One of Wall Street's biggest winners of the day is D.R. Horton, a residential construction company whose shares have climbed 6.4% to a price of $174.04 -- 8.38% below its average analyst target price of $189.97.
The average analyst rating for the stock is buy. DHI may have outstripped the S&P 500 index by 6.0% so far today, but it has lagged behind the index by 1.7% over the last year, returning 29.5%.
D.R. Horton, Inc. operates as a homebuilding company in East, North, Southeast, South Central, Southwest, and Northwest regions in the United States. The company is a consumer cyclical company, whose sales figures depend on discretionary income levels in its consumer base. For this reason, consumer cyclical companies have better sales and stock performance during periods of economic growth, when consumers have more of an incentive to spend their money on non-essential items.
D.R. Horton's trailing 12 month P/E ratio is 12.1, based on its trailing EPS of $14.34. The company has a forward P/E ratio of 11.0 according to its forward EPS of $15.93 -- which is an estimate of what its earnings will look like in the next quarter.
The P/E ratio is the company's share price divided by its earnings per share. In other words, it represents how much investors are willing to spend for each dollar of the company's earnings (revenues minus the cost of goods sold, taxes, and overhead). As of the third quarter of 2024, the consumer discretionary sector has an average P/E ratio of 22.6, and the average for the S&P 500 is 29.3.
Another key to assessing a company's health is to look at its free cash flow, which is calculated on the basis of its total cash flow from operating activities minus its capital expenditures. Capital expenditures are the costs of maintaining fixed assets such as land, buildings, and equipment. From D.R. Horton's last four annual reports, we are able to obtain the following rundown of its free cash flow:
Date Reported | Cash Flow from Operations ($ k) | Capital expenditures ($ k) | Free Cash Flow ($ k) | YoY Growth (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
2023 | 4,304,100 | 148,600 | 4,155,500 | 904.71 |
2022 | 561,800 | 148,200 | 413,600 | -6.19 |
2021 | 534,400 | 93,500 | 440,900 | -66.73 |
2020 | 1,421,600 | 96,500 | 1,325,100 | 73.24 |
2019 | 892,100 | 127,200 | 764,900 | 60.32 |
2018 | 545,200 | 68,100 | 477,100 |
- Average free cash flow: $1.26 Billion
- Average free cash flown growth rate: 46.3 %
- Coefficient of variability (the lower the better): 0.0 %
With its positive cash flow, the company can not only re-invest in its business, it can offer regular returns to its equity investors in the form of dividends. Over the last 12 months, investors in DHI have received an annualized dividend yield of 0.7% on their capital.
Another valuation metric for analyzing a stock is its Price to Book (P/B) Ratio, which consists in its share price divided by its book value per share. The book value refers to the present liquidation value of the company, as if it sold all of its assets and paid off all debts.
D.R. Horton has a P/B ratio of 2.23. This indicates that the market value of the company exceeds its book value by a factor of more than 2, but is still below the average P/B ratio of the Consumer Discretionary sector, which stood at 3.19 as of the third quarter of 2024.
D.R. Horton is by most measures overvalued because it has a Very low P/E ratio, a lower P/B ratio than its sector average, and generally positive cash flows with an upwards trend. The stock has strong growth indicators because it has a a PEG ratio of less than 1 and strong operating margins with a positive growth rate. We hope you enjoyed this overview of DHI's fundamentals.