DR Horton Inc (NYSE: DHI) Q3 2025 Earnings Call dated Jul. 22, 2025
Corporate Participants:
Unidentified Speaker
Jessica Hansen — Vice President, Investor Relations and Communications
Paul J. Romanowski — President and Chief Executive Officer
Bill W. Wheat — Chief Financial Officer
Mike Murray — Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer
Analysts:
Unidentified Participant
Alan Ratner — Analyst
John Lovallo — Analyst
Stephen Kim — Analyst
Matthew Bouley — Analyst
Sam Reid — Analyst
Eric Bosshard — Analyst
Trevor Allinson — Analyst
Rafe Jadrosich — Analyst
Michael Rehaut — Analyst
Mike Dahl — Analyst
Alex Rygiel — Analyst
Alex Barron — Analyst
Jade Rahmani — Analyst
Jay McCanless — Analyst
Presentation:
operator
Good morning and welcome to the third quarter 2025 earnings conference call for Dr. Horton, America’s Builder. We will open the floor for your questions and comments after the presentation. I’ll now like to turn the call over to Jessica Hanson, Senior Vice President of communications for Dr. Horton.
Jessica Hansen — Vice President, Investor Relations and Communications
Thank you Matthew and good morning. Welcome to our call to discuss our financial results for the third quarter of fiscal 2025. Before we get started, today’s call includes forward looking statements as defined by the Private Securities Litigation Reform act of 1995. Although Deo Horton believes any such statements are based on reasonable assumptions, there is no assurance that actual outcomes will not be materially different. All forward looking statements are based upon information available to Dear Horton on the date of this conference call and Dear Horton does not undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise any forward looking statements.
Additional information about factors that could lead to material changes in performance is contained in Dr. Horton’s annual report on Form 10K and its most recent quarterly report on Form 10Q, both of which are filed with the securities and Exchange Commission. This morning’s earnings release can be found on our website@investor.dlhorton.com and we plan to file our 10Q later this week. After this call, we will post updated investor and supplementary data presentations to our Investor Relations site on the Presentation section under News and Events for your reference. Now I will turn the call over to Paul Romanowski, our President and CEO.
Paul J. Romanowski — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you Jessica and good morning. I’m pleased to also be joined on this call by Mike Murray, our Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, and Bill Wheat, our Executive Vice President and Chief financial officer. The Dr. Horton team exceeded our expectations and delivered solid results for the third quarter, highlighted by earnings of $3.36 per diluted share. Our consolidated pre tax income was $1.4 billion on $9.2 billion of revenues with a pretax profit margin of 14.7%. Our net sales orders in the third quarter were flat with the prior year quarter and increased 3% sequentially. Our tenured operators continue to respond to market conditions with discipline, balancing pace versus price to maximize returns in each of our communities achieving 23,160 homes closed this quarter with a home sales gross margin of 21.8%, both of which were above our guidance range.
We remain focused on maximizing capital efficiency to generate substantial operating cash flows and deliver compelling returns to our shareholders. Over the past 12 months we have generated $2.9 billion of cash from operations and we have returned $4.6 billion to shareholders through repurchases and dividends. For the trailing 12 months ended June 30, our home building pre tax return on inventory was 22.1% while our consolidated returns on equity and assets were 16.1% 11.1%. Our return on assets ranks in the top 15% of all S&P 500 companies for the past three, five and 10 year periods, demonstrating that our disciplined returns focused operating model produces sustainable results and positions us well for continued value creation.
New home demand continues to be impacted by ongoing affordability constraints and cautious consumer sentiment. Where necessary, we have increased incentives to drive traffic and incremental sales. Our cancellation rate remains at the low end of our historical range, indicating that buyers in today’s market are able to qualify financially and are committed to their home purchase. Despite the volatility and uncertainty of the current economic environment, we expect our sales incentives to remain elevated and increase further during the fourth quarter, the extent to which will depend on the strength of demand, changes in mortgage interest rates and other market conditions.
With 54% of our third quarter closings also sold in the same quarter, our sales incentive levels and gross margin are generally representative of current market conditions. We will continue to tailor our product offerings, utilize sales incentives and adjust the number of homes and inventory based on demand in each of our markets. Markets we are well positioned offering our customers an attractive value proposition with quality homes at affordable price points and we have a positive outlook for the housing market over the medium to long term. Mike
Mike Murray — Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer
earnings for the third quarter of fiscal 2025 were $3.36 per diluted share compared to $4.10 per share in the prior year quarter. Net income for the quarter was $1 billion. Consolidated revenues of $9.2 billion. Our third quarter home sales revenues were $8.6 billion on 23,160 homes closed compared to $9.2 billion on 24,155 homes closed in the prior year quarter. Our average closing price for the quarter was $369,600, down 1% sequentially and down 3% year over year bill for the.
Bill W. Wheat — Chief Financial Officer
Third quarter, our net sales orders of 23,071 homes were flat with the prior year quarter while order value decreased 3% to $8.4 billion. Our cancellation rate for the quarter was 17%, up from 16% sequentially and down from 18% in the prior year quarter. Our average number of active selling communities was up 4% sequentially and up 12% year over year. The average price of net sales orders in the third quarter was $365,100, which was down 2% sequentially and down 4% from the prior year. Quarter Jessica
Jessica Hansen — Vice President, Investor Relations and Communications
Our gross profit margin on home sales revenues in the third quarter was 21.8% which was flat sequentially and above our expectations. Although our home sales gross margin was stable from the second to third quarter, our incentive costs have increased on recent sales, so we expect our home sales gross margin to be lower in the fourth quarter compared to the third quarter. Our actual incentive levels and home sales gross margin for the fourth quarter will be dependent on the strength of demand, changes in mortgage interest rates and other market conditions.
Bill W. Wheat — Chief Financial Officer
Bill in the third quarter, our homebuilding SG&A expenses increased 2% from last year and homebuilding SG and A expense as a percentage of revenues was 7.8%, up 70 basis points from the previous same quarter. In the prior year, our community count is up 12% and our market count has increased 4% to 126 markets in 36 states. The investments we have made in our team and platform position us to continue producing strong returns, cash flow and market share gains while remaining focused on managing our SG and a cost efficiently across our operations.
Paul J. Romanowski — President and Chief Executive Officer
Paul we started 24,700 homes in the June quarter, up 24% sequentially from the second quarter and we expect our starts in the fourth quarter to be lower than the third quarter. We ended the quarter with 38,400 homes in inventory, of which 25,000 were unsold. 7,300 of our unsold homes at quarter end were completed, down 1100 homes from March. 800 of our unsold homes have been completed for greater than six months. For homes we closed in the third quarter, our construction cycle times improved several days from the second quarter and approximately two weeks from a year ago.
Our improved cycle times position us to turn our housing inventory faster and we will continue to manage our homes and inventory and starch pace based on market conditions.
Mike Murray — Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer
Mike Our home building lot position at June 30th consisted of approximately 600,000 lots of of which 24% were owned and 76% were controlled through purchase contracts. We are actively managing our investments in lots, land and development based on current market conditions. During the quarter, our homebuilding segment incurred $16 million of inventory impairments and wrote off $36 million of option deposits and due diligence costs related to land and lot purchase contracts. We remain focused on on our relationships with land developers across the country to allow us to build more homes on lots developed by others which enhances our capital efficiency, returns and operational flexibility.
Of the homes we closed this quarter, 66% were on a lot developed by either Four Star or a third party, up from 64% in the prior year. Quarter our third quarter home building investments in lots of land and development totaled $2.2 billion of which $1.4 billion was for finished lots, $610 million was for land development and $140 million was for land acquisition.
Paul J. Romanowski — President and Chief Executive Officer
Paul in the third quarter our rental operations generated $55 million of pre tax income on $381 million of revenues from the sale of 1,065 single family rental homes, 328 multifamily rental units. Our rental property inventory at June 30 was $3.1 billion which consisted of $2.5 billion of multifamily rental properties and $668 million of single family rental properties. We remain focused on improving the capital efficiency and returns of our rental operations.
Jessica Hansen — Vice President, Investor Relations and Communications
Jessica Forestar Our majority owned residential lot development company reported revenues for the third quarter of $391 million on 3,605 lots sold with pre tax income of $44 million. Four Star’s owned and controlled lot position at June 30 was 102,000 lots. 63% of Forestar’s owned lots are under contract with or subject to a right of first offer to D or Horton. $320 million of our finished lots purchased in the third quarter were from Four Star. Forestar had $790 million of liquidity at quarter end with a net debt to capital ratio of 28.9%. Our strategic relationship with Forestar is a vital component of our returns focused business model.
Forestar’s strong separately capitalized balance sheet, substantial operating platform and lot supply position them well to consistently provide essential finished lots to the homebuilding industry and aggregate significant market share.
Mike Murray — Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer
Mike Financial Services Pre tax income for the third quarter was $81 million on $228 million of revenue resulting in a pretax profit margin of 35.7%. During the third quarter our mortgage company handled the financing for 81% of our home buyers. Borrowers originating loans with DHI Mortgage this quarter had an average FICO score of 720 and an average loan to value ratio of 90%. First time home buyers represented 64% of the closings handled by a mortgage company this quarter.
Bill W. Wheat — Chief Financial Officer
Bill Our capital allocation strategy is disciplined and balanced to support an operating platform that produces compelling returns and substantial Operating Cash flows We have a strong balance sheet with low leverage and healthy liquidity, which provides us with significant financial flexibility to adapt to changing market conditions and opportunities. During the first nine months of the year, Homebuilding cash provided by operations was $1.7 billion in consolidated cash provided by operations was $950 million. At June 30th we had $5.5 billion of consolidated liquidity consisting of $2.6 billion of cash and $2.9 billion of available capacity on our credit facilities.
In May we issued $500 million of homebuilding senior notes due 2030 and in June we increased the capacity of our Homebuilding Revolving credit facility to $2.3 billion. Debt at the end of the quarter totaled $7.2 billion, with $500 million of homebuilding senior notes maturing in the next 12 months. Our consolidated leverage at June 30 was 23.2% and we plan to maintain our leverage around 20% over the long term. At June 30, our stockholders equity was $24.1 billion and book value per share was $80.46, up 7% from a year ago. For the trailing 12 months ended June 30, our return on equity was 16.1% and our return on assets was 11.1%.
During the quarter we paid cash dividends of $0.40 per share totaling $122 million and our board has declared a quarterly dividend at the same level to be paid in August. We repurchased 9.7 million shares of common stock during the quarter for $1.2 billion and our fiscal year to date stock repurchases were $3.6 billion, which reduced our outstanding share count by 9% from a year ago. Our remaining share repurchase authorization in June 30 was $4 billion.
Jessica Hansen — Vice President, Investor Relations and Communications
Jessica Looking forward to the fourth quarter, we currently expect to generate consolidated revenues in the range of 9.1 to $9.6 billion and homes closed by our homebuilding operations to be in the range of 23,500 to 24,000 homes. We expect our home sales gross margin for the fourth quarter to be in the range of 21 to 21.5% and our consolidated pre tax profit margin to be in the range of 13.6% to 14.1%. For the full year of fiscal 2025, we now expect to generate consolidated revenues of approximately 33.7 to $34.2 billion and homes closed by our homebuilding operations to be in the range of 85,000 to 85,500 homes.
We still forecast an income tax rate for fiscal 2025 of approximately 24% based on our fiscal year to date, share repurchases, strong financial position and expected operating cash flows of greater than $3 billion. We now plan to repurchase 4.2 to $4.4 billion of our common stock in fiscal 2025, subject to the amount of cash flow generated and share price changes during the fourth quarter.
Paul J. Romanowski — President and Chief Executive Officer
Paul in closing, our results and position reflect our experienced teams, industry leading market share, broad geographic footprint and focus on delivering quality homes at affordable price points. All of these are key components of our operating platform that support our ability to generate substantial operating cash flows and return capital to shareholders while continuing to aggregate market share. We recognize the current volatility and uncertainty in the economy and will continue to adjust to market conditions in a disciplined manner to enhance the long term value of our company. Looking ahead, we expect a solid finish to our fiscal year and we have a positive outlook for the housing market over the medium to long term.
Thank you to the entire Dr. Horton family of employees, land developers, trade partners, vendors and real estate agents for your continued efforts and hard work. This concludes our prepared remarks. We will now host questions.
Questions and Answers:
operator
Certainly everyone at this time will be conducting a question and answer session. If you have any questions or comments, please press Star one on your phone at this time. We do ask that while posing your question, please pick up your handset if you’re listening on speakerphone to provide optimum sound quality. Once again, if you have any questions or comments, please press Star one on your phone. Your first question is coming from Alan Ratner from Zelman and Associates. Your line is live.
Alan Ratner
Hey guys, good morning. Congrats on the really strong results in a challenging market. Really impressive first question, I guess on the incentives. First you guided for an uptick here in the fourth quarter. Just curious if you can kind of talk through how incentives have trended through the quarter and into July and how much of that increase is based on competitive pressures you’re seeing from other builders in terms of trying to match them to maintain a certain sales pace versus. You going out and trying to accelerate. The level of activity a little bit. What I’m looking at specifically is your. Start pace, which did increase pretty meaningfully. Sequentially in the fiscal third quarter.
Paul J. Romanowski
Yeah, Alan, I think the incentives throughout the quarter were a bit choppy and we’ve responded to the market and you know, in terms of competition that kind of flows market to market. You know, we look to maintain and we’re able to exceed our guidance on closings. And that really comes from our operators at a community level managing their incentives to drive that result. That being said, you know, as we work through the end of spring and deep into the summer, summer selling season, our incentives have increased some to maintain our pace, which is going to allow us to maintain our guidance at 85 to 85,5000 for the year.
So feel good about our position so far in the quarter.
Mike Murray
And while starts increased in the second in the quarter, they were basically aligned. Trailing six months starts and trailing six month sales were almost the same number. Kind of bringing those back in alignment. Got it. Yes, I noticed that. Obviously it pulled back quite a bit in the first half of the year, so makes sense. Second question just on the overall consumer.
Alan Ratner
These aren’t big changes, but if I. Look at some of the disclosures you. Gave on the mortgage side, looks like. The average FICO score of your buyer is down about five points year over year. It’s the lowest it’s been in quite a while combined. LTV is ticking higher as well. So just any commentary you can give on the strength of the consumer today and if you are seeing any impact at all from student loan repayments resuming and being reported to the credit agencies. Thank you.
Mike Murray
We’re seeing more of our buyers select an FHA product and we’ve probably been very heavily incentivizing that FHA product offering at 399, probably our most attractive interest rate on the FHA. So that’s led more buyers to select that program. Not seeing a lot of impact at this point on the student loan area.
Alan Ratner
Great, thank you very much.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from John Levallo from ubs. Your line is live.
John Lovallo
Good morning guys. Thanks for taking my questions. So the fourth quarter gross margin outlook of 21 to 21 and a half. Is similar to what you put out there for the third quarter, which you obviously beat by 30 basis points. Curious on that beat, was that just. A little bit more volume than you expected? You know, what sort of drove the beat? And then in terms of the fourth. Quarter guide, is it really just the incentive load that or the potential incentive. Load that could drive that lower? Or are you seeing anything change in terms of, you know, stick and break or land cost, things of that nature?
Bill W. Wheat
Yeah, John, in the third quarter, as Paul mentioned, our incentives were a bit choppy during the quarter. So as you know, a quarter ago as we looked into Q3, we were seeing, you know, the potential for needing to increase incentives through the quarter, as it turned out, it was a little more balanced and it didn’t impact the closings and the margins quite as quickly in the quarter as we anticipated a quarter ago. So some margins were flat. But we still, as we sit here today, see a trend of higher incentives. Our recent sales and currently our sales and backlog do reflect a higher cost of incentives.
And so the closings that we see into July, August, September, we do expect margins to, to take that step down that we had previously anticipated would occur in Q3.
John Lovallo
Understood. And then it was good to see the share repurchase authorization or the assumption raised from about 4 billion to 4.2 to 4.4. I mean, what sort of drove the. Decision to move that higher?
Bill W. Wheat
You know, it’s always a balance between what we see in terms of our cash flow, our liquidity level, our leverage on our balance sheet. And we’re in a, in our target range there. And so we’ve had the room to be able to devote a bit more capital to the share repurchase this year. Obviously with where our share price has been, we feel like the valuation is attractive and so we’re taking advantage of that during this time. And so the step up in the annual level is really just still within our target range for our balance sheet.
John Lovallo
Okay, makes sense. Thank you guys.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Steven Kim from Evercore isi. Your line is live.
Stephen Kim
Yeah, thanks a lot guys. I just want to say, I mean I think that gross margin guide is a lot better than many had feared. So we’re pretty excited about that. I want to talk about your SGA to start off with. You had pretty good or strong overhead control. I kind of beat you up about that last quarter a little bit because it was high. I was wondering was there anything unusual in the quarter this time? And then from a long term perspective, is kind of the mid 7s still kind of a good long term target for SGA? And then finally on SGA, I think you had said previously that SGA is kind of sensitive to asp.
And so with your asp, your average selling price coming down, should we expect this to put some near term pressure on your sga? Thanks.
Jessica Hansen
Sure. Steve. The beat on SGA is really a function of closings, higher closings, volume. Even though our ASP was down, our closings did exceed our expectations in terms of where we expect our SG and A to be over the long term. I do think 7 to 8% somewhere in that range. You know, we’re a ways away from that on an annual basis right now, to your point, when we have significant price appreciation say back in 2022, that does really good things for SGA leverage. So our SGA improvement from here on an annual basis is probably going to be pretty gradual, but we would expect to continue to to make improvements in that in the future years.
Mike Murray
Yeah, I appreciate that, Jessica. I do note though that you’re actually. Hold on, Sorry, I’m having some tech issues. I do notice that your closings, while they were a little better than maybe what you thought, you actually performed quite well given that things on a year over year basis were still down in terms of closing. So it certainly seems that you’ve got a good control in your sga. The second question I had regards your ROE and your cash conversion. I think you had said when we last met that you were targeting cash flow conversion of maybe 100%, which I think some folks have had a little bit of difficulty getting to.
And I think we’re kind of looking to see what could get your ROE higher than or up to near 20% longer term. Both of those seem to speak to maybe some changes on the balance sheet. And I wanted to talk to you or have you talk a little bit about what your longer term goals are with respect to your balance sheet. Should we be expecting inventory or maybe rental or maybe four star or something in that realm that you would make changes to that would enable your ROE to sort of get a boost and then maybe also if you bring some inventory levels that that might also lead to stronger cash flow conversion.
Maybe if you could just sort of opine a little bit on those two points. ROE going higher potentially, and also your cash flow conversion.
Bill W. Wheat
Sure. Thanks Steve. We are in position to generate much more consistent cash flow yield and cash flow conversion going forward today. We believe with where our platform is set up, where our balance sheet is, as I mentioned earlier, we’re in our target range for leverage and liquidity, so we don’t see major changes on that side of the balance sheet going forward. We are very focused on inventory efficiency and improving inventory efficiency throughout all aspects of our operations in terms of our land holdings, our ownership of finished lots and then our homes and inventory and our inventory turns there.
We are very focused on continuing to improve those turns. And so with that we do expect we are setting expectations for ourselves to improve the efficiency of inventory levels. And so that will be a key component to stabilizing and then improving our returns on assets as well as then our returns on equity and our consistency of cash flow generation back to the beginning, we talked about cash flow yield, cash flow conversion. We do expect this year’s cash flow conversion to be near 100%. It may not be quite there. On a consolidated basis, I think in our home building operations we would expect 100% but consolidated, maybe not quite there.
As we look into future years, we would expect to be much more consistent than we have been in the past. And the key to maintaining an ROE up closer to that 20% is to have a cash flow yield of north of 10% with strong inventory efficiency.
Stephen Kim
Great. That’s really helpful guys. Thanks very much.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Matthew Booley from Barclays. Your line is live.
Matthew Bouley
Good morning everyone. Thank you for taking the questions I wanted to ask. On the community count, I think you said it was up 4% sequentially and up 12 year over year. So curious if at this point if you can give any kind of directional color or quantification on how 2026 may shape out, just given where you’ll be entering the year. I don’t know, are you extending out or phasing out communities, anything along those lines to manage some of that supply growth? Just early 26 expectations and any changes on how you’re managing that pace of new community openings? Thank you,
Paul J. Romanowski
Matthew.
We do expect our community count to moderate some. You know, it’s been double digit for a bit now and we do expect it to drift back down into the mid, high single digit and then to kind of mid. You know, we have opened a fair amount of markets. We’ve got another four markets out there and you know that community count tends to accelerate when we get out into those communities before they start to produce produce at a higher level of absorption per community. We feel really good about our footprint, about the, you know, the progress we’ve made in the new markets that we’ve opened.
So not concerned about the level of community account we have. And our operators have done a great job of managing their inventory throughout our communities and we certainly watch that closely responding to the absorption they’re getting community by community. Our total specs and completed. Well, our completed specs have come down as we expect it to and we expect that to continue into the fourth quarter. So feel good about that. But we do expect to see moderation in community count as we move into 26.
Matthew Bouley
Okay, got it. Thank you for that. And then secondly, your peer this morning spoke about maybe towards the end of.
June when rates came down a little bit, seemed like there might have been. A bit of a positive response from, from buyers And I’m obviously paraphrasing what. They said, but it sounded like then. July was a little bit choppy. So just curious kind of what you guys were seeing around sort of the rate volatility and into the holiday and now into the early part of summer. Just how you guys been seeing traffic. Trends these past few weeks. Thank you.
Paul J. Romanowski
You know, really it has been choppy and that choppiness can be based on rate or the noise that you see in the news cycle the these days. And you know we have been pretty consistent with the rates we’ve been offering in the market. And because we have great relationships with our realtor community, they understand what we’re offering in the market. I think that we have been able to maintain, you know, across our footprint in the communities that have been performing well, have continued to and so far we’ve been on track and pleased with what we’ve seen into July.
The incentives are up as we’ve spoken to. That’s why we guided to a little lower gross margin into the fourth quarter. But so far seems to be doing okay as far as driving traffic and the incremental sales we need.
Matthew Bouley
Got it. All right, thanks Paul. Good luck guys.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Sam Reed from Wells Fargo. Your line is live.
Sam Reid
Awesome, thanks so much. Wanted to touch on your third party broker relationships really quickly. I believe you’re somewhat unique in that. You embed third party broker commissions in gross margin. So just curious if you had any color on broker attach rate and the rate you’re paying those brokers this quarter. And whether there was any step change in that number. I believe one of your large competitors has been moving deeper into third party broker relationships. I’m curious if you’ve had to respond to that.
Mike Murray
We’ve seen, you know, always had a long term, very good relationship with the brokerage community and I think we are still north of 80% with our broker attachment rate to our transactions. And we love it that they bring us a qualified buyer and they’re only paid when the home closes. And so we continue to maintain strong relationships. They’re been part of our operating model for a long time and I envision it will be for a long time. Our average commission stayed relatively flat. So on our overall closings it’s about 270 basis points of impact. If you wanted to look at apples to apples gross margin or SGA versus other builders that record it differently.
Sam Reid
No, that’s very helpful. And then you’ve alluded a few times. So far on the call, the Higher sequential incentives in the fourth quarter and it’s definitely very topical today. Could you just talk to the composition. Though of those incentives that you’re embedding in that fourth quarter gross mar guide? Earlier in the call I think you. Mentioned you’re leaning more into fha and to that end kind of, would it be reasonable to assume that perhaps some. Of that lower sequential on gross margin could be a function of more buyers utilizing that 3.99% buy down and then. On that 3.99% rate? We’ve seen it in several markets across our checks. But just curious, the uptake on it or do you think it’s more of a traffic driver versus something the buyer actually ends up going with? Thanks.
Paul J. Romanowski
Yeah, the 399 rate where we have it is largely a traffic driver and it’s community specific. I mean I was in a division last week where they were offering everything from 3.99 to no BFC, no rate incentive, just market because they had solid, strong, consistent demand at the pace they expected in that community. You know, I think our average rate in backlog and or on closings was just over 5%. So you know, we really do have a range of incentives out there, including multiple programs, whether that’s for a buyer that needs no money down or a special ARM which has taken a little better hold, you know.
So our operators have done a great job of managing that rate incentive. But by and large that is the key incentive that has been driving sales for for us. And that’s the biggest component of the incentives that we’re seeing in our mix.
Jessica Hansen
I think we’ve talked to the one to one and a half points below market pretty consistently last quarter. We were pretty transparent about we were probably closer to the 1.5 on average, which is what the just over 5% Paul mentioned would incorporate.
Sam Reid
Very helpful. Thanks so much. I’ll pass it on.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Eric Bosshard from Cleveland Research. Your line is live.
Eric Bosshard
Good morning. Two things. First of all, I’m just curious from a stick brick in land, where that. Is in terms of inflation and where. You expect that to go from here.
Jessica Hansen
So on a year over year basis, we saw a nice decline in our stick and brick costs on a perfect square foot basis down about 2% sequentially, that was down about 1%. And then on the lot cost side we did see the moderation. You know, it’s only been 1/4, so we’ll see what happens next quarter. But we’ve talked about that moderating for some Time and so our lot cost was up a mid single digit percentage year over year and it was slightly, just ever so slightly down sequentially.
Eric Bosshard
From a lot cost perspective is is there anything that you’re doing to influence this? Is there anything different in the market. That you’re seeing that suggests the path. For that forward can be a bit. Of a flatter curve than we’ve seen.
Paul J. Romanowski
I think some of that is mix down 1% quarter. I wouldn’t expect that with consistency. We really haven’t seen a significant shift in the land market. You know, people have pulled back on purchases and delayed purchases and more from the land market negotiating terms and timing of those terms. You know, there certainly are some opportunities out there, but not to the extent that we would expect given the mix of lots that we have across our whole portfolio. Anything that’s going to change those lot valuations significantly in the the coming quarters.
Eric Bosshard
And then the second question from a product or price point, anything that you’re seeing change? It was a quarter where you spoke to things were better than expected. I’m just curious from a product mix perspective if there are areas of incremental outperformance or underperformance?
Mike Murray
I think we continue to see strong adoption of some of the smaller plans we’ve introduced across our market. Probably not having a meaningful material impact on the overall consolidated results yet. But we’re encouraged by how some of that smaller product has been well received in the market and the utility it’s providing for the buyers.
Eric Bosshard
Thank you.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Trevor Allinson from Wolff Research. Your line is live.
Trevor Allinson
Hi, good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. First one is just on your completed. And age spec count. You’ve made some really good progress over. The last couple of quarters working those down. We’re also entering the slower time of year. Can you talk about how you feel. About your completed inventory levels currently and is there a target level for each of those numbers you’d like to be at as you exit your fiscal year?
Paul J. Romanowski
We feel very good about where we are and the progress that we’ve made in reducing our special our completed spec count. We do expect that to continue to lower given our cycle times and continued improvement in cycle times. We just don’t need to carry as many spec homes to generate the closings that we’re looking for in the quarter and as we look into 26. So we would expect that to continue to trend down, don’t have a specific target. We’re going to respond to the market and make sure that we are starting homes largely in sync with our sales pace into the fourth quarter as we prep for fiscal 26.
Trevor Allinson
Okay. Makes a lot of sense. And then second question is just your views on resale inventory in the markets you operate in. We’ve heard a lot of builders talk about resale inventory not being very competitive for new homes. At the same time, we’ve seen a pretty notable rise in resale inventory since really the middle the of last year coincided with some overall demand weakness. So are you seeing more competition there from resale inventory? And if so, could you rank where that stands in terms of headwinds in context of affordability and sentiment issues?
Mike Murray
In the conversations I have with our sales folks and our models, I’m not hearing resale as being a big pushback from us or that we’re losing customers to resale inventory.
That housing stock is generally quite a bit older than it otherwise would have been because it sat dormant for a while and was not brought to market. Plus, some of the interest rate incentives are not nearly as compelling that are being offered by the resale owners. And you know, it’s still a very attractive position for buyers, especially new home buyers, to come look at new home, new home construction. First time home buyers look at new home construction. Thank you for all the color and good luck moving forward.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Rafi Jedrocich from Bank of America. Your line is live.
Rafe Jadrosich
Hi, good morning. It’s Rafe. Thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to ask, just when you compare the performance in the larger markets that you operate versus some of the smaller markets, maybe where you have more private competition, is there a big difference and what are you seeing from the private, smaller home builders?
Paul J. Romanowski
I would say that throughout this fiscal year we’ve seen more consistent performance to budget or to planned absorptions from the markets that are smaller, where we operate mostly against the private builders with maybe a public or two in those markets. And you know, those are the markets that largely we have entered as well over the last several years. And our teams are just starting to build out their teams and catch their stride in their communities and performing at a good level. You know, I think as you look at the larger markets, there certainly is competition, always has been, which we’re happy to play in that space, and operators doing well in those as well.
But I think if you look at comparison to plan, we’re seeing a little better performance this year in the markets, the secondary markets and markets where we have less public builder competition.
Rafe Jadrosich
That’s interesting. Thank you. And Then in terms of the land cost impact, I think the last couple of quarters there was some cost pressure from mix and this quarter it was a tailwind. If we were to sort of normalize for that, what are you seeing for sort of underlying lot cost and inflation? And just given some of the softness in the market more recently, when would that sort of underlying trend, when is there an opportunity for that to come lower?
Paul J. Romanowski
I think in the near term we would expect to continue to see mid single digit inflation in our lot cost.
I mean, it’s kind of a flow of inventory that’s going through there. So the homes we close over the next 12 months are pretty much on lots that are identified, costed and largely owned by us today. Going forward, if we continue to see a little bit of softness or changes in the marketplace and that results in changes in land and development costs, we expect to see relief from that inflation going forward. But that would be several quarters out before any of that inventory came into production and closed things. Thank you, that’s helpful.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Michael Rehot from JP Morgan. Your line is live.
Michael Rehaut
Great, thanks for taking my questions. Appreciate it. First, I just wanted to circle back and make sure fully appreciated or understood the trends around incentives during the quarter and how they’ve progressed year to date and how you’re thinking about them in the back in the next quarter or two. One of your competitors this morning talked about incentives now up each of the last two quarters, 70 to 80bps on average, sequentially each of the last two quarters. I was wondering if you’re seeing any type of similar trend, at least on average. I know obviously market by market, it varies a lot.
And if you would expect incentives to continue to rise over the next quarter or two.
Jessica Hansen
Mike, I don’t think we’ve quantified our incentives other than talking about them in a high single digit percentage range. I mean obviously if it’s netting against revenue or it’s in cost of sales, it all falls out in gross margin. Which is why you hear us continue to focus on that forward looking data point. And we did, as we said, start to incentivize more heavily here over the last couple of weeks to drive what we’re trying to achieve for the full fiscal year. And so we do expect at the midpoint a 50 basis point decline in our gross margin from Q3 to Q4.
Michael Rehaut
Okay. No, I appreciate that. And I guess secondly, anything that maybe is offsetting that rise in incentives that you saw this past quarter going into next quarter, obviously this Quarter still came in above, a little bit above your guidance. Next quarter down 50bps is not anything too material relative to perhaps some more bearish concerns out there. So anything on the tailwind side that you can kind of put your finger on that’s offset some of those headwinds, be it costs or even tariffs or other areas of the construction cost basket.
Jessica Hansen
We have seen slight improvement in our stick and brick costs, and so that is a partial offset.
But our commentary really over the last year has been that incentives have been increasing. That’s been the main driver for the gross margin decline over the last year. Our operators are striving every day to strike the best balance between hitting pace and maintaining margin in each community to maximize returns. And so they’re using all the levers they have with incentives to try to balance that. And so we have seen the pace of incentive cost increases and the pace of margin decline moderate a bit over the last couple of quarters. And in this quarter, it held still flat sequentially.
But the trend is still pointing towards a bit higher incentives. And we don’t see significant offsets to that, though we will continue to work on costs on the construction side.
Michael Rehaut
Great. Thanks so much.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Mike Dahl from rbc. Your line is live.
Mike Dahl
Thanks for taking my questions. Should we stick with the cost side of the equation? I mean, we may or may not. Be in a position to refine views on tariff duties, all that fun stuff.
Jessica Hansen
Mike, did we leave you?
Mike Dahl
Sorry, can you hear me?
Jessica Hansen
Yeah, we cut out after fun stuff.
Mike Dahl
All the fun stuff around tariffs and potential labor dynamics. You guys, given your position in the market and your breadth, have a good holistic view of things like that. Can you just give us your sense of as? We’ve kind of refined as. As all the headlines come out. You know, obviously this wouldn’t impact your fiscal 25, but when you think about costs for construction next year on sticks and bricks and then availability of labor, how are you thinking about things?
Paul J. Romanowski
You know, Mike, we work on our costs every day. And you know, that has been consistent and certainly is going on today in our divisions from labor availability. It’s plentiful. We have the labor that we need. Our trades are looking for work. And that’s why you’ve seen sequential and year over year reduction in our cycle time. Because we have the support we need to get our homes built. And given those efficiencies, we do expect to continue to see reductions in stick and brick over time. Some of that is from design and efficiency of the product that we’re putting in the field.
And some of that is just from the efficiency of our operations and from the competitiveness from the labor bases out there today.
Mike Dahl
And then shifting gears, you know, you had a healthy result in terms of kind of step up in rentals, both revenue and profitability. It’s still pretty dynamic market out there. So can you just help us understand some of those moving pieces in 3Q, how you’re thinking about the next couple of quarters given the, you know, the. Backlog that you’ve got on the rental side?
Bill W. Wheat
Yeah, we have the backlog of identified properties that are, that are in line to sell. We did see a bit of a step up there in the revenue there this quarter. A little bit better margin on those. That market is still experiencing a lot of transition in the higher rate environment and cap rates that have changed over the last few years. And so we’re working on each one of those projects, working them closer to sale. And that is one element of our margin guide as we look to Q4, we would expect while revenues may still be in the same ballpark or better than where it was this quarter, we do expect margins on the sales in Q4 to be lower in the rental segment than they were Q3.
Mike Dahl
Got it. Okay, thank you.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Alex Rheidil from Texas Capital Securities. Your line is live.
Alex Rygiel
Thank you. Geographically, can you comment on demand trends and highlight the outliers?
Mike Murray
We typically don’t go into a whole lot of geographic discussion. It’s kind of a roll up of everything we’re doing. And, and we see some of the same national trends I would say you see with others. And in the resale markets. There’s been a lot of a change in the dynamic in the Florida markets and perhaps most so there. Other markets continue to be consistent performers where there’s been limited inventory and limited development of lots and housing production continue to see strong demand in those markets.
Jessica Hansen
Our supplemental data presentation will include our sales and active selling community detail. Again, that gets posted after the call. So you’ll see on a sequential basis, there’s really no outliers outside of the Northwest. Sales were a little bit lagging and I think we attribute some of that just to the tech buyer and what’s going on with potentially uncertainty of the job market and whatnot in the Pacific Northwest. But otherwise we saw a decent increase, at least on a sequential unusual seasonal basis in our sales, which was a positive.
Alex Rygiel
And real quick, could you talk a bit about your lower, your low cancellation rate what it’s telling you about the. Economy, consumer confidence and buyer credit quality,
Paul J. Romanowski
you know, at the rate that we’re seeing, which is kind of below our historical average, is that the buyers that are out there and our FICO score at what, a 720? Even. Even with a transition to FHA rate. I think some of that transition, transition is people taking advantage of the lower rates that we can offer with a rate buy down. But you know, people are having to work to get there. And as we introduce smaller product and continue to try and reduce our ASP to expand into that buyer base, we certainly have to go through the process of working through credit.
But our teams do a very good job of that and our mortgage company doesn’t exceptional job of working with those buyers to get them in a position to close on their home.
Mike Murray
During the quarter, over 12,000 of our customers were first time home buyers. And so they people that have worked very hard to get on the homeownership ladder. And you know, we’re very proud of this company that we’re able to make that happen for so many families quarter after quarter after quarter. I just.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Alex Barron from Housing Research Center. Your line is live.
Alex Barron
Yes, good morning. I’m sorry if I missed, if you. Mentioned the build time, but can, can. You repeat that and is there any particular initiatives to try to lower that, you know, such as more in house labor or manufacturing, you know, trusses or. Any of that kind of stuff?
Paul J. Romanowski
None of that. As far as integrating for us, we have the labor base that we need and a very strong trade base that’s very supportive of us. So we don’t feel the need to internalize any of that and take on that additional challenge and risk at this time. We’ve seen sequential reduction in that cycle time, you know, over a couple days and then two weeks over last year. We’re sitting right where we want to be three months, which is below our historical norms. I would not expect to see a significant decline over the next 12 months, but teams are very focused on maintaining that and gaining advantage where they can on cycle time.
Got it. What about efforts to drive, you know, greater affordability, such as smaller lot sizes or smaller floor plans? Any initiatives on that front? I think, I think both of those. Alex. You can look at our average square footage and it’s declined consistently over really the last 24 months. I would expect that to continue some. And you know, the key to affordability in this country is to provide a smaller home site with a smaller home that meets the ability of our buyers to close on our home and meets a monthly payment that fits what they’re looking for.
We just need a little extra help from local governments to allow us to achieve that really across the US but that’s an opportunity that we continue to explore every day.
Jessica Hansen
Our average square footage on homes closed was 1,956, which was down 1% from a year ago, which has been just a very gradual decline. But we’re down in the last five years a high single digit percentage on our average square footage. So we expect that just gradual trend of the average shrinking to continue.
Alex Barron
Okay, great. Good luck for the rest of the year. Thank you.
operator
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Jade Rahmani from kbw. Your line is live. Thank you very much.
Jade Rahmani
Can you discuss what you’re seeing in the market in terms of home prices. Across the board, if you could quantify. Any range of price decline you’re seeing and also what you might expect going forward?
Jessica Hansen
We focus predominantly on incentives where we can and that’s allowed us to maintain a lot of our base pricing across the country. That doesn’t mean you won’t find places. We’re on select houses and select communities. We are making actual base price reductions. That’s generally much more targeted though in terms of on completed aged inventory.
Jade Rahmani
And are you seeing competitors with your product, primarily new home builders, but also in the existing home market cut price?
Mike Murray
I think competitive pressures across the board in any given sub market, we’re seeing some competitors cut price or resale cutting price. And our local operators respond to every one of those dynamics on a weekly basis. And we’re still seeing sales spaces in line with the targeted goals for those communities at the right margins to drive the returns we’re looking for. So it’s going to be a competitive thing. We deal with neighborhood by neighborhood and trusting our local operators to meet their market week to week to week.
Jessica Hansen
And we do generally see though, by and large, builders are much more rational today. You can look at another competitor’s results this morning. And I think most builders today are taking a very balanced approach as it relates to pace and price and not just slashing prices across the board. So we’re happy to see the rational approach that the industry is taking today.
operator
Thanks very much. Thank you. Your next question is coming from Jay McCandless from Wedbush. Your line is live.
Jay McCanless
Hey, good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking my questions and apologies I missed this, but did you all happen to comment on the Canadian Softwood Lumber agreement? What gross margin impact that might have on Horton?
Mike Murray
No, we haven’t commented on it. It will have some potential impact, but we’ve not quantified that. I know it is a significant step up in the tariff rates that I think go into effect next month. But we’re buying some percentage of that wood and there’s some substitutionary product that would be available as well based upon where that pricing ultimately settles.
Jay McCanless
Okay, and then the second question, and I’m sure you guys addressed this earlier. But. To hold a gross margin like y’ all did, to have this beat, I think that’s very impressive, especially given some of the incentives that your competitors are putting out there, I guess. Is there anything from a geographic or a product standpoint that you haven’t called out already in this call that you might want to address just to give people a sense of how you might be able to hold that gross margin into the fourth quarter?
Paul J. Romanowski
No. I think, Jay, that the performance this quarter is a credit to our teams out in the field managing week to week their flow on buyers and sales and traffic that they need to achieve their goals for the quarter. And you know, we were able to outperform, which honestly was a surprise to us relative to our guidance. But you know, we do expect to see a step down in margins as to our guide of 50 basis points as you look into this quarter. We’ll be happy to be pleasantly surprised if that occurs again this quarter. But it’s very early in the quarter to be able to tell where that’s going to land.
54% of the homes that we closed this quarter were sold in the quarter. So we still got a long way to go in this quarter to see how the margin plays out by quarter end.
Jay McCanless
Great. And then the last one I had, did you all give any color about fiscal 26 community growth or how you expect that to trend?
Jessica Hansen
Yes, Paul mentioned that it should ultimately moderate. It’s been a low double digit percentage on an annual basis or, excuse me, on a year over year basis for a while. And we would expect that to moderate to the high single digit and ultimately probably more like a mid single digit community count growth going forward.
Jay McCanless
Okay, great. That’s all I had. Thank you.
operator
Thank you. That concludes our Q and A session. I will now hand the conference back to Paul Romanowski for closing remarks. Please go ahead.
Paul J. Romanowski
Thank you, Matthew. We appreciate everyone’s time on the call today and look forward to speaking with you again to share our fourth quarter results on Tuesday, October 28th. Congratulations to the entire Dr. Horton family on producing a solid third quarter. We are honored to represent you on this call and greatly appreciate all that you do.
operator
Thank you, everyone. This concludes today’s event. You may disconnect at this time and have a wonderful day. Thank you for your participation.
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