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CarMax Posts Quarterly Loss on Goodwill Charge, Weak Used-Car Demand

April 14 (Reuters) - Used car retailer CarMax reported a fourth-quarter loss on Tuesday, hurt by a goodwill impairment charge and ​shrinking margins from used vehicles.

Shares of the Richmond, ‌Virginia-based company fell 6.8% in premarket trading.

The used-car sector has struggled to move inventory at profitable prices, with softening consumer demand ​and import tariffs squeezing margins across the industry.

CarMax's ​retail gross profit per used vehicle slipped to $2,115 ⁠in the quarter, down from $2,322 a year ago. Its ​wholesale gross profit per unit fell to $940 from $1,045 a ​year ago, as it cut prices to drive demand.

New CEO Keith Barr said the largest U.S. used-car retailer is moving "with urgency" to improve efficiency ​and regain sales momentum.

The ongoing conflict in Iran has ​also dampened consumer sentiment, with gasoline prices near $4 per gallon, curbing ‌some ⁠spending and prompting interest in more affordable electric and hybrid vehicles.

CarMax said it recorded a non-cash goodwill impairment charge of $141.3 million in the quarter, citing a fall in ​its share ​price and weaker ⁠financial performance in fiscal 2026.

The company's quarterly revenue fell 1% to $5.95 billion from a ​year ago.

CarMax reported a fourth-quarter loss of $120.7 ​million, ⁠or 85 cents per share, compared with a profit of $89.9 million, or 58 cents per share, a year earlier.

On ⁠an adjusted ​basis, it earned a quarterly ​profit of 34 cents per share, compared with 64 cents a year ​ago.

Reporting by Nathan Gomes in Bengaluru; Editing by Tasim Zahid

Source: Reuters


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