NVR converts the most capital-intensive, most cyclical, most balance-sheet-fragile activity in U.S. industrial business — residential land development — into a software-like compounder with 30% ROIC and net-cash balance sheets. The mechanism is the Lot Purchase Agreement (LPA) model: NVR pays non-refundable deposits of ~10% of finished lot value to third-party developers for the right to take down lots on a quarter-by-quarter basis. The capital that peers tie up in raw land, NVR redeploys into share buybacks. The risk that peers absorb in housing downturns, NVR walks away from by forfeiting deposits.
Three decades of evidence validate the model. NVR was the only major U.S. homebuilder to remain profitable through the 2008–2010 housing collapse. Peer ROICs ranged from sub-zero to mid-single-digits in that period; NVR's never dropped below 12%. Across the most recent peak-to-peak window (FY2018→FY2024), revenue compounded at 6.6%, EPS at 16.2%, FCF at 11.4%, and ROIC averaged 30.9% — all while the share count fell ~24%. Berkshire Hathaway has held a disclosed position for years, and Saville's 17-year CEO tenure produced one of the strongest TSR records in the S&P 500.
The investment case rests on three propositions. First, the moat is durable enough that peer replication (PHM at 59% optioned, LEN's Millrose, DHI's Forestar) compresses NVR's premium but does not eliminate it within a decade. Second, the next housing cycle (likely peaking 2030–2031, troughing 2032–2033) will demonstrate the same relative resilience that 2008–2010 proved — NVR loses less revenue and less margin than peers, then takes share through the recovery. Third, current valuation embeds enough premium for the moat that entry price is the binding constraint, not thesis quality. Pabrai's framework requires a 30% margin of safety against a fair-value estimate built from probability-weighted Bear/Neutral/Bull cash flows; the present price's relationship to that fair value is the work the Scenario Builder will resolve. Management quality (4/5 Strong) and moat strength (Wide / Durability 4) are not the limiting factors. The work is buying right.
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