America's Car-Mart's Q1 2026: Contradictions Emerge on Tariff Impacts, Consumer Demand, Credit Quality, and Underwriting Standards
The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call
Date of Call: September 4, 2025
Financials Results
- Revenue: $341.3 million, down 1.9% YOY
- Gross Margin: 36.6%, up 160 bps YOY
Guidance:
- Expect half of Q1 SG&A increase to unwind in H2 FY26; targeting mid-16% SG&A of retail sales over time.
- Average selling prices (ex-ancillary) expected to lift revenue; maintain disciplined gross margin rate.
- Used-car wholesale pricing expected to seasonally decline in back half as tariff effects normalize.
- Demand strong into Aug/Sep; LOS V2 shifting mix to higher-quality customers.
- Pay Your Way to drive ~5% SG&A cost savings over time and support better ABS terms.
- Exploring financing solutions to expand inventory capacity and preserve ABL cushion; continued improvements in securitization coupons/spreads anticipated.
Business Commentary:
* Revenue and Volume Performance: - America's Car-MartCRMT-- reportedrevenue of $341.3 million for Q1 2026, a decrease of 1.9% from the prior year, primarily due to a 5.7% decrease in retail units sold to 13,568 units, compared to 14,391 units a year ago. - The decrease in volume was attributed to tariffs and wholesale pricing constraints, which led to a $500 per unit increase in procurement costs during the quarter.- Improved Gross Margin and Collection Efficiency:
- The company's gross margin expanded to
36.6%, an improvement of160 basis pointsover the prior year quarter. This improvement was driven by disciplined originations, a stronger vehicle mix, and the effective rollout of the upgraded Pay Your Way platform, which enhanced payment convenience and collections efficiency.
Elevated Credit Applications and Underwriting Enhancements:
- Credit applications increased by
10%year-over-year, with a sharp26.5%increase in applications in July. This surge in applications was attributed to enhanced underwriting standards, specifically the implementation of LOS V2 and risk-based pricing, which shifted the customer mix towards higher-ranked profiles.
Capital Efficiency and Securitization Platform Strengthening:
- On August 29, the company closed a
$172 millionsecuritization issuance, marking an81 basis point improvementin the overall weighted average coupon compared to the May 2025 deal. The fourth consecutive improvement in the weighted average coupon reflects the company's ongoing capital market receptivity and the impact of its upgraded collections platform on future cost of capital.
Digital Adoption and Payment Modernization:
- The implementation of the upgraded Pay Your Way platform led to a significant increase in customers enrolled in recurring payments, nearly doubling from the prior year.
- This digital adoption enhanced payment consistency and operational efficiency, which is expected to support a stronger outlook from rating agencies and unlock more favorable terms for future securitizations.

Sentiment Analysis:
- Revenue fell 1.9% YOY and retail units declined 5.7%, while procurement costs rose ~$500/unit and inventory capacity was constrained. Offsetting this, gross margin expanded to 36.6% (+160 bps YOY), interest income increased 7.5%, collections rose 6.2%, and securitization pricing improved (5.46% WAC, 81 bps better; fourth consecutive improvement). Delinquencies >30 days were 3.8% (+30 bps) and NCOs were 6.6% vs 6.4%.
Q&A:
- Question from Kyle Joseph (Stephens Inc.): What are you seeing in procurement costs post-quarter, given strong July applications and working-capital constraints?
Response: Procurement costs have stabilized near Q1 levels with only nominal easing, while demand strength from July continued into August and early September.
- Question from Kyle Joseph (Stephens Inc.): With DQs and NCOs up, how quickly should credit stabilize under the new LOS systems?
Response: Portfolio is now mostly under new underwriting, so expect normal seasonal NCO patterns from here; current levels are within the operating range.
- Question from Kyle Joseph (Stephens Inc.): How should we think about the cadence of SG&A from here?
Response: About half of the Q1 SG&A increase should unwind in H2; Pay Your Way drives ~5% SG&A savings over time, supporting a mid-16% long-term SG&A/sales target.
- Question from John Hecht (Jefferies): Are tariff-driven inventory price increases a step-up or temporary spike, and how long will it affect you?
Response: Used-car pricing is ~5–6% above last year; expect seasonal declines in the back half as tariff effects normalize, while pursuing financing solutions to ease inventory constraints.
- Question from John Hecht (Jefferies): What indicators should we watch for green shoots as headwinds dissipate?
Response: Watch LOS V2-driven mix shift toward higher-ranked customers and higher FICO originations; asset availability remains key to capturing demand.

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