CarMax, Inc: Why Mar Vista Investment Partners Loves This Stock

Mar Vista Investment Partners is a California-based investment management firm that recently published its Q4 investor letter (you can download a copy here). The investor discussed its investment thesis on two companies, XPO Logistics and CarMax, Inc (NYSE:KMX) in the letter. We’ve already covered Mar Vista’s thoughts on XPO Logistics. In this article we’re going to focus on Mar Vista’s comments about CarMax, which is the largest-retailer of used vehicles in the United States.

So, here is what Mar Vista said about KMX in the letter:

CarMax is the largest domestic used car retailer with a highly disruptive business model. The company delivers value to consumers through its fully transparent sales process and nationwide network of 65,000 high quality used vehicles. Since 1993, CarMax has sold over 6.5 million vehicles and appraised another 25 million used cars. The data intelligence collected from these transactions gives CarMax a valuable informational advantage that is difficult to replicate. Over the past twenty years, CarMax’s intrinsic value has compounded by 13% annually. With only 185 stores and 3% of the used vehicle market share, we think CarMax has ample opportunities to expand its store base over our investment horizon.

CarMax’s other main contributor to intrinsic value is its CarMax Auto Finance (CAF) which provides used car financing solely to its prime customers. CAF’s loss adverse underwriting culture is another source of competitive advantage. Moody’s and S&P have validated CAF’s stringent credit standards by assigning AAA ratings to its asset-backed securitizations.

CAF’s high-quality nonrecourse loan portfolio lowers its capital requirements to less than 1% of total securitizations. From our vantage point, investors periodically undervalue the financing business due to its capital markets dependency and interest rate sensitivity. We think the benefits of the loss adverse underwriting culture and nonrecourse credit warehouse facilities supersede the earnings volatility.

During the quarter, CarMax’s stock declined 17% after same-store-sales slowed due to a temporary compression between new and used vehicle prices related to hurricane replacement demand. We view this used car price inflation as transitory. Eventually, excess used vehicle supply will force price depreciation to resume. We took advantage of these cyclical issues and purchased the equity at 13x normalized earnings.

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Pixabay.com

CarMax, Inc. operates 181 used car stores in 89 television markets. Its products and services include retail merchandising, wholesale auctions, extended protection plans, reconditioning and service, and customer credit. The market cap of the company is $11-6 billion.

Shares of the retailer are down 2.65% since the beginning of the year, while the stock has dropped 3.75% over the past 12 months. Analysts, polled by FactSet, have a consensus average rating of ‘Overweight’ and a consensus average target price of $77.88 for the used car retailer’s stock. On Friday, KMX was closed at $62.43.

Meanwhile, CarMax isn’t a very popular stock among hedge funds tracked by Insider Monkey. As of the end of the fourth quarter, there were 39 funds in our database with positions in the company, including Immersion CapitalGiverny Capital, and Markel Gayner Asset Management.

Disclosure: None.

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