
Advance Auto Parts sells Worldpac unit to Carlyle Group for $1.5 bln, cuts forecast
Advance Auto Parts sells Worldpac unit to Carlyle Group for $1.5 bln, cuts forecast
Aug 22 (Reuters) – Advance Auto Parts (AAP.N), opens new tab said on Thursday it would sell its Worldpac unit for $1.5 billion as part of its latest attempt at streamlining operations, but cut its annual results forecast, sending its shares down about 17%.
The company will sell the unit to private equity firm Carlyle Group (CG.O), opens new tab in cash, and the deal is expected to close before the year-end.
On a post-earnings call, Advance CEO Shane O’Kelly said the macro environment was challenging and retailers were lowering expectations, but added the company was starting from a “lower baseline relative to the industry”.
O’Kelly took charge last year to help the company through a turnaround amid pressure from activists investors who had urged Advance to offload Worldpac, a wholesale parts distribution business with a $2.1 billion revenue for the year ended June 30.
Advance had acquired Worldpac in 2014 when it bought General Parts International.
“What we like about Worldpac is it’s just the professional market, the repair shops, and the trend longer term is for that market to grow and the economic resiliency makes it an attractive part of the industry,” said Wes Bieligk, a partner on Carlyle’s Global Industrials investing team, in an interview.
“This is bread and butter what we’re looking to do for Carlyle from an industrial perspective. A really nice business that’s buried within a corporate parent that we’re looking to unleash and support going forward.”
Advance Auto also cut its annual sales and profit forecasts on Thursday after bumpy demand for auto parts and expects headwinds related to maintenance deferrals and lower discretionary spending.
Wedbush analysts said they believe the company is facing higher costs to retain and attract employees.
Advance now expects its net sales in 2024 to be between $11.15 billion and $11.25 billion, down from its prior expectations of $11.3 billion and $11.4 billion.
The company expects annual profit per share to be between $2 and $2.50, compared with the prior forecast of $3.75 and $4.25.
The North Carolina-based company’s financial performance and stock price have lagged behind rivals AutoZone (AZO.N), opens new tab and O’Reilly Automotive (ORLY.O), opens new tab.
Its stock had tumbled around the time S&P Global Ratings downgraded its debt to “junk”.
Latest Posts
- Lava Bold N1 5G Arrives in New 6GB RAM, 128GB Storage Variant in India: Price, Features
April 23, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech - iPhone 18 Could Fall Behind iPhone 17 With Older Display Material, Widening Gap With Pro Models: Report
April 23, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech - iOS 26.4.2 Update Rolled Out With Fix for Bug Used to Extract Notifications for Deleted Chats
April 23, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech - Moto G87 Could Feature at Least 8GB RAM, 256GB Storage
April 23, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech - Poco C81 Launched in India With 6,300mAh Battery, 13-Megapixel Camera Alongside Poco C81x: Price, Specifications
April 23, 2026 | Mobiles, Tech, Technology - Pakistan Astronauts To Train For China’s Tiangong Space Station In Historic First
April 23, 2026 | Breaking News, World - Vedanta Boiler Blast Death Count Rises To 25 As Another Worker Dies
April 23, 2026 | Breaking News, India - Tendo Marketplace Hits One Million Vouchers Purchased
April 23, 2026 | Breaking News, Business - Doda West MLA Shakti Raj Parihar Meets Union Minister Jitendra Singh, Thanks Centre for ₹9,780 Cr Tunnel Projects in Doda
April 23, 2026 | Breaking News - As Mystery Deepens of Unexplained Deaths, Disappearances of US Scientists, Multiple Agencies Probing
April 23, 2026 | Breaking News, World