NASDAQ:LGIH LGI Homes Q4 2023 Earnings Report $55.31 -0.32 (-0.58%) As of 05/9/2025 04:00 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast LGI Homes EPS ResultsActual EPS$2.19Consensus EPS $2.54Beat/MissMissed by -$0.35One Year Ago EPS$1.45LGI Homes Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$608.41 millionExpected Revenue$663.95 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$55.54 millionYoY Revenue Growth+24.60%LGI Homes Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2023Date2/20/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, February 20, 2024Conference Call Time12:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsLGI Homes' Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, July 29, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 12:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by LGI Homes Q4 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 20, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the LGI Homes 4th Quarter 2023 Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded and a replay will be available on the company's Web site at www.lgihomes.com. After management's prepared comments, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. I'll now turn the call over to Josh Fader, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:27Thanks and good afternoon. I'll remind listeners that this call contains forward looking statements, including management's views on LGI Homes' business strategy, outlooks, plans, objectives and guidance for future periods. Such statements reflect management's current expectations and involve assumptions and estimates that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause those expectations to prove to be incorrect. You should review our filings with the SEC for a discussion of the risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ from those presented today. All forward looking statements must be considered in light of related risks and you should not place undue reliance on such statements, which reflect management's current viewpoints and are not guarantees of future performance. Speaker 100:01:11On this call, we'll discuss non GAAP financial measures that are not intended to be considered in isolation or as substitutes for financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. Reconciliations of non GAAP financial measures to the most comparable measures prepared in accordance with GAAP can be found in the press release we issued this morning and in our annual report on Form 10 ks for the period ended December 31, 2020 3 that we expect to file with the SEC later today. This filing will be accessible on the SEC's website and in the Investor Relations section of our website. I'm joined today by Eric Liebert, LGI Homes' Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board and Charles Merdian, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer. I'll now turn the call over to Eric. Speaker 200:01:56Thanks, Josh. Good afternoon, and welcome to our earnings call. We are pleased to report that we delivered a strong 4th quarter that successfully achieved all of our operational and financial guidance targets for the full year. We also laid the foundation for considerable community count growth and continued profitability for many years to come. As we prepared for today's call, we reflected on our original full year guidance from February of last year. Speaker 200:02:22Looking back, it's worth highlighting how well our teams across the country navigated the headwinds, executed our strategy and outperformed our initial expectations. At the beginning of last year, we expected to close between 6,071,000 homes. We delivered 6,729 homes, the high end of our original guidance and an increase of 1.6% year over year. We expected ASPs between $335,000 $350,000 and we exceeded that range. We generated revenue of $2,400,000,000 an increase of over 2% compared to last year, making us one of the few public homebuilders who delivered year over year growth in both closings and revenue in 2023. Speaker 200:03:14The trend of outperformance continued when it came to our profitability targets. At this time last year, we expected gross margin to range between 21% percent 23% and our actual result was at the top end of that range. We expected adjusted gross margin between 22.5% to 24.5%. Through a continued focus on improving profitability throughout the year, we exceeded the high end of that range, delivering 24.7%. We averaged 5.4 closings per community per month last year, an industry leading pace that demonstrates the effectiveness of our systems, processes and people in a challenging and uncertain market. Speaker 200:03:56Our top 5 markets this year were Dallas Fort Worth with 9.1 closings per community per month, Charlotte with 8.6, Northern California with 8.3, Fort Pierce with 8.1 and Las Vegas with 7.3. Congratulations to the teams in these markets on your outstanding results. In 2023, our geographic footprint continued to grow. We added a new market and a new state to our map with our first closings in Salt Lake City, Utah. At the time of our initial public offering in 2013, we were operating in just 8 markets across 4 states. Speaker 200:04:32Since then, we successfully replicated our systems and culture across the country and are now active in 36 markets across 21 states. Salt Lake City marks another significant milestone in the growth of our company and we look forward to providing more updates on future calls. Throughout 2023, we made considerable progress growing our community count and ended the year with 117 active communities, an increase of 18.2% year over year. And we're not slowing down, expanding community count remains at the forefront of our objectives. While the land required to drive our growth for the next several years is already owned and under development, there's more work to do. Speaker 200:05:13We continue to invest in our long term growth and are taking advantage of opportunities as they arise. Before handing the call over to Charles, I'll share one additional highlight. The success of our business model has been clearly demonstrated by a number of impressive metrics, but I'll draw your attention to one in particular. Despite expanding our operational footprint significantly, quadrupling our closings and increasing our community count by a factor of nearly 7 times, we have never taken an inventory impairment, not as a public company and not as a private company before that. Even with the challenges and uncertainty of the last 18 months, the conservative and disciplined framework of our acquisition strategy has proven extremely dependable at selecting and delivering lots that meet or exceed our profitability and return metrics and we expect that to remain the case in the future. Speaker 200:06:08With that, I'll turn the call over to Charles for additional color on our financial results. Speaker 300:06:13Thanks, Eric. Here are more details on our 4th quarter results. Revenue was $608,400,000 an increase of 24.6 percent year over year, reflecting a 21.4% increase in closings to 17 58 homes and a 2.6% increase in our average selling price to $346,083 Our ASP was 1.9% lower sequentially, reflecting a higher level of incentives offered in the 4th quarter as mortgage rates climbed into the mid-7s in October November. We closed 298 homes through our wholesale business in the 4th quarter, representing 17% of our total closings compared to 4 31 homes or 29.8% of our total closings in the Q4 of last year. Gross margin as a percentage of sales in the 4th quarter was 23.4% compared to 20.7% in the same period last year. Speaker 300:07:19I'll remind listeners that during the Q4 of 2022, we decided to move older, higher cost inventory resulting in lower overall margins. The 270 basis point improvement was also driven by our continued focus this year on improving the incremental profitability on every home sold and fewer wholesale closings. Gross margins were 2 30 basis points lower sequentially, primarily due to higher financing incentives offered to buyers in the 4th quarter. Adjusted gross margin in the 4th quarter was 25.1 percent. Adjusted gross margin excludes $8,900,000 of capitalized interest charged to cost of sales and $981,000 related to purchase accounting together representing 170 basis points. Speaker 300:08:10Combined selling, general and administrative expenses were 13.6 percent of revenue. Selling expenses were $49,800,000 or 8.2 percent of revenue compared to 6.8 percent of revenue in the Q4 of 2022. The increase as a percentage of revenue was driven by increased spending on advertising and higher outside commissions. General and administrative expenses totaled $33,000,000 or 5.4 percent of revenue in the 4th quarter compared to 5% of revenue in the same period last year. Pretax net income for the 4th quarter was $68,500,000 or 11.3 percent of revenue. Speaker 300:08:534th quarter net income was $52,100,000 or $2.21 per basic share and $2.19 per diluted share. Highlighting a few full year results. Revenue was $2,400,000,000 an increase of 2.3% driven by a 1.6% increase in home closings and a 0.7% increase in our full year average sales price to $350,510 During the year, we closed 679 homes through our wholesale business, representing 10.1% of our total closings and generating $202,300,000 in revenue. We currently expect our wholesale business will represent approximately 5% of our total closings in 2024. Our full year gross margin was 23% and adjusted gross margin was 24.7%, both in line with the guidance we provided on our last call. Speaker 300:09:54Combined selling, general and administrative expenses were also in line with our guidance at 13.1%. Our pretax net income for the year was $261,800,000 or 11.1 percent of revenue. Our effective tax rate last year was 23.9 percent in line with the guidance we provided on our last call. And finally, our 2023 net income was $199,200,000 or $8.48 per basic share and $8.42 per diluted share. 4th quarter gross orders were 15.61. Speaker 300:10:34Net orders were 9.71 and the cancellation rate during the quarter was 37.8% compared to 37.5% during the same period last year. The full year cancellation rate was 25.4 percent, generally in line with our historical average. We ended the year with 5 90 homes in backlog valued at $224,900,000 Decrease in homes was primarily due to fewer wholesale contracts included in our backlog at the end of this year compared to last. Turning to our land position. At December 31, we owned and controlled a total of 71,081 lots, a decrease of 1.1% year over year and 1.4% sequentially. Speaker 300:11:21We ended the quarter with 55,331 owned lots, a decrease of 5.8% year over year and 1.7% sequentially. Of our owned lots, 41,155 were raw land or land under development and approximately 25% of those lots were actively being developed and about 46% were in engineering at year end. Of the remaining 14,176 owned lots, 10,749 were finished vacant lots. During the quarter, we started 705 homes and finished the year 3,427 completed homes, information centers or homes in progress. Finally, at December 31, we controlled 15,750 lots, an increase of 19.5% year over year. Speaker 300:12:16And with that, I'll turn the call over to Josh for a discussion of our capital position. Speaker 100:12:22Thanks, Charles. We ended the year with over $3,100,000,000 of real estate inventory on total assets of over $3,400,000,000 In November, we issued $400,000,000 of 8.75 percent senior notes and used the net proceeds to pay down borrowings on our revolver. The new notes mature in 2028 and are callable beginning late next year. Concurrent with the new issuance, we successfully amended our credit agreement, returning a previously non extending lender back into our bank group and increasing total commitments on the facility from $1,100,000,000 to $1,200,000,000 through 2025 and extending the maturity for $960,000,000 of those commitments through 2028. Taken together, these two transactions create additional depth and flexibility within our capital structure and provide significant additional liquidity to support our long term profitability focused growth. Speaker 100:13:17As of December 31, our total debt was $1,250,000,000 resulting in a debt to capital ratio of 40.2% and a net debt to capital ratio of 39.3%. Total liquidity was $403,800,000 including $49,000,000 of cash on hand and $354,800,000 available to borrow under our revolving credit facility. Finally, we ended the quarter with nearly $1,900,000,000 in total book equity and a book value per share of $78.71 With that, I'll turn the call back over to Eric. Speaker 200:13:55Thanks, Josh. We're pleased with the strong results we delivered in 2023. It was a challenging year, but our success in meeting or exceeding all of our operational and financial targets reflects the effectiveness of our systems and people and gives us confidence as we head into 2024. Before sharing our outlook, I'll provide some color on what we're currently seeing in the market. As shown by our January closings, the Q1 got off to a slower start. Speaker 200:14:21There were several contributing factors, including pronounced seasonality in December leads, fewer wholesale closings, the close out of some higher performing communities and new openings that are still in the early stages. However, I'm pleased to say since the beginning of February, we've seen a significant increase in leads and traffic. We remain focused on keeping homeownership affordable, utilizing our expertise and reaching and serving the first time homebuyers. Through the 1st 3 weekends of February, our leads are up an average of over 73% compared to the prior 2 months and last weekend was the best sales week of the year, driven by our investment and targeted advertising and introduction of new solutions to combat affordability headwinds for our customers. With those points in mind, I'll share our outlook for 2024. Speaker 200:15:08Our plan remains anchored in our strategy of driving affordability, increasing profitability and building on the significant groundwork related 2023 or community count growth over the next several years. For the full year, we expect closings to be up by double digits and plan to deliver between 7,008,000 homes. Once again, community count will be up significantly this year. We expect to grow community count by 25% to 30% and end 2024 with approximately 150 active selling communities. Selling prices will be higher this year as we balance affordability and focus on increasing margins and offsetting expected cost inflation. Speaker 200:15:51Based on our backlog, planned product mix and expected community openings, we are guiding to a full year average sales price between 350 $360,000 While few builders have set out a full year gross margin target, we once again plan to increase margins. We currently expect full year gross margins between 23.1 percent 24.1 percent and adjusted gross margins between 25% 26%. SG and A expense is expected to range between 12.5% 13.5% as we invest in personnel, training and advertising to support our growing number of communities. Finally, we expect the full year tax rate will range between 24% 25%. Similar to this time last year, our guidance targets reflect our current view in the market and what we believe is attainable if conditions remain the same for the rest of the year. Speaker 200:16:46As a result, we have complete confidence in our ability to meet or exceed all the metrics we've presented. I'll close by thanking our employees for their commitment and enthusiasm this past year. At the end of the day, our achievements are the results of our people and their dedication to our company. We thank them for their excellent performance last year and look forward to all that we'll accomplish together in 2024. Operator, please open the call for questions. Operator00:17:12Certainly. Our first question will be coming from Paul Przybylski of Wolfe. Your line is open. Speaker 400:17:36Thank you. I guess first of all, your guide for this year on closings implies about 4.2 absorptions at the midpoint. Typically, I think your goal has been around 6. Is that a change in your strategic thinking, demand environment focus, so price over pace? Any color you can add there? Speaker 200:18:02Yes, Paul, this is Eric. It's a great question. I think our numbers are a little bit different from yours and I'll talk through that. Our pace in 2023 was 5.4%, which we're pretty excited about because our ASP being the highest it's ever been and opening a lot of new communities. And when we looked at guidance for 2024, starting the year, a good comparison, we think we're going to be in an affordability challenged market, similar to what we were in 2023. Speaker 200:18:30And if we did 5.4 in 2023, confident in our community count growth to 100 and 50 active communities. We do believe it's going to be back end loaded. So the average community count, was probably a little bit higher or excuse me, lower than what you're thinking. And we think a range of 4.5% to 5.3% is actually where our guidance is based on where how we think the community count is going to flow. Also another factor in that is LGI Living, our wholesale business, our expectation is that's about half of it, the volume it was in 2023. Speaker 200:19:04And then with all the new communities opening, our expectations are all of these new communities, the absorption pace is slower. So 5.4% last year, a range of 4.5% to 5.3% this year, we think it's a very good way to start the year with guidance. Speaker 400:19:23Okay. Fair enough. And then going to your gross margin guide, obviously, it's flat to up year over year. I think some of your peers are talking down those expectations given higher land costs flowing through. I guess what's different about your current setup that would allow you to buck those trends? Speaker 200:19:48Yes, I think a couple of things, Paul. First of all, we do a lot of development work. We think it's important to capture that development profit. We think we need to incentivize the customers through incentives to get that mortgage rate and buy downs as low as possible. But we don't think that needs to be more than we have been doing in 2023, and I think we need to take a cautious approach to that. Speaker 200:20:12These finished lots and the inventory that we have around the country, those are very valuable assets. So I think we're going to be cautious about discounting them too much. And certainly, if we did a lot of discounting and through even more incentives at the customer, that pace per community would probably increase. But I think we need to be protective of our gross margin. And that's one of the positive things about LGI right now is we're anticipating gross margin midpoint of a range being higher in 2024 than 2023 plus all the community count growth. Speaker 400:20:42Okay. And one last one. On your you've got nice community count growth this year. How does that set the stage going into 2025? Will you be able to maintain community count growth or are you kind of pulling some stuff forward? Speaker 400:20:58Any color or guidance? Speaker 200:21:00Yes. No pulling it forward from a standpoint. We still expect community count growth in 2025. The 150 communities are somewhat baked in. Almost all of those are completely developed. Speaker 200:21:12A lot of those construction has begun on the site. So we expect those 150 communities to have closings by the end of the year and then we expect community count growth again next year as well. Thank you. Appreciate it. You're Operator00:21:29welcome. And one moment for our next question. And our next question will be coming from Ken Zener of Seaport Research. Your line is open. Speaker 500:21:43Hello, everybody. Speaker 200:21:46Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 500:21:49Your comments about not having impairments, that's worthwhile making. I mean, I have to think about it, but it is an impressive statement. I'm not sure I was aware of that, so good for you guys. Why are we seeing perhaps better SG and A leverage? It looks like it's kind of flat year over year. Speaker 500:22:10And with your I believe that you're selling, right? It's where you're absorbing kind of a lot of the increase. It doesn't seem like you're really expecting that to go down much or are you in your SG and A guidance? Because you're getting more leverage in your communities that you've been investing for, I assume. So talk to that dynamic, if you would. Speaker 300:22:31Yes, great question, Ken. This is Charles. So a couple of things. One is we're spending more on advertising this year or expect to this year than we did in 2023. So that trend started to increase mid year. Speaker 300:22:47Last year as we started in the second and kind of third quarters and increased into the 4th quarter. We also are increasing community count as well. So we're investing in growth in people that the community count comes faster, to Eric's point about the absorption than the revenue does. So we're a little we'll be investing ahead of the closings as well. So those are really the 2 biggest pieces. Speaker 500:23:18And the advertising Is the advertising increase expected to offset your absorption from the people that you've already invested in? And where does that leave your incentive assumption? I guess that's where I'm kind of thinking about those three pieces working together. Speaker 300:23:38Sure. Yes. So in terms of the incentive assumptions, the incentives are flowing into net revenues, so not in the SG and A line. So that affects the average sales price. So the assumptions on ASP increasing incentives. Speaker 300:23:58And we would expect overall incentives to generally be similar in 2024 as they were to the average for 2023. And then in terms of personnel growth, advertising spend, we're investing in driving leads. So our marketing team is actively monitoring what we're spending and where we're spending it to drive leads to our communities. So we're just budgeting in that we're expecting to use our full budget this year and some years in the past, we haven't had to use it. For example, during the COVID years, we saw a lot of favorable results in that spend because we didn't need to spend it. Speaker 300:24:43But for 2024, we're expecting that we're going to spend our full budget. Speaker 500:24:48Good. And if I could ask, I guess, more of another question. It goes to the balance sheet and you guys self developed land. I think your statement around impairments, that's why you do that up a lot. And I'm just trying to set your balance sheet. Speaker 500:25:05So one of the ways to think about that is your units in inventory is about 3500 or 3427. Where do you think if you can help us understand your kind of thinking process, like where do you think that would be? Because I mean that was as high as 4,800 in 2Q, 2022. And I'm asking relative to your own lot count, which is like 8 year supply right now, but you ran out of land, so your pace came down. Do you think your owned lots are going to be basically the same and you're just picking up your closing pace, so your own lines loans owned lot supply will go down? Speaker 500:25:46And I asked about the units under construction because that's obviously another part of your balance sheet. If you could address that in terms of where you think that might be at the end of the year? Thank you very much guys. Speaker 300:25:57Yes, sure. Ken, I can take this one as well to start with. So out of our 3,100,000,000 about $2,100,000,000 of it is invested in raw land, land under development and finished lots. So really when you break down the owned lots, we do that in the prepared remarks, breaking the 55,000 lots down, 41,155 of them are in either a raw stage or under development. So that would include either truly raw, still the cornfield, future sections, that type of status or in engineering, which is a low cost investment way to be ready for future active development. Speaker 300:26:42So only 25% or roughly about 10,000 of our owned lots are under development. So we think we are in good shape in terms of managing the delivery of those lots to be able to satisfy the expected demand in terms of what we think for not just 2024, but going into 2025 and bring the engineered lots into active development so that we can pace that accordingly with what we think our closing results are going to be for the next couple of years. And then shifting over to vertical, we managed to about 6 months worth of inventory. So just over 3,400 units on our from an implied midpoint or low point of our guidance would be just shy of 6 months. So slower start to the year that Eric mentioned that pace is expected to increase in terms of the start pace as we introduce new communities later on throughout the year. Speaker 300:27:41But the way we think about it the $800,000,000 we have invested in vertical represents a 6 month supply of where we think closings are going. Speaker 500:27:56Thank you. You bet. Operator00:27:59One moment for our next question. And our next question will be coming from Michael Rehaut of JPMorgan. Your line is open, Michael. Speaker 600:28:14Thanks. Good afternoon, everyone. Speaker 200:28:17Good afternoon. Speaker 600:28:18First, I wanted to kind of just dial in a little bit on the closings and the pace of community openings in 2024. Eric, in your you have the guidance out there of a growth rate range of 4% to 19%. And Eric, I don't know if it was intentional or not or you're just referring to the midpoint, but you kind of described your outlook for community I'm sorry, closings growth this year is double digit. So I don't know if that was just referring to the midpoint or your maybe higher conviction of kind of hitting the upper half of that range. I don't know if that's kind of one way to look into that. Speaker 600:29:03But wanted to get a sense for your level of conviction, let's say, of hitting the upper half, if indeed you really do expect kind of to hit that, let's say, 7,500 to 8,000 range, let's say. And how does the community count openings, you said it was back half weighted. How should we think about that getting to 150? Where would we be, let's say, midyear? Speaker 200:29:34Yes, great question, Michael. Appreciate you asking it. A couple of comments. First of all, I think we agree with you. We hope closings our closing guidance is conservative. Speaker 200:29:45And that's the way we believe it always should be. So yes, when you're talking about double digit growth that was referring to the midpoint. Community count growth, we do expect to be back end loaded. As an example, one of the exciting things that the team is gearing up for here is we've got 18 new community sales openings in the month of March. And we would expect all 18 of those to be active communities in Q2 of this year and then adding in Q3 and Q4. Speaker 200:30:14So February community count is probably going to be similar to January community count. So really ramping up throughout the rest of the year, primarily in the back half. So those are a couple of exciting things. And yes, we're if we perform the way we're supposed to, leads are up, sales last week were really positive. Midpoint to high end of the guidance range is certainly possible, and that's the goal. Speaker 600:30:41Great, great. And then on the community count, I think previously you had talked about getting to above 180 by the end of 2025. Is that still kind of the goal there? Or I know that in an earlier question you just said growth, but I think you've been more explicit in other calls and kind of looking at getting to that 180 mark or better? Speaker 200:31:10Yes. Another great question, Michael. We chose not to say 180 specifically for community count growth the following year. Part of the reason is we are very opportunistic, very selective on new acquisitions. We talked about never taken inventory impairment in our life of LGI, which is a hats off the acquisitions and development teams across the nation for pulling that feet off and we're very proud of that. Speaker 200:31:36So we're cautious in our buying right now. And that being said, it really depends on what new acquisitions look like for the next 6 to 12 months. So Speaker 600:31:57I I appreciate that. A couple of other quick ones if I can squeeze in. Wanted to know number 1, if you could give us any sense of how February is tracking in terms of closings for the month, about another 10 days or so or 8 days, perhaps 8, 9 days to close out. And also the interest amortization, usually it's in the low ones and it looks like based on guidance you're looking more like 2% ish and just wanted to make sure I had that right as well. Speaker 200:32:33Yes, I can take the first part of the question on closings for February. January sales were not as robust as we'd like, Mike. So January closings were lighter. In February, we expect to close probably around $350,000,000 which is up from January, down from last year's February. And then sales last couple of weeks have been very strong in the month of February, and that will lead to March. Speaker 200:32:57And we believe we can increase the closings year over year in the month of March. Speaker 300:33:03And I can take the interest question for you Mike is, we expect a lot of these new communities were projects that we developed. So as interest rates increased over the last year or so, that interest has been capitalized against these development projects and we expect them to start coming through the income statement. So we do expect interest to tick up both just from the sheer volume of development communities plus a higher cost of debt capital. And then purchase accounting is a small factor into that delta in the guidance as well. And we would expect that absolute number to generally be about the same year over year. Speaker 300:33:46So it will be a smaller portion. So a little bit higher on the interest coming through and a little bit smaller on purchase accounting. Speaker 600:33:55Great. Thanks so much. Speaker 500:33:57You bet. Operator00:33:59And one moment for our next question. And our next question will be coming from Jay McCanless of Wedbush. Jay, your line is open. Speaker 700:34:11Hey, good afternoon, everyone. So my first question, Eric, when you were talking about the sales decline in January, you said that December leads were pretty soft, which I was surprised to hear because most of your competitors talked about volume and interest levels really picking up in December. So maybe if you could give us some more depth on that, please? Speaker 200:34:34Yes. I think we just didn't see that, Jay. I think part of it is we were really focused on ending the year strong and getting to that over 6,700 closings last year, which we are proud of. That's what we said we're going to do. It allowed us to increase closings year over year. Speaker 200:34:51And we just didn't see the strong sales pace in December. It's very typical for us, certainly around the holidays in the 1st year for sales and orders to slow down. But that's just what we saw. It's been a lot better in February. Speaker 700:35:06Okay. And then as I think part of what you talked about also is maybe some new incentives and or affordability plays that you guys could have with the customers, maybe talk more about that. And then to take it a step further from that, there is a significant amount of multifamily supply that's going to be hitting the market this year. What is the strategy or strategies to defend against that and continue to pull in your what I still believe is your core customer into the LGI neighborhood? Speaker 200:35:43Yes. I think a couple of things there is, Jay, we're always going to be talking to our customers about the advantage of a homeownership versus renting. I mean, even if there's more supply of rental houses out there or rental units, apartments, We're still going to continue to talk about the value of homeownership. Right now, affordability is strained. The gap between the monthly payments to get into homeownership compared to renting an apartment is probably the widest it's ever been or certainly the widest over the last 12 months or so. Speaker 200:36:14And that's a challenge for us and that goes back to a lot of the previous discussions that we've had. How do you combat that challenge? Well, you spend more money on advertising, you drive leads, more leads to our communities because we're probably going to have to talk to more people in order to get customers that are qualified. We're also working on smaller square footage houses. We've talked about that on a couple of previous calls. Speaker 200:36:38Percentage of houses under 1500 Square Foot that we sold in 2021 that was 21% of our houses were under 1500 Square Feet and in 2023 that was 29% and that trend is likely to continue into 2024. So that's some of the tools that we have, the increased spending on marketing, doing more training, looking at smaller square footage in order to keep that absorption pace up. Speaker 700:37:10Okay. That's all I had. Thank you. Speaker 300:37:12Thanks, Jay. Operator00:37:14And one moment for our next question. And our next question will be coming from Alex Barron of Housing Research Center. Your line is open. Speaker 800:37:26Yes, thank you. Yes, I was hoping you guys could share how many homes you guys have under production and how many of those are completed specs? Speaker 300:37:38Yes, sure. We've got about 1400 that are homes in progress and 18 50 completed homes. Speaker 800:37:49Okay. So a total of 3,250? Speaker 300:37:52Yes. And then the rest would be in permission centers to get to a 34, 20%. Speaker 800:37:59Okay, great. And then I guess just philosophically speaking, given everything that's going on right now, are you guys more inclined to try to preserve margins or try to preserve sales pace to maintain volume even if that affects margins? Speaker 200:38:22Yes, Alex, it's a great question. I guess what margin you're talking about and we're protective of gross margin. We want to maintain our sales pace. And for us, that means looking at mortgage incentives, it also means spending more money on advertising. So because we'd like to maintain the pace and also keep our adjusted gross margin high as well, but probably more towards the margin right now. Speaker 200:38:45We're starting to see some appraisal challenges across the United States, but it's still a very minimal amount. So we're comfortable that our sales prices that we're getting good value to our customers. But we're watching that and we'll have to adjust accordingly. The market dictates that we do so. Speaker 800:39:03And in terms of incentives, roughly how much are they as a percentage of your sales price? Speaker 200:39:12Yes, I think there's a couple of different factors there. We've done big forward commitments before. Our typical incentive, I'd say on average is 2% to 3% of the sales price and you're really just focused on getting that monthly payment as low as possible. So that would be a good average. Speaker 800:39:27Got it. All right. Well, best of luck. Thanks. Speaker 200:39:30Thanks, Alex. Operator00:39:35Thank you. And at this time, I'm not showing any further questions. I would like to hand the call back to Eric for closing remarks. Speaker 200:39:42Thank you to everyone for participating on the call today and for interest in LGI Homes. Have a great day. Thank you.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallLGI Homes Q4 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) LGI Homes Earnings HeadlinesLGI Homes Expands Presence in Tampa Area with New Scattered Lot Homesites in Spring HillMay 10 at 3:57 PM | nasdaq.comLGI Homes Expands Presence Near Buffalo with New Minneapolis-Area CommunityMay 9 at 7:45 PM | globenewswire.comMusk’s Project Colossus could mint millionairesI predict this single breakthrough could make Elon the world’s first trillionaire — and mint more new millionaires than any tech advance in history. And for a limited time, you have the chance to claim a stake in this project, even though it’s housed inside Elon’s private company, xAI.May 11, 2025 | Brownstone Research (Ad)3 Hated Stocks Playing with FireMay 9 at 5:12 PM | finance.yahoo.comLGI Homes Launches Sales at Creekside Estates in Terrell, TexasMay 9 at 11:42 AM | nasdaq.comLGI Homes Continues Growth in Tampa, Florida with Expansion in Spring HillMay 8 at 6:00 PM | globenewswire.comSee More LGI Homes Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like LGI Homes? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on LGI Homes and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About LGI HomesLGI Homes (NASDAQ:LGIH) designs, constructs, and sells homes. It offers entry-level homes, such as attached and detached homes, and active adult homes under the LGI Homes brand name; and luxury series homes under the Terrata Homes brand name. The company also engages in the wholesale business, which include building and selling homes to large institutions looking to acquire single-family rental properties. It serves customers in Texas, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, New Mexico, Colorado, North Carolina, South Carolina, Washington, Tennessee, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Alabama, California, Oregon, Nevada, West Virginia, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Utah. LGI Homes, Inc. was founded in 2003 and is headquartered in The Woodlands, Texas.View LGI Homes ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Why Nearly 20 Analysts Raised Meta Price Targets Post-EarningsOXY Stock Rebound Begins Following Solid Earnings BeatMonolithic Power Systems: Will Strong Earnings Spark a Recovery?Datadog Earnings Delight: Q1 Strength and an Upbeat Forecast Upwork's Earnings Beat Fuels Stock Rally—Is Freelancing Booming?DexCom Stock: Earnings Beat and New Market Access Drive Bull CaseDisney Stock Jumps on Earnings—Is the Magic Sustainable? 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There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the LGI Homes 4th Quarter 2023 Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded and a replay will be available on the company's Web site at www.lgihomes.com. After management's prepared comments, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. I'll now turn the call over to Josh Fader, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:27Thanks and good afternoon. I'll remind listeners that this call contains forward looking statements, including management's views on LGI Homes' business strategy, outlooks, plans, objectives and guidance for future periods. Such statements reflect management's current expectations and involve assumptions and estimates that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause those expectations to prove to be incorrect. You should review our filings with the SEC for a discussion of the risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ from those presented today. All forward looking statements must be considered in light of related risks and you should not place undue reliance on such statements, which reflect management's current viewpoints and are not guarantees of future performance. Speaker 100:01:11On this call, we'll discuss non GAAP financial measures that are not intended to be considered in isolation or as substitutes for financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. Reconciliations of non GAAP financial measures to the most comparable measures prepared in accordance with GAAP can be found in the press release we issued this morning and in our annual report on Form 10 ks for the period ended December 31, 2020 3 that we expect to file with the SEC later today. This filing will be accessible on the SEC's website and in the Investor Relations section of our website. I'm joined today by Eric Liebert, LGI Homes' Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board and Charles Merdian, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer. I'll now turn the call over to Eric. Speaker 200:01:56Thanks, Josh. Good afternoon, and welcome to our earnings call. We are pleased to report that we delivered a strong 4th quarter that successfully achieved all of our operational and financial guidance targets for the full year. We also laid the foundation for considerable community count growth and continued profitability for many years to come. As we prepared for today's call, we reflected on our original full year guidance from February of last year. Speaker 200:02:22Looking back, it's worth highlighting how well our teams across the country navigated the headwinds, executed our strategy and outperformed our initial expectations. At the beginning of last year, we expected to close between 6,071,000 homes. We delivered 6,729 homes, the high end of our original guidance and an increase of 1.6% year over year. We expected ASPs between $335,000 $350,000 and we exceeded that range. We generated revenue of $2,400,000,000 an increase of over 2% compared to last year, making us one of the few public homebuilders who delivered year over year growth in both closings and revenue in 2023. Speaker 200:03:14The trend of outperformance continued when it came to our profitability targets. At this time last year, we expected gross margin to range between 21% percent 23% and our actual result was at the top end of that range. We expected adjusted gross margin between 22.5% to 24.5%. Through a continued focus on improving profitability throughout the year, we exceeded the high end of that range, delivering 24.7%. We averaged 5.4 closings per community per month last year, an industry leading pace that demonstrates the effectiveness of our systems, processes and people in a challenging and uncertain market. Speaker 200:03:56Our top 5 markets this year were Dallas Fort Worth with 9.1 closings per community per month, Charlotte with 8.6, Northern California with 8.3, Fort Pierce with 8.1 and Las Vegas with 7.3. Congratulations to the teams in these markets on your outstanding results. In 2023, our geographic footprint continued to grow. We added a new market and a new state to our map with our first closings in Salt Lake City, Utah. At the time of our initial public offering in 2013, we were operating in just 8 markets across 4 states. Speaker 200:04:32Since then, we successfully replicated our systems and culture across the country and are now active in 36 markets across 21 states. Salt Lake City marks another significant milestone in the growth of our company and we look forward to providing more updates on future calls. Throughout 2023, we made considerable progress growing our community count and ended the year with 117 active communities, an increase of 18.2% year over year. And we're not slowing down, expanding community count remains at the forefront of our objectives. While the land required to drive our growth for the next several years is already owned and under development, there's more work to do. Speaker 200:05:13We continue to invest in our long term growth and are taking advantage of opportunities as they arise. Before handing the call over to Charles, I'll share one additional highlight. The success of our business model has been clearly demonstrated by a number of impressive metrics, but I'll draw your attention to one in particular. Despite expanding our operational footprint significantly, quadrupling our closings and increasing our community count by a factor of nearly 7 times, we have never taken an inventory impairment, not as a public company and not as a private company before that. Even with the challenges and uncertainty of the last 18 months, the conservative and disciplined framework of our acquisition strategy has proven extremely dependable at selecting and delivering lots that meet or exceed our profitability and return metrics and we expect that to remain the case in the future. Speaker 200:06:08With that, I'll turn the call over to Charles for additional color on our financial results. Speaker 300:06:13Thanks, Eric. Here are more details on our 4th quarter results. Revenue was $608,400,000 an increase of 24.6 percent year over year, reflecting a 21.4% increase in closings to 17 58 homes and a 2.6% increase in our average selling price to $346,083 Our ASP was 1.9% lower sequentially, reflecting a higher level of incentives offered in the 4th quarter as mortgage rates climbed into the mid-7s in October November. We closed 298 homes through our wholesale business in the 4th quarter, representing 17% of our total closings compared to 4 31 homes or 29.8% of our total closings in the Q4 of last year. Gross margin as a percentage of sales in the 4th quarter was 23.4% compared to 20.7% in the same period last year. Speaker 300:07:19I'll remind listeners that during the Q4 of 2022, we decided to move older, higher cost inventory resulting in lower overall margins. The 270 basis point improvement was also driven by our continued focus this year on improving the incremental profitability on every home sold and fewer wholesale closings. Gross margins were 2 30 basis points lower sequentially, primarily due to higher financing incentives offered to buyers in the 4th quarter. Adjusted gross margin in the 4th quarter was 25.1 percent. Adjusted gross margin excludes $8,900,000 of capitalized interest charged to cost of sales and $981,000 related to purchase accounting together representing 170 basis points. Speaker 300:08:10Combined selling, general and administrative expenses were 13.6 percent of revenue. Selling expenses were $49,800,000 or 8.2 percent of revenue compared to 6.8 percent of revenue in the Q4 of 2022. The increase as a percentage of revenue was driven by increased spending on advertising and higher outside commissions. General and administrative expenses totaled $33,000,000 or 5.4 percent of revenue in the 4th quarter compared to 5% of revenue in the same period last year. Pretax net income for the 4th quarter was $68,500,000 or 11.3 percent of revenue. Speaker 300:08:534th quarter net income was $52,100,000 or $2.21 per basic share and $2.19 per diluted share. Highlighting a few full year results. Revenue was $2,400,000,000 an increase of 2.3% driven by a 1.6% increase in home closings and a 0.7% increase in our full year average sales price to $350,510 During the year, we closed 679 homes through our wholesale business, representing 10.1% of our total closings and generating $202,300,000 in revenue. We currently expect our wholesale business will represent approximately 5% of our total closings in 2024. Our full year gross margin was 23% and adjusted gross margin was 24.7%, both in line with the guidance we provided on our last call. Speaker 300:09:54Combined selling, general and administrative expenses were also in line with our guidance at 13.1%. Our pretax net income for the year was $261,800,000 or 11.1 percent of revenue. Our effective tax rate last year was 23.9 percent in line with the guidance we provided on our last call. And finally, our 2023 net income was $199,200,000 or $8.48 per basic share and $8.42 per diluted share. 4th quarter gross orders were 15.61. Speaker 300:10:34Net orders were 9.71 and the cancellation rate during the quarter was 37.8% compared to 37.5% during the same period last year. The full year cancellation rate was 25.4 percent, generally in line with our historical average. We ended the year with 5 90 homes in backlog valued at $224,900,000 Decrease in homes was primarily due to fewer wholesale contracts included in our backlog at the end of this year compared to last. Turning to our land position. At December 31, we owned and controlled a total of 71,081 lots, a decrease of 1.1% year over year and 1.4% sequentially. Speaker 300:11:21We ended the quarter with 55,331 owned lots, a decrease of 5.8% year over year and 1.7% sequentially. Of our owned lots, 41,155 were raw land or land under development and approximately 25% of those lots were actively being developed and about 46% were in engineering at year end. Of the remaining 14,176 owned lots, 10,749 were finished vacant lots. During the quarter, we started 705 homes and finished the year 3,427 completed homes, information centers or homes in progress. Finally, at December 31, we controlled 15,750 lots, an increase of 19.5% year over year. Speaker 300:12:16And with that, I'll turn the call over to Josh for a discussion of our capital position. Speaker 100:12:22Thanks, Charles. We ended the year with over $3,100,000,000 of real estate inventory on total assets of over $3,400,000,000 In November, we issued $400,000,000 of 8.75 percent senior notes and used the net proceeds to pay down borrowings on our revolver. The new notes mature in 2028 and are callable beginning late next year. Concurrent with the new issuance, we successfully amended our credit agreement, returning a previously non extending lender back into our bank group and increasing total commitments on the facility from $1,100,000,000 to $1,200,000,000 through 2025 and extending the maturity for $960,000,000 of those commitments through 2028. Taken together, these two transactions create additional depth and flexibility within our capital structure and provide significant additional liquidity to support our long term profitability focused growth. Speaker 100:13:17As of December 31, our total debt was $1,250,000,000 resulting in a debt to capital ratio of 40.2% and a net debt to capital ratio of 39.3%. Total liquidity was $403,800,000 including $49,000,000 of cash on hand and $354,800,000 available to borrow under our revolving credit facility. Finally, we ended the quarter with nearly $1,900,000,000 in total book equity and a book value per share of $78.71 With that, I'll turn the call back over to Eric. Speaker 200:13:55Thanks, Josh. We're pleased with the strong results we delivered in 2023. It was a challenging year, but our success in meeting or exceeding all of our operational and financial targets reflects the effectiveness of our systems and people and gives us confidence as we head into 2024. Before sharing our outlook, I'll provide some color on what we're currently seeing in the market. As shown by our January closings, the Q1 got off to a slower start. Speaker 200:14:21There were several contributing factors, including pronounced seasonality in December leads, fewer wholesale closings, the close out of some higher performing communities and new openings that are still in the early stages. However, I'm pleased to say since the beginning of February, we've seen a significant increase in leads and traffic. We remain focused on keeping homeownership affordable, utilizing our expertise and reaching and serving the first time homebuyers. Through the 1st 3 weekends of February, our leads are up an average of over 73% compared to the prior 2 months and last weekend was the best sales week of the year, driven by our investment and targeted advertising and introduction of new solutions to combat affordability headwinds for our customers. With those points in mind, I'll share our outlook for 2024. Speaker 200:15:08Our plan remains anchored in our strategy of driving affordability, increasing profitability and building on the significant groundwork related 2023 or community count growth over the next several years. For the full year, we expect closings to be up by double digits and plan to deliver between 7,008,000 homes. Once again, community count will be up significantly this year. We expect to grow community count by 25% to 30% and end 2024 with approximately 150 active selling communities. Selling prices will be higher this year as we balance affordability and focus on increasing margins and offsetting expected cost inflation. Speaker 200:15:51Based on our backlog, planned product mix and expected community openings, we are guiding to a full year average sales price between 350 $360,000 While few builders have set out a full year gross margin target, we once again plan to increase margins. We currently expect full year gross margins between 23.1 percent 24.1 percent and adjusted gross margins between 25% 26%. SG and A expense is expected to range between 12.5% 13.5% as we invest in personnel, training and advertising to support our growing number of communities. Finally, we expect the full year tax rate will range between 24% 25%. Similar to this time last year, our guidance targets reflect our current view in the market and what we believe is attainable if conditions remain the same for the rest of the year. Speaker 200:16:46As a result, we have complete confidence in our ability to meet or exceed all the metrics we've presented. I'll close by thanking our employees for their commitment and enthusiasm this past year. At the end of the day, our achievements are the results of our people and their dedication to our company. We thank them for their excellent performance last year and look forward to all that we'll accomplish together in 2024. Operator, please open the call for questions. Operator00:17:12Certainly. Our first question will be coming from Paul Przybylski of Wolfe. Your line is open. Speaker 400:17:36Thank you. I guess first of all, your guide for this year on closings implies about 4.2 absorptions at the midpoint. Typically, I think your goal has been around 6. Is that a change in your strategic thinking, demand environment focus, so price over pace? Any color you can add there? Speaker 200:18:02Yes, Paul, this is Eric. It's a great question. I think our numbers are a little bit different from yours and I'll talk through that. Our pace in 2023 was 5.4%, which we're pretty excited about because our ASP being the highest it's ever been and opening a lot of new communities. And when we looked at guidance for 2024, starting the year, a good comparison, we think we're going to be in an affordability challenged market, similar to what we were in 2023. Speaker 200:18:30And if we did 5.4 in 2023, confident in our community count growth to 100 and 50 active communities. We do believe it's going to be back end loaded. So the average community count, was probably a little bit higher or excuse me, lower than what you're thinking. And we think a range of 4.5% to 5.3% is actually where our guidance is based on where how we think the community count is going to flow. Also another factor in that is LGI Living, our wholesale business, our expectation is that's about half of it, the volume it was in 2023. Speaker 200:19:04And then with all the new communities opening, our expectations are all of these new communities, the absorption pace is slower. So 5.4% last year, a range of 4.5% to 5.3% this year, we think it's a very good way to start the year with guidance. Speaker 400:19:23Okay. Fair enough. And then going to your gross margin guide, obviously, it's flat to up year over year. I think some of your peers are talking down those expectations given higher land costs flowing through. I guess what's different about your current setup that would allow you to buck those trends? Speaker 200:19:48Yes, I think a couple of things, Paul. First of all, we do a lot of development work. We think it's important to capture that development profit. We think we need to incentivize the customers through incentives to get that mortgage rate and buy downs as low as possible. But we don't think that needs to be more than we have been doing in 2023, and I think we need to take a cautious approach to that. Speaker 200:20:12These finished lots and the inventory that we have around the country, those are very valuable assets. So I think we're going to be cautious about discounting them too much. And certainly, if we did a lot of discounting and through even more incentives at the customer, that pace per community would probably increase. But I think we need to be protective of our gross margin. And that's one of the positive things about LGI right now is we're anticipating gross margin midpoint of a range being higher in 2024 than 2023 plus all the community count growth. Speaker 400:20:42Okay. And one last one. On your you've got nice community count growth this year. How does that set the stage going into 2025? Will you be able to maintain community count growth or are you kind of pulling some stuff forward? Speaker 400:20:58Any color or guidance? Speaker 200:21:00Yes. No pulling it forward from a standpoint. We still expect community count growth in 2025. The 150 communities are somewhat baked in. Almost all of those are completely developed. Speaker 200:21:12A lot of those construction has begun on the site. So we expect those 150 communities to have closings by the end of the year and then we expect community count growth again next year as well. Thank you. Appreciate it. You're Operator00:21:29welcome. And one moment for our next question. And our next question will be coming from Ken Zener of Seaport Research. Your line is open. Speaker 500:21:43Hello, everybody. Speaker 200:21:46Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 500:21:49Your comments about not having impairments, that's worthwhile making. I mean, I have to think about it, but it is an impressive statement. I'm not sure I was aware of that, so good for you guys. Why are we seeing perhaps better SG and A leverage? It looks like it's kind of flat year over year. Speaker 500:22:10And with your I believe that you're selling, right? It's where you're absorbing kind of a lot of the increase. It doesn't seem like you're really expecting that to go down much or are you in your SG and A guidance? Because you're getting more leverage in your communities that you've been investing for, I assume. So talk to that dynamic, if you would. Speaker 300:22:31Yes, great question, Ken. This is Charles. So a couple of things. One is we're spending more on advertising this year or expect to this year than we did in 2023. So that trend started to increase mid year. Speaker 300:22:47Last year as we started in the second and kind of third quarters and increased into the 4th quarter. We also are increasing community count as well. So we're investing in growth in people that the community count comes faster, to Eric's point about the absorption than the revenue does. So we're a little we'll be investing ahead of the closings as well. So those are really the 2 biggest pieces. Speaker 500:23:18And the advertising Is the advertising increase expected to offset your absorption from the people that you've already invested in? And where does that leave your incentive assumption? I guess that's where I'm kind of thinking about those three pieces working together. Speaker 300:23:38Sure. Yes. So in terms of the incentive assumptions, the incentives are flowing into net revenues, so not in the SG and A line. So that affects the average sales price. So the assumptions on ASP increasing incentives. Speaker 300:23:58And we would expect overall incentives to generally be similar in 2024 as they were to the average for 2023. And then in terms of personnel growth, advertising spend, we're investing in driving leads. So our marketing team is actively monitoring what we're spending and where we're spending it to drive leads to our communities. So we're just budgeting in that we're expecting to use our full budget this year and some years in the past, we haven't had to use it. For example, during the COVID years, we saw a lot of favorable results in that spend because we didn't need to spend it. Speaker 300:24:43But for 2024, we're expecting that we're going to spend our full budget. Speaker 500:24:48Good. And if I could ask, I guess, more of another question. It goes to the balance sheet and you guys self developed land. I think your statement around impairments, that's why you do that up a lot. And I'm just trying to set your balance sheet. Speaker 500:25:05So one of the ways to think about that is your units in inventory is about 3500 or 3427. Where do you think if you can help us understand your kind of thinking process, like where do you think that would be? Because I mean that was as high as 4,800 in 2Q, 2022. And I'm asking relative to your own lot count, which is like 8 year supply right now, but you ran out of land, so your pace came down. Do you think your owned lots are going to be basically the same and you're just picking up your closing pace, so your own lines loans owned lot supply will go down? Speaker 500:25:46And I asked about the units under construction because that's obviously another part of your balance sheet. If you could address that in terms of where you think that might be at the end of the year? Thank you very much guys. Speaker 300:25:57Yes, sure. Ken, I can take this one as well to start with. So out of our 3,100,000,000 about $2,100,000,000 of it is invested in raw land, land under development and finished lots. So really when you break down the owned lots, we do that in the prepared remarks, breaking the 55,000 lots down, 41,155 of them are in either a raw stage or under development. So that would include either truly raw, still the cornfield, future sections, that type of status or in engineering, which is a low cost investment way to be ready for future active development. Speaker 300:26:42So only 25% or roughly about 10,000 of our owned lots are under development. So we think we are in good shape in terms of managing the delivery of those lots to be able to satisfy the expected demand in terms of what we think for not just 2024, but going into 2025 and bring the engineered lots into active development so that we can pace that accordingly with what we think our closing results are going to be for the next couple of years. And then shifting over to vertical, we managed to about 6 months worth of inventory. So just over 3,400 units on our from an implied midpoint or low point of our guidance would be just shy of 6 months. So slower start to the year that Eric mentioned that pace is expected to increase in terms of the start pace as we introduce new communities later on throughout the year. Speaker 300:27:41But the way we think about it the $800,000,000 we have invested in vertical represents a 6 month supply of where we think closings are going. Speaker 500:27:56Thank you. You bet. Operator00:27:59One moment for our next question. And our next question will be coming from Michael Rehaut of JPMorgan. Your line is open, Michael. Speaker 600:28:14Thanks. Good afternoon, everyone. Speaker 200:28:17Good afternoon. Speaker 600:28:18First, I wanted to kind of just dial in a little bit on the closings and the pace of community openings in 2024. Eric, in your you have the guidance out there of a growth rate range of 4% to 19%. And Eric, I don't know if it was intentional or not or you're just referring to the midpoint, but you kind of described your outlook for community I'm sorry, closings growth this year is double digit. So I don't know if that was just referring to the midpoint or your maybe higher conviction of kind of hitting the upper half of that range. I don't know if that's kind of one way to look into that. Speaker 600:29:03But wanted to get a sense for your level of conviction, let's say, of hitting the upper half, if indeed you really do expect kind of to hit that, let's say, 7,500 to 8,000 range, let's say. And how does the community count openings, you said it was back half weighted. How should we think about that getting to 150? Where would we be, let's say, midyear? Speaker 200:29:34Yes, great question, Michael. Appreciate you asking it. A couple of comments. First of all, I think we agree with you. We hope closings our closing guidance is conservative. Speaker 200:29:45And that's the way we believe it always should be. So yes, when you're talking about double digit growth that was referring to the midpoint. Community count growth, we do expect to be back end loaded. As an example, one of the exciting things that the team is gearing up for here is we've got 18 new community sales openings in the month of March. And we would expect all 18 of those to be active communities in Q2 of this year and then adding in Q3 and Q4. Speaker 200:30:14So February community count is probably going to be similar to January community count. So really ramping up throughout the rest of the year, primarily in the back half. So those are a couple of exciting things. And yes, we're if we perform the way we're supposed to, leads are up, sales last week were really positive. Midpoint to high end of the guidance range is certainly possible, and that's the goal. Speaker 600:30:41Great, great. And then on the community count, I think previously you had talked about getting to above 180 by the end of 2025. Is that still kind of the goal there? Or I know that in an earlier question you just said growth, but I think you've been more explicit in other calls and kind of looking at getting to that 180 mark or better? Speaker 200:31:10Yes. Another great question, Michael. We chose not to say 180 specifically for community count growth the following year. Part of the reason is we are very opportunistic, very selective on new acquisitions. We talked about never taken inventory impairment in our life of LGI, which is a hats off the acquisitions and development teams across the nation for pulling that feet off and we're very proud of that. Speaker 200:31:36So we're cautious in our buying right now. And that being said, it really depends on what new acquisitions look like for the next 6 to 12 months. So Speaker 600:31:57I I appreciate that. A couple of other quick ones if I can squeeze in. Wanted to know number 1, if you could give us any sense of how February is tracking in terms of closings for the month, about another 10 days or so or 8 days, perhaps 8, 9 days to close out. And also the interest amortization, usually it's in the low ones and it looks like based on guidance you're looking more like 2% ish and just wanted to make sure I had that right as well. Speaker 200:32:33Yes, I can take the first part of the question on closings for February. January sales were not as robust as we'd like, Mike. So January closings were lighter. In February, we expect to close probably around $350,000,000 which is up from January, down from last year's February. And then sales last couple of weeks have been very strong in the month of February, and that will lead to March. Speaker 200:32:57And we believe we can increase the closings year over year in the month of March. Speaker 300:33:03And I can take the interest question for you Mike is, we expect a lot of these new communities were projects that we developed. So as interest rates increased over the last year or so, that interest has been capitalized against these development projects and we expect them to start coming through the income statement. So we do expect interest to tick up both just from the sheer volume of development communities plus a higher cost of debt capital. And then purchase accounting is a small factor into that delta in the guidance as well. And we would expect that absolute number to generally be about the same year over year. Speaker 300:33:46So it will be a smaller portion. So a little bit higher on the interest coming through and a little bit smaller on purchase accounting. Speaker 600:33:55Great. Thanks so much. Speaker 500:33:57You bet. Operator00:33:59And one moment for our next question. And our next question will be coming from Jay McCanless of Wedbush. Jay, your line is open. Speaker 700:34:11Hey, good afternoon, everyone. So my first question, Eric, when you were talking about the sales decline in January, you said that December leads were pretty soft, which I was surprised to hear because most of your competitors talked about volume and interest levels really picking up in December. So maybe if you could give us some more depth on that, please? Speaker 200:34:34Yes. I think we just didn't see that, Jay. I think part of it is we were really focused on ending the year strong and getting to that over 6,700 closings last year, which we are proud of. That's what we said we're going to do. It allowed us to increase closings year over year. Speaker 200:34:51And we just didn't see the strong sales pace in December. It's very typical for us, certainly around the holidays in the 1st year for sales and orders to slow down. But that's just what we saw. It's been a lot better in February. Speaker 700:35:06Okay. And then as I think part of what you talked about also is maybe some new incentives and or affordability plays that you guys could have with the customers, maybe talk more about that. And then to take it a step further from that, there is a significant amount of multifamily supply that's going to be hitting the market this year. What is the strategy or strategies to defend against that and continue to pull in your what I still believe is your core customer into the LGI neighborhood? Speaker 200:35:43Yes. I think a couple of things there is, Jay, we're always going to be talking to our customers about the advantage of a homeownership versus renting. I mean, even if there's more supply of rental houses out there or rental units, apartments, We're still going to continue to talk about the value of homeownership. Right now, affordability is strained. The gap between the monthly payments to get into homeownership compared to renting an apartment is probably the widest it's ever been or certainly the widest over the last 12 months or so. Speaker 200:36:14And that's a challenge for us and that goes back to a lot of the previous discussions that we've had. How do you combat that challenge? Well, you spend more money on advertising, you drive leads, more leads to our communities because we're probably going to have to talk to more people in order to get customers that are qualified. We're also working on smaller square footage houses. We've talked about that on a couple of previous calls. Speaker 200:36:38Percentage of houses under 1500 Square Foot that we sold in 2021 that was 21% of our houses were under 1500 Square Feet and in 2023 that was 29% and that trend is likely to continue into 2024. So that's some of the tools that we have, the increased spending on marketing, doing more training, looking at smaller square footage in order to keep that absorption pace up. Speaker 700:37:10Okay. That's all I had. Thank you. Speaker 300:37:12Thanks, Jay. Operator00:37:14And one moment for our next question. And our next question will be coming from Alex Barron of Housing Research Center. Your line is open. Speaker 800:37:26Yes, thank you. Yes, I was hoping you guys could share how many homes you guys have under production and how many of those are completed specs? Speaker 300:37:38Yes, sure. We've got about 1400 that are homes in progress and 18 50 completed homes. Speaker 800:37:49Okay. So a total of 3,250? Speaker 300:37:52Yes. And then the rest would be in permission centers to get to a 34, 20%. Speaker 800:37:59Okay, great. And then I guess just philosophically speaking, given everything that's going on right now, are you guys more inclined to try to preserve margins or try to preserve sales pace to maintain volume even if that affects margins? Speaker 200:38:22Yes, Alex, it's a great question. I guess what margin you're talking about and we're protective of gross margin. We want to maintain our sales pace. And for us, that means looking at mortgage incentives, it also means spending more money on advertising. So because we'd like to maintain the pace and also keep our adjusted gross margin high as well, but probably more towards the margin right now. Speaker 200:38:45We're starting to see some appraisal challenges across the United States, but it's still a very minimal amount. So we're comfortable that our sales prices that we're getting good value to our customers. But we're watching that and we'll have to adjust accordingly. The market dictates that we do so. Speaker 800:39:03And in terms of incentives, roughly how much are they as a percentage of your sales price? Speaker 200:39:12Yes, I think there's a couple of different factors there. We've done big forward commitments before. Our typical incentive, I'd say on average is 2% to 3% of the sales price and you're really just focused on getting that monthly payment as low as possible. So that would be a good average. Speaker 800:39:27Got it. All right. Well, best of luck. Thanks. Speaker 200:39:30Thanks, Alex. Operator00:39:35Thank you. And at this time, I'm not showing any further questions. I would like to hand the call back to Eric for closing remarks. Speaker 200:39:42Thank you to everyone for participating on the call today and for interest in LGI Homes. Have a great day. Thank you.Read morePowered by