Brian Comstock
Analyst · Greenbrier. Throughout the call today, you will hear us referring to recurring revenue. We define that as Leasing & Management Services revenue excluding the impact of syndication activity. And with that, I will hand the call over to Lorie
Thanks, Lorie, and good afternoon, everyone. Not only was it a great quarter, but our operations performed exceptionally well for the entire year. The leasing team continues to produce results. They grew the fleet by 300 units in the quarter with a stable fleet utilization of around 99%. In fiscal 2024, we invested over $260 million on a net basis in the fleet, supporting our multiyear goal of doubling recurring revenue. As Lorie mentioned, we are 25% of the way toward the goal and expect a stable stream of higher margin revenue that reduces the impact of market cyclicality on our results. We remain very disciplined in our approach and will continue investing up to $300 million per year on a net basis, provided that the fleet additions meet our return criteria. Lease renewal rates continue to grow at double digits and during the quarter, we renewed all units that were coming off lease. In fiscal 2025, only 10% of the leases are up for renewal. Given the ongoing strength in the leasing market, we are confident we will successfully renew or re-market these units. In September, we renewed and extended our non-recourse warehouse debt facility, extending the revolving period to September of 2027, reducing the size by $100 million to $450 million and reducing all-in pricing by more than 25 basis points. This prudently aligns a facility to our current needs at an expected lower interest expense. Our average interest rate remains in the mid-4% range, significantly lower than current market interest rates. Turning to the new railcar market, Greenbrier secured orders of 4,400 units worth $575 million in the quarter. With demand continuing across most railcar types, our backlog is strong at 26,700 units with an estimated value of $3.4 billion, which provides significant revenue visibility. The current market is different than the boom-bust-build cycles of the past. At present, it is a supply-driven replacement market that allows us to predict steadier demand over time. Traffic and velocity gains are projected to be modest and stable, further minimizing railcar demand swings. Intermodal and carload traffic are projected to grow modestly in 2025. North American railcar fleet utilization is about 81%, with 312,000 units of the fleet and storage as of October. The true surplus percentage of railcars is lower than the 19% reported due to chronically idled railcar types. Overall, utilization has been consistent during the last year, driving lease rates higher with longer lease terms in response to tighter fleet supply. Not only has the North American market changed over the last several years, but Greenbrier’s Manufacturing approach has also evolved. We are focused on maximizing our industrial footprint. This means managing our production capacity for new railcar manufacturing and addressing the growing need for programmatic railcar restoration activities. This involves repurposing existing railcars into new equipment service through re-bodying work, stretch conversions, re-racking, or deck conversions. It also includes tanker retrofits and re-qualifications. This work is performed for large fleet owners who require work on hundreds and sometimes thousands of railcars at a time. These customers need streamlined and cost-saving options as they diversify and optimize their fleets to meet their own efficiency targets. In fiscal 2025, we will perform these activities on several thousand units. This work is accretive to Greenbrier and is in addition to our new railcar backlog or current delivery guidance. Our international backlog remains healthy and our sales pipeline is strong. European production capacity is mostly allocated through fiscal 2025 as volumes through our European leasing channel continue to grow. Our ability to originate and syndicate leases is integral to the long-term performance of our European Manufacturing business and we see potential for further growth. In Brazil, we are observing an increase in demand that aligns with expectations as customers finalize infrastructure investments and transition to purchasing of railcars. In Q4, we delivered 7,000 railcars, a significant increase from 5,400 in the prior quarter. Manufacturing gross margin in the fourth quarter rose sharply to 14.8%, marking the highest gross margin in over six years. Q4 benefited from strong syndication activity and product mix. Importantly, there has been meaningful margin growth since we initiated our strategic plan 18 months ago. Many of the efficiency gains will be sustained and we continue to work on other initiatives, including our insourcing activity. Expanding in-house fabrication for basic primary parts and sub-assemblies remains on track. We intend to complete the project in Q3 of fiscal 2024 and realize the remaining benefits. In Q4, syndication of 1,600 units with multiple investors generated strong liquidity and margins. In fiscal 2024, we syndicated 6,000 units, the second highest level in our history. This performance shows that liquidity and demand remain solid in the market. Maintenance Services achieved another solid quarter. We continue to focus on initiatives to improve efficiencies around car flow, cycle times and employee retention. These initiatives have led to year-over-year increase in the gross margin for Maintenance Services. With major contributions from our experienced and agile management team, Greenbrier is successfully implementing our strategic plan, positioning us well for the future. I’ll now turn the call over to Michael.