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Key Facts
—The land bank. Cury’s future-sales pipeline hit a record R$26.1bn ($5.2bn), up 23.6 percent in a year, across 91 projects.
—The cash. The builder posted positive operating cash of R$144.9m ($28.7m), its 29th straight cash-positive quarter.
—The sales. Net sales came in at R$2.05bn ($406m), down 9.5 percent on the year.
—The output. Cury built a record 5,737 units in the quarter, up 41.8 percent.
—The focus. Most of the land bank sits in the São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro metro areas.
Cury, one of Brazil’s most efficient affordable-housing builders, has stockpiled a record land bank worth about five point two billion dollars, even as quarterly sales dipped. The mix, strong pipeline and steady cash but softer sales, captures a housing market cooling under high interest rates.
The company released its second-quarter operating figures this week, ahead of full results, in a market filing. The headline was the future-sales pipeline, which reached a record and grew by nearly a quarter over the year.
A land bank is the stock of plots a developer has secured to build on later, so a bigger one signals confidence in future demand. Cury’s now spans 91 projects and enough plots for tens of thousands of homes.
A record land bank in the big cities
The pipeline is concentrated where the buyers are. The bulk sits in the São Paulo metro region, with a further large slice in Rio de Janeiro, the two markets Cury treats as strategic.
The builder also kept its factory-like execution running. It produced a record number of units in the quarter, a sharp jump on the year, and passed most completed sales on to bank financing quickly.
Cash generation stayed positive for the twenty-ninth quarter in a row. That streak is the trait investors prize most in Cury, marking it out as a disciplined operator in a capital-hungry industry.
Softer sales, higher prices
Not everything pointed up. Net sales fell almost ten percent on the year, and the pace of sales slowed compared with the same period in 2025.
The company leaned into pricier products to offset the slowdown. The average sale price rose almost seven percent, to around 331,000 reais per unit, as Cury shifted toward higher-value homes.
Cancellations, a closely watched risk in Brazilian homebuilding, actually improved. They fell to about seven point seven percent of gross sales, down from nine point five percent a year earlier.
The launch side stayed busy despite the softer demand. Cury brought a large volume of new projects to market in the quarter, keeping its pipeline of homes for sale well stocked.
Investors have rewarded that consistency over time. Cury has been one of the standout performers among Brazil’s listed builders, prized for turning steady output into cash rather than chasing growth at any cost.
The wider backdrop is a tricky one for the industry. Brazil’s benchmark interest rate has sat in the mid-teens, lifting mortgage costs and cooling appetite across much of the housing market.
That is what makes the low-income niche so valuable right now. Backed by subsidised financing, it is far less exposed to the rate cycle than the mid- and high-end segments where sales have slowed more sharply.
The record land bank also gives management room to be selective. With years of projects already secured, the company can time new launches to demand rather than rush plots to market in a weaker patch.
The full quarterly accounts, due later in the earnings season, will fill in the margin and profit picture. For now the operating snapshot points to a builder holding its discipline while the market around it softens.
Live Company IntelligenceA Brazilian Homebuilder Is Sitting on $5.2 Billion Worth of Land — the full investor dossierInside: live share price, peer benchmarks and the latest Rio Times coverage on the company.
Rio Times · Live Ticker Intelligence
A Brazilian Homebuilder Is Sitting on $5.2 Billion Worth of Land
CURY3 · B3 São Paulo
Share price · live
R$34.00
▲ +0.59% today
Peers & comparators
RENT3 · Localiza
▼ -3.05%
B3SA3 · B3
▼ -0.34%
Data: EODHD Fundamentals & live feed · The Rio Times Ticker Intelligence
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does the land bank matter to investors?
It shows how much future revenue a builder has already locked in, so a record pipeline points to years of potential sales ahead. For Cury, it also signals that management sees enough demand in São Paulo and Rio to keep buying land even as the broader market cools.
What is driving demand for these homes?
Cury builds heavily for Minha Casa Minha Vida, Brazil’s flagship subsidised-housing programme. Recent tweaks to that programme have widened who can qualify and boosted purchasing power, cushioning the low-income segment even as high rates bite the middle market.
Is this relevant for foreigners in Brazil?
Indirectly, yes. The health of listed homebuilders is a useful read on the housing and rental market that expats also live in, and Cury’s numbers suggest strong construction activity in exactly the cities where many foreigners settle.
View original source — Rio Times ↗


