Carvana (NYSE: CVNA) printed a new monthly low on Monday as the market questioned the timing and motivation behind the firm’s recently announced 5-for-1 forward stock split.

For some, the price action may be puzzling given forward splits are often seen as positive catalysts, because they signal insider confidence in the company’s share price trajectory.

Additionally, such a manoeuvre makes a stock more accessible for retail investors, which typically boosts demand and, therefore, may help drive it higher over time.

For Carvana stock, the recent sell-off adds to the pressure it’s witnessed since late January.

At the time of writing, CVNA is down some 43% versus its year-to-date high.

Why is Carvana stock slipping on Monday?

Sceptics are reading CVNA stock split as a ploy to manage optics – not a reflection of “operational momentum.”

When a business is already reeling from its highs, a forward split can feel like a “distraction” from fundamental pressures.

In Carvana’s case, bears argue it may be a tactical play to manufacture retail liquidity and broaden employee ownership at a time when institutional confidence is wavering.

Meanwhile, the firm’s accounting quality and its significant exposure to the subprime loan market are adding to pressure on Monday morning.

In short, instead of viewing the split as a sign of strength, traders are pricing it as a “cosmetic” fix intended to mask a difficult stretch for the used-car giant.

Macro headwinds continue to hurt CVNA shares

Carvana is seeing pressure also because of a punishing macro environment that strikes right at the heart of its business model.

Higher interest rates have turned auto financing into a minefield for the firm’s core demographic, particularly subprime borrowers who now face daunting qualification hurdles.

This credit tightening, paired with a dismal University of Michigan’s “consumer sentiment index” reading of 53.3 this month, suggests the American consumer is in retreat.

Moreover, with WTI crude oil at $103 a barrel due to the Iran war, CVNA’s logistics-heavy model – which relies on flat-bedding vehicles across vast distances – is facing a huge surge in overhead.

According to critics, the market may have incorrectly valued Carvana shares as a tech play, forgetting its vulnerability as a consumer cyclical sensitive to both fuel costs and lending rates.

The bull case: why Carvana’s long-term thesis still holds

Despite immediate noise, the fundamental bull case for Carvana remains exceptionally strong for those in it for the long haul.

Bank of America maintains a “buy” rating on CVNA shares with a $400 price objective, given the firm’s reputation as the premier independent used-car dealer in the US.

Investors must remember that Carvana is playing the long game – targeting 3 million annual retail units with a healthy 13.5% adjusted EBITDA margin within the next decade.

If it can navigate this high-rate cycle, it digital-first infrastructure and logistical moat position it to capture a fragmented market.

For the patient investor, the current dip, therefore, represents an opportunity to invest in a company that’s fundamentally reshaping the unit economics of an entire industry.

The post Why is Carvana’s stock split announcement being treated as bearish? appeared first on Invezz

Author