GoodHaven Capital Management bought 17,163 shares of Asbury Automotive Group; the estimated trade size was $3.81 million (based on quarterly average pricing).
The quarter-end position value rose by $2.37 million, reflecting both trading and price movement.
The trade represented a 1.33% shift in 13F reportable assets under management.
The post-transaction stake stood at 43,761 shares valued at $8.55 million.
GoodHaven Capital Management disclosed in a May 12, 2026, SEC filing that it bought 17,163 shares of Asbury Automotive Group (NYSE:ABG), an estimated $3.81 million trade based on quarterly average pricing.
According to a May 12, 2026, SEC filing, GoodHaven Capital Management increased its position in Asbury Automotive Group by 17,163 shares. The estimated value of the buy was $3.81 million, calculated using the average closing price for the first quarter of 2026. The fund's quarter-end position in Asbury Automotive Group was valued at $8.55 million, up $2.37 million from the previous quarter, reflecting both new purchases and price changes.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Revenue (TTM) | $18.00 billion |
| Net Income (TTM) | $492.00 million |
| Price (as of market close 2026-05-11) | $197.49 |
| 1-Year Price Change | (17%) |
Asbury Automotive Group, Inc. is a leading automotive retailer in the United States, operating a broad network of dealerships and collision centers. The company leverages a diversified portfolio of automotive brands and comprehensive service offerings to drive revenue and customer retention. Asbury's integrated business model and focus on both vehicle sales and high-margin after-sales services help sustain its competitive positioning within the auto dealership industry.
Auto dealership stocks have cooled significantly after several boom years (Lithia Motors is down 14% this past year; AutoNation is up just 4%), but GoodHaven appears to be leaning into the pullback with Asbury rather than avoiding it.
Importantly, Asbury’s latest results, reported late last month, were far from disastrous. First-quarter revenue fell 1% but still topped $4.1 billion, while gross profit reached $727 million. Used vehicle retail gross profit per unit jumped 16% to $1,847, showing the company is still finding ways to protect margins even as sales volumes soften.
Management also continued aggressively returning capital to shareholders, repurchasing roughly 678,000 shares for $147 million during the quarter while expanding its buyback authorization to $500 million. Meanwhile, the company generated $188 million in net income and maintained roughly $1.2 billion in liquidity.
Ultimately and perhaps unsurprisingly, the story here will likely come down to execution. Asbury is actively reshaping its dealership portfolio, rolling out Tekion technology across more than half its stores, and focusing more heavily on higher-margin service and financing revenue streams. If management can stabilize margins while demand normalizes, the recent stock weakness could eventually look more like a cyclical reset than a broken business.
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Bank of America is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Jonathan Ponciano has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Berkshire Hathaway, and Jefferies Financial Group. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.