KB Home Reports 2021 Second Quarter Results
KB Home reported strong Q2 2021 results, with revenues up 58% year-over-year to $1.44 billion, driven by a 40% increase in homes delivered. Gross margins rose to 21.4%, while operating margins exceeded 11%. The backlog value reached $4 billion, positioning the company for significant revenue growth. Net income soared 176% to $143.4 million. Despite supply chain challenges, net orders increased 145%, the highest second-quarter level in 14 years, along with a substantial decline in cancellation rates, reflecting a robust demand for housing.
- Revenue increased by 58% to $1.44 billion.
- Net income soared 176% to $143.4 million.
- Gross margin improved to 21.4%.
- Backlog value reached $4 billion, indicating strong future revenue potential.
- Net orders rose 145%, the highest in 14 years.
- None.
KB Home (NYSE: KBH) today reported results for its second quarter ended May 31, 2021.
“Our second quarter results reflect the sustained strength and health of our business. In particular, our ability to optimize our assets was evident in our gross margin rising above
“With a backlog value above
Three Months Ended May 31, 2021 (comparisons on a year-over-year basis)
The Company’s results for the comparable 2020 quarter were adversely impacted by the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and the extensive and restrictive public health measures implemented during that period to contain and combat the outbreak.
-
Revenues increased
58% to$1.44 billion . -
Homes delivered rose
40% to 3,504. -
Average selling price increased
13% to$409,800. -
Homebuilding operating income grew
216% to$162.9 million from$51.6 million . The homebuilding operating income margin increased 560 basis points to11.3% . Excluding $.5 million of inventory-related charges in the 2021 second quarter, and$4.4 million of inventory-related charges and$6.7 million of severance charges in the year-earlier quarter, this metric improved to11.4% from6.9% .-
The housing gross profit margin expanded 320 basis points to
21.4% . Excluding inventory-related charges, the housing gross profit margin improved to21.5% from18.7% .- The housing gross profit margin improvement mainly reflected a favorable pricing environment due to the strength of housing market demand and the limited supply of available homes for sale, increased operating leverage due to higher revenues, and lower amortization of previously capitalized interest.
-
Adjusted housing gross profit margin, a metric that excludes inventory-related charges and the amortization of previously capitalized interest, increased to
24.2% from21.9% .
-
Selling, general and administrative expenses as a percentage of housing revenues improved to
10.1% from12.6% , primarily reflecting the continued impact from targeted actions the Company took to reduce overhead costs in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic; increased operating leverage from higher revenues; and the above-noted severance charges in the year-earlier quarter.
-
The housing gross profit margin expanded 320 basis points to
-
The Company’s financial services operations generated pretax income of
$10.6 million , which increased40% , mainly due to higher income from its mortgage banking joint venture, KBHS Home Loans, LLC.-
KBHS Home Loans, LLC originated
75% of the residential mortgage loans the Company’s homebuyers obtained to finance their home purchase, achieving essentially the same level as in the year-earlier quarter.
-
KBHS Home Loans, LLC originated
-
Total pretax income grew
156% to$173.7 million . As a percentage of revenues, pretax income increased 470 basis points to12.1% . -
The Company’s income tax expense and effective tax rate were
$30.3 million and approximately17% , respectively, compared to income tax expense of$15.8 million and an effective tax rate of approximately23% . The lower effective tax rate primarily reflected an increase in federal energy tax credits the Company earned from building energy efficient homes. -
Net income of
$143.4 million and diluted earnings per share of$1.50 increased176% and173% , respectively, compared to net income of$52.0 million and diluted earnings per share of $.55.
Six Months Ended May 31, 2021 (comparisons on a year-over-year basis)
-
Homes delivered increased
21% to 6,368. -
Average selling price rose to
$404,100 , up7% . -
Revenues of
$2.58 billion were up30% . -
Pretax income grew
118% to$297.2 million . -
Net income increased
115% to$240.4 million and diluted earnings per share rose112% to$2.52 .
Backlog and Net Orders (comparisons on a year-over-year basis)
-
Net orders for the quarter grew
145% to 4,300, the Company’s highest second-quarter level in 14 years, with net order value increasing by$1.35 billion , or196% , to$2.04 billion . Both net orders and net order value rose in all of the Company’s four regions, with net order value growth ranging from118% in the Central region to406% in the Southeast region.-
The cancellation rate as a percentage of gross orders for the quarter improved to
9% from43% . The cancellation rate in the year-earlier period largely reflected the Company’s proactive efforts to assure a backlog of qualified homebuyers amid the unprecedented nationwide economic and employment disruptions resulting from the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.
-
The cancellation rate as a percentage of gross orders for the quarter improved to
-
Ending backlog grew
98% to 10,034 homes, driving a126% increase in ending backlog value to$4.29 billion . Each of the Company’s four regions generated a triple-digit increase in backlog value, ranging from105% in the Central region to155% in the Southeast region. -
Strong housing demand drove an increase in the Company’s average monthly net orders per community to 7.0 from 2.4, which accelerated community closeouts during the quarter. As a result, the Company’s average community count decreased
17% to 205, and its ending community count was 200, compared to 244.
Balance Sheet as of May 31, 2021 (comparisons to November 30, 2020)
-
Cash and cash equivalents totaled
$608.1 million , compared to$681.2 million .-
The Company had total liquidity of
$1.40 billion , including cash and cash equivalents and$787.6 million of available capacity under its unsecured revolving credit facility. The Company has not borrowed under the facility since 2019.
-
The Company had total liquidity of
-
Inventories increased
10% to$4.27 billion .-
Investments in land acquisition and development for the six months ended May 31, 2021 rose
79% to$1.13 billion , compared to$633.5 million for the year-earlier period. -
The Company’s lots owned or under contract increased to 77,458, up
16% from November 30, 2020 and28% year over year.-
Of the Company’s total lots, approximately
55% were owned and45% were under contract. - The Company’s 42,733 owned lots represented a supply of approximately 3.6 years, based on homes delivered in the trailing 12 months.
-
Of the Company’s total lots, approximately
-
Investments in land acquisition and development for the six months ended May 31, 2021 rose
-
Notes payable of
$1.75 billion were essentially unchanged.-
The Company’s debt to capital ratio improved 190 basis points to
37.7% . The Company’s net debt to capital ratio of28.3% improved 30 basis points. On a year-over-year basis, the debt to capital ratio and net debt to capital ratio improved 380 basis points and 410 basis points, respectively. - In May 2021, Moody’s Investors Service upgraded the Company’s corporate credit rating to Ba2 from Ba3 and changed the rating outlook to stable from positive.
-
The Company’s debt to capital ratio improved 190 basis points to
-
On June 9, 2021, the Company completed the issuance of
$390.0 million in aggregate principal amount of4.00% senior notes due 2031, and used a portion of the net proceeds to purchase, pursuant to a tender offer that expired the previous day,$269.8 million in aggregate principal amount of its outstanding$450.0 million of7.00% senior notes due December 15, 2021. The Company intends to use the remaining net proceeds together with cash on hand to redeem the remainder of these notes at par value on September 15, 2021.-
The Company expects to recognize a charge of approximately
$5.0 million for the early extinguishment of debt in the 2021 third quarter. -
The recently completed transactions, together with the planned redemption of the remaining
$180.2 million of7.00% senior notes on September 15, 2021, will effectively extend the weighted average maturity of the Company’s senior notes by more than two years and reduce its weighted average borrowing rate by approximately 70 basis points.
-
The Company expects to recognize a charge of approximately
Environmental, Social and Governance (“ESG”) News
- On April 13, 2021, the Company was named an ENERGY STAR® Partner of the Year — Sustained Excellence Award Winner for the 11th consecutive year by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The Company has built over 150,000 ENERGY STAR certified homes, more than any other homebuilder in the nation.
- On Earth Day, April 22, 2021, the Company released its 14th Annual Sustainability Report, which details its priorities and achievements in three core areas: environmental sustainability, social responsibility and economic sustainability; and highlights the Company’s evolving ESG standards and practices as part of its focus on long-term value creation. The full report can be found on the Company’s website.
Conference Call
The conference call to discuss the Company’s 2021 second quarter earnings will be broadcast live TODAY at 2:00 p.m. Pacific Time, 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time. To listen, please go to the Investor Relations section of the Company’s website at kbhome.com.
About KB Home
KB Home is one of the largest and most recognized homebuilders in the United States and has built nearly 650,000 quality homes in our more than 60-year history. Today, KB Home operates in 45 markets from coast to coast. What sets KB Home apart is the exceptional personalization we offer our homebuyers—from those buying their first home to experienced buyers—allowing them to make their home uniquely their own, at a price that fits their budget. As the leader in energy-efficient homebuilding, KB Home was the first builder to make every home it builds ENERGY STAR® certified, a standard of energy performance achieved by fewer than
Forward-Looking and Cautionary Statements
Certain matters discussed in this press release, including any statements that are predictive in nature or concern future market and economic conditions, business and prospects, our future financial and operational performance, or our future actions and their expected results are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements are based on current expectations and projections about future events and are not guarantees of future performance. We do not have a specific policy or intent of updating or revising forward-looking statements. Actual events and results may differ materially from those expressed or forecasted in forward-looking statements due to a number of factors. The most important risk factors that could cause our actual performance and future events and actions to differ materially from such forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to the following: general economic, employment and business conditions; population growth, household formations and demographic trends; conditions in the capital, credit and financial markets; our ability to access external financing sources and raise capital through the issuance of common stock, debt or other securities, and/or project financing, on favorable terms; the execution of any securities repurchases pursuant to our board of directors’ authorization; material and trade costs and availability, particularly lumber; consumer and producer price inflation; changes in interest rates; our debt level, including our ratio of debt to capital, and our ability to adjust our debt level and maturity schedule; our compliance with the terms of our revolving credit facility; volatility in the market price of our common stock; home selling prices, including our homes’ selling prices, increasing at a faster rate than consumer incomes; weak or declining consumer confidence, either generally or specifically with respect to purchasing homes; competition from other sellers of new and resale homes; weather events, significant natural disasters and other climate and environmental factors; any failure of lawmakers to agree on a budget or appropriation legislation to fund the federal government’s operations, and financial markets’ and businesses’ reactions to any such failure; government actions, policies, programs and regulations directed at or affecting the housing market (including the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, relief provisions for outstanding mortgage loans and any extensions or broadening thereof, the tax benefits associated with purchasing and owning a home, and the standards, fees and size limits applicable to the purchase or insuring of mortgage loans by government-sponsored enterprises and government agencies), the homebuilding industry, or construction activities; changes in existing tax laws or enacted corporate income tax rates, including those resulting from regulatory guidance and interpretations issued with respect thereto; changes in U.S. trade policies, including the imposition of tariffs and duties on homebuilding materials and products, and related trade disputes with and retaliatory measures taken by other countries; the adoption of new or amended financial accounting standards and the guidance and/or interpretations with respect thereto; the availability and cost of land in desirable areas and our ability to timely develop acquired land parcels and open new home communities; our warranty claims experience with respect to homes previously delivered and actual warranty costs incurred; costs and/or charges arising from regulatory compliance requirements or from legal, arbitral or regulatory proceedings, investigations, claims or settlements, including unfavorable outcomes in any such matters resulting in actual or potential monetary damage awards, penalties, fines or other direct or indirect payments, or injunctions, consent decrees or other voluntary or involuntary restrictions or adjustments to our business operations or practices that are beyond our current expectations and/or accruals; our ability to use/realize the net deferred tax assets we have generated; our ability to successfully implement our current and planned strategies and initiatives related to our product, geographic and market positioning, gaining share and scale in our served markets and in entering into new markets; our operational and investment concentration in markets in California; consumer interest in our new home communities and products, particularly from first-time homebuyers and higher-income consumers; our ability to generate orders and convert our backlog of orders to home deliveries and revenues, particularly in key markets in California; our ability to successfully implement our business strategies and achieve any associated financial and operational targets and objectives, including those discussed in this release or in any of our other public filings, presentations or disclosures; income tax expense volatility associated with stock-based compensation; the ability of our homebuyers to obtain residential mortgage loans and mortgage banking services; the performance of mortgage lenders to our homebuyers; the performance of KBHS, our mortgage banking joint venture with Stearns Ventures, LLC; information technology failures and data security breaches; an epidemic or pandemic (such as the outbreak and worldwide spread of COVID-19), and the control response measures that international, federal, state and local governments, agencies, law enforcement and/or health authorities implement to address it, which may (as with COVID-19) precipitate or exacerbate one or more of the above-mentioned and/or other risks, and significantly disrupt or prevent us from operating our business in the ordinary course for an extended period; widespread protests and civil unrest, whether due to political events, efforts to institute law enforcement and other social and political reforms, or otherwise, and the impacts of implementing or failing to implement any such reforms; and other events outside of our control. Please see our periodic reports and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a further discussion of these and other risks and uncertainties applicable to our business.
KB HOME CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS For the Three Months and Six Months Ended May 31, 2021 and 2020 (In Thousands, Except Per Share Amounts - Unaudited) |
||||||||||||||||
|
Three Months Ended May 31, |
|
Six Months Ended May 31, |
|||||||||||||
|
2021 |
|
2020 |
|
2021 |
|
2020 |
|||||||||
Total revenues |
$ |
1,440,892 |
|
$ |
913,970 |
|
$ |
2,582,630 |
|
$ |
1,989,905 |
|
||||
Homebuilding: |
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Revenues |
$ |
1,436,035 |
|
$ |
910,280 |
|
$ |
2,574,043 |
|
$ |
1,982,662 |
|
||||
Costs and expenses |
(1,273,133 |
) |
(858,691 |
) |
(2,297,047 |
) |
(1,870,878 |
) |
||||||||
Operating income |
162,902 |
|
51,589 |
|
276,996 |
|
111,784 |
|
||||||||
Interest income |
241 |
|
442 |
|
894 |
|
1,377 |
|
||||||||
Equity in income (loss) of unconsolidated joint ventures |
(127 |
) |
8,154 |
|
177 |
|
10,059 |
|
||||||||
Homebuilding pretax income |
163,016 |
|
60,185 |
|
278,067 |
|
123,220 |
|
||||||||
Financial services: |
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Revenues |
4,857 |
|
3,690 |
|
8,587 |
|
7,243 |
|
||||||||
Expenses |
(1,253 |
) |
(883 |
) |
(2,453 |
) |
(1,845 |
) |
||||||||
Equity in income of unconsolidated joint ventures |
7,044 |
|
4,797 |
|
13,014 |
|
8,019 |
|
||||||||
Financial services pretax income |
10,648 |
|
7,604 |
|
19,148 |
|
13,417 |
|
||||||||
Total pretax income |
173,664 |
|
67,789 |
|
297,215 |
|
136,637 |
|
||||||||
Income tax expense |
(30,300 |
) |
(15,800 |
) |
(56,800 |
) |
(24,900 |
) |
||||||||
Net income |
$ |
143,364 |
|
$ |
51,989 |
|
$ |
240,415 |
|
$ |
111,737 |
|
||||
Earnings per share: |
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Basic |
$ |
1.55 |
|
$ |
.57 |
|
$ |
2.60 |
|
$ |
1.23 |
|
||||
Diluted |
$ |
1.50 |
|
$ |
.55 |
|
$ |
2.52 |
|
$ |
1.19 |
|
||||
Weighted average shares outstanding: |
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||
Basic |
92,087 |
|
90,493 |
|
91,904 |
|
90,169 |
|
||||||||
Diluted |
95,379 |
|
93,472 |
|
95,143 |
|
93,628 |
|
||||||||
KB HOME CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS (In Thousands - Unaudited) |
||||||
|
May 31,
|
November 30,
|
||||
Assets |
|
|
||||
Homebuilding: |
|
|
||||
Cash and cash equivalents |
$ |
608,069 |
$ |
681,190 |
||
Receivables |
271,080 |
272,659 |
||||
Inventories |
4,272,566 |
3,897,482 |
||||
Investments in unconsolidated joint ventures |
45,358 |
46,785 |
||||
Property and equipment, net |
69,336 |
65,547 |
||||
Deferred tax assets, net |
199,445 |
231,067 |
||||
Other assets |
115,233 |
125,510 |
||||
|
5,581,087 |
5,320,240 |
||||
Financial services |
37,846 |
36,202 |
||||
Total assets |
$ |
5,618,933 |
$ |
5,356,442 |
||
|
|
|
||||
Liabilities and stockholders’ equity |
|
|
||||
Homebuilding: |
|
|
||||
Accounts payable |
$ |
316,989 |
$ |
273,368 |
||
Accrued expenses and other liabilities |
665,690 |
667,501 |
||||
Notes payable |
1,747,447 |
1,747,175 |
||||
|
2,730,126 |
2,688,044 |
||||
Financial services |
1,942 |
2,629 |
||||
Stockholders’ equity |
2,886,865 |
2,665,769 |
||||
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity |
$ |
5,618,933 |
$ |
5,356,442 |
KB HOME SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION For the Three Months and Six Months Ended May 31, 2021 and 2020 (In Thousands, Except Average Selling Price - Unaudited) |
||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
Three Months Ended May 31, |
|
Six Months Ended May 31, |
|||||||||||||
|
2021 |
|
2020 |
|
2021 |
|
2020 |
|||||||||
Homebuilding revenues: |
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
Housing |
$ |
1,436,032 |
|
$ |
909,978 |
|
$ |
2,573,385 |
|
$ |
1,981,788 |
|
||||
Land |
3 |
|
302 |
|
658 |
|
874 |
|
||||||||
Total |
$ |
1,436,035 |
|
$ |
910,280 |
|
$ |
2,574,043 |
|
$ |
1,982,662 |
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
Homebuilding costs and expenses: |
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
Construction and land costs |
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
Housing |
$ |
1,128,017 |
|
$ |
744,151 |
|
$ |
2,029,195 |
|
$ |
1,629,632 |
|
||||
Land |
1 |
|
302 |
|
732 |
|
874 |
|
||||||||
Subtotal |
1,128,018 |
|
744,453 |
|
2,029,927 |
|
1,630,506 |
|
||||||||
Selling, general and administrative expenses |
145,115 |
|
114,238 |
|
267,120 |
|
240,372 |
|
||||||||
Total |
$ |
1,273,133 |
|
$ |
858,691 |
|
$ |
2,297,047 |
|
$ |
1,870,878 |
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
Interest expense: |
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
Interest incurred |
$ |
31,110 |
|
$ |
31,055 |
|
$ |
62,202 |
|
$ |
62,017 |
|
||||
Interest capitalized |
(31,110 |
) |
(31,055 |
) |
(62,202 |
) |
(62,017 |
) |
||||||||
Total |
$ |
— |
|
$ |
— |
|
$ |
— |
|
$ |
— |
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
Other information: |
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
Amortization of previously capitalized interest |
$ |
39,600 |
|
$ |
28,746 |
|
$ |
72,250 |
|
$ |
63,321 |
|
||||
Depreciation and amortization |
8,068 |
|
7,815 |
|
15,792 |
|
15,744 |
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
Average selling price: |
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
West Coast |
$ |
622,000 |
|
$ |
567,200 |
|
$ |
603,300 |
|
$ |
591,900 |
|
||||
Southwest |
360,900 |
|
317,100 |
|
356,900 |
|
316,700 |
|
||||||||
Central |
317,000 |
|
297,600 |
|
312,200 |
|
295,200 |
|
||||||||
Southeast |
293,500 |
|
292,300 |
|
291,200 |
|
292,100 |
|
||||||||
Total |
$ |
409,800 |
|
$ |
364,100 |
|
$ |
404,100 |
|
$ |
377,400 |
|
KB HOME SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION For the Three Months and Six Months Ended May 31, 2021 and 2020 (Dollars in Thousands - Unaudited) |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
Three Months Ended May 31, |
|
Six Months Ended May 31, |
|||||||||
|
2021 |
|
2020 |
|
2021 |
|
2020 |
|||||
Homes delivered: |
|
|
|
|
||||||||
West Coast |
1,006 |
585 |
1,890 |
1,379 |
||||||||
Southwest |
715 |
552 |
1,249 |
1,155 |
||||||||
Central |
1,232 |
955 |
2,243 |
1,923 |
||||||||
Southeast |
551 |
407 |
986 |
794 |
||||||||
Total |
3,504 |
2,499 |
6,368 |
5,251 |
||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||
Net orders: |
|
|
|
|
||||||||
West Coast |
1,300 |
555 |
2,460 |
1,534 |
||||||||
Southwest |
924 |
305 |
1,791 |
1,070 |
||||||||
Central |
1,292 |
719 |
2,890 |
1,936 |
||||||||
Southeast |
784 |
179 |
1,451 |
713 |
||||||||
Total |
4,300 |
1,758 |
8,592 |
5,253 |
||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||
Net order value: |
|
|
|
|
||||||||
West Coast |
$ |
937,416 |
$ |
324,936 |
$ |
1,716,967 |
$ |
923,352 |
||||
Southwest |
374,700 |
99,464 |
708,619 |
356,684 |
||||||||
Central |
463,746 |
212,445 |
1,016,687 |
585,926 |
||||||||
Southeast |
260,975 |
51,599 |
463,632 |
205,136 |
||||||||
Total |
$ |
2,036,837 |
$ |
688,444 |
$ |
3,905,905 |
$ |
2,071,098 |
||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||
|
May 31, 2021 |
May 31, 2020 |
||||||||||
|
Homes |
Value |
Homes |
Value |
||||||||
Backlog data: |
|
|
|
|
||||||||
West Coast |
2,594 |
$ |
1,729,370 |
1,198 |
$ |
705,357 |
||||||
Southwest |
2,063 |
786,578 |
1,153 |
380,454 |
||||||||
Central |
3,684 |
1,249,238 |
2,001 |
609,156 |
||||||||
Southeast |
1,693 |
529,737 |
728 |
208,050 |
||||||||
Total |
10,034 |
$ |
4,294,923 |
5,080 |
$ |
1,903,017 |
KB HOME
RECONCILIATION OF NON-GAAP FINANCIAL MEASURES
(In Thousands, Except Percentages - Unaudited)
This press release contains, and Company management’s discussion of the results presented in this press release may include, information about the Company’s adjusted housing gross profit margin and ratio of net debt to capital, neither of which is calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”). The Company believes these non-GAAP financial measures are relevant and useful to investors in understanding its operations and the leverage employed in its operations, and may be helpful in comparing the Company with other companies in the homebuilding industry to the extent they provide similar information. However, because they are not calculated in accordance with GAAP, these non-GAAP financial measures may not be completely comparable to other companies in the homebuilding industry and, thus, should not be considered in isolation or as an alternative to operating performance and/or financial measures prescribed by GAAP. Rather, these non-GAAP financial measures should be used to supplement their respective most directly comparable GAAP financial measures in order to provide a greater understanding of the factors and trends affecting the Company’s operations.
Adjusted Housing Gross Profit Margin
The following table reconciles the Company’s housing gross profit margin calculated in accordance with GAAP to the non-GAAP financial measure of the Company’s adjusted housing gross profit margin:
|
Three Months Ended May 31, |
|
Six Months Ended May 31, |
|||||||||||||
|
2021 |
|
2020 |
|
2021 |
|
2020 |
|||||||||
Housing revenues |
$ |
1,436,032 |
|
$ |
909,978 |
|
$ |
2,573,385 |
|
$ |
1,981,788 |
|
||||
Housing construction and land costs |
(1,128,017) |
|
(744,151) |
|
(2,029,195) |
|
(1,629,632) |
|
||||||||
Housing gross profits |
308,015 |
|
165,827 |
|
544,190 |
|
352,156 |
|
||||||||
Add: Inventory-related charges (a) |
457 |
|
4,379 |
|
4,521 |
|
10,051 |
|
||||||||
Housing gross profits excluding inventory-related charges |
308,472 |
|
170,206 |
|
548,711 |
|
362,207 |
|
||||||||
Add: Amortization of previously capitalized interest (b) |
39,600 |
|
28,746 |
|
72,096 |
|
63,321 |
|
||||||||
Adjusted housing gross profits |
$ |
348,072 |
|
$ |
198,952 |
|
$ |
620,807 |
|
$ |
425,528 |
|
||||
Housing gross profit margin |
21.4 |
% |
18.2 |
% |
21.1 |
% |
17.8 |
% |
||||||||
Housing gross profit margin excluding inventory-related charges |
21.5 |
% |
18.7 |
% |
21.3 |
% |
18.3 |
% |
||||||||
Adjusted housing gross profit margin |
24.2 |
% |
21.9 |
% |
24.1 |
% |
21.5 |
% |
||||||||
(a) Represents inventory impairment and land option contract abandonment charges associated with housing operations.
(b) Represents the amortization of previously capitalized interest associated with housing operations. |
Adjusted housing gross profit margin is a non-GAAP financial measure, which the Company calculates by dividing housing revenues less housing construction and land costs excluding (1) housing inventory impairment and land option contract abandonment charges (as applicable) recorded during a given period and (2) amortization of previously capitalized interest associated with housing operations, by housing revenues. The most directly comparable GAAP financial measure is housing gross profit margin. The Company believes adjusted housing gross profit margin is a relevant and useful financial measure to investors in evaluating the Company’s performance as it measures the gross profits the Company generated specifically on the homes delivered during a given period. This non-GAAP financial measure isolates the impact that housing inventory impairment and land option contract abandonment charges, and the amortization of previously capitalized interest associated with housing operations, have on housing gross profit margins, and allows investors to make comparisons with the Company’s competitors that adjust housing gross profit margins in a similar manner. The Company also believes investors will find adjusted housing gross profit margin relevant and useful because it represents a profitability measure that may be compared to a prior period without regard to variability of housing inventory impairment and land option contract abandonment charges, and amortization of previously capitalized interest associated with housing operations. This financial measure assists management in making strategic decisions regarding community location and product mix, product pricing and construction pace.
Ratio of Net Debt to Capital
The following table reconciles the Company’s ratio of debt to capital calculated in accordance with GAAP to the non-GAAP financial measure of the Company’s ratio of net debt to capital:
|
May 31,
|
November 30,
|
||||||
Notes payable |
$ |
1,747,447 |
|
$ |
1,747,175 |
|
||
Stockholders’ equity |
2,886,865 |
|
2,665,769 |
|
||||
Total capital |
$ |
4,634,312 |
|
$ |
4,412,944 |
|
||
Ratio of debt to capital |
37.7 |
% |
39.6 |
% |
||||
|
|
|
||||||
|
|
|
||||||
Notes payable |
$ |
1,747,447 |
|
$ |
1,747,175 |
|
||
Less: Cash and cash equivalents |
(608,069) |
|
(681,190) |
|
||||
Net debt |
1,139,378 |
|
1,065,985 |
|
||||
Stockholders’ equity |
2,886,865 |
|
2,665,769 |
|
||||
Total capital |
$ |
4,026,243 |
|
$ |
3,731,754 |
|
||
Ratio of net debt to capital |
28.3 |
% |
28.6 |
% |
The ratio of net debt to capital is a non-GAAP financial measure, which the Company calculates by dividing notes payable, net of homebuilding cash and cash equivalents, by capital (notes payable, net of homebuilding cash and cash equivalents, plus stockholders’ equity). The most directly comparable GAAP financial measure is the ratio of debt to capital. The Company believes the ratio of net debt to capital is a relevant and useful financial measure to investors in understanding the leverage employed in the Company’s operations.
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210623005317/en/
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