Homebuilder stocks are often framed as simple rate trades: mortgage rates rise, affordability gets squeezed, and builders are assumed to lose pricing power and volume at the same time. D.R. Horton’s latest quarter suggests the better lens is operational. The company is still exposed to housing demand, but its edge comes from how it matches affordable product, national scale, and disciplined land strategy to a market where many smaller players cannot adjust as quickly. That makes D.R. Horton less of a pure macro proxy than its headline multiple implies.
Why affordability and national scale still anchor the model
In fiscal second-quarter 2026, D.R. Horton generated $7.6 billion of consolidated revenue, including $7.0 billion of home sales revenue on 19,486 homes closed. Net sales orders rose 11% year over year to 24,992 homes, even as management said affordability constraints and cautious consumer sentiment were still shaping demand. That combination matters: the market is not easy, yet Horton is still producing order growth and a pre-tax margin of 11.5%.
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The company’s scale helps explain why. Horton operates across 126 markets in 36 states and sells across a wide price spectrum, but management continues to emphasize affordable product offerings rather than a luxury tilt. In a choppy demand environment, that breadth gives Horton more ways to hold absorptions, use incentives selectively, and keep communities moving. Management also said the quarter came in above the high end of its guidance range, which points to execution rather than just a temporary demand bounce.
How lot strategy and inventory discipline protect returns
One of the more durable pieces of the Horton story is not just what it sells, but how it controls the inputs behind that sales machine. At quarter end, the company had 38,200 homes in inventory, of which 22,900 were unsold. More important, unsold completed homes were down 35% from a year earlier, a sign that Horton is still managing spec inventory with discipline instead of simply chasing volume.
Its lot strategy is also doing real work. During the first six months of fiscal 2026, 67% of homes closed were on lots developed by Forestar or third parties, up from 65% a year earlier. That matters because a more controlled lot pipeline can reduce capital intensity and keep balance-sheet flexibility intact even when incentive levels stay elevated. Horton’s homebuilding return on inventory was 17.6% for the trailing twelve months ended March 31, 2026, which reinforces the point that the company is still earning respectable returns even in a tougher affordability backdrop.
Why Forestar, rental, and financial services matter more than many investors assume
Investors often treat Horton as if all value creation lives inside traditional for-sale housing closings. The latest quarter shows that the adjacent businesses add meaningful resilience. Forestar sold 2,938 lots in the quarter and generated $374.3 million of revenue with $43.9 million of pre-tax income. Financial services added $192.8 million of revenue and $51.7 million of pre-tax income, producing a 26.8% pre-tax margin.
Even rental, which posted only a 5.8% pre-tax margin on $211.8 million of revenue, still matters strategically because it expands Horton’s outlet for land, construction capability, and product beyond the traditional first-sale cycle. Together, these segments help explain why Horton should not be read only through the lens of monthly mortgage-rate headlines. The company has built a broader housing platform that includes lot development, mortgage and title capture, and rental monetization.
Capital allocation, balance-sheet flexibility, and what investors may still be misreading
The other underappreciated part of the thesis is capital allocation. Horton produced $441.5 million of cash from operations in the first six months of fiscal 2026 and ended the quarter with total liquidity of $6.0 billion. Its debt-to-total-capital ratio was 21.7%, and management said the company remained on track for at least $3.0 billion of operating cash flow for fiscal 2026.
That financial flexibility shows up in shareholder returns. During the quarter, Horton repurchased 6.0 million shares for $903.6 million and paid $129.7 million of dividends. For the first six months of the fiscal year, buybacks totaled $1.6 billion, while the company still had $1.7 billion remaining under its repurchase authorization. That is a meaningful signal: Horton is not acting like a builder under stress. It is still funding incentives, managing inventory, and returning capital at scale.
The main risk is straightforward. Management expects sales incentives to remain elevated through fiscal 2026, and demand is still sensitive to rates, sentiment, and affordability. But the latest quarter suggests the more durable question is whether Horton can keep converting scale, lot control, and adjacent businesses into above-cycle returns. So far, the answer still looks closer to yes than no.
Key Signals for Investors
The 11% increase in net sales orders to 24,992 homes suggests D.R. Horton is still gaining enough demand traction to offset a tougher affordability backdrop.
The 35% decline in unsold completed homes and the 67% mix of closings on Forestar or third-party lots point to a builder that is actively protecting capital efficiency, not just chasing volume.
Financial services and Forestar together provided a meaningful earnings buffer in the quarter, which supports the case that Horton is broader than a plain single-family closings story.
A 21.7% debt-to-total-capital ratio, $6.0 billion of liquidity, and nearly $1.0 billion returned to shareholders in the quarter reinforce the company’s flexibility if demand stays uneven.
Sources
D.R. Horton, “D.R. Horton, Inc., America’s Builder, Reports Fiscal 2026 Second Quarter Earnings and Declares Quarterly Dividend of $0.45 Per Share,” April 21, 2026. Source URL: https://investor.drhorton.com/news-and-events/press-releases/2026/04-21-2026-113024627.
D.R. Horton Investor Relations, “Current Quarterly Results.” Source URL: https://investor.drhorton.com/financial-information/financial-reports/current-quarterly-results.












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