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KB Home · KBHInitiating coverage — Q2 FY20262026-07-15

KB Home Trades Below Book Value — Bargain or Trap? (KBH)

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Initiating coverage · FY2025 10-K (fiscal year ended November 30, 2025) and Q2 FY2026 10-Q (quarter ended May 31, 2026, filed July 9, 2026) · All filing figures verified against the company's SEC XBRL data via RoboSystems · Market data as of July 15, 2026

The Hook

KB Home's book value is $61.93 per share. The stock trades around $56. That is a price-to-book ratio of roughly 0.90 — the market is valuing one of America's largest homebuilders, a company that earned $6.15 per share last fiscal year, at about a 10 percent discount to the net assets already sitting on its balance sheet. And management is acting on it: in the second quarter alone, KB Home bought back 1.4 million of its own shares for $75.0 million — an average price of about $53.57, well below book — and says another $50 million to $100 million of repurchases are planned for the third quarter, with $775 million still authorized.

The discount is not irrational. The same quarter that book value ticked up to a record, earnings collapsed: revenue fell 27 percent to $1.11 billion, diluted EPS dropped from $1.50 to $0.43, and the housing gross margin compressed from 19.3 percent to 15.2 percent. So the question this report tries to answer is the classic one for a cyclical trading under book in a downturn: is this a value opportunity, or a value trap?

Company Snapshot

KB Home is one of the largest U.S. homebuilders, operating in 50 markets across 10 states, organized into four segments — West Coast, Southwest, Central, and Southeast. Founded in 1957, it has delivered over 700,000 homes. Its signature is the Built to Order (BTO) model: roughly 71 percent of buyers are first-time or first move-up purchasers who pick their lot, floor plan, and finishes, and the home is built only after a signed contract. Homebuilding is 99.6 percent of revenue; a small financial-services arm (including the KBHS mortgage joint venture) makes up the rest. This analysis draws on the FY2025 10-K (fiscal year ended November 30, 2025) and the Q2 FY2026 10-Q covering the quarter ended May 31, 2026.

The Financial Story

The top line tells you where housing is. After peaking at $6.93 billion in FY2024, revenue fell about 10 percent to $6.24 billion in FY2025, with net income down roughly 35 percent to $428.8 million ($6.15 diluted). The slide steepened in the first half of FY2026: Q2 revenue of $1.11 billion was down 27 percent year over year, on 2,395 deliveries (down 23 percent) at an average selling price of $461,900 (down 5 percent). Six-month EPS is $0.96 versus $3.00 a year ago. The so-what: this is not a company-specific stumble — affordability-strained demand (30-year mortgage rates near 6.5 to 6.65 percent, NAHB builder sentiment at 35, a 26th straight negative reading) is squeezing the whole industry — but KB Home's decline is amplified by a deliberate, self-inflicted trough. A year ago management chose to pivot back from speculative inventory sales to its core Built to Order model, accepting fewer deliveries now in exchange for a sold backlog with locked costs and known margins. BTO reached 73 percent of Q2 net orders; management says the delivery trough is behind it.

Margins show both the damage and the mechanism for repair. Housing gross margin fell about 410 basis points year over year to 15.2 percent (15.7 percent adjusted for $5.6 million of inventory-related charges), driven — per the 10-Q — by price reductions, higher relative land costs, and lost operating leverage on lower volume. The segment detail in the filing is where the story gets interesting: West Coast, the biggest segment at $510.6 million of Q2 housing revenue (46 percent of the total), posted just a 14.0 percent gross margin versus 18.3 percent a year ago, while the Southwest earned 20.2 percent. SG&A deleveraged to 12.7 percent of housing revenue from 10.7 percent. The result: homebuilding operating income of $28.2 million versus $131.5 million a year earlier — a 2.5 percent operating margin. Every margin problem here is volume- and price-driven, not structural cost inflation, which matters for the recovery case.

The recovery case is unusually specific. Management guided Q3 housing gross margin to 16.0 to 16.6 percent and the full year to 16.1 to 16.5 percent (excluding charges), implying roughly 17.3 percent in Q4 at the midpoint — a walk of about 60 basis points sequentially into Q3 and another 100 into Q4, built from operating leverage (about 30 then 60 basis points), a rising BTO delivery mix (60 percent of Q2 deliveries, heading toward roughly 70 percent by Q4, with management citing a roughly 400-basis-point margin premium for BTO over spec), and a mix shift toward high-price, high-margin Bay Area communities now ramping. Backlog supports the volume half of that walk: 4,526 homes worth $2.14 billion, up 26 percent sequentially in units, with more than 80 percent of Q3's projected deliveries already sold, build times down to 100 days (a decade-plus best), and the cancellation rate at just 12 percent versus 16 percent a year ago.

The balance sheet is the thesis's foundation, so it deserves scrutiny. Inventories of $5.73 billion dominate $6.78 billion of total assets, against $1.97 billion of notes payable and $3.80 billion of equity. Debt-to-capital rose to 34.1 percent from 30.3 percent at year-end, reflecting $275 million drawn on the revolver — seasonal working capital, but a real increase in leverage into a soft market. Liquidity is about $1.12 billion. The maturity ladder is manageable: nothing due until $300 million of 6.875 percent notes in June 2027, then staggered maturities out to 2031. Impairments so far are trivial — $3.1 million in the quarter on a single community, which management says was not market-driven, with only $22.1 million of inventory carrying impairment marks. That last number is worth watching: it is the canary for whether book value itself is defensible.

Capital allocation is aggressive and shareholder-friendly. Share count has fallen from 94.9 million in FY2021 to 61.3 million — down 35 percent — including $538 million of buybacks in FY2025 (13 percent of shares outstanding). Since Q2 2021 KB Home has returned 48.2 percent of its market value via dividends and net repurchases, versus 31.3 percent for large-cap peers (per the company's FactSet-sourced IR deck). Book value per share has compounded from $34.23 in 2021 to $61.93 — buying back stock below book mechanically adds to that. One footnote: annual operating cash flow was $335.7 million in FY2025, down from over $1 billion in FY2023, so the buyback pace ultimately depends on the cycle cooperating.

Valuation — What Is It Worth as a Normal Business?

Where it trades: roughly $56 per share (July 15, 2026), a market cap of about $3.4 billion, enterprise value near $5.3 billion, trailing P/E about 13.5, forward P/E about 14.4, price-to-book about 0.90 against $61.93 book value, and a $1.00 annual dividend (yield about 1.8 percent). The 52-week range is $44.03 to $68.71. Analyst consensus is Hold with average targets clustered around $55 to $58, but the dispersion is telling: CFRA at Sell with a $49 target, Wells Fargo Underweight at $52, Barclays Overweight at $57, KBW Market Perform at $65, and Citizens at Market Outperform with a $77 target explicitly built on a 1.2x multiple of estimated 2026 tangible book value of $62.61 — versus the roughly 0.9x where KBH trades and the roughly 1.2x homebuilder group average Citizens cites.

For a homebuilder trading under book, the cleanest scenario framework is book value times a justified price-to-book multiple, where the multiple follows normalized return on equity. KB Home's ROE was 15.7 percent in FY2023, 16.6 percent in FY2024, and 10.7 percent in FY2025. Three scenarios, with assumptions stated:

Bear case — the trap springs. Mortgage rates stay near 6.5 percent or rise, the H2 margin walk fails, gross margins stall around 15 percent, ROE settles near 7 to 8 percent, and price cuts or impairments start eating book value. A builder earning below its cost of equity deserves a discount: 0.70 to 0.80 times a flat-to-slightly-lower book implies roughly $43 to $50 per share.

Base case — guidance holds. FY2026 lands within the guided ranges (housing revenue $4.9 to $5.3 billion, adjusted gross margin 16.1 to 16.5 percent), FY2027 margins recover into the 17 to 18 percent range on the BTO mix and Bay Area deliveries, ROE returns to about 10 to 12 percent, and buybacks keep compounding book value per share. That supports 0.9 to 1.0 times a growing book: roughly $56 to $64.

Bull case — the model re-rates. The BTO repositioning delivers what management claims — dependable margins near the FY2023-24 level of 19 to 21 percent, ROE back to about 14 to 16 percent — and the stock re-rates toward the roughly 1.2 times book where peers trade: roughly $70 to $77, consistent with the most constructive published targets.

The blended implied-value range is therefore about $43 to $77, with the mid-scenarios spanning the high $50s to mid $60s. At $56, the market is essentially pricing the base case with no credit for the re-rating — it assumes the margin recovery stabilizes the business but never restores mid-cycle returns. Put differently: today's price implies the H2 margin walk mostly works, and anything better is free upside. These are implied values under stated assumptions, not price targets, and not investment advice.

Risks

The risks are the bear case's raw material. Demand: affordability is the binding constraint — with 30-year rates near 6.5 to 6.65 percent and consumer confidence weak, absorption already slipped to 4.0 net orders per community per month from 4.5, and management flagged a soft March and a normal-seasonal (that is, slowing) June. The filing's risk factors also flag tariff-driven cost pressure on materials such as lumber, steel, drywall, and concrete continuing into 2026, which management is offsetting with trade-labor savings for now. Book-value erosion: the below-book thesis fails if the asset side deflates — $5.73 billion of inventory (54 percent of it in the West Coast segment) is carried at cost, and a leg down in California pricing would hit both margins and the balance sheet; watch quarterly impairment activity. Leverage and cash: debt-to-capital at 34.1 percent is above the roughly 30 percent target, operating cash flow has fallen two years running, and the $300 million June 2027 maturity is the first test. Execution: the Q4 margin walk leans on a concentrated set of high-ASP Bay Area communities and a continued BTO mix shift; slippage in either pushes the recovery into FY2027. Housekeeping items: the energy-efficiency tax credits KB Home has long harvested are eliminated for homes delivered after June 30, 2026 (raising the effective tax rate), and the headquarters relocation to Tempe, Arizona will cost an estimated $8 to $12 million through 2028.

The Bottom Line

KB Home is a disciplined, well-run builder navigating a genuine downturn with a deliberate strategy: shrink into a sold-backlog Built to Order model, protect margins over volume, and buy back stock below book while it waits. The stock at 0.90 times a record $61.93 book value prices in stabilization but no recovery. The watch items are refreshingly concrete: does Q3 gross margin land in the guided 16.0 to 16.6 percent band; does backlog turn positive year over year as management expects; does the Bay Area mix deliver the Q4 step to roughly 17.3 percent; and do impairments stay trivial. If those check off, the below-book entry looked like the opportunity. If margins stall while rates stay near 6.5 percent, the discount to book was the market being right. This is a framework for watching a cyclical at a discount to its own equity — not a recommendation.

This analysis was built on structured SEC filing data from RoboSystems (robosystems.ai). It is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice. New customers get 50% off your first month with code ROBO50.