5 WallStreetBets Stocks Gaining in August

2. Carvana Co. (NYSE:CVNA)

Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 48

Share Price Gain in the Last Month as of August 12: 148.45%

Carvana Co. (NYSE:CVNA) is an Arizona-based company that operates an e-commerce platform for buying and selling used cars in the United States. On August 4, the company reported earnings for the second quarter of 2022, posting a loss per share of $2.35 and a revenue of $3.88 billion, falling short of Wall Street consensus by $0.47 and $110 million, respectively. Despite the below consensus Q2 results, Carvana Co. (NYSE:CVNA) stock has gained 148.45% in the last month as of August 12. 

Deutsche Bank analyst Emmanuel Rosner on August 8 reiterated a Hold rating on Carvana Co. (NYSE:CVNA) and lowered the price target on the shares to $42 from $54. Despite what continues to be a very tough operational backdrop, Carvana Co. (NYSE:CVNA) reported strong improvement across retail units sold and revenue in Q2, the analyst told investors in a research note. However, in the short-term, the stock will continue to trade like a “show-me” story, noted the analyst.

According to Insider’s Monkey, 48 hedge funds were bullish on Carvana Co. (NYSE:CVNA) at the end of March 2022, compared to 56 funds in the preceding quarter. Chase Coleman’s Tiger Global Management is the biggest position holder in the company, with 8.5 million shares worth over $1 billion. 

Here is what Saga Partners has to say about Carvana Co. (NYSE:CVNA) in its Q1 2022 investor letter:

“I first wrote about Carvana in this 2019 write-up. I initially explained Carvana’s business, superior value proposition compared to the traditional dealership model, attractive unit economics, and how they were uniquely positioned to win the large market opportunity.

Since then, Carvana has by far exceeded even my most optimistic initial expectations. While the company did benefit following COVID in the sense that customers’ willingness to buy and sell cars through an online car dealer accelerated, the operating environment over the last two years has been very challenging. Carvana executed exceedingly well considering the shifting customer demand in what is a logistically intensive operation and what has been a tight inventory environment due to supply chain issues restricting new vehicle production.

Shares have come under pressure following their first quarter results, which reflected larger than expected losses. The quarter was negatively impacted by a combination of COVID-related logistical issues in their network that started towards the end of the fourth quarter as Omicron cases spread. Employee call off rates related to Omicron reached an unprecedented 30% that led to higher costs and supply chain bottlenecks. As less inventory was available due to these problems, it led to less selection and longer delivery times, lowering customer conversion rates.

Additionally, interest rates increased at a historically fast rate during the first quarter which negatively impacted financing gross profits. Carvana originates loans for customers and then sells them to investors at a later date. If interest rates move materially between loan origination and ultimately selling those loans, it can impact the margin Carvana earns on underwriting those loans…” (Click here to see the full text)