Lennar (LEN) Q2 2026 Earnings Transcript

Source Motley_fool
Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Date

Friday, June 12, 2026 at 11 a.m. ET

Call participants

  • Executive Chairman — Stuart A. Miller
  • Chief Financial Officer — Diane J. Bessette
  • Chief Operating Officer — Jim Parker
  • Executive Vice President, Homebuilding — David Grove
  • Controller and Vice President — David Collins
  • Chief Legal Officer — Katherine Lee Martin

Need a quote from a Motley Fool analyst? Email pr@fool.com

Takeaways

  • Deliveries -- 20,500 homes delivered, in line with prior guidance.
  • New orders -- 21,700 homes, positioned near the high end of internal guidance.
  • Gross margin -- Sequential improvement to 15.6% as reported by management.
  • Net margin -- Rose to 6.4% for the quarter.
  • EPS (excluding mark-to-market) -- $1.31 per share, specifically noted as excluding mark-to-market items.
  • Sales incentive rate -- Declined to 12.9%, compared with 14.1% last quarter, and 14.5% in the previous fourth quarter; management stated this "is starting to look like a trend."
  • Construction cost per square foot -- Improved to $81, representing a 7% year-over-year decline, and 13% reduction over two years.
  • Cycle time -- Reached a company-low of 121 days, cited as a record by management.
  • Inventory turn -- Increased to 2.5x from 1.8x a year ago, attributed to operational efficiencies.
  • Cash balance -- $1.8 billion at quarter end, as reported by the CFO.
  • Homebuilding debt-to-total capital -- 15.8% at the end of the quarter, with no outstanding borrowing under the revolver.
  • Shares repurchased -- 5 million shares repurchased during the quarter for $447 million; dividends paid totaled $123 million.
  • Book value per share -- Approximately $90 as of quarter end.
  • Land portfolio configuration -- 2% of homesites owned on-balance-sheet, and 98% controlled through third parties; 11,000 homesites owned, 484,000 controlled.
  • Fiscal Q3 2026 guidance -- New orders expected between 21,000 and 22,000 homes; deliveries forecasted between 20,500 and 21,500; average sales price projected at $375,000-$380,000; gross margin targeted at 16%; SG&A expected in the 8.8%-9% range; EPS guidance set at $1.20-$1.40 (excluding potential mark-to-market impacts).
  • Annual delivery guidance -- Adjusted to 82,000-83,000 homes due to "current pressures on interest rates and continued macro uncertainty," according to CFO Bessette.
  • Multifamily and segment guidance for Q3 -- Expected loss of approximately $15 million for Multifamily; $20 million loss anticipated for Lennar Other, and $15 million loss projected for homebuilding joint ventures, land sales, and other categories combined.
  • Option maintenance fees and capitalized costs (ACOR/ACRE) -- ACOR and ACRE combined balance grew $237 million sequentially to $7.1 billion, with the increase primarily attributed to capitalized option maintenance fees paid to land banks.

Summary

Lennar (NYSE:LEN) reported sequential improvement across key profitability and operational metrics, highlighting a reduction in incentives and a record-low cycle time. The company further reduced the number of completed unsold homes per community from three in Q1 to just above two, presenting greater inventory discipline. The CFO stated, "We ended the quarter with no outstanding borrowings under our revolving credit facility." Lennar's land-light approach resulted in less than 5% of land held on balance sheet by period end. Management reaffirmed its dual focus on "consistent, even flow production and volume," as well as an increasingly efficient asset-light balance sheet model, positioning for further cost and margin improvements in subsequent quarters.

  • Lennar's return on inventory rose to 15.3%, reflecting further enhancement in capital allocation and asset efficiency, separate from the reported improvements in inventory turn.
  • Executive commentary described the federal government's attention to the housing affordability crisis as "genuinely unprecedented," suggesting possible future industry tailwinds if legislative action materializes.
  • Management identified targeted financing tools, including rate buy-downs and closing cost assistance, as effective levers for supporting payment-qualified buyers in a high-rate environment.
  • The CFO clarified, regarding land banking costs, that "The majority are current-pay," arrangements, with some deferred payment structures present in various land bank partnerships.

Industry glossary

  • ACOR: Company’s term for capitalized option maintenance fees and pre-acquisition costs related to controlled homesites; increases as fees are capitalized, decreases as homesites convert to inventory.
  • ACRE: The balance accumulating capitalized option maintenance fees, which is reduced upon homesite purchase and recognized in land basis.
  • Land banking: Strategy involving third-party ownership of land with option agreements; enables asset-light operations and reduces on-balance-sheet land risk.
  • Inventory turn: The ratio indicating how many times homebuilding inventory is sold and replaced over a defined period.
  • Everything’s Included Platform: Lennar’s standardized feature package, enabling purchasing efficiencies, cost control, and customer value.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Stuart A. Miller: Very good. Good morning, everybody, and thanks for joining today. In this interesting day with the SpaceX IPO at the same time. So I am in Miami today together with Diane J. Bessette, our chief financial officer, David Collins, who you just heard from, our Controller and Vice President Katherine Lee Martin, our chief legal officer and Jim Parker, our newly promoted and appointed chief operating officer. Congratulations, Jim. And David Grove, our newly promoted and appointed executive vice president for own building. Congratulations, David. Jim and David jointly oversee our operations across the country. And while they will not be giving opening remarks today, they will participate in our Q&A period.

And as usual, I am going to give a macro and strategic overview of the company, although abbreviated, and Diane will give a detailed financial overview and guidance for the third quarter of 2026. Then we will open it up for questions. And as always, please limit yourself to 1 question and 1 follow-up. Before we begin, I would also like to reiterate so that all of you know that we have now posted our new investor deck on our website today at investors.lennar.com. In conjunction with this earnings release.

This deck was created in an effort to give investors analysts, and interested parties a clear view of the Lennar transformation and strategy that we have described consistently on these calls over the past years. From our volume based operating strategy to our asset light manufacturing model, and from our technology platform and initiatives to our path to margin recovery and long term value creation, we have tried to tie it all together for your review and comment. We believe it provides important context for understanding where we are where we are going, and why. With that said, let me begin by saying that we are pleased to report Lennar's second quarter 2026 results.

That we believe represents strong operational execution even as the macro backdrop has grown more complicated and sometimes erratic since our last earnings report. In the second quarter, we delivered 20.5 thousand homes around the midpoint of our guidance and we generated 21.7 thousand homes or new orders near the high end of our guidance. Our gross margin improved sequentially to 15.6% Our net margin increased to 6.4%. And our earnings per share came in at $1.31 excluding mark to market items. Notably, our sales incentive rate on deliveries was 12.9% this quarter down from 14.1% in quarter 1 down from 14.5% in Q4 2025.

After 3 years of incentive levels that have been generally increased starting to see the first real and potentially sustainable decline. While this decline may be a leading indicator of margin recovery, the overall market remains choppy, as economic and geopolitical crosscurrents mark the way forward. Against this backdrop, let me briefly discuss the overall housing market. The macro economy has grown more complex since the first quarter earnings call. And I wanna spend a few minutes reviewing the specific dynamics shaping the market right now. First, mortgage interest rates have remained stubbornly elevated in the mid to upper 6% range throughout our second quarter.

The 30 year fixed rate sits between 6.46.5% today modestly better than a year ago, where rates were closer to 7%. But still at a level that keeps affordability challenged. At 6.5%, the buyer at the median family income spending above 30% of gross income on their housing needs. Buyers are stretching. And our incentives are enabling purchase. The fact that incentives are declining, although slowly, is an encouraging signal even though the math has not yet changed meaningfully yet for the buyer. The inflation picture has also become more complicated. The May CPI report released recently showed headline inflation at 4.2% year over year, up from 3.8% in April and the highest reading since early 2023.

The primary driver was energy, as gasoline prices increased 7% in May and are up over 40% year over year driven by disruptions to oil supply tied to the Iran conflict. While this is possibly just an energy driven spike, as core CPI came in at 2.9% and actually decelerated on a monthly basis Higher energy prices touch every part of the American household budget. And tend to depress consumer confidence. When families see gasoline at the pump, electricity bills climb, their willingness to make major financial commitments, including purchasing a home, moderates. Even when their underlying desire to own has not changed.

This inflation backdrop most likely has taken the Federal Reserve off the table as a near term source of relief. The federal funds rate remains at 3.5% to 3.75%, and there is little probability of a cut in the immediate future. Rate cuts when they eventually do come can meaningfully it can be meaningful tailwinds for our business. But we are not waiting for them. We are building and executing to the market as it currently exists. On the employment side, the economy remains solid on the surface. But consumer psychology is being affected by anxieties about the long term security of jobs, at a time of rapid technology change.

The advance of artificial intelligence is raising questions about the future of employment across a wide range of the workforce. We see this in buyer behavior Traffic is inconsistent. Intent is high. But urgency to close is still measured and deliberate. Rather than confident and energized. We continue to make homeownership achievable and attractive through value oriented pricing, compelling financing, and the speed and quality of our customer engagement. While currently, urgency is lacking, we continue to build the platform to serve buyers even better in a normalized market. On the cost side of our world, a broad range of commodities and building products continue to create headwinds across the industry.

We have managed these pressures effectively as construction cost per square foot improved to $81 this quarter down 7% from a year ago But the cost environment remains fluid and bears close attention. Additionally, labor costs require oversight as well. Labor availability has improved modestly in some markets, as multifamily construction has slowed, providing some relief although immigration policy and enthusiastic data center construction continues to create tightness in other geographies. Our record cycle time of a hundred and 21 days though, is evident that we are managing these dynamics effectively. On a positive note, the federal government's engagement with the national housing crisis continues to deepen.

While the legislative vehicles moving through congress are likely to have little impact on supply and demand components. Housing affordability is still a focal point of both the administration and the legislature. The level of attention being paid at the highest levels of government to housing affordability, is genuinely unprecedented in my experience. And I remain confident that meaningful federal action is closer than the market currently believes. If and when government action does come, and depending on its content, it can be a significant tailwind for the industry.

1 component of our attention on this matter, we continue to watch closely is the legislative and regulatory effort at both state and federal levels to contain or constrain institutional and investor purchases. of single-family homes. Several states have passed or are advancing restrictions on large scale investor acquisitions, and federal attention is growing to this issue as well. We view this initiative as a concerning long term development for housing as it is recalibrating demand dynamics in a number of local markets might have the effect of reducing production of housing and reducing much needed supply. So in summary, rates remain elevated. A fresh inflation spike is complicating the consumer picture. And the Fed is on hold.

But underlying demand is real, and growing. Supply is structurally short, Our own incentives are slowing, are slowly declining. For the first time in 3 years, and the government is focused on affordability. Cross currents, yes. But on balance, optimistic. Against this backdrop, let me briefly turn to our operating strategy. Our strategy has not changed. And consistency of strategy especially through a difficult cycle, is what builds confidence through our company and we believe enduring competitive edge in the market. We remain focused on 2 strategic priorities. First, driving consistent, even flow production and volume and second, continuously refining our asset light land light balance sheet model to generate strong and growing cash flow and returns.

As to the first, across the Lennar platform, we have clarity that we price to market and maintain volume order to meet demand at affordability. We offer the incentives that our customers need to achieve the value they can afford and we maintain consistent volume even as the market adjusts. We have remained steadfast in our execution and our results reflect that conviction. We continue to believe that our focused strategy has built consistency through the Lennar platform which is creating a real competitive edge in the market. This focus has enabled us to drive down construction costs per square foot to $81, as I said, down 13% from 2 years ago.

And cycle time is down to a hundred and 21 days which is a record low. A direct driver of inventory turn improvement to 2.5x from 1.8x a year ago. On the asset light side, we continue to make excellent progress on an ever more seamless and sustainable asset light model. Less than 5% of our land is on balance sheet, Total homebuilding inventory has declined to $10.9 billion this quarter from $11.4 billion a year ago. Our land banking partnership continued to function extremely well, and are getting increasingly more efficient while providing just in time home site delivery at an 86% delivery rate.

In addition, we inject modern in every aspect of our land light execution, we expect that by year end, will have an extremely efficient land operating system and process that will reduce cost structure, while enhancing our land acquisition diligence, and review. Simply put, our land light model will enable us enable us to be significantly more efficient and effective as a land buyer as a land developer, and land administrator at a significantly lower overall cost of capital. By strategically focusing on volume and asset light, we are becoming a materially better and singularly focused homebuilder slash manufacturer. This enables us to spend more time and attention to drive quality and value in our homebuilding operation.

Quality always comes first at Lennar. We remain continuously focused on improving the quality of every home we build with a world-class customer experience for our customers and with safety first for our building partners. Lennar's excellent but always improving customer experience program starts at the time we first meet our customers through our digital marketing funnel. And never stops through the signing of the contract through the closing of the contract, through the engagements with our customers, after they close. We are focused on embracing and engaging our technology platform to enrich and expand Lennar's customer experience as we build a customer for life. Additionally, we continuously improve the Lennar value proposition.

We are using our market share land access, and cost advantages to enhance the value proposition embedded in each home offering to our customers. Our everything's included platform and program continues to serve as an important competitive differentiator and affordability lever. By standardizing features at scale, and offering more for less, we capture purchasing efficiencies offset cost pressures, protect margin, and deliver meaningful value to buyers. All while keeping the buying process simple and transparent. Additionally, our targeted financing programs rate buy downs, and closing cost assistance allow us to solve to an affordable monthly payment for buyers who are qualifying on payment rather than price which describes a large share of our buying population, the current rate environment.

Now let me turn briefly to our Q2 2026 results. In the second quarter, we delivered 20.5 thousand homes and generated 21.7 thousand new orders. Both reflect the continued underlying demand for new homes and the effectiveness of our pricing strategy. Our average sales price came in at 372 thousand and our sales incentive rate on delivery trended down to 12.9%, as I said, compared to 14.1 in Q1 and 14.5% in the fourth quarter of 2025. I would reiterate that this is starting to look like a trend. Our gross margin was 15.6% while SG&A was 9.2% reflecting continued investment in our digital marketing and technology platforms.

Net margin was 6.4% producing net income of $305 million and earnings per share $1.24 on a GAAP basis. Or $1.31 excluding mark to market losses on technology. We are currently expecting to continue the trend of margin improvement. Relative to our balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $1.8 billion in cash, as our homebuilding debt to total capital ratio was 15.8%. Our inventory turn of 2.5 times and return on inventory of 15.3% reflect efficiency gains in our manufacturing model. We continue to focus on cash generation and improving returns. I will leave it here for now as Diane will cover our guidance and our third quarter expectations.

So let me conclude by returning to where I started at the opening of the call. The new investor deck that we have now posted at investors.lennar.com, We have spent some time putting together a presentation that we believe gives investors a clear view of our consistently articulated strategy. The mechanics of our asset light model, the technology investments we are making, and the path to margin recovery. And we expect to continue to add to and refresh this presentation as we continue to advance our program. But overall, we have made the hard decision built the right platform, and we believe that we will continue to see that work mature into real bottom line results.

After over 3 years of navigating a rather difficult and complicated housing market, we believe that we are well positioned for conditions as they unfold. In the current market, incentives are declining, margins are starting to improve, and our sales and marketing machine is generating stronger leads, engagement, and better conversion. Our operational platform cost cycle time, inventory turn, continues to improve on every dimension. And our market position is very strong in the vast majority of our markets, which gives us the scale and influence to drive that recovery intentionally. Rather than waiting for it. We are building towards that with clarity discipline, and confidence.

We simply could not be prouder of the extraordinary work driven by Lennar Associates across the company, They are all aligned in mission and strategy, as they have executed through this extended period of difficulty building new capabilities, driving down costs, shortening cycle times, and never losing sight of our mission, provide affordable, high quality homes to families across America. With that, let me turn it over to Diane.

Diane J. Bessette: Thank you, Stuart, and good morning, everyone. Stuart's comments combined with our earnings release provide a comprehensive overview of our second quarter operating results. Therefore, I am going to focus on balance sheet highlights and then provide estimates for the third quarter. For this quarter, once again, we were highly focused on generating cash by pricing homes to meet affordability. As Stuart noted, we ended the quarter with $1.8 billion of cash and total liquidity of $4.9 billion During the quarter, we started approximately 20.6 thousand homes and ended the quarter with approximately 38.6 thousand homes in inventory. Which included about 3.5 thousand completed unsold homes or just above 2 homes per community.

This is a meaningful reduction from 3 homes per community Or 5.1 thousand homes in Q1. Our construction cycle time improved to a hundred and 21 days, our lowest cycle time in history, reflecting the impact of our production efficiencies. Respect to land, we own 2% on our balance sheet and control 98% through third parties. This configuration significantly lowers our balance sheet risk especially in challenging markets. We ended the quarter owning 11 thousand homesites and controlling 484 thousand homesites. We believe our land portfolio of primarily optioned homesites provides us with a strong competitive position to continue to grow market share in a capital efficient way.

The total balance of deposits in ACCOR and ACCOR's pre acquisition cost on real estate was $7.1 billion at quarter end an increase $237 million sequentially. The deposit component of this balance remained flat with Q1, which is consistent with a relatively flat number of homesites controlled. The ACOR balance increase was primarily driven by a net increase in capitalized option maintenance fees. We pay current pay option maintenance fees to land banks based on the capital deployed on a multiyear pipeline of communities. Those fees are capitalized into ACRE. ACRE is then reduced as we purchase homesites from land banks and the cost becomes part of our land basis.

So in summary, ACOR increases by fees paid on multiyear land and ACCOR decreases by homesites purchased 1 at a time. Our inventory turn was 2.5x and our return on inventory was just over 15%. We maintain our focus on increasing asset return will enable us to capture more return upside as margin margins normalize. Turning to our debt position, homebuilding debt to total cap. Was 15.8 at quarter end, We ended the quarter with no outstanding borrowings under our revolving credit facility and $1.7 billion outstanding under our term loan. Note that $400 million of 5.25% senior notes matured on June 1. We used cash to redeem the notes. Our next maturity is June 2027.

Consistent with our commitment to increasing total shareholder returns, we repurchased 5 million shares for $447 million and we paid dividends totaling $123 million. Our stockholders' equity was approximately $22 billion and our book value per share was approximately $90. In summary, the strength of our balance sheet provides us with confidence and financial flexibility as we progress through the second half of the year. So with that brief overview, I would like to provide guidance estimates for Q3 3. Starting with new orders. We expect Q3 new orders to be in the range of 21 thousand to 22 thousand homes with continued focus on matching start and sales pace.

We anticipate our Q3 deliveries to be in the range of 20.5 thousand to 21.5 thousand as we maintain even flow production and turn inventory into cash. Our Q3 average sales price on those deliveries should be between $375 thousand and $380 thousand. Gross margin should be approximately 16%. As we noted last quarter, we expect sequential margin improvement quarter to quarter as the year progresses. Our SG&A percentage should be in the range of 8.8% to 9%. And all of these metrics, of course, are dependent on market conditions. We anticipate our financial services earnings to be between $95 million and $100 million for our multifamily business, we expect a loss of approximately $15 million.

For our Lennar Other segment, we expect a loss of approximately $20 million, excluding the impact of any potential mark to market adjustments. For the combined homebuilding joint venture, land sales, other categories, we expect a loss of approximately $15 million. We expect our Q3 tax rate to be approximately 28%, and the weighted average share count should be approximately 238 million. And so on a combined basis, these estimates should produce an EPS range of approximately $1.20 to $1.40 for the quarter. And finally, as Stuart indicated, we are adjusting our annual delivery guidance to 82 thousand to 83 thousand homes, given current pressures on interest rates and continued macro uncertainty.

With that, let me turn it over to the operator.

Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the Q&A session of today's conference call. We ask that you limit your questions to 1 question and 1 follow-up question until all questions have been answered. If you would like to ask a question, please unmute your phone, press 1, and your name clearly when prompted. If you need to withdraw your question, you may use 2. Again, that is 1 to ask a question. Our first question comes from Susan Maklari from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Susan Maklari: Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. I wanted to talk about the cash flows of the business and how you are thinking of the ability to generate cash as you continue to leverage the standard product and any inventory turn improvement that we have seen?

Stuart A. Miller: Core products. You wanted to talk about core products? Susan, is that what you meant? Give the impact of the core product?

Susan Maklari: The core yeah.

Stuart A. Miller: Yeah. Yeah. I think let me turn it to David and Jim, but I think there is an increasing percent of our homes that are trending towards core product. it is very efficient. I think the real impact is the returns that we get on that. Because they are smaller product, easier to build. Lower cost. So, while I think there is cash benefit I think the real benefit is on the return side, but Jim?

Jim Parker: Yeah. I would say we are continuing to optimize product across the whole company.

David Grove: We are taking different divisions in different geographies seeing what works the best, what cost structure is the best, and really using those more across more communities, which I think is really gonna have a long term effect on costs and on selling.

Jim Parker: At the end of the day, as we migrate towards more of our core product, we are gonna continue to see reductions in both cycle time and our cost per square foot. And we think this is a real strategic advantage as we go forward. And as we reduce cycle time, and cost per square foot, we are gonna see increases in inventory turn We think there is still room for improvement there. And this, of course, directly impacts cash flows.

Susan Maklari: Yeah. Okay. Alright. that is helpful. And then thinking about a lot of these cost savings that you have been focused on, generating returns from those tech investments, those kinds of benefits. Can you just give us an update on how some of that is evolving in there? And how we should think about the ultimate savings that you can realize and what that will mean for profitability and cash generation over time.

Stuart A. Miller: So let me start with that and say that our savings are gonna come from a number of items. As I just noted, cycle time is 1. And cost per square foot is another. But as we continue to improve number 1, our foundational technologies, They are basically the engine for efficiency. We are gonna start to see our SG&A start to go down. Together with our corporate G and A. The efficiencies are coming through basically a system that has required an awful lot of updating Our technology systems at the foundation level have required a lot of work we have had some missteps along the way in that regard.

Is going as we as we really get our new systems entrenched, it is going to enable us to bring costs down And, of course, the efficiencies that we will see through our operating systems we think, can be very strong. So I do not know that we can quantify either the amount or the timing, but we know that the cost reductions are gonna be quite substantial. As we go forward, particularly in some of our corporate and SG&A costs.

Susan Maklari: Okay. Thank you for the color.

Stuart A. Miller: Do want to say anything on that?

Jim Parker: I think what is interesting about both of those is that our core product and our technology are both very also very focused on our customer and our customer experience. As we create a great a better customer experience utilizing technology, and also our in our core product as we continue to refine it to meet the customer's needs. And provide them, you know, what they are what they expect and more than they expect with their every everything's included model. We both have cost efficiencies and cost savings on our side, we also are going to market with a better product and a better experience for our customers.

Susan Maklari: Okay. Alright. Thank you.

Operator: Next, we will go to Alan Ratner from Zelman and Associates. Please go ahead.

Alan Ratner: Hey, guys. Good morning. Thanks for all the color and the, the presentation. Appreciate it. First question, we want to drill in a little bit on the kind of the incentive and volume interplay. it is encouraging to see the trend moving lower on incentives. At the same time, you did slightly reduce the volume expectations. And I am just curious, as you in the field are out there, I know this is community by community, but in the field as you are out there, trying to dial back some of those incentives, are you seeing an immediate negative impact on your sales pace and absorptions that is translating to that reduced guidance?

Or should we think about it more the other way in that you are expecting to see maybe volume pull back a little bit as you try to reduce incentives, and, therefore, you are reducing your start pace commensurate with that. I am just curious, you know, how you are seeing that in the field.

Operator: Go ahead, David.

David Grove: I think we have done a good job through the quarter, a really excellent job actually of both maintaining a sales pace, a very respectable sales pace of 4.3 sales per community per week.

Jim Parker: While reducing our incentives. And I think that is a combination of you know, core product execution. I think it is a combination of our presentation. And the way we engage with our customer, and it is a result of our improving sales and marketing funnel. Leading to more appointments kept that we can then convert at a at a higher rate. Yeah.

Stuart A. Miller: I think that is right. I think that even sales is the biggest If you look not just weekly, almost daily, how we measure it, and it takes away from the pressure on the weekends. I think keeping that cadence, if you look at our last quarter, every week lines up. Similar sales number. Every Friday, similar percentage. So I think keeping that really allows us to lower those incentives. Incentives. And I think just layering on top of that what you have seen as a disciplined approach to both sales pace and production pace.

To alleviate some of the drive and pressure so that we can allow some of the incentive reductions and pricing to kind of catch up with pace. The market has been under stress, The market overall has been somewhat erratic. And so we have taken some pressure off of pushing into the market in order to let some of those incentive reductions mature.

Alan Ratner: Great. That makes a lot of sense. I appreciate that. Second, and bear with me for a second here. I just was hoping to get a little bit of clarification on some of the numbers in your investor presentation. So, you know, you have a number in here, 18.5 billion of inventory control effectively. What I am assuming that is kind of like the cost basis, if you will, of all the land that you control either through options or land banking. I am guessing that is not a finished lot value because if it was, that would seem pretty low per unit.

So first, can you just confirm that is correct, that is kind of, like, the current cost basis of all of your 400-plus-thousand optioned lots.

Diane J. Bessette: Yeah, let me I will say it differently. Alan. It is the total amount outstanding. So it is the total amount of capital deployed by our land bank at that point in time. So that would be acquisitions dollars that they paid as well as development dollars that they have incurred. And so you are right. it is not the finished price. And it relates just to the land bank population. So you were right. I just want to tweak the wording a little bit.

Alan Ratner: Okay. So that is just land bank. So of the 400 and I think it is 480 thousand lots that are kinda controlled through third parties. Only a portion of that The majority relates to that number.

Diane J. Bessette: Yeah. Already have it. Already. We do have some with land developers, but it is the majority. Okay.

Alan Ratner: So then of that 18.5 billion then it sounds like should we think of all of that being relevant to your ACOR? Meaning, you are assuming a 10% cost of capital on $18.5 billion should we think about $1.8 billion being kind of the check you are writing every year to maintain those land banking, or are some of those structured more picks on the back end? I am just trying to figure out the cash flow impact of that cost of capital.

Diane J. Bessette: that is exactly right. There are some most of the land banks have a current pay, but there we do have some that are deferred payments. that is right. And take it for purchase price time.

Alan Ratner: Okay. So do you have, I guess, a number in mind that we should think about as far as what the ongoing maintenance is on an annualized basis, assuming some of those are PIC.

Stuart A. Miller: I mean, it is gonna be less than you know, 1.8 billion I presume, but I am just trying to figure out how much less. Well, the way we listen. The way we think about it, Alan, and it moves around a little bit.

Diane J. Bessette: So, you know, what you have here is you know, kind of a static moment But what you have is, you know, as land is coming on either you know, 1 platform or another, you are adding to And with each home delivered, you are relieving from.

Stuart A. Miller: So you have got an input and an output on a regular basis. Now remember that while we are catching up, to, you know, the starting point, We have more going on land bank than coming off through deliveries.

Diane J. Bessette: But you know, I think that when you get down to it, I do not know what the percentages are. Of front pay versus amortized or The majority are current-pay.

Alan Ratner: Got it. Okay. that is really helpful. I appreciate it. We do not have a number right now. Yeah. Okay. Perfect. Thank you, guys.

Operator: Okay. Next, we will go to Mike. Michael Rehaut from JPMorgan. Please go ahead.

Michael Rehaut: Thanks for taking my question. Good morning, everyone. First question, I guess, I have 1 question on the direction of the 3Q gross margins, but I wanted to start off with a question just around kind of broadly more broadly volume versus price because, you know, I think in the last couple of years, you have certainly kind of put a stake in the ground in saying, you are a volume driven company.

And you use price or margin as the lever to maintain a good volume number And that number theoretically being, you know, 5% or 10% growth every year, Obviously, this year is a challenging environment, but I am just curious on the thought process behind lowering the closings guidance as you did this quarter by 2.5 thousand homes at the midpoint, you know, instead of maybe lowering further lowering your margin, or price to maintain the prior 85 thousand you know, it would seem that it is almost you are kind of saying, hey. We really do not want the gross margin to go below this level.

But correct me if I am wrong and just any insights into that shift for this year at least.

Stuart A. Miller: So you know, the answer, Mike, is that we are we are dealing right now with a changing constantly changing macro environment. And this past quarter has been, you know, particularly awkward. You have geopolitical uncertainty. that is driving elements of whether it is, you know, interest rate expectations or certainly inflation expectations, And we just felt that as we manage sales and starts pace, and as we are managing carefully our inventory levels, what we did not wanna do is kind of go headstrong into a clearly uncertain environment with just a conviction with a market that is just moving around too much.

So we felt that the prudent thing to do in managing our business is to focus on the absorption rate that we felt comfortable with for the system so that we can manage inventory levels, and you have seen the critical part of our narrative here is that our inventory has come down. From 3 homes per community to 2.1 homes per community, which is kind of our comfort zone.

We articulated last quarter that we had built up inventory looking forward to a more robust selling season, that did not really materialize in force and at the same time, the uncertainties in the geopolitical world just said, let's err on the side of prudence. that is where the calculus came from.

Michael Rehaut: Okay. No. I appreciate that. And certainly makes sense, you know, every policy needs flexibility, for extenuating circumstances. Theoretically. Secondly, I just wanted to circle back to the third quarter gross margin guidance. And kind of understand a little better So you are looking at about a 40 bp sequential improvement How much of that is from the incentives coming down a little bit? And I am curious, I believe it is 12.9 on the homes closed in the second quarter. What you are expecting that to be for the third quarter and what other drivers might be behind the sequential improvement, be it a little bit more volume or, you know, lower construction costs?

Stuart A. Miller: We are not really we are not really guiding to nor are we injecting a projection as to where incentives might decline. This is more our increase in margin is more an expectation relative to inclusion of more core product continuous improvement in our cost structure, and some of the more operational sides of our business. It is so we really do not have an expectation right now for where incentives are going to migrate to. That could potentially be additional upside remember in my remarks, I was clear to say that incentives are coming down but I said it a couple times. Though slowly. Which is a positive thing because they are not going up.

But that migration down is slow, and looking to present itself as somewhat of a trend. So we are gonna see, and we are not projecting something but embedded in our margin improvement our expectation from the operational execution that we are seeing and able to look forward to.

Michael Rehaut: Great. Thank you.

Operator: Okay. You bet. Next, we will go to John Lovallo from UBS. Please go ahead.

John Lovallo: Thanks guys for taking my questions. I wanted to go back to sort of the A core comments. And it seems like the implied option maintenance expense was maybe $270 million or so greater than what was expensed in the quarter. A, you know, a, is that correct? And if so, is that you know, implying that 2Q EBIT is overstated by $270 million I guess along the same lines, what is the expectation in the third quarter for this for the option maintenance expense?

Stuart A. Miller: Say the question 1 more time. I want to make sure I am answering the right question.

John Lovallo: Yeah. Sure. So the implied option maintenance expense it seems like it was it was 270 million greater than what you expensed in the quarter. So I am curious, are earnings actually overstated? The second quarter because of this? And then I also was curious what, you know, what you expect this to be Go ahead, John.

Stuart A. Miller: that is a good question. I wanna make sure that I was understanding it right. So the what you have seen and what you are seeing is as we have stood up our asset light strategy, remember that you are recovering 1 year's worth of homesites and you are starting an ACCOR accumulation or capitalization of the option maintenance fees for a broader range of land assets that are covering 2, 3, 4 years, maybe 5 years in some instances, of land accumulating on the platform.

So for a period of time, there will be that imbalance and that is a natural ebb and flow of capital. it is why we have been more conservative on things like cash and stock buyback over time because we knew that there would be this imbalance. An extended period of time.

It will ultimately equalize And so the answer is no. that is not an overstatement of earnings or anything else. it is a natural migration from an on book balance sheet with land embedded or the way we think about it, a land company that happens to build homes to an off-balance-sheet asset light approach will become a manufacturing platform and that migration will have that imbalance for some period of time.

Diane J. Bessette: Yeah. And, John, I would just add on a positive note. Most of our land so if you think about Stuart's saying, right, that most of our land banks are getting closer to kind of that equilibrium because think about the fact that most of our land banks have a close to kind of like a maturity, if you will, is the 1 that is still on the journey. Right? We have formed Millrose a year and a half ago. So that is 1 that has a little bit longer to go to get to that point where you are matching the 2 sides.

John Lovallo: If that is helpful. Yes. Thanks, guys. Second question is and maybe I am just looking too deeply into this, but it seems like the wording of how you guys describe the incentives over the past 2 quarters in the press release changed a bit. So I just want to clarify The incentive load of 12.9% versus the 14.1 Part A, I mean, does that include the base price adjustments in that number? And if so, I guess the question is, why did not we see a bigger impact sequentially in gross margin from 120 basis points of reductions in incentives?

Operator: Go ahead.

Stuart A. Miller: Go ahead.

John Lovallo: Q4 to Q1, is that is that what you are asking? Oh, I am I am asking, does the 12.9% include base price adjustments, or is that just buy downs?

Stuart A. Miller: that is the first part. Yeah.

Diane J. Bessette: it is all in. It does include them.

John Lovallo: Okay. Great. And Yeah. Fantastic. And then and then just, you know, with that in mind, if that is an all in number, we saw, you know, 120 basis points reduction sequentially. So if we think quarter over quarter, I am just curious why there was not more of a gross margin good guy, if you will.

Diane J. Bessette: Pickup. Yeah. You know, it is a function of a few other items on, and guess the only thing I would say is generally, if you think about incentives, it does get a little convoluted because sometimes you change your base price on a community, for example. And because it is the whole community, it is not an individual home price reduction. So it does get a little confusing as to what you are measuring against when you are looking at your base price versus your net price. And additionally Does that make sense?

Stuart A. Miller: And additionally, you are opening new communities that have different pricing, so it is not even necessarily a price reduction.

Diane J. Bessette: that is right. it is maybe a change in community. Community a versus community b, and you open up at a lower price You have seen our average sales price come down at the same time.

John Lovallo: So there is some mixing and matching in all of this under understood. I appreciate it, guys.

Operator: Okay. You bet. Next, we will go to Jay McCanless from Citizens Bank. Please go ahead.

Analyst: First question I had, if we look at the back at the end of 2Q, roughly 16 thousand homes should be about 80%, I think, of the closings that you are projecting for third quarter. Could you talk about what the backlog incentive looks like right now, maybe just as directional for what gross margins and incentives might look like in the third quarter?

Stuart A. Miller: No. I do not know. David, what why do not you take that?

Operator: Go ahead.

David Grove: Backlog incentives?

Analyst: Yeah. I think right now, we are sitting at about that same 12.5% on sales from Q2 that will feed into Q3 closings?

Stuart A. Miller: Yeah. So I think that Got it. I think they are flat to down a little bit right now.

David Grove: And I think that they give us I think that you said 12.5% or is it 12.9%.

Stuart A. Miller: Yeah. Versus 12.9. And just so you know, to our operators, 40 basis points is almost flattish, but to some of us, it is, you know, it is just every 10 basis points matters. Right? So they are they are coming down a little bit. And we really do not put that number out there because as you go through the quarter, you know, some of the backlog gets delivered in the next quarter. Some of it gets delivered in a quarter after that. And it gets mixed with homes that are gonna be sold during the quarter.

So it is it is it is a mixture, and it is not it is not necessarily a good indicator. that is why my initial reaction was to say, we probably do not wanna give that information.

Analyst: Okay. Well, thank you for answering it. The second question I had, and thank you guys for putting this deck together. I guess, is there opportunities over time to improve that WAC further to something lower than 11%? Or do you think you have maxed out for now? And also, I know you said Millrose has some more time to develop. Is that gonna be something that could also help that WAC move lower over time?

Operator: Go ahead.

Diane J. Bessette: Yeah. I think great question. I think absolutely because Stuart hinted to it, but you might not have caught it. there is continual work with regard to the land bank structures that we have. And every day, we are refining and making them better. So I do think that there is opportunity. We try to give you just an illustrative example of how that cost has decreased, but I think there is a great amount of opportunity there as we continue to partner with our land banks.

Stuart A. Miller: Yeah. I think this is 1 of the big opportunities for the company going forward it is a laser focus of ours right now making the migration, the transformation which is, you know, a financial transformation from on book to asset light book a lot of work, a lot of focus, and we had to bring capital to a market that really did not exist. Now that we are established every day within the company, we are looking at cost of capital, cost of execution. And refining the model so that costs come down. it is another area of big and sizable opportunity within the company. And I think you will see movement here over the next 2 quarters.

All right. From there, why do not we take 1 more question, please?

Operator: Next, we will go to the line of Buck Horne from Raymond James. Please go ahead.

Analyst: I was just wondering if you could elaborate a bit on maybe your conversations that you have been having in Washington, D. C. And the comment that you believe some meaningful federal action is closer than the market may be believing. I am wondering if is that does that relate to something that may be beneficial for builders in particular beyond what is in the current, housing bill that is still kind of being negotiated or to the extent you are willing to elaborate on that comment, what levers could be pulled further that would be beneficial for the industry?

Stuart A. Miller: So I think that all of the builders have seen and been engaged in various discussions in DC And while it would be inappropriate and probably not meaningful, to talk about those conversations with specificity you do not know where they are gonna end up. And I do not mean to create false optimism or anything like that. But the focus and attention has been something that I have not seen in my career. that is meaningful. It indicates that the affordability question in and around housing is something that is significant and something that has the attention of this administration. Now if you look over the past quarter, they might have been distracted on some other things.

And so things that might be on the agenda are maybe overshadowed by other parts of the attention of the administration. But I can say that the attention has been consistent And I think that the affordability question is front and center. Housing is an important part of that. Where the discussions will end up what kind of programs the administration might choose to pursue is something that we will just all have to wait and see on. I bring it up only because many think that there was a flash in the pan and an interest and that it subsided I just think that other things have taken the place of current thinking, but it is gonna come back.

It feels to me like it is gonna come back as a front and center consideration. Affordability matters. Right. Thanks very much. that is perfect. Appreciate it. Okay. that is a good place to end. We want to thank everyone for joining. And we will get back with you in a quarter. Have a nice day.

Operator: That concludes Lennar's second quarter earnings conference call. Thank you all for participating. You may disconnect your line, and please enjoy the rest of your day.

Should you buy stock in Lennar right now?

Before you buy stock in Lennar, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Lennar wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $438,283!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $1,257,427!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 938% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 206% for the S&P 500. Don't miss the latest top 10 list, available with Stock Advisor, and join an investing community built by individual investors for individual investors.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 12, 2026.

This article is a transcript of this conference call produced for The Motley Fool. While we strive for our Foolish Best, there may be errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in this transcript. Parts of this article were created using Large Language Models (LLMs) based on The Motley Fool's insights and investing approach. It has been reviewed by our AI quality control systems. Since LLMs cannot (currently) own stocks, it has no positions in any of the stocks mentioned. As with all our articles, The Motley Fool does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company's SEC filings. Please see our Terms and Conditions for additional details, including our Obligatory Capitalized Disclaimers of Liability.

The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Lennar. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Gold Price Analysis (XAU/USD): Gold Falls to 6-Month Low as Inflation Fuels Rate Hike Bets, A Buying Opportunity or a Falling Knife? Gold hit a 6-month low on Fed rate hike bets. However, strong central bank buying and technical indicators suggest potential tactical bounces and long-term accumulation windows.
Author  Mitrade Team
12 hours ago
Gold hit a 6-month low on Fed rate hike bets. However, strong central bank buying and technical indicators suggest potential tactical bounces and long-term accumulation windows.
placeholder
15 Days After SpaceX Listing, Index Funds Will Take 30% of Floating Shares, What It Means for Retail Investors?TradingKey - SpaceX (SPCX.US) is set to debut on Nasdaq on June 12, targeting a valuation of $1.75 trillion. At that time, only about 3% to 4% of total shares will be freely tradable; with founder sha
Author  Mitrade Team
6 Month 10 Day Wed
TradingKey - SpaceX (SPCX.US) is set to debut on Nasdaq on June 12, targeting a valuation of $1.75 trillion. At that time, only about 3% to 4% of total shares will be freely tradable; with founder sha
placeholder
WTI steadies around $87.50 despite renewed supply concernsWest Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil price experiences volatility after registering over 2.5% losses in the previous day, trading around $87.40 per barrel during the Asian hours on Wednesday.
Author  Mitrade Team
6 Month 10 Day Wed
West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil price experiences volatility after registering over 2.5% losses in the previous day, trading around $87.40 per barrel during the Asian hours on Wednesday.
placeholder
Lincoln National vs. MetLife: Which Financial Stock Is a Better Buy in 2026?Key PointsLincoln National offers a specialized focus on U.S. retirement and life insurance markets.MetLife provides massive global diversification across forty international marke
Author  Mitrade Team
6 Month 10 Day Wed
Key PointsLincoln National offers a specialized focus on U.S. retirement and life insurance markets.MetLife provides massive global diversification across forty international marke
placeholder
US Attacks Iran Amid the “Ceasefire”: Bitcoin, Gold, and Oil ReactThe United States launched strikes against Iran on Tuesday after a US Apache helicopter was downed over the Strait of Hormuz, breaking the fragile ceasefire previously announced by President Donald Tr
Author  Mitrade Team
6 Month 10 Day Wed
The United States launched strikes against Iran on Tuesday after a US Apache helicopter was downed over the Strait of Hormuz, breaking the fragile ceasefire previously announced by President Donald Tr
goTop
quote