Subscribe

H&R Block reports $85.5 million 4Q loss

H & R Block’s continuing struggles in its mortgage lending unit put a drag on fourth-quarter earnings.

H & R Block’s continuing struggles in its mortgage lending unit put a drag on fourth-quarter earnings.
The Kansas City-based tax preparer said that it lost $85.5 million, or 26 cents per share, in the fourth quarter ended April 30, compared to net income of $587.5 million, or $1.77 per share in the year-ago period.
Revenue in the quarter increased 8% to $2.35 billion, compared to $2.18 billion in the year-ago period.
Analysts surveyed by Financial expected earnings of $1.88 on $2.44 billion in revenue.
H & R Block said it recorded a quarterly loss of $676.8 million, or $2.07 per share, on discontinued operations, which includes Option One—its subprime lending business—as well as several smaller non-mortgage businesses.
The company announced in April that it would sell its Option One Mortgage Corp. to a subsidiary of Cerberus Capital Management LP, a New York-based private equity company, by Oct. 31 (InvestmentNews, April 20).
The tax division reported $1.91 billion in revenue, up 8.2% compared to $1.76 billion during the fourth quarter of 2006.
Revenue from its consumer financial services segment, which began operations at the start of the 2007 fiscal year, increased 57% from $120.2 million compared with $76.8 million in 2006.

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

More Americans have health insurance than pre-pandemic

But 25 million remain uninsured according to new report.

Bitcoin at one-month low amid broad crypto sell-off

Stocks and bonds providing better returns weakens digital assets appeal.

Goldman sees slower growth, labor market with two Fed cuts

Any further slowing of demand will hit jobs not just openings.

TD facing new allegations in Florida, Bloomberg reports

Canadian big six bank is already under investigation by US regulators.

Demand for bonds is soaring amid rate-cut speculation

Led by US Treasuries, global demand for sovereign debt is rising.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print