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KB Home skips mortgage rate buydowns that other builders are promoting

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KB Home (KBH) isn't relying on mortgage rate buydowns like other homebuilders as rates top 7%. Instead, the builder is catering to buyers through customization and a rate lock.

"We're built to order...and with that customer, you're working to lock the rate and it costs a little more because you're further out, but they want comfort knowing they'll get the rate when the home is completed," CEO Jeffrey Mezger said on the company's quarter earnings call Wednesday after posting soft gross margins and an orders miss. "And other than that, we're not really doing financing concessions on our built-to-order sales."

"That buyer picks everything ... and it's all about the best price for the best value and they build it and they are happy at that price."

Mezger's comments came the same day the Federal Reserve held its benchmark interest rate steady but indicated that a quarter-point hike could come by the end of the year and that higher rates would stay for longer.

Read more: What the Fed rate-hike pause means for mortgage rates and loans

The rise in rates has only made buying a home tougher. The average rate on the 30-year fixed loan continues to linger above 7%, making housing affordability challenging.

Homebuilders across the country have rolled out juicier incentives to entice buyers back into the market. For some, that means offering aggressive rate buydowns when the builder pays upfront to reduce the interest rate on a mortgage for the buyer.

One example is Lennar (LEN), which is promoting a fixed mortgage rate of 4.25% in Colorado for buyers who "sign a purchase agreement on a select move-in ready home." That’s quite a difference from today’s current mortgage rate.

KB Home, however, used the perk sparingly, pulling it out only for a selective share of their customers.

"Any mortgage buydowns or points that we paid primarily went to moving inventory homes that were later along in the cycle and closer to closing," Robert McGibney, executive vice president and chief operating officer at KB Home, said on the earnings call.

The popularity of temporary mortgage rate buydowns rose as mortgage rates crossed over 6%, according to Corelogic, but now has started to slowly slide downward. This aligns with what KB Home executives have noticed between quarters.

"As far as the total percentage on mortgage concessions, it was roughly the same quarter-over-quarter, 1.6%, I believe, as a percentage of revenue this quarter versus 1.5% or 1.6% last quarter, so it stayed relatively flat quarter on quarter," McGibney added.