Allan P. Merrill
Management
Thank you, Carey, and thank you for joining us. We are sorry about the delaying the call by a day. The weather and road conditions here in Atlanta required us to do so. And after the last 3 days, we should probably consider moving our corporate headquarters to Detroit, where they seem to be able to handle an inch of snow. Well, as most of you know, in November, we introduced our 2B10 plan, a new multiyear overarching objective to reach at least $2 billion in revenue with 10% EBITDA margins. Our team has quickly embraced this new plan and produced results for our fiscal first quarter that keep us on track to attain these milestones within the next 2 to 3 years. Specifically, during the quarter, we increased adjusted EBITDA to $21.6 million, from $7.7 million last year. This is especially notable in light of the fact that coincidentally, we closed exactly the same number of homes this quarter as we did last year. We sold 895 homes during the quarter, or 4% less than last year with 9% fewer active communities. Contrary to most of our peers, we were able to improve sales per community slightly on a year-over-year basis. We grew our ASPs by $44,000 to $279,000, expanded gross margins by 310 basis points to 21.2%, decreased our cancellation rate by 460 basis points, and improved SG&A as a percentage of revenue from nearly 15% last year to 13.7% this year. Finally, we ended the quarter with $383 million in unrestricted cash and spent $124 million on land and land development, compared to only $90 million last year. Overall, we are pleased with these results, particularly, because they were accomplished in a selling environment that lack the consistency and sustained buyer enthusiasm. As in past years, we were prepared for the adverse seasonality, typical of the December quarter, as well as the more aggressive selling tactics of many of our peers with fiscal years that end during this particular quarter. But beyond those factors, we successfully weathered the government shutdown in October, and via the flying analogy we powered through a few air pockets, characterized by very low traffic and buyer engagement in certain weeks in particular markets. On an overall basis, buyer demand in the first quarter could be called tepid or lukewarm or halfhearted, I think you get the idea. Before giving you our take on January, and the balance of 2014, I'm going to turn the call over to Bob to provide a bit more detail on the quarter. Then I'll come back on to discuss our expectations for the remainder of the year. Bob?