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Hovnanian Slides to Two-Year Low - Wider Loss Than Analyst Estimated

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  • Hovnanian Slides to Two-Year Low - Wider Loss Than Analyst Estimated

    Hovnanian Slides to Two-Year Low After Wider Loss Than Analyst Estimated

    By Prashant Gopal and Mary Childs - Jun 8, 2011 Hovnanian Enterprises
    Inc. (HOV), the largest homebuilder in New Jersey, fell the most in a
    year in New York trading after reporting a wider second-quarter loss
    than analysts estimated.

    Hovnanian's net loss for the three months ended April 30 widened
    to $72.7 million, or 69 cents a share, from $28.6 million, or 36 cents,
    a year earlier, the Red Bank, New Jersey-based company said in a
    statement yesterday after the close of trading. Analysts predicted a
    loss of 55 cents a share, the average of nine estimates in a Bloomberg
    survey.

    The results `were well short of our (and the Street's)
    expectations on most fronts as the housing market remains under
    pressure,' Vincent Foley and Cedric Morris, analysts with
    Barclays Capital Inc. in New York, wrote in a research note yesterday.

    The stock fell 12 percent to $2.07 at 4:15 p.m. in New York Stock
    Exchange Composite trading, the biggest decline since June 2010. It has
    lost 49 percent this year, the worst performance in Bloomberg's
    U.S. homebuilder index.

    U.S. homebuilders are struggling with weak demand as unemployment hovers
    around 9 percent and foreclosures drag down prices of previously owned
    houses. Hovnanian, which specializes in communities of single-family
    homes, said the spring selling season was
    `disappointing.'

    Falling Orders, Margins
    Second-quarter revenue declined to $255.1 million from $318.6 million a
    year earlier. Net orders tumbled 17 percent to 1,166 homes. The
    company's homebuilding gross margin, a measure of profitability,
    dropped to 14.8 percent from 17.3 percent.

    The company is likely to have revenue of $265 million to $295 million in
    the third quarter, and $320 million to $350 million in the fourth
    quarter, Chief Executive Officer Ara Hovnanian said during a conference
    call with analysts today.

    Bondholders are losing confidence in Hovnanian as the company uses its
    cash to buy land in the housing slump. The homebuilder's cash
    and near-cash holdings fell to $353.7 million in the quarter from $783.1
    million two years earlier.

    The cost to protect the company's debt with credit-default swaps
    ended yesterday at the highest level since Sept. 23, according to CMA,
    which is owned by the CME Group Inc. Contracts protecting against the
    company's default for five years increased 2.1 percentage points
    today to 37.6 percent upfront as of 12:28 p.m. in New York, according to
    the data provider. That's in addition to 5 percent a year,
    meaning it would cost $3.76 million initially and $500,000 annually to
    protect $10 million of Hovnanian debt.

    Hedge Against Losses
    Credit-default swaps pay the buyer face value if a borrower fails to
    meet its obligations, less the value of the defaulted debt. The
    contracts, which investors use to hedge against losses on corporate debt
    or to speculate on creditworthiness, decline as investor confidence
    improves and rise as it deteriorates.

    `We understand the market's concern with
    liquidity,'Chief Financial Officer Larry Sorsby said during
    today's call.`It is something we are monitoring closely.
    However, our internal financial models give us the confidence that we
    have sufficient capital to grow our way back to profitability, even in a
    flat, non-recovering market.'

    The company expects narrower losses in the third and fourth quarters,
    CEO Hovnanian said.

    To contact the reporters on this story: Prashant Gopal in New York at
    [email protected]; Mary Childs in New York at [email protected]


    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Kara Wetzel at
    [email protected]


    From: Baghdasarian
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