LENNAR A CORP CLASS A (LEN)
Sector: Consumer Discretionary
2026 Annual Meeting Analysis
LENNAR A CORP CLASS A · Meeting: April 8, 2026
Directors FOR
2
Directors AGAINST
7
Say on Pay
AGAINST
Auditor
FOR
Director Elections
Election of Directors
Against Analysis
Ms. Banse joined the board in 2021 (more than 24 months ago), so the TSR trigger applies: Lennar's 3-year total shareholder return trails the company's own peer group median by 62.2 percentage points, well above the 35-point threshold that triggers an AGAINST vote, and the 5-year record (79.9pp gap) does not provide a mitigating longer-term track record.
Mr. Gilliam has served on the board since 2010, so the full underperformance period applies: Lennar's stock has lagged its peer group median by 62.2 percentage points over three years, far exceeding the 35-point trigger, and the five-year record is similarly poor (79.9pp gap), offering no mitigating offset.
Mr. Hudson has served since 2008, making his full tenure overlap with the underperformance period; the 62.2-percentage-point three-year lag versus peers well exceeds the 35-point trigger, and the five-year comparison (79.9pp gap) provides no relief, warranting an AGAINST vote.
Ms. McClure joined in 2013, so she has presided over the full underperformance window; Lennar's three-year total return trails its homebuilder peers by 62.2 percentage points (threshold: 35pp), and the five-year gap of 79.9 percentage points does not provide a mitigating signal of an otherwise strong track record.
Mr. Miller has served as a director and executive since 1990 and bears the most direct accountability for the company's performance trajectory; the stock has underperformed the company's own disclosed peers by 62.2 percentage points over three years (threshold: 35pp), and the five-year record (79.9pp gap) provides no mitigating context — an AGAINST vote on Mr. Miller as a director is warranted independently of the Say on Pay evaluation.
Mr. Olivera has served since 2015, giving him full tenure overlap with the underperformance period; the 62.2-percentage-point three-year gap versus disclosed homebuilder peers far exceeds the 35-point policy trigger, and the five-year comparison (79.9pp) confirms this is not a transient short-term trough.
Mr. Sonnenfeld has served since 2005, covering the entire underperformance period; Lennar's stock trailed its peers by 62.2 percentage points over three years — well above the 35-point trigger — and the five-year comparison (79.9pp gap) shows no evidence of a longer-term record of adequate performance that would offset the recent shortfall.
For Analysis
Mr. Smith joined the board in 2023 and falls within the 24-month new-director exemption period, so the TSR underperformance trigger does not apply; no other policy flags (overboarding, attendance, independence, or qualifications) are triggered.
Ms. Wolfe joined in 2023 and is within the 24-month new-director exemption window, so the TSR trigger does not apply; she brings relevant financial and real estate expertise, serves as an audit committee financial expert, and no other policy flags are present.
Seven of nine nominees are recommended AGAINST primarily because Lennar's 3-year total shareholder return of approximately +6% trails its own disclosed compensation peer group median of +68% by 62.2 percentage points, far exceeding the 35-point threshold for companies with low-positive absolute returns. The five-year comparison (LEN -79.9pp vs peers) confirms this is not a transient trough but sustained multi-year underperformance, so the 5-year mitigant does not apply. The two directors who joined in 2023 (Smith and Wolfe) receive a FOR vote under the 24-month new-director exemption.
Say on Pay
✗ AGAINSTCEO
Stuart Miller
Total Comp
$29,527,931
Prior Support
88%%
The pay-for-performance alignment check fails: Lennar's CEO received approximately $29.5 million in total compensation while the stock delivered a three-year return of roughly +6%, lagging the company's own homebuilder peers by 62.2 percentage points — a gap far exceeding the 20-percentage-point threshold that triggers concern when variable pay is above benchmark and shareholders have meaningfully underperformed peers. Although the prior year's Say on Pay received 88% support (well above the 70% threshold that would require a response), the core issue is that above-benchmark incentive pay was awarded in a period where shareholders experienced dramatically worse returns than every major peer, with Toll Brothers up 153%, PulteGroup up 130%, and TRI Pointe up 101% over the same three years Lennar returned only 6%. The compensation structure's performance metrics are directionally sound (70% performance-based equity, relative TSR included), but the 2022 performance share awards vested with a 0% payout on the relative TSR metric — meaning the incentive system confirmed the underperformance — making the overall pay level difficult to justify.
Auditor Ratification
✓ FORAuditor
Deloitte & Touche LLP
Tenure
N/A
Audit Fees
N/A
Non-Audit Fees
N/A
The proxy filing does not include a fee table with auditor fee data in the provided text, so the non-audit fee ratio trigger cannot be assessed; auditor tenure is not disclosed in the available filing text and therefore the tenure trigger does not fire (policy requires confirmed data); Deloitte & Touche is a Big 4 firm appropriate for a company of Lennar's size, and no material restatements are indicated, so the default FOR vote applies.
Stockholder Proposals
2 proposals submitted by shareholders
Proposal 4
Equal Voting Rights for Each Share
John Chevedden is a well-known individual governance activist with a strong track record of filing shareholder-interest-oriented proposals, making this filer highly credible. The proposal received 45% overall support in 2023 — a strong signal of real shareholder concern that falls in the 'lean FOR' tier under policy — and the company has not taken any steps to address the dual-class structure since then. Eliminating or phasing out a 10-to-1 voting structure that allows the CEO to exercise approximately 39% of all voting power while holding only about 8% of the economic interest is a mainstream governance improvement that directly protects ordinary Class A shareholders' ability to hold management accountable, particularly relevant given the company's significant stock underperformance relative to peers.
Proposal 5
Disclosure of Voting Results by Share Class
The filer is the Illinois State Treasurer acting in a fiduciary capacity for a college savings trust — a credible institutional investor with no ideological agenda — and the ask is a straightforward transparency measure: simply report how many Class A votes (one vote each) versus Class B votes (ten votes each) were cast on each proposal. This is a low-cost disclosure improvement that would help ordinary Class A shareholders understand when outcomes diverge from what the broader shareholder base actually wants, which is a genuine and material concern given that one individual controls roughly 39% of total voting power while holding only about 8% of the economic value. The company's stated opposition — that existing dual-class disclosures are adequate — does not address the specific gap this proposal would fill, and the Council of Institutional Investors explicitly endorses class-by-class vote disclosure for dual-class companies.
Overall Assessment
This ballot is dominated by a significant shareholder accountability concern: Lennar's stock has returned only about 6% over three years while its own disclosed homebuilder peers returned a median of 68%, a 62-percentage-point gap that triggers AGAINST votes for seven of nine director nominees and a failed pay-for-performance alignment check on Say on Pay. Both stockholder proposals — one seeking equal voting rights and one seeking transparency on how each share class voted — are recommended FOR, as they address real governance deficiencies created by the company's 10-to-1 dual-class voting structure that concentrates control in the hands of the CEO.
Compensation Peer Group
8 companies disclosed in 2026 proxy filing