How 3 of the market’s biggest 2022 losers ended up in the S&P 500 this year

Few stock market turnarounds are as dramatic as the one experienced by Carvana (CVNA).

By the end of 2022, Carvana had reversed eight straight years of improving margins.

The company sold more than double the number of cars in 2022 than it had in 2019, but its annual loss ballooned to nearly $2.9 billion. Now, the company has swung from the brink of collapse and managed to post record revenue and gross profit per vehicle earlier this year.

Three years ago, the stock traded just below $4 per share; in 2022, Carvana stock plunged 98%. Later this month, the stock will join the S&P 500 (^GSPC), capping off an 11,000% rally that crushed short sellers.

Its addition to the S&P 500 will see the company join the ranks of Robinhood (HOOD) and Coinbase (COIN), two other companies whose shares were hammered during the depths of the 2022 bear market before staging their own sharp turnarounds.

Read more: What’s ahead for stocks and gold in 2026? What experts are watching.

In 2022, surging interest rates, soaring inflation, and a crypto bear market sent the S&P 500 19% lower, its worst performance since the financial crisis and one of its worst years on record outside of a recession.

All three companies — Carvana, Robinhood, and Coinbase — were at the center of that storm.

Carvana CEO and chairman Ernie Garcia summed up the company’s survival after posting its first annual profit in 2024.

“It’s very hard for a group to go through a period like the last two years and not disintegrate under the pressure,” Garcia said. “We didn’t disintegrate.”

Even Morgan Stanley’s Adam Jonas, who once warned the stock could plummet to $0.10, became Overweight on the stock in May, calling the platform the “potential ‘Amazon of auto retail.’”

In October, the analyst wrote he expects Carvana to grow to a 12% share of the used car market by 2040, up from 1.5% today.

“CVNA short sellers have had a scarier ride than the Conry Island Cyclone,” Ihor Dusaniwsky, managing director of S3 Partners, told Yahoo Finance. “Shorts are down $8.44 billion in mark-to-market losses since its all-time low in 2022.”

FILE - A Carvana car retail
A Carvana car retail “vending machine” and vehicle parking lot are seen from a drone in South Fayette, Pa., on March 15, 2021. (AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

Trading platform Robinhood Markets (HOOD), the face of the 2021 meme stock frenzy, has also staged a comeback and is on pace to be the fourth-best performer in the S&P 500 this year after joining the index in September.

Its stock is up about 1,450% from a 2022 low of around $7, a period marked by acquisition rumors and aggressive cost-cutting layoffs. Founders Vlad Tenev and Baiju Bhatt agreed to forgo their own $500 million bonus contracts to help the company save money and become profitable more quickly.


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