Abstract
CarMax will report its fiscal first-quarter 2027 results on June 17, 2026 Pre-Market, and the street expects softer top-line and margin trends to continue amid a still-normalizing used-car demand backdrop and tight credit conditions.
Market Forecast
Consensus for the current quarter points to revenue of 7.39 billion US dollars, an EBIT of 215.16 million US dollars, and EPS of 0.93, implying year-over-year changes of -1.60%, -23.21%, and -20.76%, respectively; revenue YoY in the underlying dataset indicates -2.01%. Forecasts embed pressure on gross margin and net profitability, and adjusted EPS is projected to decline year over year. The core Sales Operations business is expected to remain the primary revenue engine, while Auto Finance stabilizes sequentially with risk of higher loss provisions; the most promising area is sourcing efficiency and omnichannel-led conversion, though revenue capture still faces affordability constraints.
Last Quarter Review
In the prior quarter, CarMax delivered revenue of 5.95 billion US dollars with a gross profit margin of 11.72%, a GAAP net loss attributable to shareholders of 121.00 million US dollars and a net profit margin of -1.89%; adjusted EPS printed 0.34, down 46.88% year over year. Inventory discipline and cost controls helped EBIT exceed expectations despite lower unit volumes, while credit normalization weighed on bottom-line performance. By business, CarMax Sales Operations generated 25.88 billion US dollars for the trailing period and CarMax Auto Finance contributed 1.86 billion US dollars, with Sales Operations remaining the dominant revenue driver.
Current Quarter Outlook
Sales Operations trajectory
Market chatter signals demand remains subdued against an affordability-constrained consumer, with used vehicle prices holding above pre-pandemic levels and incentives still limited. CarMax’s omnichannel platform continues to support unit conversion, but mix and pricing headwinds are likely to limit revenue growth, consistent with the slight year-over-year decline embedded in the revenue forecast. The company’s focus on appraisal volumes, self-sourced inventory, and expense control should help defend gross profit dollars per unit, yet gross margin may face mild compression if average selling prices decline faster than reconditioning and logistics cost relief.
CarMax Auto Finance dynamics
The finance segment remains sensitive to credit spreads and loss severity trends. Provisioning for credit losses and funding costs are the two levers that could sway EBIT this quarter, and consensus for EBIT contraction suggests continued prudence on reserves. Any incremental tightening by lenders or a rise in charge-offs could cap approval rates and sales conversion, while incremental improvement in funding costs or loss trends would favorably surprise margins.
Key stock-price swing factors
Unit sales momentum, gross profit per unit, and CAF loss provision trends are the principal swing variables this quarter. A better-than-expected turn in appraisal buys and e-commerce conversion would point to healthier throughput and operating leverage. Conversely, a weaker consumer or deterioration in credit performance would risk deeper EPS pressure than the current forecast, as indicated by the expected year-over-year declines in EBIT and EPS.
Analyst Opinions
The prevailing tone among recent analyst commentaries skews cautious, with a majority emphasizing demand headwinds and credit normalization risks relative to valuation. Several well-followed institutions highlight that year-over-year declines in revenue and EPS are likely as affordability constraints persist; views center on monitoring gross profit per unit resilience and CAF provisions as the decisive near-term catalysts. In this consensus, the cautious camp underscores that the implied -23% EBIT and -21% EPS forecasts leave limited room for disappointment, and any negative surprise on unit volumes or credit costs could pressure shares.Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.
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