Carvana printed a new monthly low on Monday as investors reacted badly to a combination of macro pressure, governance concerns, and a stock split that landed with a thud.
The company recently announced a 5-for-1 forward stock split. Normally, a forward split is seen as a positive signal — it suggests management believes the price will keep climbing, and it makes the stock more accessible to retail buyers. For Carvana, the market read it differently.
Traders largely dismissed the move as a cosmetic fix. When a stock is already down 43% from its year-to-date high, a split can look more like a distraction than a declaration of confidence. Bears argued it was a tactical play to generate retail liquidity and broaden employee ownership at a time when institutional conviction is waning.
The split announcement wasn’t the only thing weighing on the stock. A recent proxy filing flagged a governance dispute around leadership roles, and concerns about the company’s accounting practices resurfaced. Neither issue is new, but both hit harder in a weak tape.
The bigger picture is arguably more concerning than the corporate governance noise. Carvana’s business model is unusually exposed to two forces that are both moving in the wrong direction right now.
Higher interest rates have made auto financing difficult for the firm’s core demographic. Subprime borrowers — a key part of Carvana’s customer base — are facing steeper qualification hurdles. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index came in at 53.3 this month, a reading that points to a consumer pulling back.
Then there’s oil. WTI crude is sitting around $103 a barrel. For a company that ships vehicles across long distances on flatbed trucks, that’s a direct hit to margins. Critics have pointed out that the market may have spent years treating Carvana like a tech company, underestimating how exposed it actually is to fuel costs and lending rates.
Year-to-date, the stock is down around 28%.
Not everyone is walking away. Bank of America still has a Buy rating on Carvana with a $400 price target, framing it as the premier independent used-car retailer in the country.
The company’s stated long-term targets are ambitious: 3 million annual retail units and a 13.5% adjusted EBITDA margin within the next decade. The digital-first model and logistics network give it structural advantages in a fragmented market.
Bank of America’s Buy rating and $400 price target remain unchanged as of Monday.
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