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Toll Brothers (TOL): Q2 FY25 Earnings Live Coverage

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Key Points

  • Valuation depends on margins holding in luxury segment.

  • EPS/revenue both expected to decline YoY; stock still down 15% YTD.

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Margins and momentum

Gross margin was a key watch item given mix shifts toward specs, which tend to carry lower margins. However, Toll beat margin guidance handily with a Q2 adjusted GM of 28.2%, even as 54% of deliveries came from spec homes. For comparison, specs had a 26.1% GM vs. 29.8% for build-to-order units — but Toll used pricing discipline and construction efficiency to keep blended margins strong.

Importantly, FY2025 gross margin guidance remains at 28% even with higher spec mix, and Q3 is projected at 27.7%, implying Q4 stability near 27.4%. That suggests Toll’s ability to sustain profitability while scaling volume, a key component of the broader “profitable growth” thesis we noted earlier.

Guidance and Execution — On Target

Toll’s latest quarter confirmed strong execution against pre-earnings expectations, particularly around backlog monetization and demand velocity. The builder had flagged solid spring activity, and today’s 30% jump in new orders validates that. At the midpoint, Toll delivered $185 million more in revenue than projected and grew contracts across all regions.

Even more notably, Toll raised FY2025 delivery guidance by 350 homes and tacked on $15,000 per unit to the average price — signaling roughly $500 million in incremental revenue vs. the last update. This is aligned with commentary from the prior call that noted favorable community absorption trends and strong land positioning for spec builds.

Records All Around, Guidance Raised Again

Toll Brothers (NYSE: TOL) delivered another quarter of strength, posting record Q2 results that beat expectations across revenue, gross margin, and net contracts. The company delivered 2,641 homes (191 above guidance) and generated $2.65 billion in homebuilding revenue, up 6% YoY and ahead of consensus estimates by $185 million. EPS landed at $4.75 vs. $4.15 consensus (+14.5% surprise).

New contracts rose sharply to 3,041 homes worth $2.94 billion, marking a 30% increase in units and 29% in dollars YoY. While the average contract price slipped to $967,000 (–1% YoY), the change was mix-driven as the builder leaned into more spec inventory to support volume growth.

Gross margin of 28.2% exceeded guidance by 60 bps, aided by operating leverage and cost control. Toll raised FY2025 delivery guidance to 10,400–10,800 homes (from 10,050) and now expects $500 million in additional revenue. Adjusted gross margin guidance for the full year remains strong at 28%, while Q3 gross margin is projected at 27.7%.

How the stock performed after recent earnings reports

Quarter EPS Actual EPS Est. Surprise Stock Reaction
Q1 2025 $2.25 $2.16 +$0.09 +3.2%
Q4 2024 $4.11 $4.01 +$0.10 –0.8%
Q3 2024 $3.73 $3.56 +$0.17 +5.0%
Q2 2024 $2.85 $2.76 +$0.09 +1.1%

Traders Betting on Margin Compression

TOL’s short interest has climbed to 6.9% of float, one of the highest among major homebuilders. This reflects skepticism around the sustainability of premium pricing and luxury buyer resilience. Options traders are split — heavy call open interest exists near $115, but rising put activity near $100 suggests hedging ahead of earnings.

Despite recent analyst upgrades, the stock trades at a compressed multiple (~7.5x FY25 EPS), indicating that many investors expect margins to compress. Commentary on cancellations or ASP softness could shift sentiment quickly.

Luxury Buyer Still in Control — For Now

Toll’s last earnings call reflected strong confidence in the high-end buyer. CEO Doug Yearley highlighted that cancellation rates were at multi-year lows and said buyers were showing “little price sensitivity” in design upgrades. ASPs remained above $1 million in key regions, and TOL raised full-year community count guidance.

Management noted that build-to-order customization remains a differentiator, allowing flexibility in margins and price mix. Yearley also emphasized that land strategy remains asset-light, with options preferred over ownership. However, there was subtle caution: Yearley acknowledged that “rates are sticky” and noted buyers are “taking longer to close.”

“Our buyers have choice, and they’re making that choice with conviction. They want luxury, and they want it their way.”

Margin Control and Land Strategy in Focus

Toll has leaned heavily on product mix and operational efficiency to maintain margins, even as affordability pressure has squeezed peers. On the last call, management said “build-to-order is winning”, allowing them to prioritize high-margin customers and avoid speculative inventory. The company has also pointed to design center customization as a moat, and average selling prices remain high relative to the broader builder group.

IR updates show ongoing strength in Sun Belt and Western U.S. demand, and TOL continues to use option-controlled land rather than heavy land banking — a strategy designed to limit risk if the market softens further. Investors will be laser-focused on community count growth, cancellation rates, and new order pricing versus backlog.

Toll Brothers has risen +15% over the past month, though it remains down –15% YTD. For Q2, analysts forecast EPS of $2.89 on $2.67 billion in revenue, both modestly down year-over-year. The quarter is expected to show pressure on margins and normalized new order activity as the Fed’s rate outlook clouds luxury housing demand.

TOL has topped earnings in 3 of the past 4 quarters. FY25 EPS consensus is $13.72, with revenue expected to fall slightly to $10.71 billion. With gross margins near peak and affordability stretched in core markets, the key issue is whether Toll can continue to offset mortgage headwinds with product mix and pricing power.

High-End Housing Navigates Affordability Crosswinds

Homebuilders are walking a tightrope between strong underlying demand and stubbornly high mortgage rates. New home sales have held up better than existing inventory, but affordability remains a constraint, especially at luxury price points. PulteGroup and D.R. Horton both issued mixed outlooks, flagging buyer hesitation despite resilient order books.

Toll Brothers, as a premium builder, has some cushion via design customization and margin-rich communities, but it’s not immune. The Fed’s hold on rate cuts has dampened spring season enthusiasm, and any slippage in orders or cancellation rates could reignite pressure. On the flip side, limited resale supply and high rental inflation continue to provide structural support for builders with land positions.

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