John Diez
Analyst · Vertical Research
Thanks, Robert. Total company results for the second quarter on Page 6. Operating revenue of $2.6 billion in the second quarter, up 10% from the prior year primarily reflects recent acquisitions. Comparable earnings per share from continuing operations were $3 in the second quarter, down from $3.61 in the prior year. The earnings decline reflects weaker market conditions in used vehicle sales and rental partially offset by higher contractual earnings. Return on equity, primary financial metric was 16%. The year-over-year decline reflects weaker used vehicle sales and rental market conditions. Year-to-date free cash flow increased to $71 million from $16 million in the prior year, primarily due to lower capital expenditures partially offset by higher working capital needs related to recent acquisitions and lower proceeds from the sale of used vehicles and properties. Turning to fleet management results on Page 7. Fleet Management Solutions operating revenue increased 2% due to higher choice lease revenue, partially offset by lower rental demand. ChoiceLease revenue grew 10%, with about half coming from organic lease revenue growth and the remainder from intersegment lease revenue from Cardinal vehicles operating in our Dedicated segment. Pretax earnings and fleet management were $133 million and down year-over-year as anticipated. Results reflect lower used vehicle pricing compared to elevated levels in the prior year as well as weaker rental demand. Rental utilization on the power fleet was 69% and down from 75% in the prior year. Rental results for the quarter continue to reflect market conditions that remain weak. We saw some seasonal improvement in rental demand from Q1 to Q2, but the increase was below what we typically see and not enough to signal a freight recovery. Our fleet pricing was in line with prior year. During the quarter, higher ChoiceLease results and benefits from our maintenance cost savings initiatives partially offset the earnings impact from weaker market conditions in used vehicle sales and rental. Fleet Management EBT as a percent of operating revenue was 10.4% in the second quarter and is expected to be low double digits for full year 2024, in line with our expectations given where we are in the freight cycle, but below our recently increased long-term target of low teens. Page 8 highlights used vehicle sales results for the quarter. As anticipated, market conditions for used vehicle sales continue to weaken from elevated levels in the prior year. Compared with prior year, used tractor proceeds declined 19% and used truck proceeds declined 27%. On a sequential basis, proceeds for tractors increased 5% and proceeds for trucks decreased 10%. Tractor pricing remained relatively stable, whereas truck pricing continued to decline. During the quarter, we sold 6,000 used vehicles, down sequentially up versus prior year. Used vehicle inventory increased to 9,500 vehicles at quarter end, reflecting higher lease expirations. Inventory was just above our targeted inventory range and is expected to decline as fewer rental units are expected to be out serviced during the balance of the year. Although used vehicle pricing declined proceeds remain above residual value estimates used for depreciation purposes. Slide 19 in the appendix provides historical sales proceeds and current residual value estimates for used tractors and trucks for your information. Turning to Supply Chain on Page 9. Operating revenue increased 14%, driven by recent acquisitions and organic growth across all industry verticals. Supply chain earnings increased by $9 million from prior year, primarily reflecting stronger automotive performance. Supply Chain EBT as a percent of operating revenue was 8.6% in the quarter and is expected to remain in line with the segment's long-term target of high single digits for full year 2024. Turning to Dedicated on Page 10. Operating revenue increased 48%, reflecting the acquisition of Cardinal Logistics. Dedicated EBT increased from prior year, reflecting improved operating performance partially offset by acquisition, integration and other related costs. EBT continued to benefit from favorable driver conditions as the number of open positions and time to fill for our professional drivers continue to improve. Dedicated EBT as a percent of operating revenue was 7.6% in the quarter and in line with the segment's long-term high single-digit target. Turning to Slide 11. Year-to-date, lease capital spending of $933 million was below prior year, reflecting lower lease sales activity. Year-to-date, rental capital spending of $294 million was also below prior year, reflecting lower planned rental investments. We reduced our full year 2024 lease capital spending forecast by approximately $400 million due to lower sales activity, reflecting delayed decisions and economic uncertainty, as well as increased redeployment activity. 2024 lease spending is now expected to be approximately $2.2 billion and our year-end lease fleet is expected to increase moderately from second quarter loans. Our forecast for rental capital spending is unchanged from our prior forecast and our 2024 year-end rental fleet is expected to be down by approximately 2% year-over-year. In rental, we continue to increase capital spending on trucks versus tractors as trucks have benefited from relatively stable demand and pricing trends. At year-end 2023, trucks represented approximately 60% of our rental fleet, up from 49% in 2018. Our full year 2024 capital expenditures for trucks is now expected to be approximately $2.9 billion and below prior year. We expect approximately $600 million in proceeds from the sale of used vehicles in 2024 with full year net capital expenditures expected to be approximately $2.3 billion. Turning to Slide 12. Our 2024 full year forecast for operating cash flow is unchanged at $2.4 billion, and our forecast for free cash flow has increased to a range of positive $150 million to $250 million. As shown, operating cash flow remained strong, driven by growth in our contractual lease, dedicated and supply chain businesses, which comprise over 85% of Ryder's operating revenue. Our free cash flow profile has changed significantly since the implementation of our balanced growth strategy in late 2019. Lower targeted lease growth as well as COVID effects and OEM delays resulted in lower capital spending and higher free cash flow. Proceeds from the exit of the U.K. FMS business also benefited free cash flow in 2022. The summary on the right side of the slide illustrates the free cash flow generated by the business prior to investing in fleet growth. In 2024, since we do not expect fleet growth given market conditions, our increased free cash flow forecast of positive $200 million at the midpoint of our range is the same as our forecast for free cash flow prior to growth. Our capital allocation priorities remain unchanged and are focused on supporting our strategy to drive long-term profitable growth and return capital to our shareholders. Our top priority is to continue to invest in organic growth. Balance sheet leverage of 245% at the end of the quarter was below our 250% to 300% target range and continues to provide ample capacity to fund organic growth and strategic investments. as well as to return capital to shareholders through share repurchases and dividends. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Robert to discuss our 2024 outlook.