Toll Brothers, Incorporated (TOL)

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Robert I. Toll , CEO/Chairman of the Board/Director
Industry: Construction
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Robert I. Toll, CEO/Chairman of the Board/Director

250 Gibraltar Road

Horsham, PA 19044

US Map it

Phone: (215) 938-8000

Fax: (215) 938-8010

www.tollbros.com

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Toll Brothers

WHAT THEY DO
A purveyor of McMansions, McCondos, and “active lifestyle communities,” Toll Brothers is the 11th-largest home builder in the U.S. and a market leader in luxury homes. Headquartered in Horsham, Pennsylvania, Toll Brothers builds in 20 states and has a market capitalization of nearly $4.6 billion.

WHERE THEY CAME FROM
Brothers Robert and Bruce Toll, a lawyer and an accountant respectively, started the company in 1967, when they decided to follow in the footsteps of their father, who had been in the construction business. When they began building homes in the suburbs of Philadelphia, the siblings decided not to establish a generic building firm; from the beginning, they focused on high-end customers who wanted large, traditional-style houses with modern conveniences and all the trimmings. By 1982, the company had expanded into New Jersey, and from there it spread throughout the Northeast. Toll Brothers went public in 1986.

WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
Toll Brothers is skilled at tapping into cultural and demographic trends. Recognizing that baby boomers wanted big homes away from the congestion of cities, Toll Brothers built them—especially in hot markets like Florida and Arizona. The company bought parcels of undeveloped land in the exurbs of fast-growing cities, divvied them up into lots, and offered buyers a range of customizable designs for houses. Toll Brothers appealed to its aspirational customer base by offering potential buyers homes with names like the Federal and the Chateau (today’s models also include the Coventry, the Philmont, and the Carlton) and optional flourishes like greenhouses, cathedral ceilings, and stucco exteriors.

In creating entirely new neighborhoods, they’ve been masters at navigating zoning and other local regulations.

Its business model resulted in boom times in the early 1990s. Good times continued to roll throughout the decade: Demand was robust—the company had a backlog of orders worth $2.9 billion by 2004—and the average price of a Toll home rose nearly 50 percent between 1999 and 2004. That meant big business for the company, which expanded into California, Texas, and several other southern and western states during the 1990s.

WHERE THE CHALLENGES ARE
Rising interest rates, the increasing cost of materials, and declining consumer confidence in the economy have all hurt the home-building industry. Between summer 2005 and early 2007, Toll’s stock price lost nearly half its value, falling from a high of $58.67; orders for new homes dropped 33 percent during the first quarter of 2007. The best news Robert Toll could report then was that the rate of order cancellations for new homes was decreasing—in other words, the bad news wasn’t getting worse.

The company also found itself in the spotlight in 2005 for inflated C.E.O. compensation: Robert Toll was second on Fortune’s list of highest-paid C.E.O.’s for his $44 million salary package in 2004. As owner of 17 percent of the company, Toll has seen his pay trimmed to less than $20 million in 2006.

WHAT’S NEXT
Americans have been moving back to the cities, and so is Toll. The company expects the housing market to remain strong in places like Jersey City, New Jersey, and New York City; among its urban projects are a 21-story condominium on Manhattan’s Union Square and a six-story condo in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

So far, Toll Brothers has not expanded outside the U.S., but it hasn’t ruled out that possibility—particularly when it comes to Shanghai. In December, Robert Toll told the Wall Street Journal that his company doesn’t have firm plans but is “just in conversation with the locals.”

Also, in an effort to raise revenue, the company has expanded its menu of offerings, which now includes mortgage services, security services, golf course management, and cable and internet services. —Mary Bridges

Portfolio Articles
  • Master Over Builder
    Bob Toll scored big during the real estate bubble. Now, as sales stall and losses mount at Toll Brothers, the luxury homebuilder he helped found, he talks candidly about overbuilding, unwise land deals, greed-and how we can get out of this mess.
    Sep 18 2008
  • Contributors
    The writers and photographers whose work appears in the October 2008 issue.  
    Sep 18 2008
  • The Mansion Family
    Luxury-home builder Bob Toll on how to know when the housing collapse has finally hit bottom.
    Jul 16 2008
  • Toll Spies a Glimmer
    Homebuilder sees hopeful signs even as it posts a loss.
    Feb 27 2008
  • Buckle Your Seat Belt
    Volatility is likely to continue in markets as investors come to grips with uncertainty in homes, cars, and media.
    Nov 05 2007

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Employees

Number of Employees: 4,329
Revenue per Employee: $1,073,453

Financials

Quarterly
Annual

Income Statement 09/2008 06/2008 02/2008 12/2007
Sales 739.83 Mil. 843.12 Mil. 868.48 Mil. 1.03 Bil.
Gross Operating Profit 57.84 Mil. -24.33 Mil. -25.63 Mil. 135.37 Mil.
Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) -45.26 Mil. -133.04 Mil. -146.95 Mil. 14.9 Mil.
Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) -75.38 Mil. -154.01 Mil. -151.96 Mil. -18.61 Mil.
Total Net Income -29.3 Mil. -93.74 Mil. -95.96 Mil. -81.84 Mil.
Basic EPS, Total -0.18 -0.59 -0.61 -0.53
Diluted EPS, Total -0.18 -0.59 -0.61 -0.5

BALANCE STATEMENT 09/2008 06/2008 02/2008 12/2007
Cash and Equivalents 1.5 Bil. 1.24 Bil. 956.64 Mil. 900.34 Mil.
Total Assets NA NA NA 6.78 Bil.
Total Liabilities NA NA NA 2.12 Bil.
Total Capitalization 4.83 Bil. 5.59 Bil. 4.97 Bil. 5.1 Bil.

Cash Flow 09/2008 06/2008 02/2008 12/2007
Net Cash From Continuing Operations NA NA NA 330.47 Mil.
Net Cash From Investing Activities NA NA NA 25.58 Mil.
Net Cash From Financing Activities NA NA NA -88.24 Mil.
Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents NA NA NA 267.81 Mil.

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Income Statement 2007 2006 2006 2004
Sales 3.99 Bil. 4.37 Bil. 3.9 Bil. 2.74 Bil.
Gross Operating Profit 655.29 Mil. 1.75 Bil. 1.89 Bil. 1.12 Bil.
Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) 138.56 Mil. 1.18 Bil. 1.41 Bil. 739.58 Mil.
Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) 173.13 Mil. 1.25 Bil. 1.45 Bil. 740.74 Mil.
Total Net Income 35.65 Mil. 687.21 Mil. 806.11 Mil. 409.11 Mil.
Basic EPS, Total 0.23 4.45 5.23 2.75
Diluted EPS, Total 0.22 4.17 4.78 2.52

BALANCE STATEMENT 2007 2006 2006 2004
Cash and Equivalents 900.34 Mil. 632.52 Mil. 689.22 Mil. 580.86 Mil.
Total Assets 6.78 Bil. 7.24 Bil. 6.04 Bil. 4.71 Bil.
Total Liabilities 2.12 Bil. 1.93 Bil. 2.09 Bil. 1.69 Bil.
Total Capitalization 5.1 Bil. 5.64 Bil. 4.25 Bil. 3.22 Bil.

Cash Flow 2007 2006 2006 2004
Net Cash From Continuing Operations 330.47 Mil. -104.45 Mil. 334.7 Mil. 111.61 Mil.
Net Cash From Investing Activities 25.58 Mil. -174.51 Mil. 31.57 Mil. -71.05 Mil.
Net Cash From Financing Activities -88.24 Mil. 222.27 Mil. -142.88 Mil. 115.05 Mil.
Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents 267.81 Mil. -56.7 Mil. 223.38 Mil. 155.61 Mil.

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