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CI

CarParts.com, Inc. (PRTS)·Q4 2020 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Record Q4 net sales of $119.7M, up 90% YoY; gross margin rose 110 bps to 34.8%, but adjusted EBITDA fell to $1.0M as Texas DC start-up costs (~$1M) and higher freight weighed on profitability .
  • Sequentially, revenue held near Q2/Q3 levels ($118.9M/$117.4M), while EBITDA compressed (Q4: $1.0M vs Q3: $5.1M vs Q2: $5.6M) given seasonal receiving and DC ramp; management cautioned against over-reading Q4 seasonality .
  • No formal quarterly guidance; management reaffirmed long-term targets of 20–25% revenue CAGR and 8–10% EBITDA margins, with multi-year margin levers across gross margin, marketing mix, and operating leverage .
  • Near-term catalysts: mechanical parts expansion, do‑it‑for‑me services testing (broader rollout targeted for 2022), and distribution footprint enabling faster delivery; supply chain normalization expected to improve in 2H of the year per management .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • Record Q4 sales ($119.7M) and FY sales ($443.9M), driven by strong growth in the flagship CarParts.com channel and house brands mix; “Right Part, Right Place, Right Time” strategy underpinned results .
  • Gross margin expansion to 34.8% in Q4 (+110 bps YoY), reflecting favorable channel/product mix and higher house-brand penetration; 89% of sales were house brands .
  • Strategic execution and long-term framework: “We believe that over the long run, we can achieve topline revenue growth at a CAGR of 20% to 25% with 8% to 10% EBITDA margins” (David Meniane) .

What Went Wrong

  • Profitability pressure from start-up costs at Texas DC (~$1M) and heavier receiving seasonality; adjusted EBITDA declined to $1.0M and net loss was ($3.5M) .
  • Inventory constraints and global supply chain disruptions (container shortages, port congestion) limited the ability to fully stock Texas DC (about 50% full), impacting SKU-level availability and sales .
  • Elevated inbound/outbound freight and carrier surcharges compressed margins despite mix tailwinds; management highlighted these cost headwinds directly .

Financial Results

Quarterly Comparison (Q2 2020 → Q3 2020 → Q4 2020)

MetricQ2 2020Q3 2020Q4 2020
Revenue ($USD Millions)$118.93 $117.41 $119.73
Gross Profit ($USD Millions)$40.83 $43.12 $41.64
Gross Margin %34.3% 36.7% 34.8%
Adjusted EBITDA ($USD Millions)$5.56 $5.13 $1.03
Adjusted EBITDA Margin %4.7% 4.4% 0.9%
Net Income (Loss) ($USD Millions)$1.57 $1.38 ($3.49)
Net Income Margin %1.3% 1.2% (2.9)%
Diluted EPS ($USD)$0.03 $0.03 ($0.07)

Notes: Q4 included one extra week (14 weeks) .

Q4 YoY Comparison (Q4 2019 → Q4 2020)

MetricQ4 2019Q4 2020
Revenue ($USD Millions)$62.96 $119.73
Gross Profit ($USD Millions)$21.19 $41.64
Gross Margin %33.7% 34.8%
Adjusted EBITDA ($USD Millions)$1.69 $1.03
Net Income (Loss) ($USD Millions)($25.09) ($3.49)
Diluted EPS ($USD)($0.70) ($0.07)

Actuals vs Consensus (Q4 2020)

MetricActualConsensus
Revenue ($USD Millions)$119.73 N/A – unavailable via S&P Global at time of request
Primary EPS ($USD)($0.07) N/A – unavailable via S&P Global at time of request

Estimates unavailable via S&P Global at time of request.

KPIs and Balance Sheet Snapshots

KPIValueSource
House Brand Mix (% of Sales)89%
Distribution Centers5
Click-to-Ship TimeUnder 12 hours
Inventory (Year-End)$89.316M
Cash (Year-End)$35.802M
Cash + Inventory$125.1M

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Revenue Growth (CAGR)Long-termNot formally guided20%–25% CAGR (framework) Framework communicated/maintained
EBITDA MarginLong-termNot formally guided8%–10% (framework) Framework communicated/maintained
Gross Margin upliftMulti-yearNot formally guided+100–200 bps from mix/closer-to-customer Framework detail
Marketing/Customer Service margin upliftMulti-yearNot formally guided+200–300 bps via awareness and free-to-paid mix Framework detail
Operating leverageOut-yearsNot formally guided+200–300 bps efficiency/supply chain Framework detail

Management did not provide formal quarterly revenue/EPS guidance for 2021 and emphasized a long-term orientation .

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q2 2020)Previous Mentions (Q3 2020)Current Period (Q4 2020)Trend
Supply chain & freightRecord sales; gross margin expansion; rebrand; industry e-comm penetration rising DIY shift and secular offline→online; strong margin expansion Inbound/outbound freight pressure; carriers at capacity; DC ~50% full; spot rates ~2x Q4; partial easing expected by 2H Mixed: Improvement expected later
Distribution footprint & speedSite consolidation to one flagship; operational optimization focus Continued optimization and fulfillment network expansion Goal to reach 80–90% of customers in one day; disciplined DC ramp; Texas DC half full Up (expansion continuing)
Mechanical parts expansionNot highlightedStrategic focus mentioned mid-’20Expansion underway; delayed by supply chain; seasonal demand expected in spring/summer Up (building)
EV/hybrid strategyNot highlightedNot highlightedEV/hybrid page launched; sales mix ~2–4% mirrors vehicle park; 90% revenue powertrain-agnostic Stable/Strategic positioning
Do‑it‑for‑me servicesNot highlightedNot highlightedTesting turnkey repair/mobile mechanics; broader rollout targeted for 2022 Up (testing)
Marketing/brandRebrand to CarParts.com; single site; Russell 2000 inclusion Focused investments & unit economics Renewed NASCAR partnership; new PFL partnership to build awareness Up (brand building)

Management Commentary

  • CEO Lev Peker: “Our strategy of Right Part, Right Place, Right Time is helping us transform and disrupt an industry with a superior value proposition that keeps our customers at the center of everything we do.”
  • CFO/COO David Meniane: “We believe that over the long run, we can achieve topline revenue growth at a CAGR of 20% to 25% with 8% to 10% EBITDA margins… gain 100 to 200 bps of gross margin… 200 to 300 bps [from] marketing/customer service… and 200 to 300 bps of operating leverage.”
  • CEO on supply chain: Texas DC “is up and running… but only about 50% full. On the outbound side, all carriers are running about full capacity, slowing down order fulfillment and adding costs.”
  • CFO on seasonality: “We would caution with reading too much into fourth quarter operating profitability which seasonally is our slowest quarter… increased receiving expense prior to the first quarter.”
  • CEO on customer experience: “Our average click-to-ship times have gone from around 36 hours to now under 12 hours and we will continue to push relentlessly for continuous improvement.”

Q&A Highlights

  • Distribution centers/speed-to-customer: Goal to reach 80–90% of customers within one day; disciplined, sequential DC expansion with Dallas ramp before next site .
  • Inventory constraints and Texas capacity: Texas ~50% full at year-end; SKU-level constraints affecting sales; inventory ended at $89M, with room to grow by ~$10–15M across DCs .
  • Do‑it‑for‑me rollout: Testing in select markets; broader rollout targeted for 2022; management avoids pre-announcing until “fully baked” .
  • EV/hybrid exposure: Sales mix ~2–4%, mirroring vehicle fleet; 90% of revenue agnostic to powertrain; many chassis/collision parts common to EVs/ICE .
  • Estimates/guidance: No formal 2021 guidance; long-term targets reiterated; supply chain spot rates roughly double Q4 levels; normalization likely in 2H .

Estimates Context

  • S&P Global Wall Street consensus data for Q4 2020 (Revenue, EPS, EBITDA) was unavailable at the time of request; as a result, we cannot benchmark reported results against consensus in this recap. Management did not provide formal quarterly guidance for 2021, emphasizing long-term targets .

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Mix-driven margin tailwinds are intact (house brands 89%, favorable channel/product mix), but elevated freight and DC ramp costs temporarily compress EBITDA; watch for margin normalization as supply chain eases in 2H .
  • Revenue trajectory is resilient and capacity‑limited rather than demand‑limited; full stocking of Texas DC and mechanical parts rollout are key to unlocking next leg of growth .
  • Long-term model (20–25% CAGR, 8–10% EBITDA margin) provides a durable thesis; execution on gross margin, marketing efficiency, and operating leverage are the multi‑year drivers .
  • Near-term trading setup: sensitivity to freight/receiving costs and inventory turns; seasonal lift in mechanical parts expected spring/summer; monitor Q1 update for Texas DC capacity progress .
  • Strategic moat: vertically integrated sourcing, curated catalog, under‑12‑hour click‑to‑ship, and five DCs support share gains versus brick‑and‑mortar and generalist e‑commerce .
  • Optionality: do‑it‑for‑me services testing adds service-layer TAM and potential LTV uplift; broader rollout targeted 2022 .
  • Brand investments (sports partnerships) aim to build awareness and improve free-to-paid mix over time, supporting marketing margin expansion .