BYD delivered what looks like a textbook mixed quarter — and the market responded harshly.
Q1 2026 was, by most headline metrics, a genuine record. Revenue hit CAD $997 million, up 28% year-over-year and the highest first-quarter print in the company's history. Adjusted EBITDA rose 52% to $122 million, with margins expanding 200 basis points to 12.3%. Location count jumped 33% to 1,312, largely on the close of the Joe Hudson's acquisition in January — the largest MSO deal in Boyd's history. Yet the stock fell roughly 13% on the day, capping a week that saw shares shed 7.3% to close around CAD $152.86.
The gap between the adjusted story and the GAAP reality is where the tension lives. Headline EPS of $0.58 was roughly in line with estimates, but revenue came in about $10 million short of the $1.006 billion consensus. More tellingly, net loss widened to $7.9 million from $2.6 million a year ago — a function of integration costs, Joe Hudson's conversion disruptions, and weather impacts across southern US locations. Management flagged that same-store sales growth came in at 1.7%, adjusted to 2.6% stripping out storm effects, but both figures sit below the company's stated long-term framework of 3–5%. Average total cost of repair also remained below the trend line management needs to validate their multi-year growth model. Investors clearly weighed the wider net loss and the framework shortfall more heavily than the record top-line prints.
Short positioning is light and offers little colour here. Short interest runs at just 1.25% of the free float — a negligible level. Notably, it has roughly doubled since mid-April (from around 175,000 shares to 348,000), a 55% jump over the past month, but the absolute level remains far too small to tell a crowded-short story. Cost to borrow is 1.34%, essentially the floor rate, and availability in the lending market is ample. The ORTEX short score sits at 30, well below the threshold that would signal meaningful short-side pressure. The post-earnings drop, in other words, is driven by fundamental disappointment rather than positioning mechanics.
The Street's view provides a concrete anchor for what investors now have to bridge. The consensus mean price target is CAD $189.40 — about 24% above Tuesday's close, a gap that reflects residual optimism about Boyd's long-term consolidation thesis even as the near-term narrative softens. The EPS 12-month forward momentum factor ranks in the 90th percentile, meaning analysts have been lifting forward estimates aggressively relative to peers. But the 30-day EPS surprise rank sits in just the 19th percentile, suggesting the company has a recent pattern of delivering below what was modelled at close range. Valuation has cheapened as the stock has re-rated: the P/E has compressed by nearly two full turns over the past month to about 23x, and EV/EBITDA has drifted down to roughly 6.2x. That is no longer an expensive multiple for a business generating record EBITDA — but the market clearly wants more evidence that the growth framework holds before re-rating it back.
Institutional ownership is concentrated and stable, which matters when a stock moves this sharply. Fidelity International leads with 9.3% of shares, followed by 1832 Asset Management at 8.5% and Mackenzie Financial at 7.4%. Together, the top five holders control nearly 35% of shares outstanding. That kind of concentration means forced sellers are unlikely — but it also means the stock needs a credible re-acceleration signal to attract new money rather than simply retain existing holders. Management has given that signal in tone: they reiterated $140 million in total Project 360 and synergy savings, confirmed Joe Hudson's conversions are complete as of post-quarter end, and cited Q2 April same-store sales approaching the low end of their long-range target. The next data point is the Q2 report, scheduled for August 12 — a full three months away.
What to watch: whether same-store sales sustain the low-single-digit trajectory through Q2 now that Joe Hudson's integration disruptions have cleared, and whether average total cost of repair begins to normalise — the metric management itself identifies as the key variable for returning to framework-level growth.
See the live data behind this article on ORTEX.
Open BYD on ORTEX →ORTEX Market Intelligence content is generated by AI from a snapshot of ORTEX's proprietary data. Content is informational only and does not constitute investment advice.