Thursday, December 20, 2007

Builder Hovnanian takes $469 million net loss in Q4

Builder Hovnanian Enterprises reported a net loss of almost half a billion dollars for the three-month period ending Oct. 31.

Hovnanian recorded a $469 million net loss for the fourth quarter of the 2007 fiscal year, or $7.42 per share. That compares with a net loss of $118 million, or $1.88 per share, in the fourth quarter of the 2006 fiscal year.

Analysts had expected the company to post a quarterly loss of $1.49 per share in fourth-quarter 2007, according to a survey by Thomson Financial. Hovnanian's stock was trading at $7.24 per share as of 1:07 p.m. ET today, down $1.16 from Wednesday's closing price of $8.40. The stock price had sunk in November to its lowest level since 2001, falling to $6.75 per share on Nov. 27.

The company reported a net loss of $638 million, or $10.11 per share, for the entire fiscal year in 2007, compared with net income of $139 million, or $2.14 per share, in fiscal-year 2006.

Company officials reported that internal research and consultation with an auditing firm about the application of an accounting rule relating to an anticipated period of cumulative loss led the company to record a $54 million tax expense for the quarter -- managers had reportedly anticipated a $162 million tax benefit for the quarter.

The company also reported $383 million in pretax charges for the quarter, including land impairments of $168 million and write-offs of predevelopment costs and land deposits totaling $105 million.

The company projects positive cash flow from operations in excess of $100 million for fiscal-year 2008.

"We have reduced our total land position 47 percent from the peak in April of 2006, and we expect to see this come down even further during fiscal 2008," said J. Larry Sorsby, executive vice president and chief financial officer for the company, in a statement.

Sorsby said during a conference call this morning that the company has cut its full-time workforce by about 43 percent from peak levels in June 2006, which he described as necessary actions in difficult times. He also said that he expects "virtually the entire industry is going to be in a three-year cumulative loss" period from 2006-08, even if 2008 turns out to be a reasonably profitable year.

Ara K. Hovnanian, company president and CEO, said that the company has terminated and walked from land contracts for about 9,000 lots in the fourth quarter and 18,000 lots for the full year.

"Our industry is currently experiencing a cyclical correction," he said in a statement. "While the factors that created this downturn are different than any other throughout our 48-year history, we know that stronger demand for new homes will return. What is not known is how long the market will take to rebound."

The company reported total revenues of $4.8 billion for the 2007 fiscal year, down 21.9 percent compared to revenues in fiscal-year 2006. Fourth-quarter revenues for the fourth quarter fell 20.3 percent compared to the same quarter last year, to $1.4 billion.

The company delivered 13,564 homes with a total sales value of $4.6 billion in fiscal-year 2007, down 24.4 percent compared with 17,940 deliveries with a value of $5.9 billion in fiscal-year 2006.

The reductions of owned lots from July 31-Oct. 31 led to a $597 million decline in total inventory on the company's balance sheet, according to the earnings announcement, which includes a 13 percent decline in unsold homes and models.

As of Oct. 31, Hovnanian had 431 active selling communities excluding unconsolidated joint ventures, a decline of 18 active communities since July 31.

Hovnanian reported 2,781 net contracts excluding unconsolidated joint ventures in the fourth quarter, down 10.3 percent compared to the same quarter last year. The company's contract cancellation rate for the fourth quarter, excluding unconsolidated joint ventures, was 40 percent. That compares to a rate of 35 percent in fourth-quarter 2006.

The company reported a backlog of 5,938 homes with a sales value of $2 billion at the close of the fourth quarter, down 31.3 percent compared with a backlog with a sales value of $2.9 billion on the same day last year.

Hovnanian pointed out during the company's earnings call that new-home prices have taken a major hit, plunging "substantially" in California. He cited examples of 28 to 35 percent declines in the net average selling price of homes in a couple of Hovnanian-built communities in California from December 2006 to October 2007.

In one of these examples, the company lowered the average selling price from $858,240 in December 2006 to $641,240 in October 2007 in one Southern California inland community, and additionally offered $90,000 in incentives.

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software development, Internet programming, real estate web design and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the complete solution including design, application development and marketing.




source: lendinguniverse.com

California, Florida top list with local market price declines

Home prices fell in 21 states from October 2006 through October 207 and dropped in 21 of 31 major metro areas reported in a study released today by First American Corp.'s LoanPerformance.

The price of single-family detached homes tumbled 15.7 percent in the Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif., market area from October 2006 to October 2007, according to the LoanPerformance Home Price Index, which analyzes data for repeat sales transactions.

And six of the eight local market areas tracked in the report that experienced double-digit price declines from October 2006 to October 2007 are in Florida or California, based on single-family detached housing sales data. Las Vegas and Phoenix also saw a double-digit drop in home prices during the study period.

California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona also appear in the top-10 list of states with the highest rate of foreclosure filings in the nation during November, released today by real estate data company RealtyTrac.

The U.S. Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight reported last month that home prices fell in 21 states in the third quarter compared to the second quarter, and dropped 0.8 percent nationwide in the third quarter. A separate price index by Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller, also released last month, found that national home prices fell 1.7 percent during the third quarter and declined 4.5 percent compared to third-quarter 2006.

In the LoanPerformance report for the October 2006-October 2007 period, the Riverside market was followed in its price decline by Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla., which fell 14 percent. Las Vegas dropped 11.7 percent; followed by Oakland-Fremont-Hayward, Calif., down 11.4 percent; Miami, down 10.9 percent; Los Angeles, down 10.5 percent; Orlando, down 10.2 percent; and Phoenix, down 10.1 percent.

Honolulu topped the list of 31 local market areas included in the index report, with a 17.9 percent price gain from October 2006 to October 2007, followed by Salt Lake City, up 11.6 percent; San Antonio, Texas, up 7.9 percent; Raleigh-Cary, N.C., up 4.6 percent; Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, Texas, up 4.5 percent; Charlotte, N.C., up 4.5 percent; Dallas, up 3.9 percent; Seattle, up 2.2 percent; and Portland, Ore., up 1.7 percent.

LoanPerformance reported last month that two markets among the list of 31 had double-digit home-price declines from September 2006 to September 2007: Riverside, Calif., down 13.6; and Cape Coral, Fla., down 11.5 percent. And 17 states had home-price declines during that period.

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software development, Internet programming, real estate web design and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the complete solution including design, application development and marketing.



source: lendinguniverse.com

Nevada tops U.S. rate of foreclosure filings

Nevada continued to lead the nation for its rate of foreclosure filings per household in November -- a position it has held for the past 11 months, foreclosure data company RealtyTrac reported today.

The company reported a 67.8 percent nationwide gain in the volume of foreclosure filings in November 2007 compared to the same month last year, though filings declined 10 percent compared to October 2007.

The national rate of foreclosure filings in November was 1 for every 617 households -- Nevada had a rate of 1 filing for every 152 households during that month.

Next on the list was Florida, with a rate of 1 filing for every 282 households; followed by Ohio, 1-in-307; Colorado, 1-in-320; California, 1-in-325; Michigan, 1-in-391; Georgia, 1-in-421; Arizona, 1-in-441; Indiana, 1-in-484; and Illinois, 1-in-624.

"The 10 percent drop in November is the first double-digit monthly decrease we've seen since April 2006," said James J. Saccacio, RealtyTrac, in a statement.

Saccacio also stated that the company anticipates "a seasonal surge in foreclosure filings and another possible wave of resetting mortgages" next year that "could place further pressure on the housing market."

Five of the 10 metro areas with the highest foreclosure rates in the nation in November are in California, RealtyTrac reported. Stockton, Calif., led the nation with a metro area foreclosure rate of one filing for every 99 households. Modesto, Calif., ranked second, with one foreclosure filing for every 104 households.

Merced, Calif., took third, with a rate of one foreclosure filing for every 106 households, followed by Las Vegas, Detroit, Vallejo, Calif.; Greeley, Colo.; Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla.; Riverside-San Bernardino, Calif.; and Miami.

California led the nation for its total number of foreclosure filings in November, with 39,992; followed by Florida with 29,238; Ohio with 16,308; Texas with 11,599; Michigan with 11,464; Georgia with 8.968; Illinois with 8,238; Nevada with 6,694; Colorado with 6,425; and New York with 5,794.

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software development, Internet programming, real estate web design and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the complete solution including design, application development and marketing.



source: lendinguniverse.com

Overnight real estate rates down again

Long-term mortgage interest rates continued to fall Wednesday, and the benchmark 10-year Treasury bond yield dropped to 4.03 percent.

The 30-year fixed-rate average sank to 5.8 percent, and the 15-year fixed rate dipped to 5.36 percent. The 1-year adjustable rate was down at 5.51 percent.

The 30-year Treasury bond yield edged down to 4.45 percent.

Rates and bonds are current as of 7:15 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.

Mortgage rate figures are according to Bankrate.com, which publishes nightly averages based on its survey of 4,000 banks in 50 states. Points on these mortgages range from zero to 3.5.

In other economic news, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 25.2 points, or 0.19 percent, finishing at 13,207.27. The Nasdaq gained 4.98 points, or 0.19 percent, closing at 2,601.01.

Stock figures are current as of 7:30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software development, Internet programming, real estate web design and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the complete solution including design, application development and marketing.



source: lendinguniverse.com

Freddie Mac: Long-term mortgage rates up this week

The interest rates for 15- and 30-year fixed-rate mortgages rose in the week ending Dec. 20, according to a weekly survey by Freddie Mac.

The Primary Mortgage Market Survey revealed that the rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.14 percent with an average 0.4 point for the week, up from an average 6.11 percent in the previous week. The average rate is up from 6.13 percent for the same week last year.

Meanwhile, the average rate for a 15-year fixed-rate mortgage was 5.79 percent with an average 0.4 percent, according to the survey, compared with 5.78 percent in the prior week. The rate averaged 5.89 percent in the same week last year, Freddie Mac reported.

Five-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages averages 5.9 percent for the week ending Dec. 20, with an average 0.5 point, which is up 1 basis point from an average 5.89 percent last week. For the same week last year, the average rate for a 5-year ARM was 5.96 percent.

The average rate for 1-year Treasury-indexed ARMs was 5.51 percent this week with an average 0.6 point, up 1 basis point since last week. During this week last year, the 1-year ARM rate averaged 5.44 percent.

"Stronger-than-expected inflation reports and retail sales for November put upward pressure on long-term interest rates late last week," said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist, in a statement.

"However, ensuing data releases suggested further weakness in the housing market over November and December and allowed interest rates to drift back down. The net effect left mortgage rates little changed this week."

Nothaft added that producer and consumer price indexes rose in November, "implying inflation may still be a threat to the economy," while retail sales far exceeded market expectations.

Single-family housing starts, meanwhile, fell 5.4 percent in November to 829,000 -- the slowest pace since April 1991, and a National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo index found that builder confidence in December remained at the record-low levels since the inception of the index in 1985, Nothaft also noted.

Real Estate Designers offers totally innovative solutions for your software development, Internet programming, real estate web design and hosting needs. Our service includes domain name registration and real estate web design. Real Estate Designers provides the complete solution including design, application development and marketing.



source: lendinguniverse.com