Hilla Sferruzza
Analyst · Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your question
Thank you, Phillippe. First, I wanted to start by covering the retroactive rate lock Steve mentioned earlier. We believe that today's buyer is aware of the current interest rate environment and after locking in a fixed rate with our mortgage team for the duration of their construction cycle, this buyer is comfortable with their monthly payment. However, we also recognize the buyers in our backlog that were pre-qualified for floating-rate loans several months ago. We now find the results in a different psychological and financial position regarding a home purchase after the sudden and steep surge in interest rates since the start of the year. We wanted to relieve this concern for our buyers. And in March, we purchased retroactive below market fixed interest rate locks and applied them to all eligible floating-rate loans in our backlog that are scheduled to close in the second half of 2022 . The response from our customers has been overwhelming. And we believe these actions will help limit future cancellations in Q3 and Q4 of this year and demonstrate Meritage's commitment to provide exceptional value and service to its customers. Let's turn to Slide 8 and cover our Q1 financial results in more detail. Homebuilding revenue grew 15% year-over-year to $1.2 billion in the first quarter of 2022 as a result of a 17% increase in ASPs due to sustained homebuilding demand even as we continue to shift our product mix towards entry level homes. Home closing volumes declined 1%, impacted by the continuing supply chain issues, pushing some of our late quarter closings to Q2. Our first quarter 2022 home closing gross margin was a record 30.3%. In addition to our favorable pricing power, selling homes later in the construction cycle helped us avoid cost risk and maximize margins. The 560 bp improvement from 24.7% margins a year ago mainly resulted from higher ASPs, more than offsetting higher lumber and other commodity costs as well as the benefit of lower interest costs stemming from improved interest rates on our refinanced debt. Given lumber volatility, we anticipate the next couple of months to be choppy due to timing of lumber locks in Q1, with potential savings impacting margin in the back half of the year. The interest cost savings and margin should be permanent. SG&A as a percentage of home closing revenue was 8.5% for the current quarter, a 130 bp improvement over prior year. Over internal and external commission, higher revenue and the benefit of technology on our sales and marketing efforts allowed us to better leverage our SG&A. In addition to continuing our pursuit of overhead efficiencies, we expect the incremental revenue from closing volume growth will drive additional SG&A leverage in the future. The first quarter of 2022's effective income tax rate was 24.0% compared to 20.6% in the prior year. The higher rate in 2022 reflects the expiration of the 2019 Taxpayer Certainty and Disaster Tax Relief Act under which we earned eligible energy tax credits on qualifying homes closed in 2021. Since the energy tax credit has not yet been enacted beyond 2021, we're not assuming any such benefit in 2022 at this time. Overall, pricing power, expanded margins and improved SG&A leverage, combined with the lower outstanding share count led to a 68% year-over-year increase in first quarter 2022 diluted EPS to $5.79. Turning to Page 9. We maintained a strong balance sheet and ample liquidity during the first quarter. At March 31, 2022, our cash balance was $520 million compared to $618 million at December 31, 2021, primarily stemming from land spend as inventories rose $294 million during the quarter as well as share repurchases, which totaled about $99 million for over 1 million of shares of common stock. Our net debt to cap remained low at 16.9% as of March 31, 2022. We continue to target a maximum net debt to cap rate in the high 20s with no debt maturities until 2025. We believe we have sufficient flexibility should current economic conditions change. We continue to focus our capital spend primarily on opening our incremental communities and getting specs in the ground to help us gain market share. In addition to routinely buying back shares to offset new grants and keep our dilution neutral, we may opportunistically repurchase incremental shares, just like we did this quarter. After these purchases, we still have $54 million remaining on our share repurchase authorization. As we consider our cash spend, to look to balance our operational cash needs with maximizing long-term shareholder value. On to Slide 10. On March 31st, 2022, we had over 75,100 total lots under control, flat sequentially from Q4 2021. Based on a trailing 12-month closing, we had nearly six year supply of lots, which is slightly above our target of four to five years. Given the incremental volume that has started to flow through from the new communities that have come online over the past few quarters, we have a five-year supply of lots based on our forward closing projection at about 15,000 homes for 2022. In the first quarter of this year, we secured over 4,100 net new lots, 30% lower than prior year. Our net new lots translated to 27 new communities, of which approximately 93% are entry level to maintain our focus on affordable homes in the future. We prudently grew our positions at slower pace this quarter than we did in 2021, primarily replacing our starts. Since a 300 community combo is within our reach, we anticipate going beyond 2022 at a more normalized pace and we continue to gauge for changes in home buying trends in all of our markets. We opened up 32 new communities and grew our community count from 259 at the start of this quarter to 268 by March 31, 2022. We spent over $371 million in acquisition and development this quarter, which was essentially flat year-over-year. Since our community comp ramp is stabilizing, our go-forward land acquisition and development spend growth will be more measured. We use options or staggered purchasing terms where financially feasible to preserve liquidity. Since we manage our capital through balance sheet metrics and margin goals, we do not target an arbitrary percentage of option land. Each deal is evaluated based on its own financial merit. About 65% of our total lot inventory at March 31 was owned and 35% with options, in line with Q4 2021. As of March 31, 2021, we had a 60% owned inventory and a 40% auction position. In the first quarter of 2022, we remain selective regarding the land secured. We continue to underwrite to normalize incentive volume and absorption as well as consistent minimum gross margin threshold. Although we haven't changed our underwriting gross margin hurdle, most deals are coming in above that, which provides us a cushion to absorb further cost increases and potentially higher future incentives. This discipline enables us to keep land costs lower and in turn move down the pricing band when these new communities come online. Finally, turning to Slide 11. In April, our demand remained healthy and steady even as rates continued rising. As we manage through supply and labor issues and ramp up our starts, we anticipate incrementally higher orders and closings throughout the rest of the year. For full-year 2022, we're projecting total closings to be between 14,500 and 15,500 units, home closing revenue of $6.5 billion to $6.9 billion, home closing gross margins in the low 28% range, an effective tax rate of about 25% and diluted EPS in the range of $26.30 to $27.90. We remain on track with our 300 community combo just around the corner in Q2 this year. We continue to expect the full-year community count this year to grow between 15% and 20%. As for Q2 2022, we are projecting total closings to be between 3,000 and 3,200 units, home closing revenue of $1.3 billion to $1.4 billion, home closing gross margins in the high 29% range, and diluted EPS in the range of $5.60 to $6.10. With that, I'll turn it back over to Phillippe.