Wayfair’s stock is plummeting (2024)

Forget about Wayfair being the canary in the coal mine. It’s much more like the elephant in the room.

In a particularly ugly set of financial results for the past quarter—and coming on a day when Wall Street was in free fall—the giant online home furnishings platform reported pretty much across-the-board declines in just about every financial measure.

Sales were off 14 percent, totaling $2.99 billion compared to $3.48 billion in its first quarter a year ago. Bottom line results also shifted, from an $18 million profit a year ago to a loss of $319 million, or $3.04 a share, this year.

The list goes on. Nearly every key customer criterion declined, including total number of active customers (those who had made a purchase in the past 12 months), which was off 23.4 percent; orders per customer, dropping from 1.98 last year to 1.87 today; and orders from repeat customers, which fell 26 percent.

Not surprisingly, investors and shareholders didn’t like what they heard and the stock was off about 16 percent by midday, trading dangerously close to its 52-week low. Since the start of the year, Wayfair’s share price has dropped by almost three-quarters, and at about $74 a share it is way, way off its 52-week high of nearly $340 a share. While the stock of other home brands have stagnated in recent months, Wayfair’s abrupt fall from grace signals that while it asymmetrically benefited from the pandemic, it is now experiencing an asymmetric decline.

Company co-founder and CEO Niraj Shah, ever the optimist, was clearly looking at the glasses Wayfair sells and seeing them half-full. “The companies that will be most successful in navigating this dynamic environment are those that can act with agility, balancing near-term demands with outsized longer-term opportunities, which is an apt description for Wayfair,” he told investors. “We are well positioned to outperform and gain share from here, and we are not losing sight of the massive market opportunity still ahead. … We have complete confidence in the structural economics of our business based on the investments we have made and the key drivers that should propel profitability higher over time.”

He pointed to the retailer’s recent Way Day—the company’s annual two-day promotional event in late April—as proof that Wayfair is on the right track. “Shoppers are still very interested in the home category, as evidenced by our most successful Way Day event ever last week, which included two of the four largest days in Wayfair’s entire history,” he said.

During the depths of the pandemic, when the home business was booming and the move to shopping online was massive, Wayfair was the right company in the right place at the right time. Its top line revenues soared—and the company recorded its first profitable quarter since its IPO in 2014.

Now, with a decided slowdown in spending on home products and absolutely no physical retail presence, Wayfair is 180 degrees away from the market. Supply chain issues that have plagued the home furnishings industry are only adding to the bad news.

What will it take for Wayfair to reverse course? Shah said the company expects “supply chain constraints to ease,” although he did not put a time frame on it. Many companies in the home furnishings space continue to struggle with delivery slowdowns, particularly from the recent COVID-19 shutdowns in China, and there appears to be no letup in the historically high rates being charged for shipping containers and ground transportation.

The company does plan to open its first handful of stores later this spring or summer for several of its subbrands in the greater Boston marketplace. While the company has not officially announced a Wayfair branded store, real estate reports have confirmed plans to open its first location next year, a 150,000-square-foot store in the Chicago suburb of Wilmette, Illinois.

But it will take much more than a few stores and a drop in container prices for Wayfair to turn itself around. For the moment, the company seems to be returning to its pre-pandemic profile of ongoing losses. Although it continues to have enough financing for the time being, investors are increasingly skeptical of unprofitable businesses, particularly those well into their second decade of public life.

From all appearances, there’s no danger of Wayfair going away. But there are also fewer signs of it going ahead.

Homepage image: ©Sdx15/Adobe Stock

____________

Warren Shoulberg is the former editor in chief for several leading B2B publications. He has been a guest lecturer at the Columbia University Graduate School of Business; received honors from the International Furnishings and Design Association and the Fashion Institute of Technology; and been cited by The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Washington Post, CNN and other media as a leading industry expert. His Retail Watch columns offer deep industry insights on major markets and product categories.

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Wayfair’s stock is plummeting (2024)

FAQs

Why is Wayfair stock dropping? ›

In the last three years Wayfair saw its revenue shrink by 7.2% per year. That is not a good result. Having said that the 22% annualized share price decline highlights the risk of investing in unprofitable companies. We're generally averse to companies with declining revenues, but we're not alone in that.

Is Wayfair going to survive? ›

Summary. Wayfair is struggling to remain profitable as weaker consumer spending and increased costs impact its revenue growth and earnings. The company's customer base is declining, and average ticket sizes are decreasing, indicating soft demand.

Is Wayfair in trouble financially? ›

Wayfair's problems, however, are not rooted in its employees not working hard enough. "In the nine months of the fiscal year to-date, Wayfair has made a net loss of over half a billion dollars. Its business model remains fundamentally broken.

What is the advice on Wayfair stock? ›

The highest analyst price target is $88.00 ,the lowest forecast is $50.00. The average price target represents -2.89% Decrease from the current price of $67.88. What do analysts say about Wayfair? Wayfair's analyst rating consensus is a Moderate Buy.

Why is Wayfair tanking? ›

Wayfair has an inventory-light business model that receives customer orders upfront. This means it gets paid before paying third-party suppliers. This dynamic allows for better cash flow when revenue grows but leads to negative cash flow when revenue falls.

Is Wayfair laying off in 2024? ›

Wayfair (W) layoffs are coming to the e-commerce company. That will see it cut 1,650 jobs to reduce costs. This includes 19% of its corporate employees.

What is the future of Wayfair? ›

Wayfair is forecast to grow earnings and revenue by 52.7% and 5% per annum respectively. EPS is expected to grow by 61.3% per annum. Return on equity is forecast to be 4.8% in 3 years.

Will Wayfair ever be profitable? ›

Wayfair - Wayfair Announces Third Quarter 2023 Results, Reports Positive Year-Over-Year Revenue Growth with Strong Order Momentum and Profitability.

Is Wayfair a Chinese company? ›

Wayfair Inc. is an American e-commerce company based in Boston, Massachusetts that sells furniture and home goods online. Formerly known as CSN Stores, it was founded in 2002, and currently offers 14 million items from more than 11,000 global suppliers.

Who owns the most Wayfair stock? ›

Largest shareholders include Fmr Llc, Capital World Investors, Vanguard Group Inc, Baillie Gifford & Co, AGTHX - GROWTH FUND OF AMERICA Class A, BlackRock Inc., Susquehanna International Group, Llp, Prescott General Partners LLC, SMCWX - SMALLCAP WORLD FUND INC Class A, and Citadel Advisors Llc . Wayfair Inc.

Is Wayfair losing business? ›

For all of 2023, which the company calls the “Year of the Reset,” Wayfair reported net revenue fell 1.8% year over year to $12 billion, with U.S. revenue increasing 0.2% and international revenue falling 13.3%. While losses overall shrank, net loss was $738 million and operating loss surpassed $800 million.

Is Wayfair a good stock to buy now? ›

Is Wayfair stock a Buy, Sell or Hold? Wayfair stock has received a consensus rating of buy. The average rating score is and is based on 61 buy ratings, 32 hold ratings, and 5 sell ratings.

Is Wayfair worth investing in? ›

Overall, this was a decent quarter for Wayfair. Wayfair is up 10.4% since the beginning of the year, but at $64.89 per share it is still trading 23.4% below its 52-week high of $84.67 from August 2023. Investors who bought $1,000 worth of Wayfair's shares 5 years ago would now be looking at an investment worth $379.16.

Is it a good time to buy Wayfair stock? ›

Wayfair has received a consensus rating of Moderate Buy. The company's average rating score is 2.70, and is based on 17 buy ratings, 9 hold ratings, and no sell ratings.

Is Wayfair stock a good buy now? ›

Is Wayfair stock a Buy, Sell or Hold? Wayfair stock has received a consensus rating of buy. The average rating score is and is based on 61 buy ratings, 32 hold ratings, and 5 sell ratings.

Is Wayfair stock a good buy? ›

Valuation metrics show that Wayfair Inc. may be undervalued. Its Value Score of A indicates it would be a good pick for value investors. The financial health and growth prospects of W, demonstrate its potential to outperform the market.

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