These seller assistance loans plied basically, by the homebuilders that allow homebuyers to use a back door to FHA loans, have been defaulting at very high rates. The Congress, in an actual dollop of wisdom, scrapped them and instead gave people a tax credit of $7,500 to buy a new house, not bad considering that houses have retreated in value to the point that even though you need to put down more money as a percentage basis, as an absolute basis there's some affordability. This kind of loan is precisely what got us in trouble, an affordable loan that people ultimately couldn't afford that just helped Horton dump properties.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Horton doesn't get it
Posted May 29th 2008 3:20PM by Eliza Popescu (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Management, Lennar Corp'A' (LEN), Toll Brothers (TOL), Economic data, Housing

Despite the fact that the challenging housing conditions are still persisting, it looks like that some major housing companies are poised to see the light at the end of tunnel. SmartMoney
underlines the fact that there has been some encouraging trend for homebuilders during the past few months.
Major names such as
Toll Brothers Inc. (NYSE:
TOL),
Lennar Corp. (NYSE:
LEN),
Pulte Homes Inc. (NYSE:
PHM),
Hovnanian Enterprises Inc. (NYSE:
HOV) and
D.R. Horton Inc. (NYSE:
DHI) showed a nice recovery attempt lately, but
the National Association of Home Builders still warns investors to remain cautions regarding companies in the housing sector.
The National Association points out that, "the housing market has shown no evidence of improvement thus far," and the sentiment index is close to a historical low.
Looking at investing in housing stocks, one analyst at T. Rowe Price, Josh Spencer, makes a two-way analysis. From his point of view, housing stocks have a lot of risk if we are talking about their volatility, but they are not as risky when referring to a long-term time horizon due to their current cheap value.
Continue reading SmartMoney sees homebuilders poised for a nice recovery
Posted May 6th 2008 8:50AM by Eliza Popescu (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Bad news, Consumer experience, Altria Group (MO), Economic data, Housing

Shares of
D.R. Horton Inc. (NYSE:
DHI), the largest U.S. home builder, were plunging in premarket after the company reported a
large second quarter loss this morning. Its quarterly numbers were dragged down by the slumping housing market which forced the homebuilder to take hefty charges to write down the value of its inventory.
The company reported a loss of $1.31 billion, or $4.14 per share . The income figures were definitely nothing to cheer about. During its second quarter last year, the company had a profit of $51.7 million, or 16 cents per share, but that number was slashed this quarter as the homebuilder took pretax write-down charges of $834.1 million.
Wall Street analysts expected the company to have a quarterly loss of "only" 39 cents per share. So with the actual numbers, D.R. Horton is looking for a pretty bad day in today's session.
Continue reading D.R. Horton (DHI) swings to 2Q loss on hefty charges
Posted Oct 16th 2007 9:20AM by Lita Epstein (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Bad news, D.R.Horton (DHI), Housing
Cancellations of new homes continue to surge and D.R. Horton (NYSE: DHI), the nation's largest home builder, reported a 39% drop in fiscal fourth-quarter net orders, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal today [subscription required]. At the end of the quarter on September 30, D.R. Horton said it had orders for 6,374 homes worth $1.31 billion. Last year for the same quarter, orders totaled 10,430 worth $2.53 billion. The cancellation rate was also up over the rate in the third quarter. Third quarter cancellation rate was 38% and it was 48% in the fourth quarter.
Chairman Donald R. Horton told the Journal that market conditions "declined" and inventories are high. He said, "Buyers continued to approach the home buying decision cautiously. We expect the housing environment to remain challenging."
Pre-market trading in the stock shows a 2.43% drop over yesterday's closing price of $13.58 to $13.25. Expect the drop to continue as the news hits the markets today. Clearly there is no light at the end of the tunnel yet for home builders.
Visit AOL Money & Finance for more earnings coverage
Posted Aug 1st 2007 8:00AM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bad news, Consumer experience, D.R.Horton (DHI), KB HOME (KBH), , Housing
There are times when Wall Street, to borrow a phrase, takes "two steps forward and one step back."
Then there are times when the Street simply stands, and waits for the events on the ground to clarify the financial landscape.
And that was the case Tuesday, as Monday's rally faded into Tuesday's 140-point Dow sell-off. And one reason was the subprime issue in general, which seems to offer a data point daily regarding the sector's health, and its impact on the housing sector, and the economy.
Tuesday's data point was American Home Mortgage (NYSE: AHM), which dropped more than 80% to about $1.00 per share from its recent $10.50 per share after the company indicated it is unable to borrow money under its banks lines and is looking at ways to raise money, including "the orderly liquidation of assets."
Continue reading AHM provides a data point, and Wall Street awaits more...
Posted Jul 26th 2007 2:50PM by Peter Cohan (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major movement, Forecasts, Bad news, Housing
Today the stock market is getting slammed, with the Dow down over 360 points. In my view, that's because many of the bad things that investors have been worrying about for years are all happening at the same time:
- Spiking oil prices -- a barrel of crude oil was up $1.12 at $77.
- Tanking housing market. Disappointing results from home builders including Pulte Homes Inc. (NYSE: PHM) and D.R. Horton Inc. (NYSE: DHI) -- squeezed by a sluggish environment from home sales and continued defaults in subprime loans -- weighed heavily on the market.
- Drying up of private equity financing -- as I posted earlier today.
Over the last few weeks, these worries have been masked by an onslaught of big mergers. But the mergers aren't happening today. Moreover, if the credit markets decide to turn their back on future deals, the only thing to stop the market from freefalling would be big companies exceeding earnings expectations.
What should you do? Probably nothing if you're in it for the long term, eventually all the bad news will come out and there will be a buying opportunity. But not yet.
Peter Cohan is president of Peter S. Cohan & Associates. He also teaches management at Babson College and edits The Cohan Letter. He has no financial interest in the securities mentioned in this post.
Posted Jul 2nd 2007 1:56PM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Citigroup Inc. (C), D.R.Horton (DHI), KB HOME (KBH), Lennar Corp'A' (LEN), Toll Brothers (TOL), Housing
.gif)
Why does it seem that
Citigroup Inc. (NYSE:
C) is late to the homebuilding slump? Because they are. The housing sector has been in the dumps for months now and yet only this morning did Citigroup downgrade stocks in the sector. Citigroup downgraded
D.R. Horton Inc (NYSE:
DHI),
Hovnanian Enterprises Inc (NYSE:
HOV),
KB Home (NYSE:
KBH),
Lennar Corporation (NYSE:
LEN),
Pulte Homes Inc (NYSE:
PHM),
Toll Brothers Inc (NYSE:
TOL) and
The Ryland Group Inc (NYSE:
RYL) to Hold from Buy as they believe "shares will remain range-bound through the rest of the year."
Let's recap:
KB Home: The company reported a second quarter loss and sales hit three-year lows. The loss was partly due to land value-related charges that highlighted the continued decay of the U.S. housing market. The company also said it was unable to provide investors with a full-year earnings forecast and couldn't say when they thought conditions would improve.
Lennar: Reported a Q2 loss. The company said market conditions had eroded so much that it's not trying to limit its losses for the year.
Pulte Homes: In response to the "challenging operating environment that continues to exist in the U.S. homebuilding industry," the company announced a restructuring plan designed to reduce costs and improve operating efficiencies in May.
Get the picture? Here's one more:
Ryland Group: Reported a Q1 loss in April and said it wouldn't be able to provide new guidance due to the slump in the housing market.
See a pattern? Homebuilder after homebuilder, it's the same story -- company faces challenging housing market, company loses money, tries to regain profitability. You'd think Citigroup would have noticed.
Aside from the companies themselves, other firms and analysts have said their piece about the sector. March data showed sales of existing homes fell to a four-year low. In April, Census Bureau data showed there were 2.5 million vacant non-seasonal housing units for sale, way over many firms' predictions. Additionally, AG Edwards said on April 30th that "it is not a good time to buy shares yet." Standard & Poor's said in May that they believed over a third of all U.S. homebuilders were "vulnerable to rating downgrades" in the midst of a "three-year downturn."
This is not news. Maybe Citigroup just missed it.
Posted Jun 28th 2007 3:30PM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Rumors, Scandals, D.R.Horton (DHI)
Beazer Homes USA Inc (NYSE:
BZH): House of Cards?
Home builder Beazer said in a regulatory filing yesterday that it terminated its Chief Accounting Officer for violating the company's ethics policy. Beazer said it fired Michael T. Rand after an internal probe of the company's mortgage origination business. The Atlanta-based company said the action was taken by its board and management after saying Rand violated the company's ethics policy by attempts to destroy documents.
The country's sixth largest home builder is currently under investigation by the FBI and is the subject of several lawsuits. Earlier this year, media reports noted that the company was under federal investigation for alleged mortgage fraud, a charge Beazer has vehemently denied. In May, it announced the SEC was conducting an informal inquiry to determine if the company, or its employees, had violated any securities laws.
Rand's firing is bad news for the Atlanta company, particularly because of the FBI investigation. JP Morgan analyst Michael Rehaut said that Rand's termination "raises red flags regarding the content of the documents in question." It is unclear whether the allegations against Rand will become part of the investigation.
Rand is the second senior official to be fired at Beazer this year. The company dismissed Kenneth Gary, its general counsel, in February for "a pattern of personal conduct" that included violations of company policies. Former CFO James O'Leary resigned from Beazer in March. Shares of the company, whose competitors include
D.R. Horton Inc (NYSE:
DHI) and
Pulte Homes, Inc (NYSE:
PHM), fell nearly 8% on yesterday's announcement; shares have fallen more than 40% this year.
Who's responsible for the company's troubles? Rand, the others, or is the company looking for scapegoats?
Next Page >