Key facts
- Lennar's Q2 adjusted earnings per share surpassed analyst expectations.
- Gross margin for the quarter was 15.6%, within the guided range of 15.5-16.0%.
- The company delivered 20,519 homes and secured 21,749 net orders in Q2.
- Lennar has reduced owned homesites from approximately 174,000 in 2018 to about 11,000, with controlled homesites at roughly 486,000.
- The company expects gross margins of approximately 16% in its fiscal third quarter.
Lennar, the second-largest homebuilder in the U.S., reported second-quarter results that exceeded earnings expectations and met guidance for orders, closings, and gross margin. The company continues to reduce speculative inventory and advance its asset-light operating model, which emphasizes controlling land through partnerships rather than ownership. This strategy has significantly reduced owned homesites from approximately 174,000 in 2018 to about 11,000 today, while controlled homesites have increased to roughly 486,000.
Despite meeting its financial projections, with a Q2 gross margin of 15.6% and expected improvement to around 16% in the third quarter, Lennar faces persistent investor scrutiny. The focus has shifted from disclosure risks related to its land-banking relationships to the long-term economic viability and profitability of the asset-light model. Analysts questioned the timing mismatch between land-bank expenditures and future margin recognition, with CEO Stuart Miller characterizing these as natural ebbs and flows of capital during the transition to a manufacturing-like platform.
The company delivered 20,519 homes and secured 21,749 net orders in the quarter, a slight year-over-year decline in orders of 3.8%. Management highlighted that the operational results, including solid orders and improving margins, are positive for Lennar and the broader industry, especially given uncertain market conditions. The company also maintained a strong balance sheet and continued aggressive share repurchases.
