Previous Close | 39.95 |
Open | 40.45 |
Bid | 40.45 x 260000 |
Ask | 40.50 x 260000 |
Day's Range | 40.05 - 40.65 |
52 Week Range | 27.20 - 71.99 |
Volume | |
Avg. Volume | 191 |
Market Cap | N/A |
Beta (5Y Monthly) | N/A |
PE Ratio (TTM) | N/A |
EPS (TTM) | N/A |
Earnings Date | N/A |
Forward Dividend & Yield | N/A (N/A) |
Ex-Dividend Date | N/A |
1y Target Est | N/A |
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Yahoo Finance Live's Rachelle Akuffo takes a look at shares of furniture retail brand Wayfair.
This may seem like an inauspicious time to invest in consumer discretionary companies. Wayfair (NYSE: W) and Peloton Interactive (NASDAQ: PTON) have both had success over the years. Wayfair, an e-commerce seller of home-related goods (e.g., furnishings and housewares) did well during the early days of the pandemic.
Wayfair (NYSE: W) shares are still down more than 90% from their pandemic-induced 2021 peak, and the company is suggesting that a return to operating profitability is in the near-term cards. There are too many things that could still go wrong for Wayfair and too many other great opportunities to plug into elsewhere. Since its launch back in 2002 and Wayfair.com's launch in 2011, consumers as well as investors have enthusiastically watched -- and even cheered -- the company's efforts to crack into a crowded, complicated market.
Bad companies can survive when times are good, even if their business models fundamentally don't work. Carvana (NYSE: CVNA) and Wayfair (NYSE: W) made the most of the sky-high demand for used cars and home goods during the pandemic, but the bonanza is now over. Both companies are burning cash and are buried in debt, and neither might make it out of a prolonged recession.
Wayfair (NYSE: W) has been one of the most volatile e-commerce stocks over the last few years. The macroeconomic headwinds exposed some vulnerabilities in Wayfair's business, and the company's revenue has fallen -- customers don't have the appetite to spend money on their homes after their spending binge during the pandemic. Wayfair is already ahead of the game.
Wayfair (NYSE: W) has been among the worst-performing tech stocks in the current market downturn. Wayfair had been a nearly $20 billion business at the pandemic peak and is now valued at less than $5 billion. A valuation slump of that level doesn't happen unless there are major growth and earnings issues in the underlying business.
"Free shipping and free returns" has long been the policy for many retailers, but amid rising shipping expenses and a tough environment for retail sales, some companies are now implementing return...
Wayfair (NYSE: W) shareholders have had a volatile 2023 thanks to rapidly shifting sentiment around the e-commerce retailer's home furnishings business. Wayfair is still working through a painful growth hangover driven by much lower demand for home furnishing and e-commerce spending. Wayfair's customer base shrank by 15% year over year, and its overall order volume declined by 7%.
Q1 2023 Katapult Holdings Inc Earnings Call
"This was a strong quarter for Wayfair (NYSE: W)..." begins the online furniture retailer's first-quarter earnings report. A quick look at the numbers says otherwise. Wayfair enjoyed booming demand for home goods during the first part of the pandemic.
Shares of home goods e-commerce site Wayfair (NYSE: W) have fallen 90% from their high. Here is why Wayfair could have some problems bubbling under the surface. Wayfair is an e-commerce company focusing exclusively on the home goods market.
Wayfair's (W) first-quarter 2023 results reflect weak momentum among active customers, and the impacts of declining domestic and international revenues.
Wayfair (W) delivered earnings and revenue surprises of 34.30% and 1.08%, respectively, for the quarter ended March 2023. Do the numbers hold clues to what lies ahead for the stock?
Wayfair (W) doesn't possess the right combination of the two key ingredients for a likely earnings beat in its upcoming report. Get prepared with the key expectations.
There could be a lot of sales up for grabs because of Bed Bath & Beyond's demise.
There are still too many retail stores in existence.
Insiders who purchased US$1.7m worth of Wayfair Inc. ( NYSE:W ) shares over the past year recouped some of their losses...
IKEA stores owner Ingka Group will spend 2 billion euros ($2.2 billion) expanding in the United States over the next three years, its biggest investment in a single country, in a bet to win American customers as other big-box retailers close stores. Sweden's IKEA, which opened its first U.S. store in 1985, near Philadelphia, is seeking to win market share in the U.S. as cash-strapped consumers look for more affordable products. "It is in all the states across the U.S. where we see opportunities, but I would say in particular the South, where we see big demand that we have not so far been able to respond to," said Tolga Öncü, head of IKEA Retail at Ingka Group.
Wayfair (NYSE: W) is one of them. Wayfair was gaining momentum before the pandemic, becoming an important player in the furniture industry. It also uses a dropship model, which means it doesn't actually buy most of its merchandise and then sell it.
RH CEO Gary Friedman held another wild earnings call amid weak results.
Williams-Sonoma (NYSE: WSM) and Wayfair (NYSE: W) are both home furnishings retailers that sell most of their products online. Williams-Sonoma -- which owns its namesake banner, Pottery Barn, Pottery Barn Kids and Teen, and West Elm -- also operates more than 500 stores but generated two-thirds of its revenue digitally last year. Wayfair sells all of its products online through its eponymous website and four others: Joss & Main, AllModern, Birch Lane, and Perigold.
In this podcast, Motley Fool senior analysts Emily Flippen and Jason Moser discuss: Nvidia's results and place in the AI universe. Block surprising Wall Street with strong fourth-quarter revenue. Mercadolibre's enviable free cash flow.
Wayfair (NYSE: W) stock plummeted 23% the day after the company released its Q4 and full-year results for 2022. Its dramatic drop in earnings prompted investors to dump shares of the Boston-based furniture and home goods retailer. The question for investors is whether Wayfair is worth a speculative buy or a company they need to avoid.
Wayfair (NYSE: W) pioneered the art of losing gobs of money selling furniture and other home goods online before the pandemic. While the company's revenue was growing at a brisk pace prior to early 2020, every other metric was moving in the wrong direction. In 2019, Wayfair posted a net loss of nearly $1 billion on $9.1 billion of revenue, and free cash flow was just shy of -$600 million.