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Copart's Sales Growth Slows, but Earnings Jump in the First Quarter

Online automotive auction company Copart (NASDAQ: CPRT) reported its first-quarter 2019 results on Nov. 20, and the company grew sales and earnings by double-digit percentages, though revenue growth was lower than in the past several quarters.

Copart results: The raw numbers

Metric

Q1 2019

Q1 2018

Year-Over-Year Change

Sales

$461.4 million

$419.2 million

10.1%

Net income

$114.1 million

$77.1 million

47.2%

Diluted earnings per share

$0.47

$0.32

46.9%

Data source: Copart.

What happened with Copart in the quarter?

Copart's revenue grew by 10% in the first quarter, which isn't as substantial as the usual sales growth the company has reported in the past several quarters. For reference, Copart grew sales by 18.7% in the fourth quarter of 2018, 28% in the third quarter, 31% in the second, and 21% in the first.

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The slowdown appears to have come from the company's services sales, which grew by just 5.5% in the first quarter. But the bigger picture in the first quarter is that the company was able to improve its gross profit by 20% and increase earnings substantially.

Papers showing charts and graphs are spread out on a desktop, with a pen sitting on top of them.
Papers showing charts and graphs are spread out on a desktop, with a pen sitting on top of them.

Image source: Getty Images.

Copart's operating profit got a boost from the drop in the company's yard-operations costs, where the company houses the vehicles it sells at its auctions. Yard-operations expenses dropped from $206 million in the year-ago quarter to $189 million in the reported quarter, about an 8% decline. That helped the company's gross profit in the quarter to jump 20% to nearly $196 million. The higher operating income, mixed with a lower tax payment, helped Copart boost its net earnings by 47% in the quarter.

As has been the case over the past several quarters, Copart is still dealing with additional expenses it incurred as a result of Hurricane Harvey. The company said "abnormal costs" of $35.8 million from Harvey come from a range of expenses, including temporary storage facilities, labor costs from paying employees overtime, equipment purchases and leases, and the cost of vehicle sales.

Other notable quarterly results include vehicle sales that increased to 66,562, up 47.7% from the year-ago quarter. Copart ended the quarter with $320.3 million, up 16% sequentially.

What investors can expect

As usual, Copart's management didn't include any guidance for the upcoming quarter. That lack of information may make some investors a bit jittery as they try to figure out whether Copart's sales will continue to slow in subsequent quarters. Investors will probably remember that after the company's fourth-quarter results, Copart's share price took a steep dive because investors were disappointed with the results, even though the company showed strong sales and earnings growth.

Despite that share-price slide, Copart's stock has still gained about 30% over the past 12 months, compared with the S&P 500's 2% gain. But with the overall market experiencing significant declines lately, there's no telling how investors might respond to Copart's latest quarterly results.

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Chris Neiger has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Copart. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.