AN May 1, 2026

AutoNation Q1 2026 Earnings Call - After-Sales Revenue Hits Record Amid Macro Headwinds

Summary

AutoNation delivered its fifth consecutive quarter of year-over-year adjusted EPS growth, posting $4.69 per share despite a challenging industry backdrop defined by tariff-related comps, surging affordability pressures, and a sharp decline in battery electric vehicle sales. The company’s After-Sales business drove the quarter, setting a first-quarter record for total store gross profit at $593 million, fueled by an 8% rise in customer pay and a 7% jump in warranty-related revenue. Used vehicle margins stabilized as the team improved inventory age and sourcing, while new vehicle unit profitability ticked up 5% sequentially, even as premium luxury sales plunged 16% year-over-year.

The standout narrative was the rapid scaling of AutoNation Finance, which generated $9 million in profit, nearly matching its full-year 2025 total, and expanded its portfolio to $2.4 billion. Management signaled a strategic pivot toward higher-margin, recurring revenue streams, acknowledging that short-term SG&A investments in brand awareness and technology would pressure margins but ultimately drive long-term efficiency. With adjusted free cash flow hitting $256 million, AutoNation continued to return capital to shareholders, repurchasing $300 million in shares while maintaining a leverage ratio of 2.57 times EBITDA. The company remains cautious on near-term volume growth, citing the middle-income cohort’s stagnant wages and elevated cost of ownership, but expects deferred demand to flow into its durable After-Sales engine.

Key Takeaways

  • Adjusted EPS of $4.69 marked the company’s fifth consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth, defying a challenging industry environment.
  • After-Sales gross profit reached a first-quarter record of $593 million, driven by an 8% increase in customer pay and a 7% rise in warranty-related revenue.
  • Internal reconditioning gross profit declined 6% due to lower used vehicle volumes, but this was more than offset by strong customer pay and warranty growth.
  • Customer Financial Services per-unit profitability hit a record high, up 6% year-over-year, as finance penetration stabilized at roughly 75% of units sold.
  • AutoNation Finance generated $9 million in profit, nearly matching its entire 2025 profit, and scaled its portfolio to $2.4 billion, up $1 billion year-over-year.
  • New vehicle unit sales declined in line with the market, with premium luxury sales dropping 16% due to a more than 50% year-over-year plunge in battery electric vehicle sales.
  • Used vehicle gross profit per unit improved sequentially by over $150, supported by better inventory age, sourcing discipline, and a used-to-new ratio of 1.15x, the highest in two years.
  • Adjusted free cash flow totaled $256 million, representing 155% conversion of adjusted net income, enabling $300 million in share repurchases during the quarter.
  • Management removed its 2026 outlook slide, citing macro uncertainty from tariffs, inflation, and geopolitical shocks, but reaffirmed commitments to After-Sales growth and capital discipline.
  • SG&A as a percentage of gross profit rose to 69.8%, reflecting strategic investments in upper-funnel brand awareness and exploratory technology, with management targeting a return to the 66%-67% range by Q1 2027.

Full Transcript

Rob, Conference Operator: Hello, and welcome to the AutoNation, Inc. first quarter 2026 earnings call. My name is Rob and I’ll be your operator today. All lines are currently in listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for Q&A after management’s prepared remarks. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number 1 on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, again, press star 1. I will now hand the conference over to Derek Fiebig, VP of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Derek Fiebig, VP of Investor Relations, AutoNation, Inc.: Thanks, Rob. Good morning, everyone. Welcome to AutoNation’s first quarter 2026 conference call. Leading our call today will be Mike Manley, our Chief Executive Officer, and Thomas Szlosek, our Chief Financial Officer. Following their remarks, we’ll open up the call to questions. Before beginning, I’d like to remind you that certain statements and information on this call, including any statements regarding our anticipated financial results and objectives, constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Federal Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks that may cause our actual results or performance to differ materially from such forward-looking statements. Additional discussions of factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially are contained in our press release issued today and in our filings with the SEC.

Certain non-GAAP financial measures as defined under SEC rules will be discussed on this call. Reconciliations are provided in our materials in our website located at investors.autonation.com. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Mike.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: Yeah, thanks, Derek. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. As usual, we’re gonna provide a fulsome discussion of our results. In our materials, I think you’re gonna notice some updates that we hope you will find useful. Obviously, we’re very pleased to report that despite a challenging Q1 for the industry, particularly with year-over-year comps, AutoNation delivered its 5th consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth in adjusted earnings per share. This represents a solid 1st quarter for AutoNation. We continue to deliver strong operating performance coupled with excellent consistent cash conversion, which enables us to maintain our strategy of deploying capital in a disciplined way to deliver results to our shareholders on a consistent basis.

For the quarter, we reported adjusted EPS of $4.69, up from a year ago, as I mentioned, our 5th consecutive quarter of year-over-year adjusted EPS growth. Operating cash flow was also strong. We generated $256 million of adjusted free cash flow, which represents substantial cash flow conversion of adjusted earnings. Starting on page 3, where we cover gross profit for each of our businesses. Results were led by After-Sales, which once again delivered solid mid-single-digit growth despite some year-over-year impact from adverse weather. Same-store gross profit increased 3%, total store gross profit increased 5% to $593 million, which was a 1st quarter record for the company. The story underneath this solid total growth in gross gets even more interesting as you tease out the dynamics of the different sources of growth.

Underneath that total growth of 5%, internal pay actually declined by 6%, somewhat expected, I think, due to lower industry volumes. This contraction in internal pay was more than offset from two important segments: customer pay, which grew 8%, and warranty-related gross profit, which grew at 7%. As always, there is still more for us to do in After-Sales, where we believe there is more growth to come, but clearly this revenue and net income stream is durable, has a recurring nature, and is high margin. It’s also an important driver of customer engagement and retention. Moving on, I want to turn to Customer Financial Services. The team delivered another outstanding quarter, hosting a first quarter record per unit profit up 6% from a year ago.

The team continues to run a value-driven, customer-focused process that provides our customers with valuable products and services. Customers purchased on average more than 2 products per vehicle, with extended service contracts again leading the mix, clearly supporting future After-Sales revenue and customer retention. Finance penetration also continues to grow, with roughly three quarters of units sold with a finance contract. Now, this performance should be read with the added context of the growth in our own finance company originations, which, as you know, deliver a superior return over time, but in the short term represent a headwind to the record per unit value we just delivered. Tom, I know you’re gonna give everyone on the call more details of this dynamic later.

Derek Fiebig, VP of Investor Relations, AutoNation, Inc.: Look forward to it.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: Let’s look at new vehicle industry and our results. New vehicle unit sales were down in line with the market. As you’ll remember, last year there was a significant acceleration demand following tariff-related announcements, which clearly set up a very challenging year-over-year comp. As in the fourth quarter, following the elimination of the BEV incentive, BEV sales declined more than 50% year-over-year, and the largest reduction of that was in our premium luxury segment. The partial offset to industry volumes we just discussed, new vehicle unit profitability improved sequentially, up 5% from the fourth quarter, driven by higher per unit profit in both our import and premium luxury segments. Moving on to used vehicles, I feel we delivered a solid performance in the quarter. We actually achieved our highest used-to-new ratio in 2 years.

Our margins were much more stable, delivering a per unit profitability sequentially higher. Our wholesale performance was also strong. I would say that coming into the quarter, we had a couple of challenges that were hangovers from 2025. Inventory levels that were lower than I would prefer and aging that was slightly elevated. I think the team has made good progress with these challenges, and we now enter Q2 with improved inventory position at a younger average age. Turning to slide four, I briefly touched on our Customer Financial Services performance earlier, but let’s turn to our own finance company. AutoNation Finance performed well, generating $9 million of profit in the quarter, which by the way, nearly equaled the entire profit for 2025.

ANF generated over $20 million of cash for the quarter, and the portfolio continues to scale and ended the quarter at $2.4 billion, up $1 billion year-over-year. Our funding profile also improved following our second ABS transaction, which closed in January. The operating momentum of AutoNation Finance is obviously delivering attractive returns, and we are also benefiting from the ongoing customer engagement and valuable consumer insights that come from the business. Moving on to cash, adjusted free cash flow was strong again at $256 million. This reflects excellent cash conversion, which Tom will talk through in more detail. During the quarter, we deployed approximately $350 million of capital, including $300 million in share repurchases.

While we did not acquire any franchises in the first quarter, we do remain active in evaluating opportunities that can add scale and density in our existing markets. Our balance sheet remains strong. Our leverage ratio was in line with the first quarter of last year and remains comfortably within our targeted 2 to 3 times range as we maintain our investment grade rating. The strength of our balance sheet and robust cash flow generation give us significant flexibility to deploy capital, drive shareholder returns and grow earnings per share. As I mentioned, the 5th consecutive quarter where we have delivered year-over-year increases in EPS. Now with that, Tom, I’m gonna hand it over to you.

David Whiston, Analyst, Morningstar0: Okay, thanks, Mike. Turning to slide 5, I’ll walk through our quarterly P&L. Our total revenue for the quarter was $6.6 billion, compared with $6.7 billion in the first quarter last year, which benefited from the tariff-related volumes, particularly in premium luxury, as we’ll talk later. First quarter gross profit of $1.2 billion was essentially flat year-over-year, gross margin improved 30 basis points to 18.5% of revenue. That was driven by continued mid-single digit growth in our After-Sales business and strong performance in Customer Financial Services. Adjusted SG&A as a percentage of gross profit was 69.8% for the quarter, a bit higher than our targeted range of 66%-67%.

The increase reflects investments in marketing, including upper funnel spending to generate higher quality growth opportunities and build AutoNation brand awareness. We are also making structural investments targeting our customer experience. Lastly, we had unfavorable self-insurance experience in the quarter, including damage related to weather events. We expect SG&A to moderate in subsequent quarters as a percentage of gross profit, but remain above our targeted range, reflecting continued investment, as I mentioned earlier, of the aforementioned strategic initiatives. Adjusted operating income was $312 million for the quarter and was down 7% from a year ago. At 4.8% of revenue, it remains nearly 100 basis points above pre-pandemic levels. Below the operating line, floorplan interest expense decreased $5 million, or 10% year-over-year, as borrowing rates moderated and we remained disciplined in our inventory management.

Non-vehicle interest expense increased $6 million year-over-year, reflecting higher average balances and a slightly higher blended borrowing rate, reflecting maturities of lower cost debt. Excluded from our adjusted results are a net after-tax gain of approximately $40 million related to our valuable strategic equity investments in Waymo and TrueCar. Weighted average shares outstanding decreased 11% year-over-year, reflecting $1.1 billion of share repurchases since the end of 2024. Adjusted earnings per share was $4.69 for the quarter. Through strong operating execution and disciplined capital allocation, we’ve now delivered 5 consecutive quarters of year-over-year growth in adjusted earnings per share, as Mike mentioned. Moving to slide 6, After-Sales, representing nearly half of our gross profit, continued its impressive momentum. Gross profit was $593 million, an AutoNation first quarter record.

As Mike mentioned, we saw a modest impact from adverse weather, but still delivered mid-single digit growth. Our results reflect higher repair order count, higher value per repair order, and improved labor productivity. Same-store revenue increased 4% and same-store gross profit increased 3%, while total store revenue and gross profit both increased 5%. Growth was led by customer pay gross profit up 8% and warranty gross profit up 7%. Internal reconditioning gross profit declined 6% due to lower used vehicle volume. Wholesale and retail parts increased 10%. After-Sales gross margin was 48.6% for the quarter, roughly in line with the first quarter of 2025. We remain focused on deploying technology to drive additional volume and productivity and on hiring, developing, and retaining technicians.

These efforts increased same-store franchise technician headcount by more than 3% year-over-year, reflecting improved retention. Growing our technician workforce is a key to consistently delivering mid-single digit growth in After-Sales gross profit. I’m now on slide 7, Customer Financial Services. The momentum in CFS continues. After growing 6% for the full year last year, per unit profitability increased another 6% in the first quarter, driven by improved vehicle service contract margins, consistent product attachment, and higher finance product penetration. This per unit growth offset the year-over-year decline in unit volumes. This performance is even more impressive considering the growth of AutoNation Finance. While AutoNation Finance is attractive in long-term profitability, it diluted CFS per unit results in the first quarter by approximately $160 per unit which is a little over 5%.

Slide eight provides an update on AutoNation Finance, our captive finance company, and its continued strong performance. As expected, profitability is gaining meaningful traction as the portfolio matures and as we leverage our fixed cost structure across a much larger book. First quarter profit improved to $9 million, up from $0.1 million in the first quarter of 2025, and up sub-sequentially from $6 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. During the quarter, we originated approximately $460 million in loans and received approximately $213 million in customer repayments. Our penetration continues to improve. AutoNation Finance originations were approximately 17% of all deals financed in the first quarter, up from 14% in the fourth quarter.

The AutoNation portfolio ended the quarter at $2.45 billion, up about $1 billion year-over-year. The portfolio quality continues to improve. Credit performance metrics strengthened and average FICO scores on originations were 700 in the first quarter. Delinquency rates, 30-day delinquency rates were 2.1% at quarter end, stable as a percentage of the portfolio and in line with our expectations. As we’ve discussed, we do expect delinquencies to continue to normalize as the portfolio matures, migrating towards the 3% range over time, and our loss reserving methodology incorporates this expectation. Non-recourse debt funding also improved, reflecting better advance rates in our warehouse facilities and the benefits of our second ABS issuance for approximately $750 million completed in January.

Debt funding as a percentage of the total portfolio at quarter end was 90%. That’s up from 74% a year ago, reflecting lender and market confidence in our portfolio. To close on AutoNation Finance, our compelling offerings are driving strong customer take-up, and we continue to expect attractive returns on equity as profitability grows and equity investment requirements moderate. Slide 9 provides some color for new vehicle performance. Our unit sales declines were in line with the industry, down 9% on a same store basis and down 8% on a total store basis. Battery electric vehicle unit sales declined more than 50% year-over-year, and when combined with tariff-related pull-ins in the first quarter last year, created a disproportionate impact on our premium luxury unit sales, which decreased 16% from a year ago.

Domestic and import sales were down mid-single digits. New vehicle profitability again increased sequentially in the first quarter, averaging more than $2,500 per unit, up more than $100 or about 5% versus the fourth quarter. The improvement was driven by higher per unit profits in our import and premium luxury segments. New vehicle inventory amounted to 46 days of supply, up 8 days from the first quarter of last year and 1 day from the end of December. Turning to slide 10, as Mike mentioned, used vehicle supply remains constrained, and the team did a great job balancing sourcing, unit volumes, and overall profitability. Our used-to-new ratio increased to 1.15 times in the first quarter, the highest in 2 years. Used retail unit sales decreased 5% on a same-store basis and 3% on a total store basis.

Unit sales in the sub $20,000 category declined 9%, while vehicles priced above $40,000 increased 7%. This mix shift contributed to a 5% increase in average selling prices year-over-year. Our used vehicle unit profitability increased by more than $150 sequentially to just under 1,600 per unit, reflecting a more optimal vehicle acquisition and reconditioning, inventory velocity, and usage of enhanced technologies. We had over 25,000 units ready for sale and 32,600 total units in our used inventory at month-end, the aging is in terrific shape. To slide 11, adjusted free cash flow for the quarter was $256 million or 155% of adjusted net income.

Both of those metrics were improved from the first quarter last year as we continue to demonstrate stronger operational performance, a relentless focus on working capital and cycle times, and CapEx discipline and prioritization. Our capital expenditures to depreciation ratio was 0.9x compared to 1.2x a year ago. CapEx was a little light in the quarter, mostly due to timing, and we expect full year spending to be $300 million-$325 million. We continue to focus on driving free cash flow to improve maximum capital deployment capacity. On slide 12, our strong cash conversion gives us flexibility to invest in growth and drive shareholder value. In the quarter, we deployed more than $350 million of capital, including $300 million of share repurchases. The remaining was spent on CapEx, which is largely maintenance and compulsory spending.

Since the end of March, we have made additional share repurchases, bringing our year-to-date deployment to approximately $400 million or around $100 million per month. We have repurchased nearly 2 million shares or 6% of the shares outstanding at the beginning of the year. In our capital allocation decisioning, we also consider our investment-grade balance sheet and the associated leverage level. At quarter end, our leverage was 2.57 times EBITDA, almost identical with the 2.56 times EBITDA at the end of the first quarter last year and well within our 2-3 times EBITDA long-term target, giving us additional dry powder for capital allocation going forward. Now I’ll turn the call back to Mike before we open the line for questions.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: Yeah, thank you, Thomas Szlosek. Just a quick closing from me. I, reflecting on a strong quarter and what I expect moving forward. I am very pleased about our EPS growth. I think that’s something that the team and I were very, very focused on. I was pleased we were able to deliver it, notwithstanding some of the dynamics in the industry that we’ve just discussed. Our After-Sales business is well-positioned. I think that the market will facilitate growth in that. We’re obviously gonna stay focused on our technician recruitment, retention, and development. Customer Financial Services continues to deliver strongly for us. Very consistent performance. Its profitability is also very consistent. We know that particularly with ANF, it builds strong relationships with our customers for us, and their portfolio continues to scale, improving productivity and profitability and funding.

I do expect improvements in our used business over the course of the year, as lease returns increase and the execution continues to improve. New vehicle sales continue to track in line with the broader retail market. As you’ve seen, unit profitability continues to show signs of stabilization. During the Q&A, we may get into discussions about forecast for margin. That’s fine. We can take questions on that. You know, I think all of the factors that we’ve talked about position us from, particularly from a cash flow perspective, to continue to generate strong cash flow, which will enable us to deploy meaningful levels of capital always with our shareholders in mind. With that, Tom, if you’re ready, let’s open up for questions.

David Whiston, Analyst, Morningstar0: That’d be great. Rob, if you could please remind participants how to get in queue for the question and answer period.

Rob, Conference Operator: Your first question comes from the line of Rajat Gupta from J.P. Morgan. Your line is open.

Rajat Gupta, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Great. Thanks for taking the questions. The 1st one was just that, you know, you removed your previous 2026 outlook slide. I’m curious, is that something to do with just, you know, what’s going on geopolitically, you know, and just creating more uncertainty? You know, just trying to understand the reason behind it and maybe, you know, as you offered, you know, any guardrails around new vehicle GPU, used vehicle GPU trajectory from your end? I have a quick follow-up.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: Hi, Rajat, it’s Mike. I’ll start the answer, Tom, you jump in. You know, when we came into 2026, I think we all would agree that we knew that the structural demand, particularly in new and used, was certainly there. All of the inputs to demand, I think, you know, continued scrappage rates, household formation have continued. I think we knew that there would be some affordability headwinds coming into the year based upon the developments of last year. We were forecasting at that time maybe up to a 5% impact on new vehicle industry. Obviously, that has been compounded from a headwind perspective with the ongoing inflation that we’ve seen, as well as, the fuel price movements that we’ve seen of late.

I think that that is gonna continue for the foreseeable future. The way I’m thinking about the industry now is notwithstanding the fact that we’re going to see quarter-over-quarter comparisons that are maybe uneven this year because of the industry shocks we saw last year, I think the industry will be below that 5% forecast that we originally had coming in until some of those impacts get dissipated. Whether that is the Iran war is over, fuel prices begin to return, whether that is transaction price movements that may happen or change over the years, interest rate movements, regardless of what causes it, I think we need to see some movements in those areas for that unmet demand now in the marketplace to start to get released.

Sitting underneath that, I think the industry is still large. As we saw, the volumes that we delivered in Q1, albeit down year-over-year, were still very credible. Any deferred demand usually ends up relatively quickly in the vehicle park, and we managed to capture that with our After-Sales business as well. That’s why After-Sales is typically anti-cyclical because I expect our After-Sales business to benefit now because there’s certainly some deferred purchases in new. There’s certainly some segment shifting from new to used, and there’s deferred purchases in used as well, and that will find its way into After-Sales. Finally, ’cause your question was quite detailed and long, and you have to tell me if I’ve actually answered it.

When I think about margins for the year, you may see some margin compression. From our point of view, what’s important is that drives an improvement in volume because some margin compression, so long as it feeds its way through into Average Transaction Price, should stimulate volume. I’ll be very comfortable with that balance, by the way, because I think driving new car volume is important for us over the long term.

Derek Fiebig, VP of Investor Relations, AutoNation, Inc.: Tom, do you want to add something?

David Whiston, Analyst, Morningstar0: Yeah, quickly. Rajat, just relative to, you know, that, the original thought process. I think Mike said it well in terms of, you know, we’re facing a different macro and environment, you know, for very obvious reasons. Won’t get into those. If you look at, you know, the main tenants in our outlook, I mean, apart from, you know, the market, I think all of them are intact in terms of what, you know, we’re committing to deliver, whether it’s, you know, Customer Financial Services, sustained performance, the AutoNation portfolio growth, After-Sales, continued mid-single digit growth, a good conversion on cash and, you know, just shareholder focus, capital allocation. I mean, all those things are still intact and we’re committed to.

Rajat Gupta, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Got it. That’s helpful color. Just on the investments, the strategic investments, could you double-click on that a little bit? You know, what areas are you looking to go into? You know, how should we think about just the return on that for the business? You know, any specific areas those are targeted would be helpful. Thanks.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: I’ll start, and then Tom can finish up. I think there’s probably two main areas that I would call out as part of this call. When I look back at, I think one of the benefits AutoNation has is that we have a national brand, and I think the benefit of that is not truly unlocked yet. What that means is that we continue to invest with high quality, but good third-party partners to generate opportunities for us. We’re very focused on changing that dynamic. To change that dynamic, we need to make some more upper funnel investments to be able to grow our brand recognition higher in certain areas than it is today, because we will reap the benefits of that over time. They will not be immediate.

What you get is you get a dislocation between our investment and our return, and that’s what you’re seeing to some extent in our financial performance. Obviously, the investments being made, our expectation is over time, you will progressively see that return. What you won’t immediately see is a reversal of that, because upper funnel investment is obviously going to continue, but it is, it is measured, it is well thought through, and I think it has a very, very clear end in mind. The second area that we’re investing in is obviously in technology. It is an ongoing daily topic of conversation across every business. I think we’ve made some good investments in technology. Some of it is in an exploratory way at this moment in time.

What we’re trying to do is understand, do we truly get a long-term sustainable return on investment from those investments? That means you have to make some speculative investments, some of which will pay off handsomely, some of which will not. You’re seeing some elevated costs from that. Again, that will continue throughout the year. We’re very cognizant of the fact that we want to maintain our forecast in terms of our underlying SG&A. I think the finance teams and our operators really do have that in mind. In fact, there’s an increased emphasis on that because it frees up some headroom for us to make some of these exploratory investments that we’re making. Overall, I think, and you can see it in our Q1, we’re creating still a very, very credible balance of SG&A to gross.

Thomas, do you want to add anything?

David Whiston, Analyst, Morningstar0: No, you hit it wrong.

Rajat Gupta, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Awesome. Great. Thanks for the color and good luck.

Rob, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from a line of Mike Ward from Citigroup. Your line is open.

Mike Ward, Analyst, Citigroup: Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. It seems like there’s I don’t know if it’s a concerted effort or just a shift towards the more profitable parts of the businesses, F&I, After-Sales, financing, and it’s almost like the new and used retail is just a feeder to enhance those businesses. Is that the way you’re strategically thinking about it? Or how do you view that trend?

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: I think you answered your own question there, Mike. I like that answer very much. I’ve got nothing to add to it.

Mike Ward, Analyst, Citigroup: Okay. It is a conservative effort. You know, Mike, when you look at the industry, I, it seems to me when we came out of COVID, you know, everybody was set that inventory going forward be about 20% lower than it had been in the past. It seems to me the industry’s gotten even more efficient. How much does that contribute? We’ve kind of seen the stabilization of the new and used variable grosses. It, how much does inventory discipline contribute to that, and do you expect that to continue?

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: I’m gonna give you a bit of a broader answer, you know, apologies up front for this. I wanna lean into this kind of discussion on affordability a little bit more because I think that it is what is gonna shape the overall industry volume for the foreseeable quarters that are coming at us. You know, we know that if I just take new, for example, Average Transaction Prices are up roughly 40% on new since 2019. The dynamics in that are quite interesting when you tease it apart. The vast majority of that was covered off by real wage inflation, and in fact, the pass on effects of Average Transaction Prices have been speculated between 8%-10%.

I think that that was what was creating some of that affordability headwind when we came into this year. Obviously, it was compounded by tariffs, some of that pricing in some form or another being passed on. We no longer had supply constraint on new vehicles driving up ATPs. That is largely, with the exception maybe of one or two manufacturers, completely dissipated now. You’re left with that affordability affordability headwind, which initially was driven by transaction prices, and then more recently, a combination of rate and transaction prices, and that’s what stays in the market today. It really has been compounded by what I’m hoping is a relatively short-term shock to the economic environment that we’re in at the moment. Notwithstanding that, the industry level, as I mentioned, I think is still relatively large.

As we go forward, I think that for us to release as an industry that pent-up demand, some of those dynamics has got to, have got to change. I think part of that will be this affordability question, whether it’s content or whether it is supply chain changes, or whether it is some margin mitigation with the OEMs or us. I’m comfortable with margin mitigation because I think it will translate into volume, because I do think that there is a large amount of pent-up demand now in new. It’s also translated into used to some extent. I think used supply will still be constrained for a period to come as that hole that was created in COVID works its way through the system.

I do think that when some of those input dynamics begin to get relieved, which, you know, some of them hopefully will be happening sooner rather than later, you’ll progressively see a release of volume and may see some accompanying margin compression as a result. As I said, that’s a trade we’d be comfortable to make so long as it’s done in a disciplined way and we actually see the volume growth. Does that answer your question?

Mike Ward, Analyst, Citigroup: Yeah, it does. It just seems like the industry becomes more profitable if we stay in this, you know, 15.5 million-16.5 million range instead of, like, getting these big peaks and valleys, so lower highs and higher lows. It seems like it feeds into the more profitable part of the business for AutoNation.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: Yeah, absolutely. I mean, we like very, very much, our After-Sales capacity because as you said, it is anti-cyclical to some extent, but it’s stable, it’s durable.

Mike Ward, Analyst, Citigroup: Sure

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: It’s much, much more predictable. The other thing that’s happening, of course, is the vehicle park is still continuing to age. An aging vehicle park, particularly when new and used vehicle volumes deferred, an aging vehicle park just represents an opportunity for us that we are constantly looking to try and unlock. That dynamic is one of the great things about a balanced business that we run.

Mike Ward, Analyst, Citigroup: Really appreciate your time. Thank you.

Rob, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Alexander Perry from Bank of America. Your line is open.

Alexander Perry, Analyst, Bank of America: Hi. Thanks for taking my questions here, and congrats on all the progress. I wanted to drill in a bit more on the used vehicle side. How should we be thinking about sort of used vehicle comps and GPUs as we move forward? Inventory, you know, seems pretty lean. How should we think about your ability to sort of drive an improvement in GPUs and same-store sales on the used side? Thanks.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: I think we go upside on our, on our volume side. I was pleased with our GPUs for Q1. You know, I talked in the past that I think, and our internal view is that we should be moving towards $2,000 a unit. That to me is something that we’ve set as a goal for our teams and to understand the different drivers of achieving that. The very first driver is obviously how you source your vehicles. We’re very focused on trying to make sure we source, obviously, from our lower cost channels first, but to build up an inventory volume that is sufficient to drive incremental sales for us. As Tom mentioned, we made some progress in Q1.

The real forecast for us, the real initiative for us is to keep our progress moving, and we think that will translate into higher volumes. I do not want that to come with a, with a compression necessarily on the margin because I still think there’s some inefficiencies in the used car business that will enable us, even if we reduce ATPs, to maintain the margin, whether that is through cycle times, whether that is through a much more focused reconditioning, or whether that is through hold times. Even if you do see some mitigation in ATPs, I think some of that can be offset and mitigated by improved productivity as part of that value chain.

Alexander Perry, Analyst, Bank of America: Really helpful. Just my second one, I wanted to, you know, go back to sort of the state of the union right now and how you’re sort of thinking about things with all the uncertainty. Are you seeing any sort of change in trend line, any, you know, impact through April on consumer confidence related to the war? Just talk to us about, you know, how you’re sort of seeing the demand trend as we move forward here. Thanks.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: Yeah. Well, there’s no doubt that we’re seeing an impact on it. You know, I mentioned before that the affordability was a key industry issue for us right now. I said that wage growth to a large extent had offset most of the, well, a large portion really of the increases that we’ve seen. There are other effects that sit underneath that. The first one is total cost of ownership is also being impacted by increased insurance costs, which are up roughly 50%. After-Sales maintenance costs are up as well.

The issue that I think we’re gonna face in the short term that really is driving my outlook of the industry over the, say, coming, 1 or 2 quarters is the fact that that wage inflation that partially offset increases in transaction prices wasn’t distributed evenly. I mean, if you were at the top and at the bottom, you got real wage increases. If you were sat in the middle, you were largely stagnant, treading water.

That middle cohort of the population really is the engine. The impact that we’re seeing in the short term in terms of their household income and the dynamics there in terms of the needs, the must-haves, the staples actually taking a higher level of their disposable income, it will impact our industry and give us some headwind. We’ve seen that in Q1. It will continue, in my view, into Q2, but those deferred purchases will feed into our After-Sales. That’s the dynamic really that we’re seeing and where the impact is, in my view, is going to be felt. I do think that some of this, I’m hoping that some of this obviously is short term and can get relieved quickly.

I’m still optimistic that when we look back on this year, the industry is still going to be a healthy one.

Alexander Perry, Analyst, Bank of America: Incredibly helpful. Best of luck going forward.

Rob, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Jeffrey Lick from Stephens Inc. Your line is open.

Jeffrey Lick, Analyst, Stephens Inc.: Good morning, Mike. Good morning, Tom. Thanks for taking my question. I was wondering if you maybe drilled down a little deeper on the used in Alex’s earlier question, Mike. Just in terms of, you know, your guys’ strategy, maybe looking at, you know, late model versus six to eight, you know, year-old plus, your cluster strategy use of internal auctions. Obviously one of the largest competitors is going through a little bit of a change and, you know, Carvana continues to ramp up. Just curious, you know, how you see, you know, the used car, your used car business, playing out, you know, especially as it relates to, you know, sourcing and whatnot.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: Yeah. Well, obviously you saw in our results that our above $40,000 used car business improved. I think it was up over 7%. Thomas Szlosek will correct me if I’m wrong, but it was up over 7% and then our $20,000-$40,000 and our below $20,000 had dropped. Some of that was inventory related, there’s no doubt about that. I do think that some of the drivers of that above $40,000 was, were maybe those marginal new car buyers that from affordability did in fact drop into the used car scene. Sourcing vehicles across all of those price bands is important for us.

By the way, even if those marginal new car buyers dropped into the used car industry, you can tell from the total used car industry even more deferred their purchases from used cars anyway. The way that we think about sourcing is it is everyone talks about how competitive it is. I think it’s been competitive really for the last 5 years and will continue to be competitive. You’ve got to be focused on every single channel. The very first channel that we’re very focused on is clearly those vehicles that come to us in trade, new or used trade, that we can with the right and appropriate amount of reconditioning, generate a really excellent used car inventory piece. That’s what our focus is. I mentioned before brand.

Brand is super important when you’re sourcing vehicles directly from the marketplace. It helps cut through all of the noise out there. We have done well in many of our markets with our sourcing through our We Buy Your Car activities. I think we can do better, but I do think we need to continue to reposition our brand to more of a top-of-mind perspective rather than a searched outcome, and that’s some of the investment that we’re making. Very comfortable also to dip into the auction market. They come at, some people think an inflated price, but the reality is if you price them right, you can still get a good turn. Fundamentally, you’ve got to have the inventory because you can’t sell fresh air.

You’ve got to be able to buy it competitively, hopefully with a, with a mix that suits the business that you’re trying to achieve. The industry is so broad, we want a balanced portfolio of vehicles between all of those three price bands. As you’ve seen, and I’ll end with this, which is a repetition of how I started, our plus $40,000 sales benefited in the quarter, probably from some of that migration from new.

Jeffrey Lick, Analyst, Stephens Inc.: That’s great. I appreciate the color and best of luck in Q2.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: Thank you. Thanks, Jeff.

Rob, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from a line of John Sager from Evercore. Your line is open.

John Sager, Analyst, Evercore: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my call. on your annualizing ANF at, you know, $36 million a year. The penetration increased from 14 to 17%. FICO scores are in a good place. Can you just reframe sort of the steady state and where you think that heads? If we look out to 2027, do you think that we can continue improving that penetration to higher and higher levels? Is, you know, something like $50 million an achievable goal?

David Whiston, Analyst, Morningstar0: Thanks, John. Great question. When you look at, you know, where we have been on, you know, penetrations, or when you look at overall originations for AutoNation Finance, you know, going back to 2024, we underwrote about $1 billion in sort of our first full year, $1.1 billion, and that went up to $1.8 billion in 2025. You know, we’re on a run rate that we think is, you know, gonna get us north of $2 billion-$2.1 billion in 2026, which would be, you know, close to 20% growth. We keep the key is the originations.

That would, you know, right now the, as you said, penetration 17%, that’s of all units that are financed. If we get to the numbers I mentioned for 2026, I think we’ll be pushing 20%. I don’t think we’re really calling a limit on, you know, what the penetration can be. I mean, it’s been a, you know, steady climb, you know, following the, you know, the originations. At some point there’s some elasticity there, but right now I think it’s slow and steady growth for us on both penetration and origination.

John Sager, Analyst, Evercore: Okay, great. On the SG&A efficiency, can you just quantify the impact of stock-based comp in the quarter?

David Whiston, Analyst, Morningstar0: Over probably less than $1 million of incremental expense.

John Sager, Analyst, Evercore: Okay. Thank you.

Rob, Conference Operator: Yeah. Our next question comes from the line of John Babcock from Barclays. Your line is open.

John Babcock, Analyst, Barclays: Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Just first of all, did you guys quantify the impact of the weather on the quarter? Apologies if I missed.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: Well, we both can answer this one.

John Babcock, Analyst, Barclays: Okay.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: I don’t entertain discussions about the impact of weather on the business in the business. I think it’s something that tends to happen relatively frequently. I know that Tom will have a much more well-thought-through answer. I tend to believe that much of it may be just deferred for a short period of time. Some of it you lose, as people say. No doubt Tom will be able to give you a better flavor than that. I try and focus on doing as much business as possible, regardless of whether it’s raining or windy.

David Whiston, Analyst, Morningstar0: I think Mike’s saying that he doesn’t allow us to make any excuses for our SG&A performance. You know, when you look at the, you know, one-time events that we referred to, they were you know, self-insured type, you know, claims activity. You know, more than half of which was, you know, was weather-related. I’d say the total, including those weather-related, impact was roughly $5 million year-over-year. John.

John Babcock, Analyst, Barclays: Yeah. Okay. Thanks. That’s perfectly fine. Then just on the SG&A side, obviously there’s been a fair bit of discussion on the call so far about uncertainty in the market, affordability challenges, the other broader macro headwinds. In light of all that, how are you thinking about your SG&A spending levels? Part of the reason I ask is because over time, the dealers have generally tended to be pretty good about, you know, adjusting spending up and down based on how the market is looking. I want to get your thoughts on that and whether you’re comfortable with current spending levels or if you think there might be a time at which, you know, maybe you decide to pull back in certain areas.

David Whiston, Analyst, Morningstar0: Great question. Thanks, John. I’ll start it out and then, you know, let Mike jump in. You know, the thing that’s hidden inside, you know, those SG&A numbers that we talked about is, you know, some of the productivity that, you know, we are generating either through AI or other technology. If you look, for example, at our compensation for sales, you know, personnel, you know, we’re up at close to 10 sales per associate in the first quarter of 2026. That number was probably 9 or so a year earlier. You know, we’re doing that with, you know, better training, you know, better technology, emphasis on, you know, performance based incentives.

There are a number of other initiatives when it comes to AI and productivity that, you know, we think will continue to allow us to, you know, drive down our SG&A. We’re deploying AI at scale in our service and contact centers and in our back office. You know, we’ve generated meaningful savings in 2025, you know, close to $5 million, and I expect that to continue into 2026 through, you know, digital applications and AI-type applications. I, I don’t want you to think that we’re, you know, not focused on it. We do have to make, you know, some investments, some incremental investments. I do think those start to generate additional growth over time.

I also think those investments, some of them dissipate, as we get through 2026, particularly, you know, the investments on some of the digital enhancements that Mike referred to. At this point, we feel like we’re on a good trajectory, you know, to bring our SG&A at a run rate that starts to approximate, you know, our targeted range, you know, towards the first quarter of next year. I think in second quarter through the fourth quarter, should probably expect us to, you know, bring it down 150 basis points from what we saw in the first quarter if, you know, we can avoid some of the, you know, the calamities that, you know, we don’t necessarily control. That’s the way I would look at it.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: John, I just wanna add a piece as well. Obviously, we see a much more detailed breakdown of our SG&A performance than others on the outside of the company are. If we look at the underlying core SG&A performance of our dealerships, our collision centers, and our auctions, and we take out or we give an allowance for the investments that we see as being incremental that will benefit us, that’s that dislocation between the investment and the revenue that you get that I discussed earlier. I’m comfortable with our SG&A levels, and I see a trajectory that I’m actually pleased with. It’s not so apparent from the outside. The question is: Are the investments that we are making that are incremental truly gonna give us a revenue stream in a reasonable timeframe to have made them worth the trip?

That’s something that we are very, very careful to look at, that we’re really looking to see what benefits we see as a result of those investments. If we believe they are, we continue to do it, and if we believe that they’re not, for whatever reason, we’re quick to shut them off. I think underneath the headline number that you’re looking at, there is a good trend in our SG&A in line with discussions that Tom’s had with all of you in recent quarters. I do think that there is a mechanism for us to make sure that we’re looking very closely at any incremental investment that we make, so that it will yield a benefit for the company at some point in the future.

John Babcock, Analyst, Barclays: All right, thanks. That’s very useful.

Rob, Conference Operator: Yeah, your final question comes from a line of David Whiston from Morningstar. Your line is open.

David Whiston, Analyst, Morningstar: Good morning. Just curious if you could give any kind of update on the status of mobile repair adoption and what are the challenges in getting more consumers to use that service?

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: Actually, what we’ve now done is we have been able to integrate our mobile repair service into our big markets. We’ve now moved their bases into our existing ANUSA businesses, which give them a base, which you need, a hub. We found out that having a hub actually helps with our productivity quite significantly because it gives us a start and return point that’s much, much more consistent. We slimmed down the number of technicians that we had in that area because the levels of productivity were very, very low. You have to build a quite a large consistent base.

The integration of those into that business have helped tremendously with that because there is a residual amount of business that enables us to layer in those more variable trips, those more unexpected trips, in a good way unexpected, to customers outside of the physical locations. We have learned a huge amount about dynamic booking and still learning about dynamic booking. Now that I think we have a much more solid base, our productivity has increased, I think, well. We’re now beginning to build layers of business on top of that so that we can extend the products and services that are remote in a way that doesn’t bring our utilization and productivity down to such a level that we’re actually not covering our costs. It is a much more complex business than we anticipated a few years ago when we acquired the business and began building it.

I think our skill set has improved tremendously, and I think it now begins to add value, not just to customers who want remote work, but also add values to a number of our business partners as well. Still a lot of work to do in that area, but I’m pleased with what I’ve seen so far.

Rob, Conference Operator: We have reached the end of our question and answer session. I will now turn the call back over to management for closing remarks.

Mike Manley, Chief Executive Officer, AutoNation, Inc.: Yeah. Thank you, everybody. Thanks very much for your time on this call, and we look forward to talking to you more about the quarter and also next quarter, Q2. Thank you very much.

Rob, Conference Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.