Ara Hovnanian
Analyst · the company's website at www.khov.com. Those listeners who would like to follow along should now log on to the website. I would like to turn the call over to Jeff O'Keefe, Vice President, Investor Relations. Jeff, please go ahead
Thanks, Jeff. I'm going to review our first quarter results and I'll address the current market environment. Larry Sorsby, our CFO, will follow me with more details and then we'll open it up to Q&A. The Omicron COVID variant certainly further exacerbated industry supply chain disruptions and labor shortages. Across the country, during the month of January, in particular, we experienced trade partners being unable to work or working short staff due to COVID infections among their teams. Similarly, local building departments and inspectors experienced widespread COVID-related absences. Finally, COVID caused widespread issues among our suppliers. Cabinets, windows and garage doors were among the many problems due to COVIDs impact on labor at their manufacturing and delivery facilities. At the end of our first quarter, many homes across our markets were virtually finished. However, one or two back quartered items or the lack of a final inspection prevented us from closing homes all around the country. All of these issues combined resulted in longer construction cycle times and delays in home deliveries. This pushed some of our expected first quarter deliveries into the second quarter and caused us to miss our revenue guidance. However, as we'll describe more fully in a moment, our outperformance in gross margin and several other areas allowed us to exceed the high-end of our guidance for pre-tax profit. On Slide 5, we compare our first quarter results to our guidance. Additionally, we added a third column to compare our results without the $5.7 million of incremental phantom stock expense that was due solely to stock price increases in the quarter. As you can see in the third column, we missed in revenues, exceeded the top end of our guidance on gross margin, we're within our guidance range on SG&A, and exceeded the top end of the range in income before taxes. Due to 60% of our phantom stock being distributed in January of 2022, going forward fluctuations and stock price will have much less of an effect on our SG&A expense. For every $8 movement in our stock price, we'll have a corresponding $1 million impact on SG&A expense. Moving on to Slide 6, we show year-over-year comparisons for our first quarter. Given the supply chain disruptions and labor shortages that have been plaguing many industries, certainly including homebuilding, we're pleased with the strong profitability in the quarter. Starting in the upper left hand of the slide, you can see that our total revenues for the first quarter were $565 million. Moving to the upper right hand portion of the slide, you can see that our adjusted gross margin increased 170 basis points to 22.4% this year compared to 20.7% in last year's first quarter. This clearly illustrates that we've been able to raise home prices more than enough to offset the higher labor and material costs that we've incurred. Keep in mind that these first quarter deliveries were started when lumber costs were much higher and therefore did not get the benefit of the lower lumber costs that we had in the fall of 2021. We expect that lower lumber prices from late summer and fall of 2021 to positively impact gross margins beginning in the second quarter of fiscal 2022, as we deliver homes that started after the lumber prices receded. This is reflected in the large increase in our guidance for second quarter gross margins. Lumber prices have moved up from levels that we saw in the fall, but those increased prices are already factored into our full-year guidance. In the lower left hand quadrant of the slide, you can see that our SG&A ratio was 12.8% for the first quarter compared to 11.1% in last year's first quarter. If you exclude the incremental phantom stock expense, it would improve to 11.8% this year. If the COVID-related delays did not adversely affect our delivery count, our SG&A ratio would've been lower yet. In the lower right hand quadrant of the slide, we show that adjusted EBITDA was flat year-over-year at $64 million. Excluding the incremental phantom stock expenses adjusted EBITDA would've increased 9% year-over-year to $70 million. Turning to Slide 7. On this slide, you can see the benefit of the $181 million reduction of debt that we completed last year, particularly the reduction of some of our higher cost debt. Our percentage of interest expense to total revenues decreased 240 basis points from 7.2% in last year's first quarter to 4.8% this year. We anticipate lowering our interest costs further in the future. Regardless of future market conditions, lower debt levels means lower interest expenses in future periods. On Slide 8, you can see that excluding incremental phantom stock expenses, our adjusted pretax income improved 92% to $41 million compared to $21 million last year. Adjusted pretax income including the phantom stock expense still increased 65% to $36 million. Last year we did not expense federal income taxes in the first quarter, since we had sufficient deferred tax reserves. We subsequently reversed our deferred tax reserve. Therefore this year, we expensed federal income taxes in the quarter causing our net income to increase 31%, while our pretax income increased 65%. Regardless of the federal tax expense this year, we do not have to actually pay federal income taxes for the next $1.6 billion of pretax income as a result of our deferred tax asset. Let me talk about our sales environment. On the right hand portion of Slide 5, we show contracts per community for the first quarter, in each of the last three years. You can see that our contract pace jumped from 9.7 in the first quarter of fiscal 2020 to a white hot pace of 16.9 in fiscal 2021. That was a 74% year-over-year increase. While not as strong as last year, our sales pace of 14 contracts per community in the first quarter of this year was still exceptionally strong. Compared to the 9.7 contracts per community in the first quarter of 2020 our contract pace is up 44%. Further to the left, we show that the average first quarter contract pace from 1997 to 2002 was 8.6. And as we said, many times before, that was a time that was neither a boom nor a bust for the housing industry. The current pace of 14 contracts per community in this year's first quarter is incredibly strong compared to historical averages. Due to our ability to raise prices more than construction costs, our recent contracts are being written with very high gross margins. We expect higher levels of profitability in future periods as we deliver these homes. If mortgage rates rise further, it's reasonable to expect the rate of home price increases will moderate. At the same time, however, material and labor cost increases should also moderate. Despite the high impact of higher mortgage rates, house -- home demand remains strong. Entitled and improved lots remain a scarce commodity. And today we are still increasing home prices in all of our markets. On Slide 10, we show contracts per community monthly from March through February. The most recent month is in dark green. The same month a year ago is in light blue and the same month two years ago is in gray. For the last nine months, our contracts have been lower than last year's blazing pace. However, we compare favorably every month with the same month two years ago, which was a more historically typical contract pace. There's no doubt that our current sales pace reflects strong consumer demand for our homes. Turning to Slide 11, I want to focus on the month of February given everyone's focus on the current market conditions and you can't get more current than a month, which ended yesterday. I want to begin by saying that February right through our sales yesterday was a very strong month. I'm sure many of you have been wondering whether rising rates, fears of inflation, or the problems of Ukraine have affected demand. As you can see in this slide, sales were rock solid and very much above normal. On this slide, we show the contracts per community for the month of February from fiscal 2018 through fiscal 2022, which ended yesterday. For the first two years on this slide, contracts per community had been steady at about 3.2. This was a historically typical pace. Then the demand in February of 2020 exploded to 4.8 contracts per community. This was just before COVID hit. Then in February of 2021, we hit a white hot pace of 6.1 contracts per community, almost double the historical pace. This year, the preliminary results for February put us at 5 contracts per community, which is a very strong month for the month of February and well above normal, but certainly not as good as it was in 2021. On the bottom of the slide, we show what the seasonally annualized sales pace based on the month of February for these same years were to give another perspective. As you can see the annualized pace for February 2022 of 72.5 contracts per community puts us well ahead of 2018 or 2019, and was much higher than the non-boom non-bust sales pace of 44 that we averaged from 1997 through 2002. So let me say it one more time, sales right through our month end yesterday were rock solid and well above normal. I want to take a few moments to talk about interest rates. On Slide 12, we show long-term perspective of where the 30-year fixed rate mortgages have been since the 1990s. Today's 4% 30-year fixed rate mortgage remains among the lowest levels that we have seen for the past three decades. If you turn to Slide 13, we show that the rates, since January 1 of this year, the mortgage rates have increased almost a 100 basis points. Despite this recent run-up in mortgage rates, as you just saw demand for new homes has remained robust, right through the end of February. Any increase in mortgage rates is not helpful as a portion of homebuyers will no longer be able to qualify for the same mortgage that they would have previously. However, over the 60-plus years that we've been building homes, we've observed in numerous rising mortgage rate environments, rates certainly impact how large of a mortgage consumers can afford. But time after time, we've seen homebuyers adjust their expectations for how much they can afford to buy. When mortgage rates increase, consumers typically will either buy a smaller home or choose fewer options and upgrades. To-date, we have not seen much evidence of our customers taking those steps. If mortgage rates continue to increase, we expect that would occur. Incidentally, we make a comparable gross margin ratio in our smaller homes in a community compared to our larger homes. Now that's not to say interest rates do not affect housing demand. Continued rapid increases could certainly cause sticker shock among homebuyers and cause delays in their home buying decision. As recently as 2018, the housing markets suffered from sticker shock, as mortgage rates increased 100 basis points in a short time then, and homebuyers delayed their home purchase decision. However, in 2018, the economy was not as strong and the outlook for inflation was nominal. People did not believe mortgage rates would remain high, nor that home prices would remain high. So some customers just waited before buying a new home. After just a few months, consumers jump back into the housing market in a very strong way. And that was even before the post-pandemic surge. If consumers need and desire new housing, after adjusting their expectations for what they can afford, they will eventually buy a home. The increase in mortgage rates has had no impact on our cancellation rates. For the first quarter of 2022, our cancellation rate was 14% compared to 17% in last year's first quarter. For the months of January and February, when interest rates moved up by 100 basis points, our cancellation rates were 15% and 17%. Both months are in line with our low cancellation rate trends and remain below our historical average cancellation rates in the low 20% area. On Slide 14, we show that our community count increased slightly year-over-year, the most relevant number to keep an eye on is our consolidated community count, which increased by six communities, or 6% year-over-year to 111 at the end of the quarter. We expect our community count is likely to be similar at the end of the second quarter, and then increase in both the third and fourth quarter. Given no material changes in market conditions, we expect to end year with a community count at or slightly higher than the 140 communities that we had at the end of fiscal 2021. Further, we expect to maintain a higher average community count for fiscal 2022 compared to last year. We already have 86% of the remainder of the year's deliveries in backlog and firmly believe we'll be able to achieve the significant profit growth in our fiscal 2022 guidance. I'll now turn it over to Larry Sorsby, our Chief Financial Officer.