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Champion Homes, Inc. (SKY)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 FY2025 delivered strong YoY growth: net sales up 32.9% to $616.9M, gross margin up 190 bps to 27.0%, and diluted EPS up 19% to $0.94, aided by higher ASPs, increased captive retail mix, and lower forest product input costs .
- Sequentially, revenue slipped 1.7% vs Q1 (from $627.8M to $616.9M) as late-quarter hurricanes disrupted production, shipments, and retail closings; backlog rose to $427M (+$23M q/q), with lead times steady at ~11 weeks .
- Adjusted EBITDA was $74.2M and margin 12.0%; SG&A rose y/y with Regional Homes consolidation, but fell q/q to $99.7M (16.2% of sales) as earn-out effects abated; cash ended the quarter at $570.2M, and the Board refreshed the $100M repurchase authorization; $20M was repurchased in Q2 .
- Near-term outlook: management expects a mid-single-digit sequential revenue decline in Q3 FY2025 due to hurricane timing effects; medium-term demand seen as strong in affected regions due to rebuild needs; gross margins “stabilized” but will fluctuate with mix .
- Consensus estimates from S&P Global were unavailable at time of writing due to data quota limits; comparisons to Street consensus cannot be provided (S&P Global data unavailable).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Robust volume/price: U.S. homes sold +31% to 6,357 and ASP +4.5% to $92,400; gross margin expanded 190 bps to 27.0% on pricing, captive mix, lower inputs, and higher utilization .
- Synergy capture ahead of plan: Regional Homes integration “achieved the upper limit” of synergy targets, a year ahead of schedule; builder/developer and financing initiatives showed accelerating traction .
- Backlog/cash: Backlog increased to $427M with steady ~11 week lead time; operating cash flow of ~$60M in the quarter and cash rose to $570M; $20M buyback executed and authorization refreshed to $100M .
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What Went Wrong
- Weather and timing: Hurricane impacts late in the quarter reduced production, shipments, and retail closings; management expects a mid-single-digit sequential revenue decline in Q3 .
- SG&A intensity: SG&A rose y/y to $99.7M (16.2% of sales) with Regional Homes and higher variable comp; adjusted EBITDA margin contracted 60 bps y/y to 12.0% due to higher SG&A .
- Canada softness: Canadian homes sold fell to 179; revenue was $22M amid higher rates and macro uncertainty; prior quarter also saw a 24% decline in units .
Financial Results
Notes:
- Adjusted metrics are Non-GAAP; reconciliations provided in filings .
Segment/KPI Trends
Actual vs Street Consensus (Q2 FY2025)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Champion Homes delivered another strong quarter, generating healthy margins and cash flow… our digital direct-to-consumer strategy, combined with our retail footprint expansion… positioned us to achieve significant growth in home sales compared to last year.” — Mark Yost, CEO .
- “Gross margin expanded by 190 basis points… primarily due to higher average selling prices on new homes sold as our company-owned retail sales centers captured a greater share… and lower input costs, primarily from forest product materials.” — Laurie Hough, CFO .
- “We achieved the upper limit of our synergy targets… just 1 year following the acquisition, a full year ahead of projected schedule.” — Mark Yost, CEO .
- “We anticipate a modest decline in top line performance for the third quarter, projected to decrease by mid-single digits sequentially… largely attributable to the timing disruptions from the hurricanes.” — Mark Yost, CEO .
Q&A Highlights
- Hurricanes: Management detailed lost production days and insurance binding suspensions; expect catch-up over this and possibly the next quarter depending on infrastructure rebuild pace .
- Gross margin drivers: Lower forest product inputs, stronger captive retail mix; purchase accounting headwinds now “immaterial” going forward .
- Orders/backlog around election: Organic order rates up 14% y/y; backlog likely moderates into December; election outcome and potential incentives could influence trajectory .
- Builder/developer strength: Accelerating capture with small/mid-tier and large builders; expected to remain a strong growth channel .
- FEMA potential: No FEMA orders yet despite widespread destruction; monitoring federal/state response .
- Charter rates: Running ~8–8.5% for good credit; typically lag mortgages by ~6 months .
- Capital allocation & M&A: M&A remains top priority; robust pipeline; continued repurchases (Q2 $20M; authority refreshed to $100M) .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for Q2 FY2025 were unavailable at time of writing due to data quota limits; therefore, we cannot assess beats/misses vs Street for revenue, EPS, or EBITDA (S&P Global data unavailable).
Where estimates may adjust:
- With Q2 revenue and margin strength, captive retail mix, and backlog up into winter seasonality, models may raise medium-term gross margin run-rate but temper Q3 top-line assumptions for hurricane timing impacts; Canada likely remains conservative on units .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Healthy core trends: YoY strength in units, ASP, margins, and backlog underpin medium-term confidence; sequential softness is timing/weather-related rather than demand-driven .
- Mix and margins: Captive retail share and lower input costs lifted margins; expect fluctuations with product and channel mix; purchase accounting headwinds fading — supportive for margin durability .
- Rebuild catalyst: Hurricanes likely depress Q3 sequential revenue but set up demand tailwinds in the Southeast; monitor FEMA activity and dealer stocking behavior .
- Builder/developer momentum: Accelerating capture should continue to drive volumes; watch for incremental wins and community REIT normalization through CY2025 .
- Capital allocation: $570M cash, minimal debt, ongoing buybacks (authorization refreshed to $100M), and active M&A pipeline provide multiple levers for value creation .
- Canada caution: Higher rates and uncertainty continue to weigh on Canadian volumes and ASP; keep model assumptions conservative .
- Near-term trading: Expect volatility around Q3 headline (sequential decline) and macro/election narratives; medium-term thesis supported by backlog, mix, and strategic initiatives in DTC and financing .