Lennar (LEN) Stock Faces Profit Margin Drop That Tests Bullish Growth Narratives

لينار كورب

Lennar Corporation Class A

LEN

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Lennar (LEN) has just reported Q2 2026 results with revenue of US$7.9b, basic EPS of US$1.27, and net income of US$304.8m, while the trailing twelve months show revenue of US$32.7b, basic EPS of US$6.42, and net income of US$1.6b as investors weigh these figures against a reported 4.9% net profit margin over the last year. The company has seen quarterly revenue range from US$6.6b in Q1 2026 to US$9.4b in Q4 2025, with basic EPS moving between US$0.93 and US$2.29 over the past six reported quarters. This sets the backdrop for a story where growth forecasts and margin pressure sit alongside a discounted cash flow estimate that screens well against the current US$90.30 share price, putting the focus squarely on how sustainable those margins look.

See our full analysis for Lennar.

With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to see how this earnings print lines up against the prevailing narratives around Lennar’s growth outlook, profitability trends, and risk reward profile.

NYSE:LEN Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at Jun 2026
NYSE:LEN Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at Jun 2026

TTM earnings slide from US$3.7b to US$1.6b

  • Over the last twelve months, net income moved from US$3.7b at Q1 2025 to US$1.6b by Q2 2026, with trailing EPS over the same span going from US$13.77 to US$6.42.
  • Consensus narrative expects Lennar to use its asset light, just in time model and acquisitions to support future revenue and EPS, yet this trailing profit drop creates a clear tension:
    • Analysts talk about revenue growing 5.3% a year and earnings reaching US$1.9b by around 2029, but the recent trailing net income level of US$1.6b is below that target starting point.
    • The shift from a 9.1% net margin last year to 4.9% now means any long term margin assumptions in the consensus view rely on a stabilization that is not visible in the latest backward looking numbers.
For bulls who think the current profit dip is temporary, it is worth seeing exactly how their thesis lines up with these trailing figures 🐂 Lennar Bull Case.

4.9% margin pressure vs asset light promise

  • Net profit margin over the last year is 4.9%, compared with 9.1% the prior year, even though the asset light model is intended to improve cash flow and eventually support margins.
  • Bears focus on this margin squeeze and argue that higher mortgage rates and roughly 13% sales incentives could keep profitability under pressure:
    • Guidance and narrative references to gross margins near 18% and incentives well above the historic 5% to 6% range line up with the drop in net margin to 4.9% in the trailing numbers.
    • With earnings over the past five years declining about 11.4% per year, the latest margin level fits the bearish view that profitability has been compressed for longer than a single quarter.
If you are weighing those margin concerns against the long term story, it helps to see how skeptics build their case around the full data set 🐻 Lennar Bear Case.

P/E premium and DCF gap at US$90.30

  • Lennar trades on a trailing P/E of 13.9x, modestly above the US Consumer Durables industry at 13.2x and peers at 12.5x, while the cited DCF fair value of US$244.45 sits far above the current US$90.30 share price.
  • Supporters of the bullish view point to that large DCF gap and around 9% forecast annual earnings growth, but the valuation set up is more nuanced:
    • The P/E premium over industry and peers suggests the stock is not priced as a distressed business, even though trailing earnings have been declining at roughly 11.4% per year over five years.
    • The 2.21% dividend is not well covered by free cash flow in the trailing period, which matters if investors are using the DCF fair value to justify paying above the sector multiple for what is, at least recently, lower margin cash generation.

Next Steps

To see how these results tie into long-term growth, risks, and valuation, check out the full range of community narratives for Lennar on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.

If this mix of pressure and potential feels finely balanced, use the full data set to stress test your own thesis and decide whether the trade off works for you by weighing the 2 key rewards and 2 important warning signs.

See What Else Is Out There

Lennar's shrinking trailing net income, compressed 4.9% margin, and P/E premium over peers highlight pressure on profitability and questions around how well earnings are holding up.

If weakening margins and less comfortable earnings coverage bother you, it makes sense to widen your search to companies screening as 70 resilient stocks with low risk scores while you reassess your options.

This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.