Morning Sun

Carvana boosts profit forecast as turnaround gains momentum

- By Richard Clough

Carvana raised its profit outlook as the used-car retailer said the momentum it saw from an early-year turnaround is carrying into the third quarter.

Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on will be more than $75 million in the current threemonth period, according to a statement Wednesday. That compares with a prior outlook of “positive” adjusted ebitda and a consensus analyst estimate of $45.7 million.

The revised forecast is another hopeful sign for investors as Carvana looks to regain its footing after stumbling coming out of the pandemic. The Tempe, Ariz.-based company has been grappling with heavy debt loads following an illfated expansion several

years ago, an issue compounded by a slowdown in the used-car market.

The latest move comes just three weeks after the company reported better-than-expected secondquar­ter results and announced that it would restructur­e its debt, a relief for investors.

Shares of the company surged as much as 12% in premarket trading Wednesday on the news.

They were up 7.2% to $47.20 as of 9 a.m. in New York.

Despite an eye-popping rally that has sent its stock up more than 800% this year, Carvana is still down more than 85% from it’s early-pandemic peak.

Carvana has yet to post positive net income for a full year, in part because of significan­t interest expenses related to its debt. The recent restructur­ing agreement aims to tackle that by lowering borrowings by $1.2 billion and giving the company the opportunit­y to delay some interest payments for the next two years.

The guidance change was spurred by “significan­t fundamenta­l gains” in vehicle profitabil­ity across both its retail and wholesale operations, Carvana said. The company now expects total gross profit per unit to top $5,500 in the quarter, up $500 from its prior forecast.

“Our strong execution is continuing to drive lasting business improvemen­ts,” Chief Financial Officer Mark Jenkins said in the statement.

 ?? DAVID PAUL MORRIS — BLOOMBERG ?? A Carvana vending machine in Daly City, California.
DAVID PAUL MORRIS — BLOOMBERG A Carvana vending machine in Daly City, California.

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