pulte homes posts
Posted Feb 1st 2009 4:10PM by Trey Thoelcke
Filed under: Earnings reports, Forecasts, Centex Corp (CTX), D.R.Horton (DHI), Housing
Given last week's news that new home sales have plunged and that new home prices continue to fall, what is Wall Street expecting from homebuilders Centex Corp. (NYSE: CTX), Pulte Homes Inc. (NYSE: PHM), and DR Horton Inc. (NYSE: DHI) when they report quarterly results this week?
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters anticipate that Dallas-based Centex will report that it narrowed its net loss in its fiscal third quarter to $3.27 per share. In the same period of last year, the loss was $7.94 per share. Revenue in the third quarter is expected to total $895.3 million, down 53.0% from last year. For the full year, the loss is expected to reach $7.36 per share on revenue of $4.0 billion, which compares to a $21.69 per share loss on $8.3 billion in sales in 2008. Centex has posted bigger-than-expected losses in the past five quarters. So the consensus recommendation of analysts remains to hold CTX, though the long-range EPS growth forecast is 9.0%. The share price has fallen 20.0% just since the beginning of the year, and it is 70.7% lower than it was a year ago. Centex suspended its quarterly dividends back in October.
Continue reading Earnings preview: Homebuilders Centex, Pulte Homes, and DR Horton
Posted Jan 27th 2009 9:30AM by Sam Collins
Filed under: Earnings reports, American Express (AXP), Boeing Co (BA), Chevron Corp (CVX), Technical Analysis, Wells Fargo (WFC), S and P 500, DJIA, NASDAQ
Despite the overwhelming tide of bad news from Q4 earnings reports, stocks not only held above the support line at Dow 8,000 and S&P 500 800 Monday, but the stochastic indicator on both the NYSE Composite Index and the Nasdaq issued buy signals.
Our other internal indicators are still oversold, and the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) fell to 45.69 and appears to be headed lower -- which is generally a bullish sign.
The key, however, to moving the markets higher could be the financial stocks.
This week, a number of closely watched banks, such as Dow members American Express (NYSE: AXP) and Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC), will report earnings. The expectation for all of these former finance powerhouses is low, so upside surprises could have a positive impact on the Dow.
Continue reading Today's technical outlook: Financials hold the key
Posted May 30th 2008 9:00AM by Jim Cramer
Filed under: Market matters, , D.R.Horton (DHI), KB HOME (KBH), Lennar Corp'A' (LEN), Toll Brothers (TOL), Housing, Recession, MBIA Inc (MBI)
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says the mortgage problem is in the process of cresting, which is why the stocks have largely bottomed. We are in the heart of default country, and we knew we would be. This is the toughest moment. You need to go back and look at the calendar to realize the astonishing acceleration in defaults. It's simple: This moment two years ago is when the underwriting standards were the lowest, and this is the moment when the defaults will be the highest because the loans are resetting at high levels and most of the lenders, lenders like
Countrywide (NYSE:
CFC) (
Cramer's Take), are more interested in getting as much out of a borrower as possible before kicking him out than working out the loan.
Think about it.
In the second quarter of 2006, the housing industry was going strong. We were in the 7-million-homes-changing-hands mode, and the vast majority of those homes required little money down, with home equity loans being taken out immediately to pay whatever little interest was being charged. These were the moments of the ultimate no-doc-high-fee loans by New Century Financial, Ameriquest, Resmed (Ditech), American Home Mortgage, Novastar, and of course, Countrywide. This was when the homebuilders' mortgage arms lent the most terribly.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Deep in the heart of defaults
Posted May 29th 2008 3:20PM by Eliza Popescu
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 5th 2008 5:29PM by Eliza Popescu
Filed under: Forecasts, CIGNA Corp (CI), , Economic data, Stocks to Buy, Recession

It has been a tough year for investors. We have been dealing with recession fears, housing market worries, high gasoline prices and a very weak U.S dollar. As much as we would love to say that the worst is behind us, we still could be in for some more rocky times ahead. So its best to try to figure out which stocks would be best to avoid for the time being.
Richard Gibbons wrote up a nice piece over on
The Motley Fool that looks at some of the stocks that we would be wise to stay away from at this time. Regardless good or bad times, he is convinced there are always ways to make money, but in order to find the winners, it is also necessary to pull out the losers.
So how can we separate out the winners from the losers?
Gibbons seems to have a simple answer for this. He believes there is really no use in wasting our time trying to separate the winners from the losers as there are so many great cheap stocks that could offer us a chance to make money. Gibbons' advice is to not choose ugly and risky companies that could put our hard earned money at risk. To makes this clear, he uses a baseball analogy, expressing his options for the curve balls instead of the fastballs.
Continue reading Stocks to avoid: Motley Fool says stay away from WaMu, Ambac, Pulte
Posted Jul 2nd 2007 1:56PM by Eric Buscemi
Filed under: Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Citigroup Inc. (C), D.R.Horton (DHI), KB HOME (KBH), Lennar Corp'A' (LEN), Toll Brothers (TOL), Housing
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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
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?
Posted May 30th 2007 2:52PM by Beth Gaston Moon
The slowdown in the housing market has claimed another victim. Specifically, another 2,000 victims.
Pulte Homes (NYSE:
PHM) said late yesterday that it plans to
trim its work force by 16%, eliminating roughly 2,000 jobs as part of the firm's restructuring plan. The homebuilder say its restructuring efforts will save up to $200 million each year (before taxes). PHM will swallow a pretax charge of $40 million to $50 million due to these layoffs; most of this charge will be absorbed during the second quarter of this year.
In an accompanying news release, the firm's president and chief executive noted that "The homebuilding environment remains difficult, and our current overhead levels are structured for a business that is larger than the market presently allows."
The latest announcement is evidently not the first series of layoffs. In 2006, Pulte employed 12,400 employees, down from 13,400 in the previous year.
Yesterday, Standard & Poor's reported that
U.S. home prices dropped 1.4% in the first quarter, marking the first time since 1991 that prices posted a quarterly decline. While many analysts continue to predict a recovery in the housing market, it has so far been a bumpy ride.
Beth Gaston Moon is an analyst at Schaeffer's Investment Research.
Posted Mar 26th 2007 4:20PM by Michael Fowlkes
Filed under: Major movement, Bad news, Industry, Consumer experience, Centex Corp (CTX), KB HOME (KBH), Economic data
The housing market's woes continue today as we get the numbers from last month's homes sales. According to a report from the Commerce Department
sales of new homes fell 3.9% during the month of February.

February's disappointing results follow on the heels of January's 15.8% decline which was the largest one month drop in 13 years. With last month's decline the seasonally adjusted annual rate is now coming in at 848,000 which puts us on the slowest sales pace in the last 7 years.
Across the nation the only area that saw growth in new homes sales was the West, which saw sales numbers jump 24.6%, but this was following a devastating month of January which saw the same region decline by 25.8%. The average price of a new home nationwide is now running at $250,000 which is 0.3% below this time last year.
Following today's report home builders have been taking a pretty good hit on Wall Street:
- Ryland Group (NYSE: RYL) is currently trading down 1.5% to $45.41 down $0.71.
- Centex Corp (NYSE: CTX) is currently trading down 1.6% to $43.13 down $0.70.
- KB Home (NYSE: KBH) is currently trading down 1.9% to $45.98 down $0.88.
- Pulte Homes (NYSE: PHM) is currently trading down 1.9% to $27.04 down $0.52.
Michael Fowlkes has worked as a stock trader for seven years and spent the last two years working as an analyst for the online investment advisory service Investor's Observer.Posted Feb 28th 2007 3:45PM by Michael Fowlkes
Filed under: D.R.Horton (DHI), Toll Brothers (TOL)

Just when you think you may have seen the worst of times for home sales we get a news report out today to bring you back to reality. A new report today showed the
biggest decline in new home sales in the last 13 years.
According to a new government report today January witnessed a massive 16.6% decline in the sales of new homes in America. The last time we saw a fall of this amount was way back in January 1994 when sales fell by a whopping 23.8%.
Things looked to be getting a little brighter for the housing market yesterday when we were given some positive data on existing home sales which put up better than expected gains last month. During January we saw the biggest rise in two years in existing home sales with a 3.0% rise from December.
Homebuilders have been taking a hit today. DR Horton Inc. (NYSE:
DHI) is trading down 1.6%, Toll Brothers Inc. (NYSE:
TOL) is down 2.1%, Hovnanian Enterprises Inc. (NYSE:
HOV) is currently down 2.4% and Pulte Homes Inc. (NYSE:
PHM) has sold off 1.7%.
Posted Jan 4th 2007 10:01AM by Eric Buscemi
Filed under: Industry, Centex Corp (CTX), D.R.Horton (DHI), KB HOME (KBH), Lennar Corp'A' (LEN)

Bill Miller, the famed Legg Mason fund manager, was on television last week. He said he is long on housing stocks.
In Barron's
Up and Down Wall Street column (subscription required), Doug Kass of Seabreeze Partners said he was short housing stocks - no big surprise there. Kass referred to order cancellation as the reasoning for his bearishness.
Typically, publicly traded homebuilders have cancellation rates of 15% of orders. However, that number has jumped considerably. Cancellation rates of publicly traded homebuilders:
- Centex (NYSE: CTX) - 37%
- DR Horton (NYSE: DHI) - 40%
- KB Homes (NYSE: KBH) - 53%
- Lennar (NYSE: LEN) - 31%
- Pulte Homes (NYSE: PHM) - 36%
- Beazer (NYSE: BZH) - 57%
- Hovnanian (NYSE: HOV) - 35%
- MDC Holdings (NYSE: MDC) - 49%
- Standard Pacific (NYSE: SPF) - 50%
These numbers (from the Barron's article) are so bad that the worst might be unfolding right now.
TheFly's advice, Miller tends to be too early and Kass is often too negative when the worst is already priced in the stocks. I'd say, start following these stocks again, expecting a bottom in the spring and early summer.
The most recent rally is mostly from an oversold condition. I'd wait for another correction and see where the industry fundamentals stand.
Posted Nov 30th 2006 11:15AM by Melly Alazraki
Filed under: Analyst reports, Analyst upgrades and downgrades
MOST NOTEWORTHY: Sovereign Bancorp (SOV) and the Homebuilders sector topped the upgrade list today.
- Citigroup upgraded Sovereign Bank Inc. (NYSE:SOV) to Hold from Sell with a $25 target, citing expectations for management to announce a larger cost-cutting program in January of 2007.
- Bank of America upgraded the Homebuilders sector to Neutral from Cautious after their survey showed traffic improvements in 33 of 39 markets in November relative to October; They do not expect a smooth trend, instead, the firm expects to see choppiness in the market for the next 12-24 months.
- In conjunction with the sector upgrade, Bank of America upgraded Standard Pacific (NYSE:SPF) to Buy from Neutral,
- and Meritage Homes Corp. (NYSE:MTH), NVR Inc. (NYSE:NVR), Pulte Homes Inc. (NYSE:PHM), The Ryland Group Inc. (NYSE:RYL) and Toll Bros. Inc. (NYSE:TOL) to Neutral from Sell.
OTHER UPGRADES:
- Sanofi-Aventis (NYSE:SNY) was upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at HSBC.
- SAP AG (NYSE:SAP) was added to Merrill Lynch's Europe 1 list.
Analyst summaries provided by TheFlyOnTheWall.com (subscription required).