Hovnanian Enterprises (HOV) Margin Compression Reinforces Cautious Earnings Narratives
Hovnanian Enterprises, Inc. Class A HOV | 0.00 |
Hovnanian Enterprises (HOV) has just put fresh numbers on the table, with Q1 2026 revenue of US$632.0 million and basic EPS of US$2.80, alongside trailing twelve month revenue of US$2.94 billion and EPS of US$6.85 that frame the latest quarter within a much larger earnings picture. Over recent periods, revenue has moved from US$673.6 million and EPS of US$3.88 in Q1 2025 through US$979.6 million and EPS of US$13.55 in Q4 2024 to the current run rate. This path sets the scene for investors now weighing softer net profit margins and compressing earnings against any perceived upside in the shares.
See our full analysis for Hovnanian Enterprises.With the headline results laid out, the next step is to see how these margin trends compare with the widely discussed narratives around Hovnanian Enterprises's earnings power and risk profile.
Margins Compress To 1.5% Net Level
- Over the last 12 months, Hovnanian Enterprises reported a net profit margin of 1.5%, down from 7.4% the prior year, with trailing net income of US$44.1 million on US$2.94b of revenue and a one off loss of US$28.3 million weighing on the result.
- Consensus narrative flags pressure from high mortgage rates, affordability issues, and incentives, and the current margin profile lines up with that cautious tone:
- Gross and net margins are being pulled down as the company uses mortgage rate buydowns and other incentives. This fits with the idea that demand support is coming at a cost to profitability.
- At the same time, management commentary in the consensus text highlights efficient land use and healthy sales pace per community, which could help margins once older, lower margin lots are worked through.
EPS And Earnings Trend Under Pressure
- Quarterly basic EPS has swung from US$13.55 in Q4 2024 to US$3.88 in Q1 2025, then to a small loss of US$0.60 in Q4 2025, and back to US$2.80 in Q1 2026, while trailing 12 month EPS moved from US$35.16 in Q1 2025 to US$6.85 in Q1 2026, alongside an annualized 25.4% decline in earnings over five years and forecasts that call for a very large further drop of 151.7% per year over the next three years.
- Bears focus on this pattern as evidence that earnings power is fragile, and the data in the last year gives them plenty to point to:
- Forecasts that revenue could slip around 2% per year and that earnings may fall sharply line up with the recent move from US$227.9 million of trailing net income in early 2025 to US$44.1 million now.
- Weak interest coverage, with interest payments not well covered by earnings, adds to the cautious view that higher debt costs could keep net income and EPS under pressure even if revenues hold around current levels.
DCF Upside Versus Richer P/E
- The shares trade around US$115.46, which is roughly 83% below a stated DCF fair value of US$744.75, yet the trailing P/E of 15.5x still sits above both the peer average of 11.9x and the US Consumer Durables industry average of 11.4x.
- Bullish investors point to the gap to DCF fair value as a source of potential upside, and the current numbers create a clear tension with that view:
- On one hand, the DCF comparison suggests a large difference between price and modeled value, which bulls see as a margin of safety if long term earnings improve.
- On the other hand, earnings have declined at 25.4% per year over five years and forecasts point to further earnings declines, so the above market P/E means buyers today are still paying a higher multiple than many peers despite weaker recent profit trends.
Next Steps
To see how these results tie into long-term growth, risks, and valuation, check out the full range of community narratives for Hovnanian Enterprises on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.
With a mix of caution and optimism running through this story, now is the moment to review the numbers yourself and decide where you stand. You can begin with 1 key reward and 4 important warning signs.
See What Else Is Out There
Hovnanian Enterprises faces compressing net margins, sharp EPS swings, and weaker interest coverage. Together, these factors suggest that earnings quality and balance sheet resilience are areas of concern.
If you want stocks where recent numbers point to stronger balance sheets and potentially steadier earnings, start comparing ideas using the solid balance sheet and fundamentals stocks screener (46 results).
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
