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MH

Meritage Homes CORP (MTH)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Orders grew 4% YoY to 3,636, but revenue and EPS declined on lower ASPs and elevated incentives; Q3 total revenue was $1.424B and GAAP diluted EPS was $1.39 (adjusted EPS $1.55) .
  • Results missed S&P Global consensus: revenue $1.424B vs $1.474B est and EPS $1.55 vs $1.72 est; higher incentives, lost fixed-cost leverage, and impairments drove the shortfall (see Estimates Context) .
  • Gross margin compressed: home closing gross margin 19.1% (adj. 20.1%) vs 24.8% LY, reflecting incentives, lot cost inflation, impairments/land walk-aways, and reduced scale benefits; SG&A rose to 10.8% of revenue on higher commissions/tech costs and de-leverage .
  • Q4 guidance implies continued margin pressure (home closing GM 19–20%) and EPS $1.51–$1.70; management highlighted consumer-confidence headwinds, but reiterated flexibility via spec strategy, faster cycle times (~105 days), and record community count (334) to support near-term growth .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

  • What Went Well

    • Community count hit a record 334 (+20% YoY; +7% QoQ), underpinning future growth and share gains .
    • Cycle times improved to ~105 days, supporting high backlog conversion (211%) and intra-quarter closings (~60% of deliveries), enhancing asset turns and flexibility .
    • Capital returns accelerated: $85M returned in Q3 (dividends + buybacks); Board added $500M to repurchase authorization (with $664M remaining) .
    • Quote: “We generated home closing revenue of $1.4 billion and achieved an adjusted home closing gross margin of 20.1% and adjusted diluted EPS of $1.55…” — CEO Phillippe Lord .
  • What Went Wrong

    • Pricing pressure from elevated incentives lowered ASPs and margins; home closing gross margin fell 570 bps YoY to 19.1% (adj. 20.1%) .
    • Impairments and land walk-away charges ($14.5M) further weighed on earnings; GAAP EPS fell 48% YoY to $1.39 .
    • De-leverage from lower revenue and calendar cadence (July softness) increased SG&A to 10.8% of home closing revenue; effective tax rate rose (22.6%) as fewer homes qualified for IRA energy credits .

Financial Results

MetricQ3 2024Q2 2025Q3 2025
Total Revenue ($B)$1.597 $1.633 $1.424
GAAP Diluted EPS ($)$2.67 $2.04 $1.39
Adjusted Diluted EPS ($)$2.69 $1.55
Home Closing Gross Margin (%)24.8% 21.1% 19.1%
Adj. Home Closing Gross Margin (%)24.9% 21.4% 20.1%
SG&A % of Home Closing Revenue9.9% 10.2% 10.8%

Segment mix – Closings and Revenue

RegionQ3 2024 Closings (Units)Q3 2024 Revenue ($M)Q3 2025 Closings (Units)Q3 2025 Revenue ($M)
West1,220 $594.5 883 $420.7
Central1,346 $484.7 1,260 $443.1
East1,376 $506.5 1,542 $535.6
Total3,942 $1,585.8 3,685 $1,399.3

Key KPIs

KPIQ3 2024Q2 2025Q3 2025
Orders (Units)3,512 3,914 3,636
ASP – Orders ($K)406 395 389
ASP – Closings ($K)402 387 380
Ending Backlog (Units)2,284 1,748 1,699
Ending Backlog ($M)931.7 695.5 670.0
Avg Absorption Pace (per month)4.3 3.8
Cancellation Rate (%)10% 11%
Backlog Conversion (%)208% 211%
Active Communities (Ending)278 312 334

Vs Estimates (S&P Global)

MetricConsensusActualSurprise
Revenue ($B)1.474*1.424 Miss*
EPS ($)1.72*1.55 Miss*
# Estimates (EPS / Revenue)9 / 6*

*Values retrieved from S&P Global.

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Home Closings (Units)Q4 20253,800–4,000 New
Home Closing Revenue ($B)Q4 2025$1.46–$1.54 New
Home Closing Gross Margin (%)Q4 202519–20% New
Effective Tax Rate (%)Q4 2025~24.5% New
Diluted EPS ($)Q4 2025$1.51–$1.70 New
Full-year Land Spend Target ($B)FY 2025~$2.0 (lowered from $2.5 in Q2) ~“around $2B” (maintained) Maintained
Quarterly Dividend ($/sh)Q3 2025$0.43 (declared) $0.43 (declared 8/21/25) Maintained
Share Repurchase AuthorizationOngoing+$500M approved (8/21) $664M remaining at 9/30/25 Increased in Q3

Notes: In Q1, management reiterated full-year 2025 closings (16,250–16,750) and revenue ($6.6–$6.9B) guidance; in Q2, they ceased full-year guidance given high backlog conversion/low visibility and provided only Q3 guidance .

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicQ1 2025 (prior two quarters)Q2 2025 (prior quarter)Q3 2025 (current)Trend
Incentives & ASP pressureIncentives elevated; ASP on closings $393K; GM 22.0% Higher use of rate buydowns; ASP $387K; GM 21.1% (adj 21.4%) Incentives still elevated; ASP $380K; GM 19.1% (adj 20.1%); mix and lost leverage cited Worsening margin pressure
Cycle times~120 days; backlog conversion 221% ~110 days; >200% conversion ~105 days; 211% conversion Improving speed/turns
Community count290 ending (+8% YoY) 312 ending (record; +9% YoY) 334 ending (record; +20% YoY) Strong growth
Macro & demandHealthy traffic; buyer psychology fragile Softer spring; July seasonal trough; low visibility beyond Q3 Softer Q3; consumer confidence weak; lower rates not yet boosting demand Macro headwind persists
Realtor strategyCo-broke ~92%; repeat realtor engagement rising Co-broke low 90%; higher commissions External commissions elevated; strategy critical to pace Steady execution
Supply chain & laborLabor slack; no material tariff impact modeled Direct costs falling; labor available; rebidding underway 3% YoY directs reduction; rebidding land dev; tariff risk into 2026–28 Gradual cost relief
Tariffs/regulatoryMonitoring; minimal near-term impact Not in numbers; potential later Potential 2026 cost impact; mitigants via vendors/product flexibility Watch 2026
Starts/spec levelsCalibrated to sales; ~23 specs/store ~22 specs/store; 5 months supply ~19 specs/store; targeting ~16 over time Tightening inventory

Management Commentary

  • Strategic focus: “Our 100% spec strategy and… improvements in our cycle times… give us the flexibility to ramp up or slow down our starts based on real-time local demand.” — CEO Phillippe Lord .
  • Margin path: “Our long-term gross margin target remains at 22.5% to 23.5%. For this target to occur… pull back on the incentive burden… and benefit from the scale and efficiency of our spec strategy.” — CFO Hilla Sferruzza .
  • Market psychology: “We believe the biggest impediment… relates to buyer psychology… lower mortgage rates have not translated to a notable improvement in demand.” — CEO Phillippe Lord .
  • Shareholder returns: “We… returned $85 million… in Q3… Board approved an additional $500 million… and… $664 million remained available…” — Press Release .
  • Liquidity: “With cash of $729 million… and net debt-to-capital ratio of 17.2%… we are comfortable with our current liquidity.” — CEO Phillippe Lord .

Q&A Highlights

  • Inventory turns and ROE: Management aims to reduce specs to ~16 per store and improve turns as cycle times fall, supporting higher ROE and cash generation into 2026 .
  • Margin cadence: Q3 margin decline was largely de-leverage; Q4 guide lower due to clearing older specs and typical year-end incentive environment .
  • Buybacks: Cadence likely at least at current Q3 level (~$55M), with opportunistic acceleration given perceived undervaluation .
  • Competitive landscape: Elevated resale inventory is not directly comparable to Meritage’s entry-level product with financing incentives; strategy targets realtor channel and payment affordability .
  • Land cost outlook: Expect stabilizing/green shoots in development costs, with more benefits in late 2026–2028; land prices broadly sticky near term .

Estimates Context

  • S&P Global consensus vs actual: Revenue $1.474B est vs $1.424B actual; EPS $1.72 est vs $1.55 actual (9 EPS and 6 revenue estimates). Both metrics missed, driven by higher-than-modeled incentive utilization, impairments/land walk-aways, and fixed-cost de-leverage from seasonal cadence .
  • Implication: Street models likely need to reflect sustained elevated incentives into Q4 (company guides 19–20% home closing GM) and the clearing of older specs, with potential margin recovery contingent on consumer confidence and incentive moderation .
    Values retrieved from S&P Global.

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Near-term profitability pressured: elevated incentives, de-leverage, and charges reduced margins; Q4 guide implies continued pressure (19–20% home closing GM) .
  • Structural execution intact: faster cycle times (~105 days), high backlog conversion (~211%), and record community count (334) support volumes and asset turns into 2026 .
  • Capital returns accelerating: $85M in Q3; $664M repurchase capacity remains; management indicates willingness to increase repurchases opportunistically .
  • Watch demand psychology: management sees buyer sentiment, not rates alone, as the key impediment; if confidence improves, Meritage can quickly pull back incentives and expand margins given spec inventory .
  • Cost outlook improving at the margin: direct costs down ~3% YoY; potential land development cost relief later in 2026–2028; tariff risks monitored but not yet embedded materially .
  • Regional mix matters: East region strength partially offsets weakness in select West/Central markets; community openings remain broad-based .
  • Trading lens: Results missed Street; Q4 guide conservative on incentives and older spec clear-out. Near-term stock drivers include repurchase acceleration, cadence of orders through holiday period, and any signs of incentive moderation in early 2026 .