to $2,115. CarMax beat the number. Investors didn't care. The used car dealer reported Q4 earnings of $0.34 per share, well above the $0.21 consensus, and revenue of $5.95 billion topped estimates by $220 million. But the stock dropped nearly 15% in early trading because the real story was buried deeper in the report.
Margins Are Shrinking
Revenue fell year over year, and total gross profit dropped 9.4%. CarMax also took a $141 million write-down - a sign the business isn't worth what it used to be on paper. The company had been cutting prices to bring buyers through the door, which worked on volume but crushed margins. Retail profit per vehicle sold dropped $207 to $2,115 per car - a meaningful hit for a business built on thin margins.
What It Tells Us About the Consumer
Analysts called this a "hollow beat," where the company found more revenue and adjusted profit than expected while the core business is under pressure from high interest rates and tight inventory. The signal: when the biggest used car dealer in the country is cutting prices to move cars and watching margins shrink, it says something about how much pressure consumers are under right now.
What to Watch
CarMax faces the same squeeze hitting the whole used car market - high financing costs keeping buyers cautious and limited affordable inventory. The next quarter will show whether margin pressure is getting worse or starting to level off.
