KB Home (KBH) delivered a solid earnings beat Thursday, but Wall Street wasn't exactly celebrating. The homebuilder's fourth-quarter results revealed a familiar story: they're making the numbers work, but the housing market itself remains stubbornly difficult.
The Numbers Behind the Slide
KB Home posted fourth-quarter revenue of $1.69 billion, edging past analyst estimates of $1.66 billion. Adjusted earnings came in at $1.92 per share, comfortably ahead of the $1.80 consensus.
But dig deeper and the challenges become clear. The company delivered 3,619 homes during the quarter, down 9% from the prior year. Average selling prices declined 7% year-over-year to $465,600. Net orders fell 10% to 2,414 units. The ending backlog stood at $1.40 billion, while inventories crept up 3% to $5.67 billion.
KB Home did manage to return capital to shareholders, repurchasing approximately $100 million of its common stock during the quarter. The company closed the period with $228.6 million in cash and equivalents.
What Management Is Saying
"Although housing market conditions remained challenging due to lower consumer confidence, affordability concerns and elevated mortgage interest rates, we were pleased to help nearly 13,000 individuals and families achieve the dream of homeownership during the year, while maintaining our industry-leading customer satisfaction ratings," said Jeffrey Mezger, chairman and CEO of KB Home.
Looking Ahead
For the first quarter, KB Home expects housing revenue between $1.05 billion and $1.15 billion. The full-year 2026 outlook calls for housing revenue in the $5.1 billion to $6.1 billion range.
KB Home shares dropped 5.02% in after-hours trading to $59.60, suggesting investors are focusing more on the challenging market backdrop than the quarterly beat.




