Douglas Yearley
Analyst · UBS. Please go ahead
Thank you, Jason. Good morning. Welcome and thank you for joining us. With me today are Marty Connor, Chief Financial Officer; Rob Parahus, President and Chief Operating Officer; Fred Cooper, Senior VP of Finance and Investor Relations; Wendy Marlett, Chief Marketing Officer; and Gregg Ziegler, Senior VP and Treasurer. Before I begin, I ask you to read the statement on forward-looking information in our earnings release of last night and on our website. I caution you that many statements on this call are forward-looking based on assumptions about the economy, world events, housing and financial markets, interest rates, the impact of the pandemic, the availability of labor and materials, inflation and many other factors beyond our control that could significantly affect future results. We are very pleased with our second quarter performance as we met or exceeded our guidance on all key metrics. We delivered a record 2,407 homes in the second quarter at an average price of approximately $908,000, resulting in record home sales revenue of $2.2 billion. This was an increase of 19% compared to last year’s second quarter revenue. Our teams did a great job delivering homes in what continues to be a very challenging production environment. Adjusted gross margin of 26.1% in the quarter improved 170 basis points compared to last year’s second quarter and was 60 basis points better than guidance. SG&A expense, at 11.1% of homebuilding revenues, was 80 basis points better than both last year’s second quarter and our guidance. Driven by significant revenue growth and expanding margins, we generated earnings per share of $1.85, up 83% compared to last year. At second quarter end, our backlog stood at a record $11.7 billion and 11,768 homes. Based on the strong pricing and margin embedded in our backlog and with approximately half of our backlog scheduled for delivery in fiscal year 2023, we expect our fiscal year 2023 adjusted gross margin to be better than fiscal year 2022’s. Sales in our second quarter were our highest quarter ever as demand remains strong across all of our buyer segments and geographies. We signed 2,874 net contracts for $3.1 billion, up 1.2% in dollars over 2021’s extremely strong second quarter, when orders were up 97% in dollars compared to Q2 of 2020. Our quarterly sales pace was consistent with the 8.8 contracts per community that we projected for Q2 on our earnings call back in February. While demand is still solid, over the past month, it has moderated from the unprecedented pace of the past 2 years as buyers adapt to higher mortgage rates and other macroeconomic conditions. The substantial rise in home prices, the steep increase in mortgage rates since January, inflation concerns and stock market volatility are all having an impact on buyer sentiment, and we anticipate that some buyers may remain cautious through seasonally slower summer months. As a reminder, in the second quarter, we limited sales to catch up on construction. We are continuing this strategy in the third quarter. With the combination of restricting sales, the normal summer slowdown and a more cautious buyer, we expect our Q3 contracts to be lower than Q2, which is what normally occurred pre-COVID. Despite the recent moderation, the housing market remains healthy. Even over the past month, we have continued to raise prices in a limited number of communities and we are running successful best-and-final sealed bid processes in about 15% of our communities. The many fundamental drivers that have supported the housing market in recent years remain firmly in place. These include favorable demographics, with 150 million millennials and baby-boomers experiencing life events that are driving home demand. The supply and demand imbalance resulting from over a decade of underproduction, tight retail inventories, migration trends driven by more flexibility in the workplace and an overall greater appreciation for homes, and in particular, new homes. In addition, the for-sale housing market is benefiting from ongoing and significant increases in rents for single and multi-family dwellings. We believe these trends will continue to support housing demand in the long-term. Turning specifically to our customers, we believe they are generally better insulated from affordability concerns. They tend to have higher incomes in net worth and many have benefited from significant price appreciation in their existing homes. Approximately 20% of our customers pay all cash and those who do take a mortgage average approximately 70% loan-to-value. Importantly, our buyers utilizing jumbo loans are benefiting from a rate that remains 0.75 point lower than the conforming rate. As our industry continues to be challenged by supply chain disruptions, labor shortages and municipal delays, we have revised our full year deliveries guidance. We now expect full year deliveries to be between 11,000 and 11,500 homes, a reduction of about 375 homes at the midpoint. However, we have increased our average delivered price guidance by $15,000 per home to reflect the strong pricing in our backlog. As a result, we expect full year 2022 homebuilding revenues of approximately $10.1 billion at the midpoint of our guidance or 20% growth compared to fiscal year 2021. We remain committed to our disciplined and capital efficient land acquisition strategy. At the end of our fiscal second quarter, we owned or controlled 85,800 lots, of which 53% were controlled and 47% were owned. Nearly 12,000 of these lots are already committed to homebuyers in our backlog. Excluding these, our controlled land represents 61% of lots. This land position, much of which was contracted for pre-pandemic, provides us with sufficient land needed for significant growth well into the future. Therefore, we can be very selective as we evaluate new land deals and apply our more rigorous underwriting standards that incorporate higher gross margin and IRR thresholds, higher contingencies for land development and construction costs, and more conservative assumptions related to sales paces. We also remain focused on improving our return on equity. In the second quarter, we repurchased $106.5 million of our common stock and another $16 million so far in our third quarter. Since the beginning of the fiscal year, we have repurchased about $308 million or 4.6% of our year end share count. We have also paid $44 million in dividends year-to-date and we retired $410 million of long-term debt in our first quarter. In March, our Board approved an 18% increase in our quarterly dividend, and just last week, refreshed our share repurchase authorization to 20 million shares or nearly $900 million based on current prices. These actions reflect our confidence in the business and our commitment to delivering returns to our shareholders. With that, I will turn it over to Marty.