- Rally's Low Volume Prompts Question: Whither Buyers?
- House Leaders Want Job Creation Bill Before Year-End
- Obama to Continue Yuan Rhetoric, Visit Great Wall
- Economy, Stocks to Grow Faster Than Many Think: ING
- Fed's Exit Strategy: How It May Raise Borrowing Costs
- Maybe A Correction Isn't Coming?
- 15 Richest Members of Congress
- Motor Trend Names a US Sedan Its 2010 Car of the Year
- Costco Stops Carrying Coca-Cola Over Pricing Fight
- Best Sector Plays for 2010: Citi's Levkovich
- Pulse of Private Equity
- Abbott, Arbiter & Avoidance
- Can YouTube Revolutionize Citizen Journalism?
- I Have to Leggo My Eggo
- Appraisals Now Center Stage in Housing Recovery
- Expect Stocks to Rise 15-20% by Mid-2010: Chief Investor
- Profiting from This Volatile Options Expiration Week: Analyst
- Nov. 17: Unusual Volume Leaders
- Soros hedge fund takes stake in Ford Motor
- Democrats promise jobs bill
- Senate weighs long-term care program
- AP lays off employees to hit cost-cutting goal
- Foreclosure proceedings for N. Colo. mall begin
- Okla. ed board wants use of Rainy Day Fund now
- Nicolas Cage sued by former money manager
- Judge says ND company ignored IRS warnings
- Concur Technologies CFO to retire
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Pulte Homes Inc <PHM.N> raised its forecast for efficiencies and savings from its acquisition of rival Centex Corp, overshadowing a quarterly loss and sending its shares up 7.5 percent.
The biggest U.S. homebuilder also reported higher gross margins in the third quarter.
Pulte, which has operations in 29 states, said its new target for efficiencies and savings from its purchase of Centex is $440 million, up 25 percent from its prior estimate.
The enhanced boost from the merger as well as higher-than-expected gross margins and lower-than-expected impairments make the third-quarter results a positive for the company, J.P. Morgan analyst Michael Rehaut wrote in a note to clients.
Pulte shares were up 69 cents, or 7.5 percent, to $9.92 in morning trading on the New York Stock Exchange, a new 12-month high.
Pulte's third-quarter gross margins of 13.1 percent, excluding interest, merger costs and impairments, were up from the second quarter and were solidly higher than Rehaut's 11.2 percent estimate.
But the Bloomfield, Michigan-based company still lost money, reporting a quarterly loss of $1.15 per share, or $361.4 million, far worse than analysts' average forecast of a loss of 69 cents per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Another source of comfort for investors: Pulte retired $1.7 billion of debt in the quarter, more than Fox-Pitt analyst Robert Stevenson had expected.
"These results are not horrific, but some investors were expecting the worst," Stevenson said.
Still, the housing industry is still challenged by conditions including broad economic weakness, foreclosures and rising unemployment, despite some signs of stabilization, Chief Executive Richard Dugas said.
As of the end of September, Pulte fell out of compliance with its a credit facility covenant. Its banks granted it a waiver until December 15. It said that if it cannot reach a new agreement or extend the waiver, it has enough cash to go without the facility.
(Reporting by Helen Chernikoff, Editing by Maureen Bavdek and John Wallace)
- How to put some green into your portfolio.
- Returning from a Ron Paul political rally, one supporter was held at an airport due to the amount of cash he was carrying. NYT reports.
- Chances for a climate change treaty look dim at the Copenhagen conference.
- Online social networking phenomenon Facebook is the source of New Oxford American Dictionary’s word of the year.
- Hard times in Hollywood are boosting job applications in the porn business.
- Restaurant reviews have been around for awhile, but one man is betting that hungry sports fans are looking for one thing only.









