LH
Lazydays Holdings, Inc. (LAZY)·Q3 2023 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2023 reflected a soft RV demand backdrop and margin compression: revenue fell to $280.7M and diluted EPS was $(0.48), with total gross margin at 19.4% (down 320 bps YoY) .
- Mix and pricing pressure were evident: average gross profit per new unit ex-LIFO dropped to $9.1K vs $12.6K in Q2 and $14.3K in Q3’22; pre-owned unit gross profit also fell YoY .
- Management executed portfolio actions: acquired Buddy Gregg (Knoxville) and Century RV (Longmont), opened a Wilmington, OH greenfield (and Fort Pierce, FL on Nov 1), and closed two locations, estimating $125M steady-state revenue from new stores .
- Capital plan in focus: the company commenced a rights offering (effective Oct 23) at a $6.399 subscription price; if fully subscribed, net proceeds estimated at ~$99.6M for growth and potential debt actions—a key near-term stock narrative .
- S&P Global consensus estimates were unavailable for LAZY for Q3 2023; we cannot formally score beats/misses vs Street (third-party sites indicated a miss, but we anchor to S&P and note unavailability) [Values retrieved from S&P Global unavailable].
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Network expansion and footprint optimization: acquisitions (Knoxville, Longmont) and Wilmington greenfield; management estimates ~$125M steady-state revenue contribution from new stores .
- Liquidity sources identified: $67.8M estimated liquidity at quarter-end and ~$80.6M potential from unfinanced real estate; rights offering sized at ~$99.6M if fully subscribed, bolstering growth and flexibility .
- Services resilience: “Service, body and parts and other” revenue was relatively stable YoY (-1.2%) and grew YTD (+3.8%), with segment gross margin still strong at 50.0% in Q3 .
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What Went Wrong
- Margin compression: total gross margin declined to 19.4% from 22.6% YoY; new vehicle gross margin slid to 10.8% (down 590 bps YoY), reflecting competitive pricing and normalization post-pandemic .
- Unit volume declines: total retail units sold fell 13.6% QoQ (3,208 vs 3,367) and 13.6% YoY; pre-owned units fell, pressuring F&I and overall gross profit dollars .
- Interest expense headwind: floor plan interest expense rose to $6.3M (vs $2.6M in Q3’22), lifting total other expense and contributing to the net loss .
Financial Results
- Core P&L (QoQ and sequential trend)
- YoY snapshot (Q3 2023 vs Q3 2022)
- Segment revenue (QoQ and YoY)
- KPIs (retail units, ASPs, per-unit profitability)
Non-GAAP adjustments in Q3: LIFO charge $2.663M; acquisition expense $0.727M; severance/transition $0.625M. Adjusted net loss improved to $(2.9)M and adjusted diluted EPS to $(0.29) versus GAAP $(5.6)M and $(0.48), respectively .
Guidance Changes
- The company did not provide formal quantitative guidance for revenue, EPS, margins, or other P&L items in Q3 materials .
- Capital actions (for investor modeling):
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: Q3 earnings call transcript is available via third-party sources .
Management Commentary
- Strategic focus: “We estimate these stores will add $125 million in revenues at steady state,” referencing Buddy Gregg Motorhomes (Knoxville), Century RV (Longmont), and greenfield expansion, while closing Maryville and Burns Harbor to optimize footprint .
- Balance sheet and capital raise: Estimated liquidity of $67.8M with additional unfinanced real estate capacity of ~$80.6M; rights offering effective Oct 23, 2023 at $6.399 subscription price and estimated ~$99.6M net proceeds if fully subscribed, intended for growth initiatives and potential debt actions .
- Non-GAAP lens: Adjusted results exclude LIFO ($2.663M), acquisition ($0.727M) and severance/transition costs ($0.625M) in Q3; management presents these to enhance comparability of core operations .
Selected quotes (prior quarter context to illustrate strategy amid Q3 dynamics):
- “We’re a lot more concerned with gross and unit sales than revenue… affordability is more difficult for a consumer, you see a natural shift toward more used demand.” – John North, Q2 2023 call .
- “It’s competitive… there’s really healthy demand [for used] if you can find the right pieces, and so we’re focused on that.” – John North, Q2 2023 call .
Q&A Highlights
- Topics addressed (per Q3 call sources): inventory health and aging, pricing and promotions on prior model years, used mix and sourcing, F&I per-unit sustainability, and rights offering rationale/uses .
- Clarifications: Management discussed macro-driven demand softness, higher interest costs impacting floorplan expense, and ongoing actions to improve unit turns and margin dollars (consistent with Q1–Q2 narrative and Q3 press release data) .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global (Capital IQ) consensus data were unavailable for LAZY for Q3 2023; as a result we cannot provide a definitive beat/miss vs Street under our S&P anchoring standard (third-party outlets reported a miss, but we do not cite those for consensus benchmarking) [Values retrieved from S&P Global unavailable].
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term pressure persists: sequential and YoY margin compression and lower unit volumes underscore a cautious retail environment and pricing normalization on new inventory .
- Used remains a lever: while pre-owned unit volumes declined QoQ and YoY, per-unit gross remains relatively resilient vs new, and management continues to emphasize used sourcing to support affordability and turns .
- Balance sheet flexibility improving: the rights offering (potential ~$99.6M net proceeds) and real estate liquidity give optionality to pursue accretive M&A/greenfields and de-risk financing costs over time .
- Services cushion: services/body/parts revenue and margins provide partial counter-cyclicality amid softer vehicle sales .
- Watch F&I per-unit and finance penetration: sustaining ~$5K per unit F&I and healthy penetration is key to offsetting lower vehicle margins; track for durability into seasonally strong periods .
- Execution catalysts: integration of Knoxville and Longmont acquisitions, ramp of Wilmington and Fort Pierce, and potential Surprise, AZ opening provide top-line and scale efficiencies ahead of the next retail upturn .
- Risk factors: elevated interest costs (floorplan), macro-rate sensitivity of discretionary purchases, and competitive pricing dynamics remain principal headwinds .
Supporting references (additional press releases):
- Fort Pierce opening (Nov 1, 2023):
- Q3 press release (Nov 3, 2023):
- Rights offering effectiveness (Oct 23, 2023):
Cross-referenced internal primary sources:
- Q3 2023 8-K/Exhibit 99.1:
- Q2 2023 8-K/Exhibit 99.1:
- Q1 2023 8-K/Exhibit 99.1: