United Rentals , Inc. (NYSE:URI), the world's largest equipment rental company, reported a record-breaking third-quarter performance during its earnings call on October 25, 2023. CEO Matthew Flannery and CFO Ted Grace highlighted the company's revenue growth and strategic plans, including a strong increase in rental revenue and an optimistic outlook for the upcoming years.
The company's total revenue reached nearly $4 billion, with rental revenue at $3.5 billion, marking significant year-over-year increases. Adjusted EBITDA and EPS also saw record highs. Management expressed confidence in future growth, despite acknowledging market uncertainties and inflation pressures.
Key Takeaways
- United Rentals reported record total revenue of nearly $4 billion and rental revenue of $3.5 billion in Q3.
- The company's adjusted EBITDA reached $1.9 billion, with a margin of nearly 48%.
- Adjusted EPS grew to $11.80, and specialty rental revenue increased by 24%.
- Full-year revenue is expected to be between $15.1 billion and $15.3 billion, with adjusted EBITDA between $7.115 billion and $7.215 billion.
- Capital expenditures are projected at $3.55 billion to $3.75 billion, with plans to return approximately $1.9 billion to shareholders.
- Management is confident in continued growth into 2025, driven by fleet productivity and specialty services.
Company Outlook
- United Rentals forecasts full-year total revenue of $15.1 billion to $15.3 billion.
- Adjusted EBITDA is expected to range from $7.115 billion to $7.215 billion.
- The company plans to return a record $1.9 billion to shareholders in the current year.
- Management anticipates a return to a more normalized operational rhythm and remains focused on strategic investments despite current market conditions.
Bearish Highlights
- Flannery acknowledged uncertainties tied to local market conditions and interest rates.
- The company noted ongoing inflation pressures but remains optimistic about maintaining pricing power.
- Challenges in petrochemical sectors were mentioned, with fluctuating upstream investments and refining delays.
Bullish Highlights
- Strong demand in both general rental and specialty businesses, with specialty rental revenue up 24%.
- Confidence in growth driven by fleet productivity and specialty services, with the fleet at its lowest pre-COVID age, allowing for growth opportunities.
- The integration of the General Finance (NASDAQ:GFN) acquisition is progressing well, with plans for further growth in that sector.
Misses
- The timeline for projects turning into revenue remains uncertain.
- Reduced contributions from the recently acquired Yak business in future comparisons are anticipated.
Q&A Highlights
- Management expressed ability to adapt quickly to market changes and build plans based on customer feedback and internal investigations.
- Flannery indicated minimal relocation costs due to a dense network, with no significant geographic movements required.
- Investments in telematics and AI are aimed at improving efficiency and customer experience, although current growth from these investments is modest.
- The company is actively exploring M&A opportunities but maintains a high bar for potential acquisitions.
United Rentals' robust Q3 results and forward-looking strategies reflect its strong position in the equipment rental market. The company's focus on innovation, customer support, and strategic acquisitions positions it well for continued growth amid evolving market conditions. Investors and industry watchers will be looking forward to the next update in January for further insights into the company's performance and strategic direction.
InvestingPro Insights
United Rentals' impressive third-quarter performance is further underscored by key metrics and insights from InvestingPro. The company's market capitalization stands at a substantial $54.06 billion, reflecting its dominant position in the equipment rental industry. This aligns with the InvestingPro Tip identifying URI as a "prominent player in the Trading Companies & Distributors industry."
The company's financial health is evident in its robust revenue figures, with InvestingPro data showing a revenue of $14.98 billion over the last twelve months as of Q3 2024. This represents a solid revenue growth of 7.76% during the same period, consistent with the company's reported record-breaking performance.
URI's profitability is also noteworthy, with an adjusted operating income of $4.118 billion and an operating income margin of 27.84% over the last twelve months. This strong financial performance is reflected in the stock's impressive returns, with InvestingPro data showing a one-year price total return of 105.18% and a year-to-date return of 44.91%.
However, investors should note that URI is trading at relatively high multiples. The P/E ratio stands at 21.63, and the Price to Book ratio is 6.61, which aligns with the InvestingPro Tip suggesting that URI is "trading at a high P/E ratio relative to near-term earnings growth" and "trading at a high Price / Book multiple." This could indicate that the stock is priced at a premium, reflecting investor confidence in the company's future prospects.
For investors seeking a more comprehensive analysis, InvestingPro offers 12 additional tips for United Rentals, providing a deeper understanding of the company's financial position and market performance.
Full transcript – United Rentals (URI) Q3 2024:
Operator: Good morning and welcome to the United Rental’s investor conference call. Please be advised that this call is being recorded. Before we begin, please note that the company’s press release, comments made on today’s call, and responses to your questions contain forward-looking statements. The company’s business and operations are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond its control and consequently actual results may differ materially from those projected. A summary of these uncertainties is included in the Safe Harbor statement contained in the company’s press release. For a more complete description of these and other possible risks, please refer to the company’s annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023, as well as to subsequent filings with the SEC. You can access these filings on the company’s website at www.unitedrentals.com. Please note that United Rentals has no obligation and makes no commitment to update or publicly release any revisions to forward-looking statements in order to reflect new information or subsequent events, circumstances or changes in expectations. You should also note that the company’s press release and today’s call include references to non-GAAP terms such as free cash flow, adjusted EPS, EBITDA, and adjusted EBITDA. Please refer to the back of the company’s recent investor presentations to see the reconciliation from each non-GAAP financial measure to the most comparable GAAP financial measure. Speaking today for United Rentals is Matt Flannery, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Ted Grace, Chief Financial Officer. I will now turn the call over to Mr. Flannery. Mr. Flannery, you may begin.
Matthew Flannery: Thank you Operator, and good morning everyone. Thanks for joining our call. As you saw yesterday afternoon, 2024 continues to play out as we expected. We were pleased with our third quarter results, which continued to reflect growth across both our construction and industrial end markets. Our updated guidance reaffirms our expectations for another year of profitable growth, which we were able to deliver thanks to our more than 27,000 team members. Their hard work enables us to support our customers with world-class service and innovative solutions, all while keeping safety as priority number one. As you’ve heard me talk about before, we continue to double down on being the partner of choice for our customers. We’re helping them solve for their goals across safety, productivity and sustainability through our compelling value proposition. Importantly, not only does our business model enable us to best serve our customers but it also generates strong shareholder value. Today, I’ll discuss our third quarter results, our expectations for the rest of this year, and share some examples of how we continue to innovate and rapidly respond to customer needs, and then Ted will discuss the financial details before we open up the call for Q&A. Let’s start with the third quarter results. Our total revenue grew by 6% year-over-year to almost $4 billion, and within this rental revenue grew by over 7% to $3.5 billion, both third quarter records. Fleet productivity increased by 3.5% supported by our focus on capital efficiency and continued industry discipline. Adjusted EBITDA increased to a third quarter record of $1.9 billion, translating to a margin of almost 48%; and adjusted EPS grew year-over-year to $11.80, another third quarter record. Now let’s turn to customer activity. We saw growth in both our gen rent and specialty businesses. Specialty rental revenue grew an impressive 24% year-over-year and a strong 15% even if you exclude the benefits of the Yak acquisition. Our cross-selling efforts helped fuel growth across all of our product offerings, and furthermore we added 15 cold starts in the quarter, putting us at 57 year to date. By vertical, third quarter trends were similar to the second quarter. We saw growth in both construction led by non-res and our industrial end markets, with particular strength in manufacturing. It will come as no surprise that we again had multiple new projects in the quarter across data centers, airports, healthcare, and battery manufacturing, to name a few. Now turning to the used market, which remains healthy, and as Ted will elaborate on, we sold a third quarter record amount of OEC, which speaks to the strength of demand, while our margins primarily reflected the ongoing normalization of the market. As we replace this equipment and buy additional fleet to meet our customer needs, we spent almost $1.3 billion on capex in the third quarter. We continue to see opportunity to put fleet on rent and our full-year guidance reflects a tightened capex range with the midpoint unchanged. Year-to-date free cash flow is over $1.2 billion. We’re on track to hit our full-year goal, which translates to a free cash flow margin in the mid-teens. Our industry-leading profit margins, focus on capital efficiency, and flexible business model translates to strong free cash generation and ultimately provides us the ability to create long term value for our shareholders. Finally, capital allocation – we returned nearly $500 million to shareholders in the quarter via share buybacks and our dividend. Our balance sheet is in excellent shape, and we’re on track to return nearly $2 billion this year. As we wrap up 2024, we’re focused on continued execution and delivering another year of records across revenue, adjusted EBITDA and earnings. Our updated guidance, which maintains the midpoint for revenue, EBITDA, and rental capex, reflects just that. We have good momentum heading into 2025, which is setting up to be another year of growth based on what we see and sense today. The tailwinds for a multitude of large, complex projects are still in the early innings, and we believe we’re uniquely positioned as the partner of choice with our customers. To support these initiatives, we continue to make investments in optimizing operations for both ourselves and our customers. For example, we’re investing in our next generation telematics products which help customers gain new insights into their own operations and allows our technicians to prioritize their workflow and best manage our fleet. Elsewhere on the innovation front, we recently announced a great example of a customer supporting technology. Our ProBox OnDemand is a Bluetooth-enabled automated tool tracking system which ensures workers have the right tools where and when they need them, and tracks tools in real time to significantly reduce worksite loss. Both of these examples demonstrate our culture of innovation and continuous improvement, but taking care of our people and helping our communities are also key elements of our culture. I was very pleased with how quickly our team reacted in the aftermath of the devastating damage caused by both Hurricanes Helene and Milton. In both instances, we were immediate to respond, putting our proven United Rentals playbook to work and providing our customers with the support needed to start the clean-up and rebuild process. To wrap things up, 2024 remains on track with ’25 setting up to be another year of growth, which we’ll discuss in greater detail in January. We continue to deepen our relationships as we partner with our customers, not only providing them the equipment they require but also helping them solve their other challenges. The combination of our competitive advantages and flexible business model coupled with our focus on profitable growth, strong free cash flow, and smart capital allocation positions us to drive long term and sustainable shareholder value. With that, I’ll hand the call over to Ted before we take your questions. Ted, over to you.
Ted Grace: Thanks Matt, and good morning everyone. As Matt just highlighted, the year continues to play out as expected with third quarter records achieved in total revenue, rental revenue, EBITDA and EPS. Looking ahead, our reaffirmed guidance at the midpoint across all metrics reflects our continued confidence in delivering another year of solid growth, strong profitability, healthy returns, and significant free cash flow. As importantly, we remain focused on prudently allocating capital to help maximize shareholder value. With that said, let’s jump into the numbers. Third quarter rental revenue was a record $3.463 billion – that’s a year-on-year increase of $239 million or 7.4%, supported again by growth from large projects and key verticals. Within rental revenue, OER increased by $153 million or 5.8%. Growth in our average fleet size contributed 3.8% to OER while fleet productivity added 3.5%, partially offset by assumed fleet inflation of 1.5%. Also within rental, ancillary and re-rent revenues were higher by $86 million or 15%, resulting primarily from strong growth in our specialty businesses. Turning to our used results, we sold a record amount of fleet in the third quarter, generating proceeds of $321 million in a strong demand environment. While we continued to see a normalization of used pricing, our adjusted margin and recovery rate both remained high by historical standards at 49.5% and 54% respectively. It’s also worth noting that our recovery rate was impacted by the age of fleet we sold in the quarter, which increased roughly four months year-on-year to 95 months on average. Moving to EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA was a third quarter record at just over $1.9 billion, translating to an increase of $54 million or 2.9%. Within this, rental contributed $132 million year-on-year. Outside of rental, used sales were a $43 million headwind to adjusted EBITDA, driven by the ongoing normalization of the used market. SG&A increased by $49 million year-on-year, primarily reflecting a larger business, including the addition of Yak and some discrete items in the quarter. Finally, the EBITDA contribution from other non-rental lines of businesses increased $5 million year-on-year. Looking at third quarter profitability, our adjusted EBITDA margin was 47.7%, implying about 140 basis points of compression. Excluding the impact of used, however, our margin was down about one percentage point, reflecting the impact of the investments we’ve talked about making this year, normal variability in costs, and the impact of roughly $15 million of discrete items in the quarter. Converting this to flow through, our incrementals would go from about 24% on an as-reported basis to 36% ex-used, and into the low 40s excluding the $15 million of discrete items I just mentioned. Finally, our adjusted earnings per share was a third quarter record of $11.80. Shifting to capex, gross rental capex was $1.3 billion, which was in line with expectations and within the range of historical seasonality. Moving to returns and free cash flow, our return on invested capital of 13.2% remained well above our weighted average cost of capital, while year-to-date free cash flow totaled over $1.2 billion. Our balance sheet remains very strong with net leverage of 1.8 times at the end of September and total liquidity of almost $2.9 billion. I’ll note this was after returning a record of over $1.4 billion to shareholders year to date, including $326 million via dividends and $1.1 billion through repurchases, and have reduced our share count by almost 1.7 million year to date. Now let’s shift to the updated guidance we shared last night, which reflects our continued confidence in delivering another year of strong results. As previously mentioned, we are maintaining the midpoints for all metrics and narrowing the ranges for total revenue, EBITDA, and gross and net capex, as we normally do at this point of the year. In terms of specifics, for total revenue we’ve narrowed our guidance to a range of $15.1 billion to $15.3 billion, implying total revenue full year growth of just over 6% at the midpoint. Within this, I’ll note that our used sale revenue guidance is unchanged at roughly $1.5 billion of proceeds on OEC sales that we now expect closer to $2.6 billion. On adjusted EBITDA, we’ve narrowed the range to $7.115 billion to $7.215 billion. Our range for gross capex was narrowed to $3.55 billion to $3.75 billion, and our net capex was narrowed to $2.05 billion to $2.25 billion. We’re still on pace to return a record $1.9 billion to shareholders this year, which translates to almost $30 per share or a current return of capital yield of about 3.6%. With that, let me turn the call over to the Operator for Q&A. Operator, please open the line.
Operator: Thank you. [Operator instructions] We’ll take our first question from David Raso with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead, your line is open.
David Raso: Hi, good morning. Thanks for the time. You made a comment, Matt, about good momentum into ’25, another year of growth. Can you give us at least how you’re thinking about that between specialty and gen rent growth, and also fleet productivity versus fleet growth? I’m not looking for exact numbers, but just how you think about the different contributors. Then I have a second question.
Matthew Flannery: Sure David. When we think about how next year is playing out, and I’ll just talk about this qualitatively because we haven’t even finished our planning process, and that will inform what we actually think our growth will be. But we’re going to have a little bit of carryover in fleet, right, that we feel confident that we’ll put to work, and the on the demand perspective, there’s still a good pipeline of large projects. The wildcard as we get deep with our customers and our field leaders is what’s that local market going to do, and we talked about that a lot this year. Our assumption of interest rates starting to show some give and possibly more coming, we think at least the emotional part of that step has been heard from our customers, so people are starting to feel a little more confident. What kind of activity that actually turns into is the part that we don’t have any quantitative way of feeling that out, but we’re going to figure out from our customers and our field leaders and then we’ll add that growth. But when you think about the ending fleet having a little bit of growth to it, we’ll continue to strive to drive fleet productivity. I’m not going to put a number out there or forecast it, but our goal is to always drive revenue growth more than fleet growth, which is all fleet productivity measures, so we’ll continue to do that. We think specialty certainly has more headwind. I mean, we’ve been, I don’t know since when, but we’ve been eight, probably eight years-plus of specialty growing over 20% each year, and we continue to think that they have that kind of opportunity. The tailwinds that we talk about in the mega projects, infrastructure and the like really plays to our one stop shop full value offering. That also helps specialty drive more growth. That’s the way we think about it, what kind of growth and what kind of growth capex we’ll put in, and we’ll talk about that in January after we’re done with our planning process.
David Raso: Also, you mentioned the strength of the balance sheet, the cash flow. As you’re aware, the sizeable acquisition in the mobile modular space recently broke apart, so I’ll just give you the platform here if you want to comment at all on the attractiveness of that space – obviously you became a player with Gen Finance. If you can just touch on that, and of course any other M&A landscape comments would be appreciated. Thank you.
Matthew Flannery: Sure David. On the first part, we’re very pleased with the acquisition we did with General Finance. We talked about when we bought that, doubling the size of that business in five years. We’re probably ahead of schedule on that, but certainly on track. We feel really good about that. For that space, we like the idea of growing off of that platform a lot, and we’re accomplishing that. We don’t necessarily need to be the biggest provider in that space overall, we just need to be the biggest with our customers, and that’s the way we look at a lot of our adjacent product lines, so pleased there. As far as M&A, we continue to look at the pipeline, right? We’ve got a competency of integration and cross-selling that’s unique and something that really plays well with our customers and within our organization. But the bar’s high, so it’s not always easy to get the right dance partner. We can get the strategic fit, we can get cultural fit, and the last part’s financial, and our bar is high there. I think one of the reasons we’re good integrators is because we’re smart buyers, so we continue to work the pipeline and when something is imminent, we’ll let you all know.
David Raso: All right, thank you.
Matthew Flannery: Thanks David.
Operator: We’ll take our next question from Michael Feniger with Bank of America. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Michael Feniger: Yes guys, thanks for taking my question. I just was curious, Matt, when we think of 2025, just the puts and takes, like the last few years rate has been a good guy as we’ve been in a backdrop of high inflation. You guys were clearly able to pass that along, the industry was able to. As we approach 2025, Matt, if equipment pricing is softening, can you guys still drive rate in that environment, even if we’re in a more deflationary environment? Just love to get your view on that.
Matthew Flannery: Yes, absolutely we can continue to drive rate – that’s about what’s your value to the customer and you’ve got to try to offset inflation. Even if equipment pricing stayed flat to down this year for the next batch we buy, we still have to absorb the inflation that we’ve been paying for the last couple of years on the fleet, which was significant. But additionally, there’s been inflation throughout the business, and we’re going to continue to give our employees raises, we continue to have cost inflation that we’ve been absorbing throughout the last couple of years, so the need to continue to drive rate is certainly there and, probably more importantly, the discipline in the industry is there, so everybody is in the same boat, where we have inflation that we’ve got to absorb. I think the industry is creating good value and giving a good output for the customer, which is the most important part of allowing yourself to get price increases.
Michael Feniger: Fair enough, and Matt, if I could just follow up with my last question, how are you feeling with your fleet age, your fleet mix if we are in an environment where there’s a little bit more megas versus local, a little bit more specialty versus gen rent? Just curious if you could comment on whether you feel your fleet’s in position to still be able to have a growth year next year with where the age is today. Thank you.
Matthew Flannery: Yes, our fleet is a little over 50 months, I believe right now. It’s the lowest it’s been pre-COVID, and that’s even absorbing some longer lived assets that we’ve bought in the last five to seven years with General Finance and Tanks, so we feel really good about where it is. There is plenty of headroom if we ever had to lean on that, but that’s not our expectation. We’re in real good position. Like I said, we’re back to pre-COVID fleet age. Thanks Mike.
Operator: We’ll take our next question from Tim Thein with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Tim Thein: Thank you, good morning. Maybe just Matt, on the topic of fleet productivity, I’m curious – I think the expectation coming into the year was to maybe hold serve on time-ut. I’m just curious as we’re nine-plus months into the year, how you’re trending relative to that initial objective.
Matthew Flannery: Yes, as we’ve said, we’d be really pleased if we were able to repeat the kind of time utilization that we achieved in 2023, and I’m pleased to say that’s what the team’s doing, so when we talk about the components of fleet productivity qualitatively, rate’s still a good guy and let’s call time neutral, which is a good achievement. When we’re talking about, just to put it in perspective, I said this previously, these are time utilizations back to better than 2019 levels, back to pre-COVID levels, so we’re pleased with that. Then the last part is mix, which that’s the variant part. That’s the part that is an output of tens of thousands of transactions a month, and just to remind everybody, within that mix is any inflation that we’ve paid for the fleet that’s over and above the 1.5% pay, and we’ve talked to you earlier this year that that looks more to be like 2.5 to 3 this year, so when we think about that fleet productivity, even ex-Yak at 1.9, absorbing that extra inflation, we’re really pleased with the execution of the team.
Tim Thein: Got it, okay. And safe to assume, obviously given how you layer in fleet, that that inflation even in mildly–if it were to play out where one year is equipment purchases layered in with seven, eight years, so that would still remain–that fleet inflation dynamic, that we should still think about that as a headwind in ’25, correct?
Matthew Flannery: Oh, yes. That tail is going to last a little bit, a couple more years.
Tim Thein: Yes, understood. Okay. Then just going back to thoughts around capital in ’25, you just brought in close to 30% more fleet in the third quarter year-over-year, and with fleet productivity, just call it 2% ex-Yak, and obviously you’ll typically de-fleet a bit in the fourth quarter, is the–if these trends kind of persist, would you maybe–would next year maybe lean a little bit lighter in terms of how you layer in that capex, in terms of the first half? I know it’s early days, but just thinking about kind of the timing of how you may think about landing fleet in ’25, any thoughts on that.
Matthew Flannery: Yes, without having done the work, I would just make the assumption of a similar cadence at this point, but we’ll talk about that a little more in January after we finish the budgeting process. I don’t think we’re going to be that far off the cadence that we typically run. We’re back to a more normalized cadence as the supply chain’s just about fully repaired – I mean, there’s just a handful of items that maybe have longer lead times than we’d like, but the supply chain, our partners have done a good job getting their business back in line and their suppliers back in line, so we’re in pretty good shape and I think we’ll return to more normalized cadence, similar to what you saw this year.
Tim Thein: Okay, thank you.
Matthew Flannery: Thanks Tim.
Operator: We’ll take our next question from Jerry Revich with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Unknown Analyst: [Audio loss] on for Jerry. You’ve talked about pockets of soft demand in some of the markets, particularly the local markets. How much more [indiscernible] to optimize productivity?
Matthew Flannery: You broke up a little bit. Can you repeat that question, please?
Unknown Analyst: Yes, so just on the–regarding the pockets of soft demand in some of the local markets, just curious how much more fleet you are moving geographically today versus last year to optimize productivity. Thanks.
Matthew Flannery: Yes, we have a very dense network, right, and we’re covered just about all of U.S. and Canada, so we’re not–we’re not having any exorbitant costs or any extra efforts to have to move things more than maybe a state to state, at the most. We’re not doing coast-to-coast movements or anything like that. We were asked that question in Q2, and fortunately with our business model of fungible assets, we’re able to move stuff within districts, so really nothing to call out there.
Unknown Analyst: Thanks, and then obviously really strong growth on the specialty side. Can you rank order [audio loss].
Matthew Flannery: I didn’t catch it all again, Clay. I think you were asking us to rank order our specialty growth?
Unknown Analyst: Yes, just some color on what’s the stronger areas within specialty. Sorry about that.
Matthew Flannery: Sure. I mean, we don’t get too granular here, but certainly we’ve talked about power being a very strong region for us, and that has continued to be the case. Frankly, there’s growth across all segments of specialty. They each have different variances – some are less mature and we’re building out, so you’re kind of building off smaller numbers so you can have stronger growth rates as a result, but they all performed quite well in the quarter and have year-to-date. That’s really what you’ve seen in those numbers.
Unknown Analyst: Thanks.
Matthew Flannery: Thank you.
Operator: We’ll take our next question from Robert Wertheimer with Melius Research. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Robert Wertheimer: Thanks, good morning everybody. My question is going to be on costs, and I know it’s not the highest growth revenue quarter – I think we talked about that last quarter, where little-ish costs show up, and I don’t imagine you’re managing your strategy for a quarterly SG&A number anyway. The question is really around the IT investments that you’ve made. Are you doing anything different there? Do you have a sense of–you know, is there a payback, are you thinking about a payback in the next year? What’s interesting about that spend there, and what are you trying to do? Thank you.
Ted Grace: Yes, good question, Rob. As we’ve talked about all year, we are making, call it additional investments in various aspects of technology. We do each and every year, this year there’s probably a couple new programs we’ve talked about. Some of it would relate to, call it AI-related stuff, some of it would relate to the advanced telematics packages that we’re rolling out, all of which we think make the company more efficient and improve the customer experience. I’m not sure we’ve dimensionalized them, and one of the reasons we’ve called them out is just to bring up the fact that in the current environment, where you’re growing kind of in the single digits, not in the double digits as we had in prior years, it does have a relative impact on flow through, so as we’ve talked about kind of margin performance in ’24, flow through performance in ’24, that along with the cold starts are really the two underlying things that kind of bridge people to where we are and expect to be this year, versus maybe where they would have thought we would be in an otherwise different environment. But the investments, they’re across a broad range of things, certainly on the fleet side – sourcing, purchasing, there’s a lot of things we’re doing there that we think are exciting, that we’re very confident have very attractive ROI. You certainly get into proof of concepts and then pilots, and then you’ve proven out and you get ready to roll it out, and then you’ve got change management, so there’s a lot of considerations that take time to implement an example like that. Certainly we’ve got other examples across the business in aspects of HR, for example, but there’s a whole host of them that we think are really exciting – inventory management, R&M. I think we’ve talked about a few different examples. They are all in varying stages and certainly some will prove to be very attractive returns, and some will prove to be not as attractive, and those are ones we probably won’t move forward with. But at the same time, we’ve talked about augmenting our current capabilities internally with third parties, and it’s quite a process. I think you’re probably well aware of this, Rob, but as you start embracing some of this technology, you’ve got to kind of go through your data, you’ve got to clean it up, you’ve got to reorganize it, restructure it so that you can lever it in these new models, and that’s certainly part of the foundational work that we’ve been focused on in the last year, that then puts us in a position to really get even more value out of the data. Matt, I don’t know if you’d add anything?
Matthew Flannery: No, and I think Rob said it right in his question – we’re not managing for a specific flow-through number. We’re not going to put long term investments aside because maybe the growth is a little bit slower. I think that’s–that’s the way your question was phrased, and that’s the right way to think about it.
Robert Wertheimer: That’s fantastic, thank you.
Matthew Flannery: Thanks Rob.
Operator: We’ll take our next question from Jamie Cook with Truist Securities. Please go ahead.
Jamie Cook: Hey, good morning. I guess just piggybacking on Rob’s questions, I’m just trying to think through the path for potentially improved profit pull through or incremental margins next year. Ted, it sounds like it’s highly reliant just on you guys getting back to double digit growth in order to achieve that. I’m wondering if with improved visibility because of mega, more mix towards specialty, maybe some of these technology investments paying off, is there a path–I mean, not to get to your targeted 50% incremental margin, but at least a path towards improved incremental margins 2025 over 2024. Thank you.
Ted Grace: Yes, I’ll certainly touch on that, Jamie. I don’t want to get ahead of ourselves. We’ll obviously give that guidance in January, but it’s dependent on a lot of things. Certainly growth is one we’ve talked about this year, and then call it the investments we’re making and/or other elements of cost. As you think about ’25, certainly there could be additional tech investments conceivably – I don’t want to forecast that at this point. The cold starts have been a drag – you know, we’ve talked about the impact that has as you start a branch and it’s fully burdened from a cost perspective, and yet it doesn’t really have revenue and it scales in over probably two years. You think about this year, we’re at 57 cold starts, so we’ve already exceeded the total we did in 2023. As we go through our 2025 plan, we’ll figure out what the game plan will be there. Certainly used is one of those other elements that you’ve got to be mindful when you think about flow-through, but when we kind of synthesize the whole thing back to the core margins and profitability, we’ve been really pleased with how 2024 has played out.
Jamie Cook: Thank you.
Matthew Flannery: Thanks Jamie.
Operator: We’ll take our next question from Ken Newman with Keybanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Ken Newman: Hey, good morning guys. Matt, I wanted to touch back on the local accounts. Correct me if I’m wrong, but you do sound slightly more optimistic about the demand there in terms of stabilization. Is the expectation there that demand is stable from 3Q to 4Q, or just any color there on the local accounts specifically?
Matthew Flannery: Yes, I would say the optimistic view would be supported by our customer confidence index, number one, so they remain positive. As I have said about the interest rates, there’s an emotional portion of that. The fact that that’s finally pivoted has got people thinking about what are we going to fund, what kind of projects are going to come back. The real question is when does that emotion, sentiment, and then future cuts turn into shovel-ready work? We don’t know that. The great news is we don’t need to know that. We have a business model where we can react quickly, so we’ll talk, like I said earlier, to our customers and our field team to put this plan together, and a big part of our internal investigation will be what does the local market look like for us next year. As we build that plan, we may be right to the upside, we may be–we might be wrong to the downside, but the supply chain is back intact and our flexible business model, I feel very confident will let us react to whatever the reality is. The truth is there’s no quantitative way to measure how fast these cuts will turn into revenue, but we are optimistic because of what we’re hearing from our customers.
Ken Newman: Right, that makes sense. Just for my follow-up, Ted, obviously you’ve got a couple of moving pieces here in terms of the margin improvement, whether that’s [indiscernible] or specialty. You did touch on a little bit from disaster recovery and hurricanes – I know it’s still early days, but I’m curious if you can help us quantify what’s embedded into the implied 4Q margin at the midpoint at this point from hurricanes specifically.
Ted Grace: There’s really nothing. I mean, there’s been no changes to the guidance, so we’ll see what the net impact of these two events is; but certainly as it relates to our guidance, there is no change.
Matthew Flannery: Yes, I mean, the impact of those storms, although devastating to the folks there and we certainly are going to help out in any way we can, both our employees and the communities and customers that we work and live in, but at the scale of our business, we’re talking small numbers here in the big scheme of things, and probably more a ’25 event if there is some significant rebuild. But even within that, we’re talking small numbers in the big scale of things.
Ken Newman: Got it, thanks.
Operator: We’ll take our next question from Kyle Menges with Citi Group. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Kyle Menges: Thanks guys. It would be great if we could hear a little bit more color on just what you’re seeing in some of the industrial end markets, maybe if–I know you called out manufacturing, it sounds like that’s been strong, but anything else that’s perhaps been weak this year? I know we’ve heard from some other companies that industrial MRO hasn’t exactly been that strong this year, so maybe that starts to improve into next year as you get some improvement in PMIs. Just anything noteworthy on the industrial side of things to call out, that could maybe improve a little bit next year?
Matthew Flannery: On our side, the one thing we’ve called out year to date, and it was again true in third quarter, was some of the headwinds we’ve got in petrochem, and it’s really across the board. Upstream has kind of mirrored what’s happened with the U.S. land rig count. We’ll see what happens with investment, upstream investment in North America next year, but that has continued to be a headwind. Midstream has kind of followed on – not a surprise there. If you’re not completing wells, there’s no need to tie them back. Then when you think about refining and chemical processing, those also year to date have been down a bit, so that to us is more likely timing. Certainly if you look at things like gasoline demand, diesel demand, jet fuel demand, very strong. It’s our sense that a lot of refineries are postponing work to the degree they can, to take advantage of the margins they’re earning, so that to us is more of a timing issue, and certainly on the chemical processing side, it would seem to be similar to refining. Other than that, industrial manufacturing has continued to be very strong for us.
Kyle Menges: That’s helpful, thanks. Then certainly the revenue contribution from ancillary and re-rents has been a nice tailwind for this year, and sounds like it’s been driven by specialty, so just how should we be thinking about that into next year? Should we assume continued growth in ancillary and re-rents, just given expecting specialty growth as well next year?
Matthew Flannery: Yes, I mean, time will tell. If you look at that, I think it was up 15% in the quarter, so it certainly outpaced rental revenue. Part of that is Yak, the contribution they had, so as we anniversary Yak, you won’t have that component as a tailwind within ancillary. But otherwise, certainly the growth we’ve had in specialty is also contributing to it, whether it’s set up, break down, fueling, those sorts of things we do for customers. The thing to just remember is we will anniversary the impact Yak has on it, but it should certainly correlate to some of that specialty growth.
Kyle Menges: That’s helpful. Thanks guys.
Matthew Flannery: Thanks Kyle.
Operator: We’ll take our next question from Angel Castillo from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Angel Castillo: Good morning guys and thanks for taking my question. Just wanted to go back to your comment about some of the discrete investments that you’re making, particularly on the sourcing side that you mentioned. Just curious if you could unpack that a little bit more as to what exactly you’re doing on the sourcing. In particular, I was hoping you could provide some color as well as it pertains to the equipment type that you need, perhaps between small and local markets versus what is needed in the mega projects, and any differences there and how that impacts your fleet management, your sourcing and capex.
Ted Grace: Sure, I’ll take the first part of that, and I think Matt will take the second part. On the sourcing side, there are two ways we think about sourcing. One is the way we manage fleet across our own network, and so certainly we’re leveraging technology, new aspects of technology and data analytics to more efficiently move fleet, to improve the customer experience, to make sure that that equipment availability is there; but also to reduce costs, and there are a couple of different ways that we think we can do that. Ultimately you come back to predictive analytics and the idea of trying to forecast where fleet is and where it needs to go across multiple iterations, so you’re thinking multiple steps. We think that’s an area where there’s a lot of opportunity for us to leverage technology. Certainly it can help with more efficient purchasing. Internally the way we think about planning, not so much as it relates to the acquisition of fleet but the way we think about managing fleet internally, I think we’ve always done a very good job there and this, we think, could make us a little better. I think that was the first part. The second part was on fleet by project size?
Matthew Flannery: Project size – yes. We don’t expect to have any kind of large change or swing in any category. One of the things that’s key to our business model, and you guys hear me talk about it plenty, is the fungibility assets. We don’t get into niche items that are just for one specific vertical. That’s the exception, not the rule here, and we think that’s important because with our broad coverage and our broad customer needs, it’s important that we can move assets from one vertical to the other vertical in case one slows down, like we talked about oil and gas, and one picks up, like we talked about infrastructure. If we got through specialized, we think–we think it’d be a lot harder to have the resiliency that we have by different end markets.
Angel Castillo: That’s helpful, thank you. Then maybe just if you could talk about the trends that you’re seeing, kind of in new equipment prices and supply. You talked about inflation a little bit earlier in the call, but maybe to the extent that trends you’re seeing there, and then if you could comment on just the discipline in rental rates that you’re seeing from independents across particularly your local markets.
Matthew Flannery: Yes, so first on the supply side, as I said earlier, we’re real pleased with our vendors, how hard they’ve worked to get their supply chain, which was severely disrupted, in line. As far as pricing, as I’ve said before, we won’t talk about our partnerships and the pricing negotiated on a public forum, but I think our vendors do realize the prices increases they had to push on over the past couple of years, and I think they value the steadiness of our demand and of our commitment to them, so we feel good about our position there. To the second part as far as–what was the second part of the question, Angel?
Ted Grace: Discipline–
Matthew Flannery: Oh, yes. So as far as the price [indiscernible], you see it in any data you look at, you see it–you hear it from our public peers. I mean, the industry has grown up, and we’ve been talking about this for a while. I’m just really pleased that people realize you can’t just keep absorbing inflation and absorbing these costs. You’re just going to–you’re going to hurt your business, so, and I think the value that rental brings overall, certainly we feel like we lead the way, but I think the industry overall gives better output, better value to the market. We’re a much more reliable channel, a much more flexible and responsive channel, so I think that’s part of the reasons why people are able to keep that discipline.
Angel Castillo: Very helpful, thank you.
Operator: We’ll take our next question from Neil Tyler from Redburn Atlantic. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Neil Tyler: Yes, thanks. Good morning Matt, Ted. I wanted to come back to the cold starts and the pace of openings there. If we think about that in the context of what you said compared to ’23, what drives your planning outlook for how many and where to land those starts, and how should we think about the cold starts, particularly when I think about specialty and specialty branches within that number, and how should we think about where we are in, say, a five-year view on that journey? Are you trying to put a lot of branches in place in order to capture future growth, or do you think there’s a sort of more measured cadence over the next few years? If you could just sort of talk a little bit around that, that would be very helpful, thank you.
Matthew Flannery: Sure Neil. We don’t have multi-year goals that we put out. In the beginning of each year, we’ll go through the planning process, we’ll see who wants to fund what cold starts and who wants to fund organic growth in many different ways, and then we’ll go through it and we’ll communicate that in January. But just when you think about it, we still have white space, some products that are more mature, maybe not as much in geographic expansion as opposed to penetration, but in others we have a lot of new products lines that we’ve added over the last couple of years, whether that’s our Reliable onsite business, our acquisition of Yak, and still quite frankly the General Finance team, where in mobile storage we still have white space to fill in. That’s most of what it is – it’s new products and/or deeper geographic penetration, and we communicate that each year. We think there’s plenty of headroom in specialty overall as a team, and quite frankly one of our most mature in power still is showing tremendous growth, and they’re just doing it by penetration versus cold starts. We continue to see a lot of opportunity with our specialty business. We think we’ve built a unique value proposition for large projects, large plans and large customers throughout the U.S. and Canada. I won’t give you a forecast of future cold starts other than to say there’s lots of headroom for us there.
Neil Tyler: Okay, great. Thanks, that’s helpful. I was really just trying to think about the margin impact that’s taken place this year and whether that’s something we need to think about as an ongoing, but I guess to some extent it is. Can I follow up with perhaps picking up on your comment about power and the penetration there? Could you perhaps help us understand what’s driving that additional penetration, some of the market trends that you’re picking up on?
Matthew Flannery: I think power overall is a growth space, right, as an end market vertical, and that’s not just for our business but also for the industry as a whole and our gen rent products as well. But within our power business, which is power HVAC, we’ve got a lot of additional products that we’ve added in. We’ve got a lot of penetration that’s through deeper product offerings to existing customers, and allowing us to get into new verticals because of some of the products that we’ve added. That’s really–you know, the team is very innovative, very creative and very growth minded, and I think they’ve done a great job deepening existing products and broadening with new products, and a lot of that in the HVAC part of the business. That’s about–without going any further on that, I don’t want to get into competitive opportunities, but we’re really pleased with the headroom there.
Neil Tyler: That’s helpful, thank you. Thank you very much.
Matthew Flannery: Thanks Neil.
Operator: We’ll take our next question from Stephen Volkmann with Jefferies. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Matthew Flannery: Steve, you there?
Operator: Steve, you may need to check the mute function on your phone.
Matthew Flannery: Can we move on? I’m guessing Steve’s–
Operator: Yes, we will take our next question then from Scott Schneeberger with Oppenheimer. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Scott Schneeberger: Thanks very much, good morning guys. I have two kind of end of the call questions, one for Matt and then one for Ted. I’ll ask them both upfront. Matt, on M&A, is there a–you know, you have this long term initiative to grow specialty within the portfolio and mix. As you come into the new year, you’re done digesting Yak, how are you thinking about gen rent versus specialty rent acquisitions? I know part of your answer will be whatever is ripe and looks the best at the time, best cultural, financial fit. But are you looking at that mix when you make these considerations? Is that heavy consideration? Then also, you made a comment on–I think it was on David’s first question at the beginning of the call about not needing to be number one in the specialty category. I just was curious if you could elaborate on what you meant. You said in Gen Finance as a good building platform, but just curious if you could elaborate on what you meant. Then Ted, for you real quick, new sales were up a lot in the quarter, I think the biggest quarter in maybe three, four years. Just curious if there’s anything there unique – mega projects, a big [indiscernible]. Is that a trend, or was that a unique event? Thanks guys, appreciate allowing the time.
Matthew Flannery: Thanks Scott, I’m glad I wrote those down – you’d be testing my memory here. But as I go through the M&A prioritization, which is how I heard your first question, it’s wherever we’re going to need more value for the customer, whether that’s in a new product offering, which is mostly specialty, and we love–we would highly prioritize any kind of brand new offering to the business where we could take a reasonable good sized platform and then grow upon it through our very strong network, like we did with Yak, like we did with General Finance. I wouldn’t call it that it’s because it’s gen rent or specialty, just like anything additional. If we found a new gen rent product line that we didn’t carry, we would feel the same way. Then when I think about gen rent, it’s more like, where do we need more capacity, where do we need more density, where do we need more of an offering? When we have that opportunity, we certainly are very comfortable integrating our gen rent business, as we’ve done, as you can see in our history very thoroughly. There’s not as much white space geographically, but certainly a lot of opportunity to add more capacity and serve more of the marketplace. When I talked about not being number one, just for clarity, I want us to be number one with our customers. Let’s use an example. For ROS, our Reliable Onsite, we don’t need to have port-a-johns at every wedding or every soccer field, but when you go into a major project or you go into a plant, we’re going to make sure we’re there to support our customer a full one-stop shop value. We want to be number one with our customers and those products. I used General Finance as an example – we don’t need to have modular classrooms in every school, right? That’s not the business we’re after. What we do need to do is make sure if our customers want a modular building or a storage container on a site for their needs, we want to be the number one in that space. That’s what I mean when I talk about that – not every product line do we need to be the largest in the industry, we need to be largest in our industry, so that’s the way we look at that. Then Ted, I think new sales–?
Ted Grace: Yes, that’s an easy one, Scott. Yak had an impact there. I think Yak had new sales of something like $16 million, so while you see that number up 48% nominally, I think if you backed that out, we’re up about 15%, which is probably a little more in line with what you would have expected.
Scott Schneeberger: Great. Thanks for the color, guys.
Matthew Flannery: Thanks Scott.
Operator: There are no further questions in queue at this time. I’ll return the call to Matt Flannery for any additional or closing remarks.
Matthew Flannery: Great, thanks Operator, and thanks to everyone on the call. We appreciate your time, and I’m glad you could join us today. Our Q3 investor deck has the latest updates, so please take a look at that when you get a chance; and as always, Elizabeth is available to answer your questions. Until we speak again in January, stay safe, have a great holiday season, and we’ll talk to you soon. Operator, you can end the call.
Operator: This does conclude today’s program. Thank you for your participation, and you may now disconnect.
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