PulteGroup Results Beat Views
21 Avril 2016 - 11:10PM
Dow Jones News
After weeks of sparring between the founder and chief executive
of home builder PulteGroup, the company on Thursday reported profit
and revenue increased more than expected in the first quarter on
top of more home closings and an increase in sales prices.
Chairman and Chief Executive Richard Dugas, whose performance
has come under attack from company founder William J. "Bill" Pulte,
steered clear of discussing the controversy during a conference
call with investors.
"We will not be responding to these attacks or otherwise be
discussing the Pultes on this call other than to stay that we stand
by the completeness and accuracy of our previous disclosures," Mr.
Dugas said in opening remarks. "I want to take this opportunity to
assure all investors that we are busy running this company and
remain squarely focused on continuing to deliver value for
you."
For the three months ended March 31, PulteGroup reported profit
of $83.3 million, or 24 cents a share, up from $55 million, or 15
cents a share, in the same period a year earlier. Profit was aided
by a one-time income-tax benefit of $10 million.
Revenue grew 26% to $1.43 billion. Analysts polled by Thomson
Reuters had expected earnings of 20 cents a share on revenue of
$1.36 billion.
Shares of PulteGroup closed down 5 cents to $19.13 on
Thursday.
Over the past two weeks, PulteGroup has been at the center of a
public battle between Mr. Dugas and Mr. Pulte, the company's
largest shareholder. Mr. Pulte, 83 years old, has argued that Mr.
Dugas and the board's lead director, James Postl, need to step down
immediately amid what he says is poor performance compared with
rival home builders.
The company announced two weeks ago that Mr. Dugas would retire
next year, but Mr. Pulte has argued that waiting another year would
further delay needed changes "to the detriment of
shareholders."
Much of the dispute comes down to a difference in philosophy:
Mr. Pulte believes the company has lost ground to competitors such
as D.R. Horton Inc. and Lennar Corp., which have pursued more
aggressive growth as the housing market has rebounded. PulteGroup's
home deliveries for the fiscal year ending December 2015 were down
slightly from a year earlier, while D.R. Horton's deliveries were
up 27% and Lennar's jumped by 15% in fiscal 2015.
PulteGroup said it has worked to reward shareholders through
increased dividends and stock repurchases, and has tried to avoid
too many risky land purchases that could become a liability in a
downturn. Executives made that strategy clear in Thursday's
call.
PulteGroup President Ryan Marshall said the company would be
pursuing "responsible growth" through a "disciplined investment
process."
"This means delivering more volume in a profitable, responsible
and risk-adjusted way, and avoiding the trap of chasing growth for
growth's sake," Mr. Marshall said on the call with investors.
After the call, Mr. Pulte criticized the results as compared
with competitor D.R. Horton, which also reported earnings Thursday.
"PulteGroup continues its severe, multiyear underperformance versus
peers" on factors such as pretax earnings, home deliveries and
overhead control, Mr. Pulte said in a statement.
Analysts said the results were a mixed bag. Closings increased
17% from a year earlier, but the company had higher selling,
general and administrative expenses.
"You don't have a perfect mix on this," said Bob Wetenhall, an
analyst with RBC Capital Markets who follows the home-building
industry. "It's not a clean, neat story."
Jack Micenko, an analyst with Susquehanna Financial Group, said
much of the recent drama involving PulteGroup misses a key point:
The company for the past five years has simply pursued a different
strategy than higher-volume competitors such as D.R. Horton and
Lennar.
Those two companies came into the downturn with better balance
sheets, allowing them to buy up land at cheap rates on which they
are now capitalizing. PulteGroup, on the other hand, came into the
downturn much more leveraged and has been working to improve its
balance sheet, he said.
PulteGroup is "running the business to maximize profitability,
not drive growth," Mr. Micenko said. "This is not a recent turn of
events."
Write to Chris Kirkham at chris.kirkham@wsj.com and Joshua
Jamerson at joshua.jamerson@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 21, 2016 16:55 ET (20:55 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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