Cristina Gallo-Aquino
Analyst
Thanks, John. Total company operating revenue of $2.6 billion in the first quarter was in line with prior year as contractual revenue growth in supply chain was offset by lower revenue in Dedicated. Comparable earnings per share from continuing operations were $2.54 in the first quarter, up 3% from the prior year, reflecting benefits from share repurchases, partially offset by lower earnings. The decline in earnings was due to lower supply chain performance compared to a robust prior year, partially offset by a lower tax rate driven by discrete items in the quarter from stock-based compensation tax benefits. Return on equity, our primary financial metric was 17%, in line with the prior year. Free cash flow increased to $273 million from $259 million in the prior year, reflecting reduced capital expenditures, partially offset by higher working capital needs. In Fleet Management Solutions, operating revenue was consistent with prior year. Earnings before taxes were $99 million up versus prior year, reflecting continued execution on our strategic initiatives. Used vehicle results reflect a year-over-year improvement and better-than-expected performance. In rental, demand remained below prior year, but we are encouraged that the sequential seasonal decline was in line with historical trends, as mentioned earlier. Lower rental activity was partially offset by higher rental power fleet pricing, which was up 3% year-over-year. Rental utilization on the power fleet, was 68% and up from the prior year of 66% on an average fleet that was 13% smaller. Fleet Management EBT as a percent of operating revenue was 7.9% in the first quarter, up from prior year, but below our long-term target of low teens over the cycle. In used vehicle sales, year-over-year used tractor pricing increased 6% and truck pricing declined 5%. On a sequential basis, pricing decreased for both tractors and trucks, with tractors down 3% and trucks down 4%. Sequential pricing reflected a lower retail sales mix as retail pricing remained stable. In the first quarter, 61% of our sales volume went through our retail channel, down from 69% in the fourth quarter. Our retail mix was above prior year levels of 56%. During the quarter, we sold 4,600 used vehicles, up 1,000 units sequentially and down versus the prior year. However, volumes for trucks, our largest inventory class were up year-over-year. Used vehicle inventory of 9,500 vehicles is slightly above our targeted inventory range. Used vehicle pricing remained above residual value estimates used for depreciation purposes. Slide 21 in the appendix provides historical sales proceeds and current residual value estimates for used tractors and trucks for your information. In supply chain, operating revenue increased 3%, driven by new business in omnichannel retail, partially offset by lost business and lower volumes in automotive. Earnings before taxes decreased 17% from prior year due to lower automotive results and, to a lesser extent, productivity of new business ramping up. Year-over-year comparisons were challenging in supply chain due to record first quarter performance in the prior year. Supply Chain EBT as a percent of operating revenue was 7% in the quarter at the segment's long-term target of high single digits. In Dedicated, operating revenue decreased 5% due to lower fleet count reflecting the prolonged freight downturn. Earnings before taxes were below prior year, reflecting lower operating revenue, partially offset by strategic initiatives [indiscernible] Dedicated EBT single-digit target. Next, let me cover capital expenditures. First quarter lease capital spending of $314 million was below prior year, reflecting the timing of replacement activity. In 2026, we're forecasting lease spending to be $1.9 billion, reflecting higher replacement activity versus the prior year. First quarter rental capital spending of $37 million was below prior year as expected. In 2026, we're forecasting rental capital spending of approximately $100 million. reflecting lower planned replacement activity. Our ending rental fleet is now expected to decrease 3% during 2026, and our average rental fleet is now expected to be down 11%. The rental fleet remains well below peak levels as we manage through an extended market slowdown. We continue to closely monitor market conditions and may increase our planned capital expenditures if improved market conditions persist. In rental, in recent years, we shifted capital spending to trucks versus tractors as trucks have historically benefited from relatively stable demand and pricing trends. At quarter end, trucks represented approximately 60% of our rental fleet. Our full year 2026 capital expenditures forecast of approximately $2.4 billion is above prior year. We expect approximately $500 million in proceeds from the sale of used vehicles in 2026, in line with prior year. Full year 2026 net capital expenditures are expected to be approximately $1.9 billion. In addition to increasing the earnings and return profile of the business, our transformed contractual portfolio is also generating significant operating cash flow. Improving the overall cash generation profile of the business is one of the essential elements of our balanced growth strategy. Better earnings performance is driving higher cash flow generation and, in turn, is delevering our balance sheet at a more rapid pace. This momentum is creating incremental debt capacity given our target leverage range of between 2.5 and 3x. As shown on the slide, over a 3-year period, we expect to generate approximately $10.5 billion from operating cash flow and used vehicle sales proceeds. Our operating cash flow will benefit from increased contractual earnings. This creates approximately $3.5 billion of incremental debt capacity, resulting in $14 billion available for capital deployment. Over the same 3-year period, we estimate approximately $9.5 billion will be deployed for the replacement of lease and rental vehicles and for dividends. This leaves around $4.5 billion, which equates to approximately 60% of our quarter end market cap available for flexible deployment to support growth and return capital to shareholders. We estimate about half of our flexible deployment capacity will be used for growth CapEx, and the remaining will be available for discretionary share repurchases and strategic acquisitions and investments. Our capital allocation priorities remain focused on profitable growth, strategic investments and returning capital to our shareholders. Our top priority is to invest in organic growth. Aligned with these priorities, in the first quarter, we funded lease and rental replacement CapEx of approximately $400 million and returned $272 million to shareholders through buybacks and dividends. We've been executing under our discretionary 2 million share repurchase program authorized in the fourth quarter of 2025. Our balance sheet remains strong with leverage of 269% at quarter end, in our target range and continue to provide ample capacity to fund our capital allocation priorities. With that, I'll turn the call over to John to discuss our outlook.