America’s Car-Mart, Inc. (NASDAQ: CRMT) is a prominent player in the automotive retail industry, specializing in selling and financing used cars to customers with limited credit options, primarily in small towns across the United States. The company faces competition from other used car retailers and financial service providers.
On March 12, 2026, CRMT reported its fiscal third quarter 2026 results (ended January 31, 2026). The company posted a non-GAAP adjusted EPS of -$1.53, missing consensus estimates of around -$0.26 to -$0.28. (Note: The reported GAAP EPS was significantly more negative due to one-time charges.) Revenue totaled $286.8 million, down 12.0% year-over-year, missing analyst expectations (which ranged around $329–$332 million pre-release).
Vehicle sales volumes declined by 22.1%, with 10,275 retail units sold. This decrease was attributed to constraints on origination capacity during the company’s ongoing capital structure transition (including the absence of a revolving warehouse facility limiting inventory purchases) and a significant weather event (Winter Storm Fern) in late January impacting sales, auctions, and collections in the south-central U.S.
Other key financial highlights from the quarter:
- Interest income increased by 3.1% to $64.2 million.
- Gross profit per retail unit sold improved by 8.8% to $7,762, with gross margin percentage at 35.8% (slightly up from 35.7% year-over-year).
- Total revenue decline was driven entirely by lower unit volume, partially offset by a 7.1% increase in average retail sales price to $20,634.
- The company reported a net loss (GAAP) in the range of approximately $76–$105 million (sources vary slightly on exact net loss figure due to charges; around $64 million in special items contributed heavily).
- Operating income and EBITDA figures reflected pressures, with negative impacts from the volume decline and transition costs.
- Cost of revenue and other expenses contributed to overall challenges.
Despite these headwinds, the company noted improving unit economics through disciplined pricing and began rebuilding inventory (up ~44% from December lows), though sustaining recovery depends on securing new financing facilities. Johnson Fistel, PLLP is investigating potential claims related to investor losses, focusing on CRMT’s executive officers and the disappointing results (including the non-GAAP EPS of around -$1.53). Shareholders who have incurred losses are encouraged to participate in the investigation.
These results reflect ongoing operational and funding challenges in a competitive subprime auto finance market.
