Logo of jester cap with thought bubble with words 'Fool Transcripts' below it

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Lennar (LEN -1.01%)
Q2 2018 Earnings Conference Call
Jun. 26, 2018 11:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Welcome to Lennar's second-quarter earnings conference call. [Operator Instructions] Today's conference is being recorded. If you have any objections, you may disconnect at this time. I will now turn the call over to Alexandra Lumpkin for the reading of the forward-looking statements.

Alexandra Lumpkin -- Investor Relations

Thank you, and good morning. Today's conference call may include forward-looking statements, including statements regarding Lennar's business, financial conditions, results of operations, cash flows, strategies and prospects. Forward-looking statements represent only Lennar's estimates on the date of this conference call and are not intended to give any assurance as to actual future results. Because forward-looking statements relate to matters that have not yet occurred, these statements are inherently subject to risks and uncertainties.

Many factors could affect results and may cause Lennar's actual activities or results to differ materially from the activities and results anticipated in forward-looking statements. These factors include those described in this morning's press release and our SEC filings, including those under the caption Risk Factors contained in Lennar's annual report on Form 10-K most recently filed with the SEC. Please note that Lennar assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements.

10 stocks we like better than Lennar
When investing geniuses David and Tom Gardner have a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the newsletter they have run for over a decade, Motley Fool Stock Advisor, has quadrupled the market.*

David and Tom just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy right now... and Lennar wasn't one of them! That's right -- they think these 10 stocks are even better buys.

Click here to learn about these picks!

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 4, 2018

Operator

I would like to introduce your host, Mr. Stuart Miller, executive chairman. Sir, you may begin.

Stuart Miller -- Executive Chairman

Thank you. Good morning. Thank you, Alex. And let me say that I am here this morning with some brand-new people.

I'm here with Rick Beckwitt, our chief executive officer; Jon Jaffe, our president; and Diane Bessette, our chief financial officer; among others. And let me go ahead and start and say that I'm going to give a general overview as I always have. Rick and Jon will then give the real operational overview, and Diane will deliver further detail on the numbers. It's hard to believe, but this is our first full-quarter conference call as a combined Lennar-CalAtlantic platform, so we have a lot of ground to cover.

Jon and Rick will give a comprehensive update on our now combined operations and progress on strategies -- I'm sorry, synergies, and Diane will give detail on how purchase accounting has affected our results and reconcile our quarterly results to our guidance and to consensus expectations. When we get to Q&A, as always, I'd like to ask that you limit your questions to just one question and one follow-up. So let me go ahead and begin by saying that our excellent quarterly results derive from a great deal of hard work that's been done both in our division offices and here in the corporate office. I said it last quarter and I'm going to say it again, it all comes down to a great team of professionals coming together and working cooperatively.

From the people here in this room with me today to the many throughout the Lennar offices, we're thankful for their hard, diligent and focused work. Because of the manner in which our team has worked and grown through this acquisition, I continue -- I have continued to become increasingly enthusiastic about the evolving position of our company as a leader in the homebuilding industry. We are not only well-positioned to execute on our current operational strategies, but we've become ever more adaptable and nimble, adjusting to the changing landscapes around us. As a management team, we believe that we're excellently structured and positioned to continue to grow our business while we leverage scale in each of our markets to drive efficiencies and implement new technologies to enhance our operating platform.

Overall, the housing market has remained strong and seems to continue to strengthen. Even with questions about rising interest rates, labor shortages, rising construction costs and the macro international trade tensions, the housing market has remained resilient. There continues to be a general sense of optimism in the market. Unemployment is at historic lows, the labor participation rate is increasing, and wages are higher.

Consumers in our Welcome Home Centers confirm that the dual income-producing family is resurgent, and they feel confident because economic conditions have remained strong and stable and are improving. The deficit in the production of new homes that has existed since the market crash has driven a serious supply shortage, while demand is strong. The millennial population is forming households and having children, so short supply with strong demand is sustaining this recovery and overcoming headwinds. And since land and labor shortages are limiting affordable production, it will still take some time.

It will still take some years to get to equilibrium. The Federal Tax Act continues to add additional momentum to the economic and housing landscape. While many continue to express concerns about the effects of the tax law in housing, it is proving to be a positive to the wallet of our customer base and stimulative to the economy overall, which is good for housing. Accordingly, with strong management focus and execution, one can see that we have not missed a beat.

We have seen new orders, home deliveries and margins exceed expectations this quarter, and we're well-positioned for the remainder of the year. Before I turn over to Rick and Jon, let me make a few short strategic notes. First, 42.4%, that's our debt to total capitalization at the end of the second quarter. Our net debt to total cap is 40%.

As noted in our press release, we have used strong cash flow to start paying down debt and rightsizing our balance sheet. We paid down $825 million of higher interest rate notes, plus the remaining $250 million of Rialto notes, and we did it out of strong cash flow and without refinance. We will remain focused on the reduction of debt, and we'll continue to drive strong cash flow as we look to the future. Next, the pay down of Rialto's remaining outstanding debt paves the way to a seamless repositioning of that enterprise.

As noted in our last conference call, we've engaged Deutsche Bank and Wells Fargo to consider the proper strategic alternatives for Rialto's future. We've begun a formal process for that consideration, and we will give public update as warranted. We noted last quarter a time frame of approximately 12 months from then to conclude this process. While I don't have further updates on the Rialto process at this time, we remain committed to our strategy of reverting to our pure-play core homebuilding platform.

Finally, some have noted with interest our recent reinvestment in Opendoor, a leading technology company that automates the valuation of homes and executes purchase offers to customers at those values. Opendoor is simply taking the friction out of the home transaction. We first invested in the Opendoor platform 1.5 years ago. We believed that Opendoor's strategy of reducing friction in the home sale market would be transformational to the industry while very compatible with our new homebuilding strategy.

Many interested in -- many interested Lennar customers come to our Welcome Home Centers with a home to sell. Opendoor is there to help. Additionally, many customers outgrow their first home as their families grow. Opendoor is there to help.

Some potential Lennar customers postpone the move-up purchase because engaging the broker and showing their home over months is a dreaded experience. Opendoor is there to help. Just like selling a used car used to strike fear in the potential new car buyers, selling a used home causes procrastination in the potential move-up purchaser, and Opendoor is there to help. Lennar invested in the Opendoor opportunity to alleviate the stress and friction embedded in our transactions.

We believed in the concept. We underwrote the capability of the management team. And we concluded that, together, Lennar and Opendoor could make serious changes to our industry, as well as to our customer interface and can drive -- and could drive cost as well as friction out of the way that people buy and sell homes. To date, this partnership has worked exceptionally well, and it's getting better and expanding to more markets.

Lennar is selling more homes enabled by the Opendoor program. We are accommodating customers who come to us with a home to sell, and we are also reaching out to existing first-time homeowners with a growing family and enabling them to avoid the friction and the aggravation and purchase a move-up home with the rooms they need, the space they want and the new home technologies they crave. Opendoor benefits from our managerial and operational experience, and we benefit from their technology and innovative approach to the home sales market. This Opendoor story is a proxy for Lennar's technology strategy.

We look for ideas that can work and enhance our customers' experience while building a better business platform. There is no hype, just execution. We look for great technology management teams that can execute on technology platforms that we don't have the talent or the resource to develop. We invest, and then we let our formidable scale and management guidance enable the business to adapt and to grow.

We get better and they get better. Opendoor is not our only technology initiative. We have now worked with the talented management teams of Blend, the digital mortgage platform; Notarize, the digital notary company; and Blueprint, the energy network company, among others. These are not investments, they're part of a strategy.

We are investing in technologies and tech teams that can change our industry and enhance our company's execution. We're simply building a better mousetrap. So with that said, let me conclude where I started. It really all comes down to people.

People make the trains run on time. Sales, starts, closings and margins, it's the people. People focus on cash flow and rightsize the balance sheet. People find the strategic directions for ancillary businesses and revert to core.

People find new technologies, and they adapt and change and incorporate them into old-school companies. People execute, and we have great people and great teams. And I'm proud to be a part of this team. We've accomplished a great deal and have a lot of exciting work ahead of us.

It's the people that have and will make the difference. And I once again thank the associates across our platform -- our operating platforms for their diligence and their expertise. Because of them, I can comfortably say that our company, Lennar, is well-prepared to continue to execute. So with that, let me turn over to Rick and Jon.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Stuart. Let me quickly start by summarizing our results in the second quarter, and then Jon and I will update you on the CalAtlantic integration. Net earnings for the quarter totaled $310 million, up 45% from 2017. Our core homebuilding operation really produced.

New orders for the quarter totaled 14,440 homes, up 62% from the prior year, with the dollar value of approximately $6 billion, representing a 79% increase. We delivered 12,095 homes in the quarter, which was up 57% from 2017. Revenues in the quarter totaled $5.5 billion, representing a 67% increase. We ended the quarter with a solid sales backlog of 19,622 homes, with the dollar value of $8.6 billion, up 92% and 114%, respectively, from 2017.

Our gross margin, excluding the backlog and construction and progress write-up, totaled 21.6%, which was the top of the range we guided to last quarter. Finally, our SG&A in the quarter was 8.7%. This marks an all-time second-quarter low, significantly lower than the -- our prior guidance and highlights the power of our increased geographic scale and our operating leverage. These results were achieved by a lot of hard work from our associates across the country driving our day-to-day business and focused on the CalAtlantic integration.

I can't thank our associates enough for everything they have accomplished. While these numbers demonstrate the success of our integration, let me give you some additional color on where we stand. Operationally, CalAtlantic is fully integrated into Lennar, and we are operating as one company. This transition has proceeded smoothly and we are well ahead of schedule.

More importantly, we're now realizing the true operating synergies stemming from our new local and national market scale. As I highlighted last quarter, our home--building operation has five regions and 38 divisions with operations in 49 markets. Prior to the merger, CalAtlantic had four regions and 27 divisions with operations in 43 markets. Two of the CalAtlantic divisions were new markets to Lennar and continue today.

The remaining 25 divisions have been combined with the Lennar divisions, resulting in significant SG&A savings. Operationally, we've been able to maintain or increase our market share, reduce cycle time and increase absorptions while reducing headcount by approximately 33%. We also eliminated five corporate and regional offices, 21 homebuilding division offices, 18 design centers, 24 financial services branches and one financial services processing center. The transition from the CalAtlantic Design Center program to the Everything's Included program has been impressive and is reducing cycle times and construction costs.

Excluding the CalAtlantic closeout communities, 207 communities have been converted to Lennar product; 136 communities have continued with CalAtlantic product, but converted to an Everything's Included product; and the remaining 30 communities are continuing with an option-light rebid CalAtlantic product. Our intense focus on product conversion is really showing its benefits in reduced cycle times. On average, we are saving approximately 30 to 40 days by converting the CalAtlantic product to Lennar product and approximately 25 to 30 days by converting the CalAtlantic Design Center product to an Everything's Included product. Jon will highlight the significant cost saving and increased access to trades we are seeing from this conversion.

Keep in mind that we are now the No. 1 builder in 20 markets and a top three builder in 32 markets and that our market share in our No. 1 markets range between 21% and 43%, with an average share of approximately 30%. This critical mass will continue to increase our operating leverage.

You just are seeing the beginning of our leverage in the last quarter. This market share has significantly increased our access to land. Simply put, landowners and developers are finding that they both want and need us in their community. With this in mind, we have met with many leading developers and third-party capital sources to explore new, mutually beneficial structures.

On the technology side and the systems side, we are making good progress on our homebuilding system migration and will be completing two more divisions this week. We are on track to be migrating two to three divisions each week for the next few months until completed. We have also completed the system migration for our financial services operation and now are currently writing all mortgages out of our Eagle Home Mortgage operation. We are already seeing the benefits of this capture rate from the legacy CalAtlantic communities, where we've increased capture rate from 60% to approximately 80%.

And we feel that there's increased opportunity over the entire platform given our larger scale. Now I'd like to turn it over to Jon.

Jon Jaffe -- President

Thanks, Rick. I'd like to bring you up-to-date on where we are with our focus on cost synergies. On last quarter's call, we communicated that we expect to exceed our synergies target of $100 million for fiscal year '18 by $25 million. I'm pleased to report that we're now on track to exceed that target by an additional $35 million for total fiscal year 2018 synergies of $160 million.

For fiscal year 2019, we are now on track to exceed our $365 million target by $15 million for a total of $380 million. This approximate -- the approximately $160 million of expected savings for 2018 breaks down to about $80 million for corporate expenses and SG&A savings and $80 million for direct construction cost savings. For the corporate expenses and SG&A savings, we have locked in about $80 million of synergies that's made up of the following categories. Corporate G&A represents about $35 million made up of executive and administrative compensation along with public company expenses.

Operational SG&A savings of about $45 million are from the reduction in associate headcount in the regions and divisions along with the closing of offices that Rick highlighted. We now estimate that 2019 annual run rate for these overhead savings at $115 million, exceeding our target of $100 million for 2019. Becoming the builder of choice for national manufacturers, suppliers and local trades is the key to achieving our direct construction cost synergies. We have now identified approximately $80 million of savings for 2018, exceeding the increased target of $65 million we gave you last quarter.

Our significant market scale combined with our efficient Everything's Included platform, are very big drivers of these savings. Additionally, our intense focus on even flow production, job site readiness, cycle time accuracy and dynamic pricing, all enhance our relationships with our trade partners, increasing the number of bids we receive for our work. Last quarter, I spoke about kicking off our cost synergy workshops. We have now conducted workshops at 23 divisions.

The key areas of focus at the workshops are value engineering, take-off verification and leveraging our increased scale. We identify, validate and collect cost synergies across all labor and material categories, as well as improved building practices. We also evaluate every opportunity to improve utilization of our national supplier programs to increase the rebate opportunity. The information from each workshop is compiled for tracking or execution and then shared with all other Lennar divisions.

Through this process, we are able to act quickly on opportunities identified in any one of our divisions across our entire platform. I feel strongly that these workshops, which involve our national supply chain teams, our regional purchasing teams and our division management teams, are the key to driving our ability to meet and exceed our direct cost savings -- our direct cost synergy plans. The 23 divisions that have completed a workshop have all -- are all above their respective synergy targets, demonstrating the effectiveness of this process. Let me briefly describe the top five categories driving our divisions' synergy plans for 2019.

Plans and specification changes will total about $50 million of savings. We select lower-cost home plans and overall specification rightsizing as identified at our workshops. Value engineering at the workshops for framing and lumber, along with leveraging our local scale for this category with our trade partners, will represent over $30 million of savings. For drywall, flooring and HVAC, we will save around $10 million in each of these categories through our national programs and leveraging our local scale with the trades.

Given our progress in these and other categories, we are on track to meet or exceed our 2019 target of $265 million of direct construction cost synergies. We expect to accomplish this despite the backdrop of serious industry headwinds of a tight labor market, elevated lumber prices and international trade tariffs. We do not expect to see any softening in the labor supply, especially with the current political environment on immigration. Here, our success in being the builder of choice with the trades gives us a strategic operating advantage as we attract more trades to bid our work.

We now see approximately five to six bids as compared to two to three bids for most trade categories. We believe lumber, which is at an all-time high of over $600 per thousand board feet, has peaked and expect to see some softening as more lumber inventory is freed up due to increased availability of transportation. With respect to tariffs, we are protected on most of our national contracts. Where we have seen some impact is with products like rebar.

In markets that are dependent upon foundations deal, this increase in rebar can be a few hundred dollars per home. To a lesser extent, there are some minor increases in products such as garage doors, steel [Inaudible] screws and nails. As I did last quarter, I want to highlight Lennar's quarterly operations reviews. This is the process that pulls together all of the pieces.

Here, Rick or I, and sometimes, Stuart, along with the regional president, the regional operations controller and the division management team, address all aspects of our business. We cover merger-related issues, associates, customers, trade partners, land plans financials and more. These sessions keep us connected and on track to accomplish our goals. I also want to thank our incredible associates.

In our first full quarter as a merged company, they tackled the challenges of the integration while exceeding all of our second-quarter expectations. Their dedication, hard work and focus inspire us all. I'd also like to thank our trade partners, from manufacturers and suppliers to the local trades. The open discussions and resulting agreements on how to improve both of our businesses are clear evidence of the effectiveness of this merger.

With that, I'd like to turn it over to Diane.

Diane Bessette -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Jon, and good morning to everyone. Before I provide the details of our second-quarter results, let me give a simple analysis of our numbers as compared to consensus to assist in understanding some of the noise in the quarter. Our reported EPS is $0.94, and the average of all analysts' estimates is $0.41. The difference is $0.53.

This difference of $0.53 can be separated into two categories, first, non-operating items, representing $0.35 of the difference; and second, operating items, representing $0.18 of the difference. This $0.18 is our operating beat or our outperformance as you compare expectations to actual results. So let me give you the details of the two categories, starting with the non-operating item. There are three distinct components to this category.

The first item is the CalAtlantic purchase accounting write-up of backlog and construction in progress. The expectation for Q2 was to record approximately $350 million of write-up. The actual amount recorded was approximately $240 million. The difference between these two amounts is just timing and will flow through in subsequent quarters.

The total amount of write-up for fiscal 2018 is approximately the same. The second item is integration costs, such as severance and leased terminations. The expectation for Q2 costs was $29 million, and the actual costs were just $24 million. The third item is tax rate.

The expected Q2 tax rate was 24%, and the actual tax rate was 19.7%. The difference relates to the impact of energy credits that were taken in the quarter. Now let me turn to the operating items category the difference between expectations and actual results relate to the increase in Q2 deliveries, average sales price and operating margin or as I previously stated, this is our operating outperformance. So with that backdrop, let me walk you through the details of our second-quarter results starting with homebuilding.

Revenues from home sales increased 74% in the second quarter driven by a 57% increase in wholly owned deliveries and an 11% increase in average sales price to $413,000. Both of these increases were primarily a result of the CalAtlantic acquisition. As Rick noted, our second-quarter gross margin on home sales was 21.6%, excluding the CalAtlantic purchase accounting write-up of backlog and construction in progress. The prior year's gross margin percent was 21.5% and gross margins in the second quarter were highest in our homebuilding U.S.

segment. And just a few comments about our second-quarter gross margins. Sales incentives improved 40 basis points to 5.3% from 5.7% and direct construction costs were up about 7% to $59.64 per square foot driven by a 7% increase in labor and an 8% increase in material costs. Also as Rick noted, our second-quarter SG&A percent was 8.7%, which was the lowest Q2 SG&A in the company's history compared to 9.3% in the prior year.

The improvement was due to improved operating leverage as Rick detailed, as well as continued benefit from our technology initiatives. So as a result of the above noted gross margin and SG&A percent, our second-quarter operating margin was 12.9%, excluding the write-up of backlog and construction in progress compared to 12.1% in the prior year. We opened 163 new communities during the second quarter and closed 182 communities to end the quarter with 1,325 net active communities. New orders increased 62% and the new order dollar value increased 79%, again, primarily as a result of CalAtlantic.

As we highlighted on our last conference call, during the second quarter, where we were transitioning CalAtlantic products, we expected our sales pace to be about 3.4%. However, we exceeded that expectation with an actual sales pace of 3.6%. Our completed unsold homes were 1,478 homes at quarter end, which is roughly about one home per community. This is a decrease from about 1.5 homes per community in the prior year.

During the second quarter, we purchased 9,600 home sites totaling $692 million and have land development spend of $557 million. Our home sites owned and controlled were 261,000, of which 195,000 are owned and 66,000 are controlled. And finally, the second-quarter joint venture land sale and other category had a combined $17.9 million of earnings compared to a loss last year of $15.9 million, primarily driven by the profitability of two strategic land sales. And then, turning to financial services, in our second quarter, our financial services segment had operating earnings of $52.4 million compared to $43.7 million in the prior year.

Mortgage operating earnings increased to $34.7 million from $32 million in the prior year. Originations increased to $2.9 billion from $2.3 billion, 96% of originations are now from purchase business, while only 4% are from refis. As we've noted for a while, this drop in refis has led to a very competitive market that is going after purchase business and is leading to lower profit per loan originated. We went live on April 1 with a new digital mortgage platform for the combined company using a mortgage application technology from Blend.

The platform is already being used in 77% of our mortgage applications. The results have shown a several day reduction in the mortgage process and have streamlined improved customer experience. Total operating earnings increased to $16.4 million from $9.7 million in the prior year. The increase was due to the addition of CalAtlantic closings and a higher mix of purchase business with higher transaction values versus the prior year.

And then turning to multifamily, in the second quarter, our multifamily segment had operating earnings of $14.8 million compared to $6.5 million in the prior year. The earnings were primarily driven by $17.4 million from the sale of two operating properties as well as $5.2 million of promote revenue related to two properties in our LMV Fund I. We ended the quarter with 19 completed and operating properties and 31 under construction, seven of which are leased up totaling approximately 14,600 apartments with a total development cost of approximately $4.9 billion. Including these communities, we have a total diversified development pipeline of approximately $9.5 billion in over 25,000 apartments.

And then turning to Rialto, in the second quarter, Rialto had operating earnings of $7 million compared to $6.2 million in the prior year and both of those amounts are net of non-controlling interest. The details of the segment businesses are as follows. The investment management business contributed $30.3 million of earnings primarily driven by $18.7 million of management fees. Rialto Mortgage Finance business contributed $209 million of commercial loans into three securitizations, resulting in earnings of $8.7 million before their G&A expenses.

Direct investments had a loss of $7.5 million as we monetized the remaining assets from the bank portfolios and G&A and interest expense, excluding warehouse lines, were $24.5 million and benefited from the retirement of Rialto's $350 million, 7% senior notes. Our tax rate for the second quarter was 19.7%. The rate is lower than prior year of $33.8 million, primarily due to a lower federal tax rate and as previously mentioned the impact of new energy efficient home credits that were extended to be available for homes closed in 2017. And then turning to our balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $932 million of cash.

And as Stuart mentioned, during the quarter, we repaid $575 million of 8.38% CalAtlantic senior notes using homebuilding cash. As a result, net debt to total cap was 40%. During the quarter, we also paid off the remaining $250 million of Rialto's 7% senior notes and on June 1 we repaid $250 million of 6.9% Lennar senior notes also using homebuilding cash, thus a total reduction of $1.1 billion. Stockholders' equity increased to $13.6 billion and our book value per share grew to $41.25 per share.

So now turning to our guidance for the balance of the year starting with homebuilding. For deliveries in new orders, we reaffirm our previous guidance as follows. We expect Q3 deliveries and new orders to be $12,500. We expect Q4 deliveries to be $15,000 and new orders to be $11,600.

For our average sales price, we expect Q3 average sales price to be about $410,000 and Q4 about $415,000. For gross margins, we expect Q3 gross margins, excluding write-ups for backlog and construction in progress to be between 21.5% and 21.75% and Q4 gross margins to be between 22.5% and 22.75% given the higher deliveries in that quarter. As previously mentioned, some of the write-ups for backlog and construction in progress have shifted. And so we now expect to record approximately $100 million in Q3 and approximately $50 million in Q4.

And for SG&A, we expect Q3 SG&A to be about 8.7% and Q4 about 8%, again, given the higher deliveries in that quarter. We expect our net community count to end the year at about 1,350. And finally, for the combined category of joint ventures, land sales and other income, we expect Q3 to be about breakeven and Q4 earnings of about $8 million. Turning to financial services, we expect Q3 earnings to be about $60 million and Q4 earnings between $63 million and $68 million.

For multifamily, we expect Q3 to be a slight loss and Q4 to have earnings of about $35 million. And for Rialto, we expect Q3 earnings to be about $15 million and Q4 earnings between $28 million and $38 million. For corporate G&A, we expect to see leverage with the full year at 1.8% of total revenue. For integration costs, we believe that we will have a small amount of continuing integration costs in Q3 and Q4, approximately $10 million in each quarter.

For our tax rate, we expect the tax rate for Q3 and for Q4 to be 24%. For share count, the weighted average share count for Q3 and Q4 should be about 330 million shares. And so then looking at EPS, as you put together the components of our guidance, our Q3 EPS excluding the write-up of backlog and construction in progress and integration costs should be in the range of $1.40 to $1.45. This range increases the low end of the range previously provided during our last conference call.

And Q4 EPS, again excluding the write-up of backlog and construction in progress and integration costs should be in the range of $2.10 to $2.20. This is also an increase to the low end of the range previously provided. We remain on target with our cash flow generation forecast of $2 million to $2.5 million -- $2 billion to $2.5 billion before CalAtlantic-related costs, ancillary businesses and debt pay-downs. So in conclusion, with these goals in mind, we are well positioned to deliver another strong and profitable year in 2018.

And now I'll turn it back to the operator to open it up for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you, speakers. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Stephen East from Wells Fargo. Your line is open.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Stephen, are you there?

Stephen East -- Palisade Capital Management -- Analyst

Yes, can you hear me?

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

There we go. There we go.

Stephen East -- Palisade Capital Management -- Analyst

All right. Congratulations on the quarter. Nice quarter and thanks for all the detail. Start first, there's a lot of chatter in our side of the world about slowing demand.

I guess we haven't really seen in our fieldwork other than seasonal slowing. Looking at your numbers given all the integration with CalAtlantic, it looks like you're not seeing it, but I don't want to put words in your mouth. So are you seeing any slowdown, anything other than seasonal? And if so, where are you seeing it and what type of product?

Jon Jaffe -- President

I think seasonal is exactly the right way to describe it, Steve. This is Jon. Across the platform, we're seeing the economic environment of strong job growth, good economy and very low inventory supporting demand as you see in your fieldwork. So we're definitely seeing the seasonal change.

We had a strong spring as evidenced by our second-quarter results, but we're not seeing anything that causes us to think otherwise.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

It goes back to some of my opening remarks, Steve. You're still looking at short supply and a growing demand. It's very hard to put affordable product on the ground and there's short supply of that in the existing market as well. And I think cutting against some of the headwinds, you just have that production deficit and a growing demand from the millennials that are all coming of that age where they're forming families and demand patterns still seem strong.

Flies in the face of some of the noise that we hear in the press, but there's a lot of confidence and people are still coming out to buy homes.

Stephen East -- Palisade Capital Management -- Analyst

All right, great. And then on the integration savings, I was wondering how long it'd take you to bump up the $365 million and it didn't take you long. So I guess two questions around that. One, does that include as you look out and we continue to see this inflation, is that net of the inflation or is that built into it? And then I guess, Jon, maybe a little bit more specifically where you're getting -- if you rank ordered the incremental bumps you're seeing in both '18 and '19, a little bit more specificity on where that's coming from?

Jon Jaffe -- President

We talk about the synergy numbers that is from what the marketplace is. So, for example, if lumber went up, but we say $1 a foot and we brought our framing and labor contracts down $0.50, our net might be up $0.50, our synergy is $0.50 if you follow that example.

Stephen East -- Palisade Capital Management -- Analyst

OK.

Jon Jaffe -- President

With respect to where we're seeing it, it's really as I said, Stephen, it's a lot of details that come out of ours workshops that deal with perhaps the way a type of lumber for a top plate or the way a corner is put together or foundations, the way we're working with our framers on some free-cutting of material, panelizing material and putting those panels together, it's really working across the spectrum of all trades. So, it's hard to say that it's all here or there, because you also have geographic differences. So in some markets, we'll find we have a bigger opportunity in one category and in another market it will be in a different category.

Stephen East -- Palisade Capital Management -- Analyst

Gotcha, OK. On the EI, and I know in the field we saw where you're keeping some of the CalAtlantic plans, if you will, but you're going to value engineer those. Will you get the same type of cost savings from those that you would have gotten from an E&I -- from an EI switch?

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

In many cases, we'll get more cost savings from those. So I really want to reiterate that most of the CalAtlantic products that we will be continuing to build in the future will be -- and there will be few communities that have -- a handful of communities that have a modified or lighter option program similar to what we do in Texas with village builders.

Jon Jaffe -- President

As I said, Stephen, in my comments, we look at an 1,800 square foot plan for a specific submarket for a specific customer type and we had a Lennar plan and a CalAtlantic plan. We look at which is the lower cost plan to produce that also will satisfy the needs of that market. So it's very much what the best plan, which one is the most cost efficient to build, which one has the best cycle plan.

Stephen East -- Palisade Capital Management -- Analyst

OK, thanks a lot and congratulations.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Alan Ratner from Zelman & Associates. Your line is open.

Alan Ratner -- Zelman and Associates -- Analyst

Hey, guys. Good morning. Congrats on all of the very impressive progress. And congrats to Rick and Jon and Diane and Bruce if you're in the room as well listening quietly.

So yes, and what I wanted to touch on a little bit was your comments on the land front. I know you had the quote in the release and you mentioned in the prepared remarks as well just the momentum and progress you're seeing as far as your conversations with landowners and sellers. And I was hoping to dig in a little bit more on that and really determine exactly what you're seeing there? If I look at your lot count, about a quarter of your lots today are controlled through options. So when you are reading between the lines, what I think I'm hearing is you're expecting to see some progress there moving that number higher.

So I was just curious if there's an internal target or goal there that you're willing to share with us. And then kind of connecting the dots there on the cash side, very impressive generation and de-leveraging this quarter, I was hoping you could just give us an update on your current thinking on cash generation as well as the timing of debt repurchase and any potential buyback activity as well.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

So it's Rick. On the land side, we have an intense focus right now, Jon and I, our regional president, Stuart. We've been all over the country meeting with the key developers to create some pretty interesting structures to increase our activity. What we found is the deals are coming to us right now, because when you have a 20% to 40% market share, you need to be included.

And so where there were times in the past, where we had to hunt them down. The hunt is not happening right now. So based on that, what we're trying to do is increase the amount of option business that we can do, which is a little bit lower-margin business, but a higher IRR business. And we are engaged in conversations across the country with these leading developers and capital sources to create something that's special.

And it's -- you will see an increase in our option business that will help our cash position, and it's going to take a little bit of time to do that. But as we move into 2019, you will see some dramatic change.

Alan Ratner -- Zelman and Associates -- Analyst

Thanks, Rick. And then just on the cash generation, I think you had given the number of $2 billion for the remainder of the year and I think the current thinking is this year, you are really focused on paying down debt getting to a net debt level similar to where you were before the deal by the end of the year and then '19 having some capacity either for some share repurchase activity, additional M&A, etc. So is that still kind of the right way to think about that?

Stuart Miller -- Executive Chairman

I think in terms of size and scope, the answer is yes. I think we leave optionality open to ourselves in terms of how casualty be deployed particularly as we look ahead numerous quarters. But I think that you can see from the numbers posted today, that cash, cash generation is squarely in the middle of our scope. We are paying down debt at an accelerated rate.

We're really pleased that we got through this quarter with the ability to pay down as much as we did without refinance, and it sets up the rest of the year, which is even more cash generative. So as we go into next year, I think we will have excess cash. And again, we leave our options open, but we're going to have a very well-crafted balance sheet.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Alan, just as a point of reference, my good friend, Stuart, made my screensaver our debt maturity ladder and I'm trying to figure out how to change it.

Alan Ratner -- Zelman and Associates -- Analyst

Gotcha. Thanks, guys. Good luck.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Stephen Kim from Evercore ISI. Your line is open.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, Steve.

Stephen Kim -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Yes, thank you very much guys. Hi, congratulations. And boy, so many things to talk about, which I guess is good. I just wanted to follow-up on Alan's question about land if I could.

Rick, in your answer to his question about land and your intentions going forward, you used a couple of phrases that were interesting. You said interesting structures trying to create something special and a dramatic change is likely in 2019. So I just want to follow-up on that and try to make sure that I'm understanding what you're saying, because options are not a new structure in the industry. So could you give us some hint as to what aspect of the deals and arrangements you're looking into is particularly interesting or special? And when you said dramatic changes likely in 2019, was that referring to dramatic changes in, let's say, land spend as a percentage of revenues or something else?

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Stephen, I don't want to go into a lot of detail, because there's a lot of conversations going on right now and with some developers, with capital sources internally within our organization. But our stated objective is to do two things, number one is increase our return; and number two, become more efficient in how we utilize our cash. With that in mind, the natural end result would be to increase in some sort of programmatic structure, our just-in-time ability to close on land. So, those are the touch points that, Stuart, Jon and I are focused on and we are all over it to figure out and create something that gets us those objectives.

Jon Jaffe -- President

And the one piece that Rick laid -- left out was and increase cash flow.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Correct.

Stephen Kim -- Citigroup -- Analyst

All right, excellent. I'm going to leave others to sort of follow-up on the cash flow point, because I'm sure they will. I wanted to jump if I could to Stuart, your commentary about technology and Opendoor as I imagine you probably expected I would. I was very intrigued to hear what you had to say about that, because obviously I share your enthusiasm about what can happen there.

But I was wondering if you could talk specifically about your investments across these technology initiatives. You said, they weren't just investments, but rather a strategy. The last I recall, when we visited you down in Miami, you talk a lot about how your vision for harnessing these innovations was to try to improve the new home industry's premium that it garners over existing homes, which I thought was very interesting. I was curious if you could talk about whether that vision also includes the ability for Lennar specifically to benefit from a competitive advantage in any material way from the things that you have invested in thus far?

Stuart Miller -- Executive Chairman

Well, that's a lot of questions. And first of all, Steve, I want to say thank you for hearing and listening to what we're talking about in technology, because it's not easy for everybody to get their head around it. And there are some of the elements of our initiatives that are more about our customer interface, others that are more oriented toward the product offering that we have. Many have heard and asked about the Amazon relationship and home automations that we've included in, and perhaps most importantly, our Wi-Fi certification that we include.

So our technology initiatives are very, very focused on identifying technologies that can alter our landscape. Altering our landscape can mean reducing our own internal SG&A or cost of building homes, some of those are going to be like Opendoor. The Opendoor technology has enabled us to bring our cost of customer acquisition down and has furthered our initiatives in those arenas. We are working on technologies in and around building construction.

Those technologies will help in terms of construction technique and enable a more efficient delivery system and production system and reduce cycle time. We are also working with technologies around the inclusions in our home. Wi-Fi certification is really all about Wi-Fi distribution through the home from wall-to-wall, floor-to-ceiling, no dead spots, no speed loss. That's a big differentiator between the existing home and the new home.

The new homes advantage is that we can be enabled for seamless Wi-Fi distribution. We know we can bring the internet to the home, but distributing it through the home is where everybody is running around with their phone looking for that hotspot that works best and we can heat map and engineer our homes to have seamless Wi-Fi distribution that it enables future technologies in an agnostic way. Right now, we are working with Amazon, but we want to be enabled for all platforms. At the end of the day, we believe that our technology initiatives which are not as you know about shiny objects and a lot of hype, they are about execution and building a better mousetrap, they will enable us to drive our costs down both at the SG&A level and at the production level and improve our product offerings to our customer, which will differentiate the new home market from the existing market and I think with our aptitude and drive toward technologies and their inclusions will separate Lennar from other homebuilders.

We are very enthusiastic about this and I think the single most important differentiating component of Lennar versus other builders is our ability to disseminate. We have built lines of communication out to our divisions to disseminate new initiatives out to the field and get them adapted and adopted in orderly fashion so that we can reap the benefits of those new technologies and improve our margins, our customer interface, and our product offering.

Stephen Kim -- Citigroup -- Analyst

That's great. Appreciate it. Do you actually have specific targets or goals, let's say, for next year with respect to any of these initiatives?

Stuart Miller -- Executive Chairman

So Steve, hype would tell us to put out a number that's exciting and market moving. The reality is that change happens in basis points and 10-basis-point increments quarter by quarter and a piece at a time. We have internal targets, but to try to articulate them for the outside world. The road is bumpy and we are respectful.

It's all about execution. And I think directionally you will see improvement in terms of goal setting, I don't think we want to get out over our skis.

Stephen Kim -- Citigroup -- Analyst

OK, thanks very much. Thanks.

Stuart Miller -- Executive Chairman

You bet.

Operator

Thank you. And the next question is from John Lovallo from Bank of America. Your line is open.

John Lovallo -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch-Analyst

Hey, guys. Thank you for fitting me in here. You are clearly executing at a really high level and that's certainly encouraging, but the market is much more concerned at this point, interest rates affordability in the cycle. So what I just want to be really clear on, are you seeing anything, anything at all that would suggest that higher rates, higher home prices are negatively impacting demand and are you seeing any evidence that the best days of this cycle are behind us at this point?

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

So let me start, it's Rick. We are still seeing good solid traffic in our communities. We are still seeing ability by our customers to qualify for homes across all price points. We have not seen a movement to a variable rate product on the mortgage side, which is generally the first sign that there is affordability issues, so while there is a lot of focus in the press on rates going up, we got to keep in mind, as Stuart said in his opening comments, that wage growth is real and it's happening out there.

Confidence is solid. So we put all those things together and look at the headlines we operate our business and the business is strong.

John Lovallo -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch-Analyst

OK, that's exactly what I wanted to hear. And then as a follow-up there is a huge disconnect at least in our opinion with where your stock is trading and where it should be trading. I mean, if you would share that view or if you do share that view, I mean and I understand that you want to de-lever I understand your focus on that, but why not just put a big authorization out and just buy the heck out of the stock?

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Look, I think that we are very straight with The Street on what our strategy is. We are not trying to send signals or anything else. We made a significant acquisition, strategic combination with CalAtlantic, and our first order of business was integration and operations. Our second order of business was cash flow and rightsizing our balance sheet.

In sequence, we will we will continue to generate cash flow, I have highlighted that we are focused on orderly cash flow from operations, enhancing that cash flow cash flow by reverting to our core business, enhancing that cash flow through land strategy. And as we have excess, then we will articulate what the strategies are for the deployment of capital at that time. So we just want to be straight, we don't want to send out signals and stuff like that. Our focus right now was on rightsizing the balance sheet and operating this business and I think we are at the top of our game.

John Lovallo -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch-Analyst

Very helpful. Thank you guys.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. And the next question is from the line of Michael Rehaut from JPMorgan.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, Mike. Are you there?

Operator

Again, Michael Rehaut, your line is open.

Mike Rehaut -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

Yes, I am here. Can you hear me?

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

There we go.

Mike Rehaut -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

OK. I wasn't on mute, don't know what happened there. Anyway, what I was about to say was good afternoon now and congrats on the results. First, just looking at demand from another perspective and appreciate all your comments on that already.

I just wanted to confirm, I believe Diane reaffirmed the order growth or order numbers for 3Q and 4Q. As part of that original guidance you had given pro forma kind of organic, I guess pro forma for CalAtlantic I believe 2Q with a 3% number and I don't have amount of the office don't have 3Q and 4Q, but just wanted to know what the pro forma was for 2Q and if it's part of the reiteration for 3Q and 4Q those pro forma numbers are still the same as well?

Diane Bessette -- Chief Financial Officer

Mike, I am just trying to understand the number. So, are you asking those pro forma for Q3 and Q4 are still the same right and they are still compared to the reaffirmation that that I made a few minutes ago.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

I think the way to think about it is that the beat in Q2 is additive to the year.

Diane Bessette -- Chief Financial Officer

It's not taking away from the third and fourth quarter.

Mike Rehaut -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

Right. I think you had given a 3% pro forma guidance number for 2Q and I just wanted to know if that is what indeed you reported if there was upside to that, because the full number of 62% growth was above our 55% estimate?

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

So maybe I will answer that. We were about depending on how you look at 8% to 10% above the prior year pro forma number and the balance of the year based on the pro forma that we gave you in the schedule that we released when we did our last call. Q3 was projected to be up about 12% and Q4 was projected to be up about 7%. And as Stuart said notwithstanding the fact that we sold and delivered more homes in Q2, because we guided to a 3% number, we are maintaining our Q3 and Q4 guidance.

Mike Rehaut -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

OK, that's helpful, Rick. I think also just on clarification on demand before I get to my second question. I think you had alluded to from an affordability standpoint that you haven't seen any difference between price points. I was just curious affordability aside just from a basic demand trend and observational standpoint, if you are noticing any areas of relative strength or weakness by demographic or price point segment or geography?

Jon Jaffe -- President

It's Jon. As I said earlier, we are really seeing because of the economic conditions strength across the platforms, where you have entry level product and pricing, there is this very strong demand where you have a move-up product in eight locations, there is very strong demand. I think maybe give you a couple of data points to sort of besides what we are seeing that underlies the demand and our view forward that, that demand is still strong is that we see most of our lead generation start on the internet and lennar.com. And in the second quarter, the traffic on lennar.com was up 50% year over year to $4.5 million and that turned into leads, which means people ask me for specific information about communities that was up 43% year over year to over 170,000 leads for the quarter.

So, there is really good clarity that there is strength and demand across the entire platform. And of course you have higher velocity at a lower price point than a move-up product, but in the markets where we have the move-up products we are still seeing exceptional demand.

Mike Rehaut -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

That's great, Jon. Thank you for that. I guess just second question going back to your comments, Rick, regarding land how you are going to be purchasing land going forward in the different types of conversations you are having with land developers, which is of course very important and great to hear particularly again leveraging your size and increased strength in the marketplace. I was curious if any of those conversations or your strategic approach to this more broadly is inclusive of your current-owned lot position given that, I believe, Diane had reported at quarter end that you are about I guess roughly 75% owned, almost 200,000 lots of your 261 owned, if there is any kind of thought toward moving some of that own position to any of your land developer partners in a greater effort to become more capital efficient?

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

What I would like to do is I'd like to put a thought on this and come back to it at another time. What we are doing as a company right now is really evaluating what as I said earlier how we can increase returns and maximize cash flow. And so there is a lot of conversations going on that will evolve over the next year. And I would like to really address that when and if that happens.

Mike Rehaut -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

OK, fair enough. I appreciate it. Thanks, guys.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you. OK, last question.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Buck Horne from Raymond James. Your line is open.

Buck Horne -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Hey, thanks. It's Buck. Quick question just on pricing power during the quarter, just wondering if you could tell us roughly what percentage of communities you were able to raise price in during the quarter and if you held back on that a little bit because of the integration of sales effort at CalAtlantic?

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

So we don't really track that kind of information, because the pricing and the price increases happen at the local level on the division by division really community by community basis. But what I will say is you look at the Case-Shiller Index that came out this morning, it was up comfortably year over year April over April. I think it's almost 7%. I think that pricing power, pricing pressure continues to exist as supply is really constrained and demand continues to come to market.

I think Jon did a good job of highlighting that demand is strong and even advanced demand relative to the traffic that we are getting on our website is a real good indicator if the traffic continues to build against a really constrained supply.

Buck Horne -- Raymond James -- Analyst

OK, that's helpful. And last one is just on the multifamily division, just wondering any updated thoughts about the longer term prospects of the business in terms if you think you are going to hold it next to the core homebuilding operation, there is obviously a wall of private equity money that's trying to still get invested in multifamily, has that evolved your thinking about the right time to move multifamily outside the cord?

Stuart Miller -- Executive Chairman

We are just so proud of the multifamily programs that has been put together I think that we highlighted or Diane highlighted, $9.5 billion in production. We have a very attractive platform and a core strategy of reverting to core, whether that happens, we certainly have not engaged process at this point, because we still think there is some maturity to be had. But we are openly thinking about how that will evolve and expect after to mature over the next year or so.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

But the thing that we are very focused on is when you are doing when you are involved in construction of about 10,000 apartment homes a year. That gives us additional synergies with regard to cost and maturities. So it's core to a large degree and we need to just really focus on the evolution of that business.

Buck Horne -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Tha's perfect. Thank you. Thank you, guys. Congratulations.

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

OK. So for those who are still with us, I know we went over a little bit in time. We are really pleased with how things are progressing. We look forward to continued success.

Just in conclusion, I will say once again, it all comes down to people. We thank the associates of the company, our trade partners, people across our platform, that's what makes it happen and we look forward to reporting again in third quarter. See you then.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 71 minutes

Call Participants:

Alexandra Lumpkin -- Investor Relations

Stuart Miller -- Executive Chairman

Rick Beckwitt -- Chief Executive Officer

Jon Jaffe -- President

Diane Bessette -- Chief Financial Officer

Stephen East -- Palisade Capital Management -- Analyst

Alan Ratner -- Zelman and Associates -- Analyst

Stephen Kim -- Citigroup -- Analyst

John Lovallo -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Mike Rehaut -- J.P.Morgan -- Analyst

Buck Horne -- Raymond James -- Analyst

More LEN analysis

This article is a transcript of this conference call produced for The Motley Fool. While we strive for our Foolish Best, there may be errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in this transcript. As with all our articles, The Motley Fool does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company's SEC filings. Please see our Terms and Conditions for additional details, including our Obligatory Capitalized Disclaimers of Liability.

10 stocks we like better than Lennar
When investing geniuses David and Tom Gardner have a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the newsletter they have run for over a decade, Motley Fool Stock Advisor, has quadrupled the market.*

David and Tom just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy right now... and Lennar wasn't one of them! That's right -- they think these 10 stocks are even better buys.

Click here to learn about these picks!

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 4, 2018