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Atlanta-based builder asserts insurance company should pay legal expenses incurred in defending Beazer company officers and executives.
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CEO tells analysts that 2010 will be "a year of transition."
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After selling off parcels in 2005, Florida builder now has the cash for great deals in 2009.
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Pennsylvania builder must find more cash to survive beyond a year.
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Pennsylvania-based public builder is dealing with serious financial troubles.
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Real estate investment fund launched a starting bid for 5,499 of the bankrupt company's unfinished lots.
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Luxury home builder's war chest remains fat enough to last for the long-haul.
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San Antonio builder increases sales by offering options that production builders don't.
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Horton logs another quarterly loss, but predicts a profitable 2010 and market share gains.
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California-based developer paid $20 million for 1,072 lots in 11 communities.
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Robert Toll says the downturn ended last March, but don't expect the recovery to be smooth.
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Restructuring the company's debt helps boost its bottom line.
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Unless it reaches agreement with its lenders, the Bensalem, Pa.-based builder faces cash deficit by December.
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Beazer will market, sell, and build out 462 lots owned by the land investment company.
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Company hopes partnerships with builders will help slow bidding wars for dirt.
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Company executives say the company is ready to start growing again.
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Pulte, now the biggest builder in the country, increases its yearly savings estimates from $350 million to $440 million.
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The move by the famously land conservative parent company of Richmond American Homes may signal a market bottom.
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In just one year the company has overhauled its debt and is out shopping for land.
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Targeting first-time and bargain-oriented buyers is helping the Ohio-based builder gain ground in the Midwest.
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Flush with cash, the builder is on a buying spree for discounted lots.
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Some judges are penalizing lenders they think acted irresponsibly in the housing boom, pushing them further back in the payment line.
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Housing Market Index shows that builder confidence declined one point.
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The famed master planned developer is hiring six builders to build homes in Irvine Ranch.
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The company's U.K.-based parent company Taylor Wimpey is said to be discussing selling its North American operations, according to The Times.
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CEO David Fry discusses Florida builder's plans now that company has exited Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
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Product with flexible floor plans and smaller square footage helps builder compete effectively against foreclosures.
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The builder sells 1,409 lots to Czechoslovakian investors.
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Franklin Templeton mutual funds investors allege the builder misled investors about the true financial condition of the company.
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CEO Stuart Miller says he sees indicators that housing market is improving.
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Ara Hovnanian: 'The land market is slowly starting to thaw.'
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Newly merged home builder taps auto industry marketing expert Deborah W. Meyer to strengthen the company's brands.
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Florida-based public builder sheds $2 billion in debt through Chapter 11.
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Virginia-based public builder has quietly started building homes in the Orlando market.
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Shareholders of the two home builders approve a merger, creating the largest home building company in the U.S.
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Builders looking to replenish their land supplies are facing competition.
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CEO Bob Toll thinks buyer confidence has returned and is betting it sticks around.
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Boosted by debt savings, the company's loss is narrower than analysts predicted.
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The U.K.-based parent company of Taylor Morrison reports narrower losses.
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The company plans to use some of its $2 billion in cash to fuel growth.
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CEO Dugas sees positives and negatives in the company's second quarter earnings.
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LandSource reincarnated as Newhall, a management company, and a new home builder all emerge in the wake of the company's bankruptcy reorganization.
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Builder posts 18% margins in 2Q, outshining its peers.
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Margins remain thin at California-based public builder.
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Fairfax, Va.-based builder sells stock to pay off debt.
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Public builder says that constructing smaller houses faster, cheaper, and on less expensive lots is the key to profitability.
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Restructuring of ESOP builder would leave employee-investors with nothing and give founding family, which lent the firm millions, sole ownership.
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Public builder reports an unexpectedly successful spring selling season.
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Both profits and revenues drop in quarter ending June 30, but public builder also books more than 2,700 orders for new-homes.
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Proposal would give one major creditor, controlled by the Buescher family, all the stock in the newly restructured company.
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Florida-based builder hopes to be out of Chapter 11 by September.
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The Horsham, Pa.-based builder is offering 7/1 ARMs as an option for buyers.
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Potential buyers show up four hours early for the grand opening of Ivy in the Villages of Irvine.
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A plan that would move the huge land development company out of Chapter 11 offers more cash to creditors.
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CEO says consumers' "abject pessimism" has been replaced with "sense of opportunity."
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U.K. orders are up 73%, while North American numbers lag; company is cautiously optimistic.
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Scarborough settles for $1 million plus legal fees and extended stock options.
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Proposal has not been endorsed by committees representing the company's creditors.
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The big builder has seen an uptick in sales throughout its second quarter.
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The luxury home builder will begin building in the Woodlands master plan community.
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The company's unsecured creditors still oppose the plan that would put most of the reorganized company in the hands of its largest creditor.
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The employee-owned green builder wants to hold off creditors so it can finish building the homes it has sold.
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Giant California land developer gets a 60-day extension to finish up its reorganization plan.
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More buyers started signing contracts for new homes by the week that ended March 22.
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Pulte's active-adult subsidiary is accusing a Las Vegas company of canvassing its home buyers in search of construction defects.
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Standard Pacific lowers its 1Q loss to $49.5 million.
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Beazer decides not to wait to settle its legal issues before working to restructure its debt and capital.
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U.K.-based parent company of Taylor Morrison says it's successfully restructured its debt.
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Both the California builder's CFO and COO have left the company in recent weeks; founder's son has been named to COO position.
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Investors alleged the Atlanta-based builder knew and failed to disclose that its mortgage origination business was involved in improper lending practices.
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M/I lost $28.1 million in the first quarter of 2009, but sales were brisker than last year's spring selling season, offering a glimmer of hope that the market is improving.
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But many appear to think the merger makes sense.
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Moody's and S&P quickly put watches on the $6.2 billion in debt that will be carried by a combined Pulte-Centex, but Fitch takes a more positive view.
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Florida-based big builder filed Chapter 11 last year, but will not emerge from bankruptcy.
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After two executives resigned, a settlement is finally reached.
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Having shed lots and backlog, the builder is better positioned than it was a year ago.
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The Indianapolis-based builder of entry level homes closes its doors after 26 years.
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After a 15-year career with Ryland, the company's white knight steps down.
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Recently no. 40 on the BUILDER 100, the Texas-based builder succumbs to the downturn.
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Can policy trump flagging confidence?
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A spokesperson for Chicago-based Pasquinelli/Portrait Homes confirmed Monday that the company has halted home building.
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Even with assets available, builder files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
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Defective drywall is being blamed for copper corrosion and odors.
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Florida-based TOUSA asks court for more time to develop reorganization plan.
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The company still managed to make a profit in 2008.
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The big builder's loss included inventory and other valuation adjustments.
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Loss largely due to pre-tax real estate-related and joint venture impairments.
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Florida builder owes more than $7 million to largest creditor.
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M/I Homes's board of directors approves poison pill plan to protect certain tax benefits.
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Parent company of Taylor Morrison says closings fell 35% in U.K. and 19% in North America in 2008.
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Atlanta builder delivered just 938 homes in quarter ending Dec. 31.