Archive: H&R Block (HRB)

PNCL: Pinnacle Suffers Accident, Fortunately No Injuries

On a dreary, rainy day in New York we woke up to find that Small Cap Watch List (Track at Marketocracy) member Pinnacle Airlines (PNCL) has reported that one of its planes was involved in an accident:

Pinnacle Airlines flight 4712 operating between Minneapolis - St. Paul and Traverse City, Michigan has been involved in an incident at Traverse City. Flight 4712 departed Minneapolis at 9:44 p.m. and landed in Traverse City at 12:43 a.m. The aircraft, a Canadair Regional Jet, was carrying a crew of 3 and 46 customers. Upon landing, the aircraft received no braking action and came to a stop off the end of the runway. There are no injuries reported to passengers or crew.

We may be overreacting to the local weather, but it seems like a day to stay inside. Thank goodness nobody was injured.

Topics: H&R Block (HRB), Pinnacle Airlines (PNCL), Stock Market | No Comments

HRB: H&R Block Looks Like it’s Taking Tax Share from Intuit

When Intuit (INTU) recently reported its interim sales figures for TurboTax, we said:

Sales since November are up 1%, but the company expects sales for the full season - ending in less than a month - to be up 3-5%? We know people procrastinate on their taxes, but didn’t they procrastinate last year as well? By sticking to the previous guidance, Intuit is saying people are significantly more likely to procrastinate this year than they were last year.

And even with the implausible guidance, consensus estimates were at the high end of management’s range. No wonder the shares are down after hours. For those procrastinators out there, however, it’s time to file your taxes. If you’re getting a refund it should arrive just as the stock is bottoming.

A commenter begged to differ, saying:

The guidance isn’t at all implausible. Intuit delivers TurboTax two basic ways: through software installed on desktop computers, and with a web version. With the desktop version, you pay up front; with the web version, you pay only when you file. Both products cost the same amount.

If the broad trend toward the web version continues, you would expect a higher percentage of turbotax purchases to occur when people finish their taxes, not when they start them. And it’s not completely a guessing game, either; Intuit can track activity on the web version, and they should have a pretty good idea of who is and isn’t likely to ultimately purchase and file through TurboTax.

We found that to be a solid argument. However, it appears to be at least partially refuted by H&R Block’s Interim Tax Season Results:

H&R Block Inc. (HRB - Annual Report) today reported tax season results for the interim period from Nov. 1, 2006, through March 15, 2007.

Total clients served (for both the company’s retail operations and digital tax solutions business) reached 14.6 million, an increase of 467,000, or 3.3 percent, over the prior year period. Digital tax clients served advanced 14.1 percent over 2006 while office-based clients increased 0.5 percent.

So H&R Block’s digital customers showed even more growth than its overall rate, which shoots a hole in the increased-web-migration argument (though Intuit could still have more web-based filers as opposed to software purchasers relative to H&R Block.)

Yet another possibility is that filers start out on Intuit’s software, then give up and hire a human. So regardless of Intuit’s customer awareness, we’re sticking with our Intuit-ion and repeat our thesis that their guidance sounds implausible.

Topics: H&R Block (HRB), Intuit (INTU), Stock Market | No Comments