RXO - Q2 2023
August 2, 2023
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Welcome to RXO Q2 2023 earnings conference call and webcast. My name is Sylvie, and I will be your operator for today's call. Please note that this conference is being recorded. During this call, the company will make certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities laws, which, by their nature, involve a number of risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. A discussion of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially is contained in the company's SEC filings, as well as in its earnings release. You should refer to a copy of the company's earnings release in the Investor Relations section on the company's website for additional important information regarding forward-looking statements and disclosures and reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measures that the company uses when discussing its results.
I will now turn the call over to Drew Wilkerson. Mr. Wilkerson, you may begin.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining today's earnings call. Joining me today in Charlotte are Chief Financial Officer, Jamie Harris, and Chief Strategy Officer, Jared Weisfeld. I'm pleased with RXO's performance in the second quarter of 2023, despite the soft freight market. Importantly, we accelerated our market share gains and achieved the goals we laid out for you last quarter. We continued to grow brokerage volume year-over-year, and we grew adjusted EBITDA sequentially. In addition, Last Mile is on track to grow EBITDA year-over-year for 2023. Overall, our company-wide gross margin remained strong, 18.6%, and our adjusted EBITDA margin was up sequentially, even though revenue declined quarter-over-quarter. We continued to optimize our cost structure and invested to support our growth. Jamie will discuss our efforts in more detail in a few minutes.
Our Q2 results were driven by another quarter of impressive year-over-year brokerage volume growth, strong brokerage profitability, and improved results from Last Mile. In brokerage, we continued to grow profitably, significantly outperforming the industry. Volume grew by 10% year-over-year, and we achieved gross margin of 15.4%. We set multiple brokerage volume records in the quarter, including new records for total volume, quarterly loads per day, and monthly loads per day during the month of June. Year-over-year volume growth accelerated every month as the quarter progressed. For the last few quarters, we've highlighted the strength of our sales pipeline, which successfully converted to contract volume in the second quarter. Contractual volume remained the most important driver of our brokerage growth. Similar to last quarter, Managed Transportation and LTL synergy loads also contributed to our growth. Overall, RXO's contractual volume grew 19% year-over-year.
Our contract business now represents 79% of our brokerage volume. Bid momentum continued in the quarter, with the number of bids up 23% year-over-year. Let me give you some color on what we're seeing within our brokerage customer verticals. Our retail-ecommerce volumes flipped positive in the second quarter, growing low single digits year-over-year. You'll recall that our retail and e-commerce volumes declined by low single digits year-over-year in the first quarter. This was the first quarter that retail and e-commerce volumes grew year-over-year since Q3 of 2022. Our retail and e-commerce customers' inventories are in a much better position than they have been in a long time. Similar to last quarter, we also saw strength in the home furnishings, building, and technology verticals. When the market is this soft, many companies find it difficult to grow volume.
However, RXO continues to win. Our customer relationships, service, technology, and scale enable us to take share profitably. Our customers are telling us that they continue to reduce the number of carriers they're working with, and our long history of creating value within their supply chains has them awarding more freight to RXO. We're in an excellent position to receive spot loads and project freight when the market turns. As an example of how we're performing for our customers, in the second quarter, RXO won Dell's 2022 North America Full Truckload Carrier of the Year award for the second straight year. Dell told us that our focus on partnership, performance, and flexibility enabled them to meet the challenges of peak demand and last year's disrupted supply chain.
We pride ourselves on the close relationships we have with our customers, and we strive to provide this level of performance for every customer. I now want to spend some time discussing the dynamics that impacted brokerage gross profit per load in the quarter. We saw a significant tightening of capacity in a portion of the country as the quarter progressed. To put it in perspective, the national load-to-truck ratio increased when compared to the first quarter of 2023. There was an acute tightness in the states impacted by produce season.... However, the tightening of capacity increased our cost of purchased transportation in those states. There was no corresponding increase in our sell rate due to the lack of spot market. Despite these dynamics, we still posted solid brokerage gross margin of 15.4% in the quarter, driven by the efforts of our team and our technology.
Jared will talk more about this in a few minutes. Turning to the results within our complementary services, gross margin expanded by 50 basis points sequentially, a strong result. Both year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter, Managed Transportation significantly increased the number of synergy loads it provided to our truck brokerage business. Our Managed Transportation pipeline continues to convert nicely as large shippers strategically choose RXO to manage their transportation spend. In the second quarter, Managed Transportation onboarded a large new customer and secured several key wins that will be onboarded in early 2024. In Last Mile, EBITDA improved on a year-over-year basis as a result of the strategic pricing actions we discussed last quarter. Last Mile's second quarter EBITDA was the highest it's been since the second quarter of 2021. We continue to expect to grow EBITDA within our Last Mile business year-over-year for full year 2023.
We're winning because of our scale, our ability to design unique solutions for our customers, and our superior customer service. Our cutting-edge technology continues to support our business results. In the second quarter, 96% of our loads were created or covered digitally. Looking ahead to the third quarter, we expect another quarter of year-over-year brokerage volume growth. Our playbook remains the same: grow profitably, provide best-in-class customer service supported by industry-leading technology, and control costs while making investments for the future. During the quarter, we announced the expansion of three brokerage offices: Ann Arbor, Michigan, Columbia, South Carolina, and Kansas City, Missouri. Now, shifting to what we're seeing in the market. Both our internal and market data suggest that we're approaching the bottom of this freight cycle. The exact timing of the bottom and the pace of the recovery are subject to the broader macroeconomic environment.
We're closely watching industry-specific leading indicators, including tender rejections, load-to-truck ratios, and carrier exits. We're always getting feedback from our customers, and we're monitoring broader economic data, including industrial production and consumer demand. Jared will cover what we're seeing later in the call. This isn't the first time we've been through a market like this. Our leadership team has decades of experience operating in every kind of freight cycle. We're optimizing our cost structure, leveraging technology, and closely monitoring all the data to make the right decisions for the long term. We're exactly where we need to be in this part of the freight cycle. RXO's volume growth, combined with our optimized cost structure, will lead to significant earnings growth when the cycle inflex. We expect the moves that we're making now will pay off for years to come. With that, I'll turn it over to Jamie.
Jamie Harris (CFO)
Thank you, Drew. Good morning to everyone. As Drew mentioned, we're executing well in what is a tough environment. In the second quarter, we generated $1 billion in revenue, compared to $1.2 billion in the second quarter of 2022. Profitability remains solid, with a gross margin of 18.6%, down 300 basis points year-over-year. Our adjusted EBITDA was $38 million in the quarter, compared to $101 million in the second quarter of 2022, and our adjusted EBITDA margin was 3.9%, down 430 basis points from the prior year. The declines in these metrics were primarily due to lower year-over-year freight rates, the moderation in brokerage gross margins, and the incremental corporate costs of being a standalone public company.
It's important to note that Q2 2022 was the peak of the prior freight cycle and the highest EBITDA in the company's history, a tough comparison we are cycling. Combined, operating expenses and SG&A were down 5% on a sequential basis. This was a direct result of the cost actions we took in the quarter and the variable component of our cost structure. Despite the 5% sequential reduction in revenue, our EBITDA margins improved by 20 basis points from the first quarter of 2023, driven by our strong execution and process engineering initiatives. We continued to optimize our cost structure, which helped absorb the pricing pressure. This positions us well to drive substantial operating margin leverage when the cycle inflex. I'll expand on this in more detail later. Below the line, our interest expense for the quarter was $8 million.
Adjusted dilution earnings per share for the quarter was $0.08. You can find a bridge to adjusted EPS on slide eight of the earnings presentation. Moving to our lines of business. We continued to outperform the brokerage industry. We grew brokerage volume by 10% year-over-year. Profitability in brokerage remained strong, with gross margin of 15.4%. Complementary services gross margin was flat year-over-year and expanded by 50 basis points sequentially. Our Last Mile pricing initiatives were the biggest driver. Please turn to slide nine as we discuss cash flow. Going forward, we'll communicate our cash conversion on a six-month view, which will normalize with quarterly volatility. We had a very strong trailing six-month cash flow conversion of 68%.
This exceeded the estimate of 50% that we shared with you last quarter, due to earlier than expected collection of some accounts receivable. We ended the quarter with $124 million of cash on the balance sheet. Prospectively, there are some second-half cash considerations to highlight. The earlier than expected collections in the second quarter were an approximately $15 million benefit, which will likely reverse in the third quarter. In addition, there will be approximately $10 million of cash outflows associated with fully approved legacy claims. Regarding working capital, we remain comfortable with an annual adjusted cash conversion rate between 40% and 60% of adjusted EBITDA over the long term across market cycles. However, accelerated growth as the cycle turns, will result in a usage of working capital in any given period.
We anticipate the use of working capital at a rate of approximately 7%-9% of each incremental revenue dollar. This can impact short-term cash conversion, depending on the pace of recovery. Moving to restructuring and spend-related costs. Last quarter, we estimated restructuring and spend-related costs of approximately $35 million for the full year 2023, of which $30 million were expected cash outflows. These estimates remain unchanged. We took out additional costs in the quarter and achieved annualized run rate savings of approximately $7 million. These savings help absorb some of the reduction in brokerage gross profit per load in the quarter. We incurred approximately $1 million of restructuring charges to achieve the $7 million in savings, an even better return relative to the first quarter's restructuring actions.
As we previously discussed, we continue to anticipate restructure and spend-related charges to decrease in 2024. We've now achieved year-to-date annualized run rate savings of approximately $27 million. While the savings have been masked by the current freight cycle dynamics and the reduction in brokerage gross profit per load, we are preparing the company for significant operating leverage when the cycle turns. Jared will expand on our growth algorithm in a few minutes. As you can see on slide 10, our balance sheet remains strong, with net leverage at quarter end at approximately 1.6x trailing 12 months adjusted EBITDA. This is at the midpoint of our stated target range and slightly higher when compared to the first quarter as we lap last year's second quarter EBITDA. We executed $2 million of share repurchases in the quarter.
As we discussed last quarter, at a minimum, we plan to repurchase enough shares to cover dilution from restricted stock grants on an annual basis. We'll continue to settle tax withholding obligations for the vesting of pre-spin RSU grants in cash. This was a $2 million cash outflow in the second quarter and a $9 million cash outflow for the six-month period. We estimate a cash outflow of approximately $15 million for RSU tax withholding obligations in 2023. You can find our 2023 modeling assumptions on slide 14 of the deck. They remain unchanged, we continue to expect the following: capital expenditures between $60 million-$65 million. This includes $15 million of strategic investments in real estate to position us for additional growth in our brokerage business.
Capital expenditures total in approximately 1% of revenue over the long term, in line with our guidance at Investor Day. Stock-based compensation expense between $20 million-$22 million. Depreciation and amortization between $70 million-$75 million. Interest expense between $32 million-$34 million, and an adjusted effective tax rate of approximately 25%. You should also model an average diluted share count of approximately 120 million shares. Please note that this does not include any impact associated with potential share repurchases. Overall, given the current state of the macroeconomy and specifically the freight cycle, we're pleased with our execution. We're operating well, have solid cash flow generation and a strong balance sheet. I'd like to turn it over to our Chief Strategy Officer, Jared Weisfeld, who will talk more about our outlook.
Jared Weisfeld (Chief Strategy Officer)
Thanks, Jamie. Good morning, everyone. We continue to outperform the market, growing brokerage volume by 10% year-over-year, with substantial market share gains enabled by our people and technology. We've been investing in artificial intelligence for the last decade. Our industry-leading pricing algorithms helped fuel brokerage gross margin of 15.4% in the quarter, despite softness in the freight cycle. RXO's pricing suite of products is pinged hundreds of thousands of times daily, which allows us to benefit from best-in-class dynamic pricing. I recently hosted an AI webcast with a few of our technology leaders to highlight this differentiated homegrown technology. In the second quarter, 96% of our loads were created or covered digitally, versus 80% in the second quarter of 2022.
Seven-day carrier retention was a strong 78% in the quarter, compared to 73% in the second quarter of 2022. While carriers exited the market during the quarter, albeit at a slow rate, RXO's platform continued to benefit from carrier adoption. Q2 active network carriers increased by 2% sequentially, and we grew weekly active users by 3% on a year-over-year basis. This quarter, we were again in an enviable position, with contractual volume representing 79% of our business, up 200 basis points sequentially, and up 600 basis points when compared to the second quarter of 2022. On a two-year stack, contract volume growth was up 49%, accelerating from 42% in the prior quarter. As we approach the bottom of this freight cycle, I wanted to review how our contract and spot mix can shift during an upturn.
While we'll still haul the same contractual freight, our best-in-class service to our contract customers will yield spot volume, mini-bids, and special projects. Our spot mix can increase quickly on a sequential basis. Revenue per load continues to be impacted by declining fuel prices, increased LTL synergy loads, and length of haul, which was down year-over-year as last year's port diversion volume did not reoccur. When compared to the second quarter of 2022, revenue on a per mile basis declined at a rate less than Revenue per load. Given recent market developments, I thought it would be helpful to give a bit more color on our monthly trends in the quarter and expand on our current view of the freight cycle. I'll refer you to slides 11 through 13 of the presentation. The national load-to-truck ratio moved higher as the quarter progressed.
Capacity tightened significantly in certain states during the quarter and was particularly acute in states impacted by produce season. As you can see on slide 11, this had a direct impact on our cost of purchased transportation, with buy rates moving up every month throughout the quarter. This is a long-term positive development, but it does have the near-term impact of moderating gross margin, and our brokerage gross margin exited the quarter at approximately 14%. Despite tightening market conditions, RXO still delivered strong brokerage gross margin of 15.4% for the quarter. We are very pleased with this margin performance at this point in the freight cycle. Moving to slide 12. We're improving our cross-cycle profitability, delivering higher highs and higher lows. During the prior freight recession in 2019, RXO's adjusted EBITDA declined for four quarters by approximately 70% from peak to trough.
We're now 4 quarters past our most recent peak, RXO's adjusted EBITDA is approximately 3.5x higher when compared to the second quarter of 2020. Our volume in that same period is up by 77%. Not only is our EBITDA significantly higher, but our cost structure is more efficient, and we're still making improvements while simultaneously investing in the business. You can see the impact of that effort in our second quarter results. EBITDA margin was up 20 basis points sequentially, despite a 5% sequential reduction in revenue. Putting this all together, we are priming our model for significant operating leverage when the market inflex. I know all of you have questions about when we think that will be. Our perspective is informed by internal and market data, and we believe that we're approaching the bottom of this freight cycle.
National load-to-truck ratio has moved higher since our last earnings call, and carrier exits are continuing, albeit at a slow pace. Additionally, consumer data has been encouraging, and both retail inventory positions and volumes have improved. While these are encouraging trends, we are still operating in a soft freight market, and as Drew mentioned, the exact timing of the bottom and pace of the recovery are subject to the broader macroeconomic environment. Let's now move to slide 13. Our Q2 gross profit per load was roughly in line with Q1 2020, the lowest level in the last 5 years. Note that this was partly impacted by the growth of LTL synergy loads within our brokerage business. Importantly, since Q1 2020, our brokerage volume has grown by approximately 70%, led by our core full truckload.
Expanding on this a bit more, our exit rate gross profit per load was roughly in line with Q2 2017 levels. By Q4 2017, gross profit per load had recovered by approximately 70%. While we are not calling for this type of recovery, I thought it was important to provide some historical context about how quickly the market can turn. I talked earlier about making higher lows. While we're currently operating at a similar gross profit per load when compared to the Q2 2017, brokerage gross margin during the month of June was 300 basis points higher. This is a business that moves quickly, and we believe that RXO has a best-in-class growth algorithm. When the environment improves, we expect a greater than 50% EBITDA contribution margin, providing a path to rapid earnings growth.
I now look to look forward and give you some more color on what we're expecting in the third quarter. While we don't provide quarterly guidance, I wanted to provide some puts and takes for our brokerage business, given recent market developments. We exited the quarter with incredible brokerage volume momentum. Our brokerage sales pipeline remains robust and is at its highest level since pre-COVID. The pipeline is up 118% and 132% on a 2- and 3-year stack, respectively, despite a lower rate environment. This gives us confidence that we will again grow brokerage volume on a year-over-year basis in the third quarter. However, the third quarter will be negatively impacted by the full run rate impact of the tighter market conditions that developed in the second quarter.... Turning to monthly trends, July trends were similar to the month of June.
While Gross Profit per Load has not yet recovered, it did stabilize and was roughly flat in July when compared to June. Additionally, there were 2 fewer business days in the month. Encouragingly, brokerage volumes grew again on a year-over-year basis in July, and truckload revenue per load trends held flat versus June. This is the 1st time truckload revenue per load has stabilized month-over-month since the 1st quarter of 2022. There are a few ways the remainder of the quarter can play out for our brokerage Gross Margin, and I'll summarize them for you. Let's start with typical seasonality. While we have not yet seen Gross Profit per Load recover, we typically see a seasonal Gross Profit per Load improvement starting in August. To the extent this occurs, Gross Margin percentage for the quarter could be flat sequentially.
Secondly, let's discuss if there's no change in the current environment. If the current environment continues with no gross profit per load recovery and only moderate capacity exits, gross margin % would be down slightly when compared to the second quarter of 2023. The last scenario is that there is a change in either supply or demand. If capacity exits start to accelerate in a more meaningful manner or demand increases heading into back to school and peak season, spot loads would emerge and increase as a % of the mix. While this is a long-term positive, our near-term gross margin % would moderate further in this scenario. To summarize, we're continuing to gain market share profitably with brokerage gross margins that are higher than previous cycles. We're optimizing our cost structure while strategically investing in the business and have an algorithm to deliver rapid earnings growth.
We're improving cross-cycle profitability. Our asset-light business model generates significant free cash flow, and we're returning capital to shareholders. We continue to believe that growth of free cash flow on a per share basis is a primary driver of long-term value creation. Put simply, we just grew volumes by 10% with strong gross margins as we approach the bottom of the cycle. Imagine the possibilities when the freight cycle inflects. With that, I'll turn it over to the operator for Q&A.
Operator (participant)
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, if you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by 1 on your touchtone phone. You will then hear a 3-tone prompt acknowledging your request. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star followed by 2. If you're using a speakerphone, you will need to lift the handset before pressing any keys. Please go ahead and press star 1 now if you have any questions. Your first question will be from Stephanie Moore at Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Stephanie Moore (SVP in Equity Research)
Hi, good morning. Thank you.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Morning, Stephanie.
Stephanie Moore (SVP in Equity Research)
For my first question, you know, really impressive, load growth continues in acceleration in 2Q. Could you maybe just talk a little bit about how you're growing volumes at these levels, you know, double-digit clip, while still holding on to these, you know, strong above-peer margins? Thank you.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Yeah. Thank you, Stephanie. When you look at how we built the business, it's not one particular thing that is allowing us to outperform the market from volume perspective and from a margin perspective. We've got great service with our customers. We pick up and deliver on time. We've got great communication throughout the life of a load cycle. When you look at the relationships with our customers, they're extremely strong, they're long-tenured. We've got a history of creating solutions for them, so it's something they're comfortable coming back to. Our technology, we feel like, is second to none, and it's something that allows them to be able to contribute success to their supply chain, and it allows them to make informed decisions on how they're going to move their transportation.
Then the last thing that I would highlight, as Jared mentioned in, in the, in the opening comments, is that we've got a team that has been here, done this before, knows and understands how to operate in every part of the cycle.
Stephanie Moore (SVP in Equity Research)
Great, that's really helpful. Then just for a follow-up, appreciate the color that you provided for what you're seeing thus far, thus far in July. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about, you know, maybe you know, just high level, just remind us what normal seasonality is for revenue growth as well as gross profit per load, and then the comment of to the point where you do see similar gross profit per load as June and July. Maybe just talk a little bit about why you think that's the case. Is the macro starting to turn? Are you seeing some incremental volumes because of disruption in the space? You know, any additional color would be helpful. Thank you.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Yeah, absolutely. When you look from June to July, it was the first time in a while that we saw revenue per load, load stabilization. We also saw stabilization within our gross profit per load. It's still a soft trucking environment out there, some of the things that have us cautiously optimistic as we look forward are: you're still seeing capacity exit the market, you're starting to see tender rejections pick up for the first time in a while, and if you look at waterfall routing guides, you know, three, four, or five weeks ago, it wasn't getting past the first carrier. You're seeing waterfall routing guides get past the first carrier for the first time in a while, and it's landing somewhere between two and five, where it is. That tells you that there's been a shift in capacity.
It's not a big enough shift to where it has created spot loads, which is ultimately when I believe the inflection will be. We've seen a shift, but not enough to take us out of a soft market overall. Your second part of your question, as far as disruption in the industry, you know, disruption and volatility typically is a good thing if you're a good, strong broker. Obviously, in the LTL, we've seen some orders pick up over the last couple of weeks. One thing that we're watching closely is if you start to see long awkward freight bleed over into the truckload network. We haven't seen that yet, but it's something that we, we do think is a possibility over the coming weeks.
Stephanie Moore (SVP in Equity Research)
... Great. Thank you so much.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Next question will be from Brandon Oglenski at Barclays. Please go ahead.
Brandon Oglenski (Director and Senior Equity Analyst)
Yeah, good morning, thanks for taking my question. Drew, I guess this is more strategic in nature, you know, gross profit per load obviously spiked during the pandemic, and we know all the disruption looking backwards. I guess looking forward, you know, with more competition in the space, and you guys have obviously done a good job going, you know, more and more digital, is the value proposition structurally changed where, like, prior GP per load is just not the right benchmark anymore?
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
That's not how we, we think about it, Brandon. You know, when you look at the industry, you know, there, there's been over 10,000 brokers in the space for as long as I've been doing this, so competition has always been there. To me, this is a cyclical business, when you look at coming out of a low cycle, when you start to see load-to-truck ratios shift, and typically it's somewhere around 6 to 1, you'll see more spot loads. What you'll see happen then is our gross profit per load on our contractual business that we'll still serve will come down, but the gross profit per load on the spot loads will go up.
Brandon Oglenski (Director and Senior Equity Analyst)
Okay. Can you expand on the sales line? Is this expanding business with your current customers? 'Cause I think you also had a stat in the slide saying, you know, like, average users on your platform are only up maybe 3%. Is this going deeper and, and bigger with the customers that you do have already?
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Absolutely. Whenever our customers are coming to us, they, they don't just come back and renew the business that we've got with them. Because we've got great service, because we've got technology that's integrated within their platforms, they come back to us, and they're giving us more freight than what we were hauling for them before. They trust us. We're also bringing on new customers. Make no mistake about it. I mean, this year, we've brought on some new Fortune 100 companies, and, you know, we're, we're excited about the pipeline of bringing on new customers. We've got a strong brand in the marketplace.
Brandon Oglenski (Director and Senior Equity Analyst)
All right. Thank you.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Thank you, Brandon.
Operator (participant)
Next question will be from Ken Hoexter at Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Ken Hoexter (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Hey, great. Good morning. Just want to kind of focus on that, that profitable growth commentary, right, which you, you highlighted a couple times. I just want to understand the contrast with EBITDA falling from 8% margins to 4% margins, maybe dig in how we should think about that move and, then the inflection that you see coming. Then a couple comments on cash calls that you made. There, there was a $10 million legacy claim. It, it seemed like there are a couple things going on with cash, cash flow. Maybe you can, either you or Jamie, dig, dig into that as well. Thanks.
Jared Weisfeld (Chief Strategy Officer)
Hey, Ken. Good morning. It's Jared. I'll start, then I'll hand it over to Jamie. In terms of EBITDA margin comparison, Jamie noted this in his script. I think it's really important to note that last year's Q2 EBITDA was the peak of the pre- prior freight cycle, importantly, was also the peak and the highest company EBITDA that RXO has ever delivered in terms of where we are in the cycle. It's a really tough comparison. In terms of strong profitability, you know, 15.4% gross margins at this point in the freight cycle, given where we are, we're really proud of. You know, you've covered us for a while.
It's part of our DNA in terms of profitable growth, where we operate in a $400 billion market, and we gain share, and we're doing it profitably. I'll hand it over to Jamie in terms of the cash considerations.
Jamie Harris (CFO)
Yeah. Thanks, Jared. Good morning, Ken. On the cash, you know, cash comment, we had actually a really good quarter, very good, first half of the year with conversion. We're about 68%. One of our call-outs is we had about $15 million roughly of collections of accounts receivable that came in earlier than anticipated. That'll be, you know, on an apple-to-apples basis, that'll reverse in the third quarter. It'll be a little bit of a, of a something to consider when you build on a model. The second call-out was we have about a $10 million outflow of cash for some legacy, you know, claims that we've settled.
Everything ordinary course of business, fully accrued, but we mainly call it out just because it is an item that we want you to be able to model in your cash flow.
Ken Hoexter (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
All right. You're calling out just the $10 million on the odd outflow. There were a couple of things you had mentioned there in terms of things that could affect cash coming up in the third quarter.
Jamie Harris (CFO)
Yeah, that's-
Ken Hoexter (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Just want to clarify.
Jamie Harris (CFO)
That was one, and then just-
Ken Hoexter (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay.
Jamie Harris (CFO)
Yeah, just the early collections of some receivables in the, in late in the second quarter.
Ken Hoexter (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Which should reverse itself. Yeah. Okay.
Jamie Harris (CFO)
Yes, that's right.
Ken Hoexter (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Then just minor things, you used some new terms I haven't heard before, synergy loads and some things. What are those?
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Yeah, when you look at the, the LTL loads that we talked about, the, the reason that we have seen growth in LTL over the last couple of quarters is because of our service in truckload. These are customers who are doing business with us on the truckload side, and they're coming to us and saying, "We want to continue to expand. We want to look at other modes of transportation with you." The synergy that we're getting off of our truckload is leading to growth within other verticals for us. When you look at LTL overall, you know, these are highly automated loads on both covered and created, and it's low touch, and it's incremental margin for us as far as what, what we've done there on the LTL side. If.
Make no mistake about it, our business is led by the truckload growth. Truckload growth led the quarter for us as well.
Ken Hoexter (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Then I, I guess on that, are there any immediate reads, given all the volatility? You, you mentioned kind of you're starting to see that. I mean, I would imagine just over the last 3 weeks, we would have seen such a massive shift on the LTL side. Anything you can kind of highlight on the, on the business shift in that part of the business?
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Yeah. We've seen a slight pickup in our LTL loads. You know, again, we're, we're close to all of our customers. They're going to call us as they are experiencing any kind of disruption in the market to be able to create a solution for, for them. The biggest thing that I'm watching for, Ken, is do you start to see freight bleed over into the truckload market? Does that create spot loads? It's not something we've seen at this point, but it's something we're monitoring.
Ken Hoexter (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Thanks for the time and thoughts. Appreciate it.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Thank you, Ken.
Jamie Harris (CFO)
Yeah.
Operator (participant)
Next question will be from Scott Schneeberger at Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.
Scott Schneeberger (Managing Director and Senior Analyst)
Thanks very much. Good morning. I, I guess I'll start off. Could you guys speak a little bit? I understand you're not giving full guidance, but I, you know, you gave some scenario analysis to, to how third quarter may play. Just curious, your visibility into back to school and the holiday season and what you're seeing out there? And then just kind of as a follow on, as you're, as you're gaining share here, where, where, what are the end markets you'd say where you're gaining share? And is it, is it small peers? Is it large peers? Just a sense of that. Thank you.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
We haven't seen a notable change from June to July from what we're tracking. As you start to look out farther than Q3, and you look into Q4, you know, inventory levels are in a much better position than what they were at this point last year. The consumer help has been resilient as we've gone through this cycle. The biggest thing that we've got to be able to see is what happens from a consumer demand perspective. We don't have a forecast or a read on how that's going to play out for Q4 yet at this point. One of the positive trends for us in the third quarter, in the second quarter, is you did see retail and e-commerce volumes picked up for the first time since the middle of last year.
Your, your second question, I think, was about, like, where is the share gains coming from? It, it is coming from everywhere. It's not one specific competitor or shape and size of a competitor. It's really about going to our customers, creating solutions, looking at what fits in well within our network, that's going to create value within their supply chain. Again, one of our customers that we, we've got a long history with, that we do business with, they come back to us time and time again, and they don't just come back and say, "We want to renew what we're doing with you." We want to grow. We're able to take share, and we're able to do it at best-in-class margins.
Scott Schneeberger (Managing Director and Senior Analyst)
Great. Thanks, Drew. Jamie, if I could just over to you, ask on a status report on your cost savings initiative. Where are you? What inning? What's to come? What type of unique savings and spend we should, we should anticipate in upcoming quarters? Thanks.
Jamie Harris (CFO)
Yeah. We've had a really good year in terms of being able to take costs out of the business. To date, we've spent about $9 million on restructuring charges. We had one in this quarter, eight in the first quarter, that's yielded annualized about $27 million worth of run rate savings. You know, we're really pleased with kind of a three-to-one investment ratio, and we'll, you know, we're going to continue to do that if we can find those opportunities. If you look at kind of what inning we're in, you know, what we did when after spin, we really took, I call it a white sheet of paper, and we looked at org structure, we looked at vendors. You know, we had some duplicative roles, we had some duplicative vendors that we were able to consolidate.
We were able to cut some costs there. You know, we looked at facilities to make sure that we can still service the customer with excellence, but maybe put two facilities together, sublet us some space. You know, in terms of the, the inning we're in, you know, from a overall process engineering, you know, we want to become known internally and externally as a, as a continuous improvement company that's always looking to optimize costs. You know, what we're going to do is, you know, really begin to drive how can we get quicker, better, make quicker decisions? At the end of the day, you know, I think it's evident in, in sequentially, if you look at our margins up about 20 basis points sequentially, despite having revenue down, I think you're seeing those cost savings begin to play out in the P&L.
So, you know, we got a lot to do there, but the, the big thing to take away is we want to be a continuous improvement company. We're constantly finding ways to improve our cost structure. When this market inflects, you know, we have opportunity to bring, you know, some really good saving and really good earnings to the bottom line.
Scott Schneeberger (Managing Director and Senior Analyst)
Excellent. Thanks very much.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Next question will be from Ravi Shanker at Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Ravi Shanker (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Thanks, morning, everyone. Drew and team, I think you were the first management team to call the end of the down cycle on your, on your previous conference call, and hopefully you are the first management team to call the beginning of the upcycle on this conference call. A, thank you for your service. B, I think Jared's walkthrough of the different scenarios for the back half of the year are really helpful. Just trying to get a sense of, are, are you guys looking for a U-shaped or a V-shaped recovery here? Because I think it looks like there's a little bit of a delay in the handoff between the downcycle and the upcycle.
Do you think this kind of limbo period lasts for a while, or do you think kind of as we get into back to school and holiday season, we should see a pretty nice recovery among those scenarios?
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Yeah, absolutely. Thank you, Ravi. You know, well, I, I do want to clarify, we didn't call for the inflection yet at this point. We, we said we're approaching the bottom and, you know, the shape of the recovery and the timing of the recovery is still to be determined. I think some of that is going to be determined by overall consumer demand. We're seeing some positive trends. Whenever you think about carriers exiting, whenever you start thinking about tender rejections going up, load-to-truck ratio increasing, you're going farther down the routing guide, those are positive signs, and you have to have those before an inflection. You know, the, the shape and timing of the recovery, I think is still too early to call.
Jared Weisfeld (Chief Strategy Officer)
Ravi, it's, it's Jared, and I think, you know, in your last note, you made a really good point in terms of, you know, as the back half of the year plays out, what we're looking to is the health of the consumer, right? As we noted in the script, the health of consumer, we're seeing some encouraging signs in terms of the resiliency. We want to see how that plays out. As Drew also noted, inventories are in a much better position for our retail and e-commerce customers. Yeah, to the extent that, you know, we'll look, we'll look into the back half of the year to the extent that continues, it could be a really interesting situation, as you think about, as you think about the back half.
Ravi Shanker (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. That's really helpful. Maybe as a follow-up, kind of just looking at the tightening of the routing guide, do you have a sense of how much of that is demand improvement versus kind of supply exiting the market? Kind of when we talk about supply, obviously, we think about, asset-based trucking supply, but are you also seeing something similar on the brokerage side, where, you know, mom-and-pop brokers simply can't compete in an AI arms race or a machine learning arms race, and so kind of that, that part of the tail of the brokerage business is also being consolidated?
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
The biggest thing that we've seen is, if people who have led with rate on a waterfall routing guide, they may not be taking as much of the tenders as what they were taking in, you know, a few months earlier. That, that hasn't held up, whether it's been broker or asset-based, based carriers. For us, you know, if you see the market tighten up more, you're going to see more pressure there, Ravi.
Ravi Shanker (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Very good. Thank you.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Thank you, Ravi.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Next question will be from Scott Group at Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Scott Group (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Hey, thanks. Good morning. Jared, I understand some of the scenarios you laid out for us. I'm just curious, your take, you think it's more likely that EBITDA is higher or lower third quarter versus second quarter, or Second half versus first half, wherever you think you've got better visibility?
Jared Weisfeld (Chief Strategy Officer)
Hey, Scott, appreciate the question. As, as you know, we don't... Well, we don't issue formal, we don't issue quarterly guidance. You know, I wanted to lay out some scenarios in terms of how we think about Q3 is going to play out. I think the first thing to consider is certainly, you know, as we talked about the market tightening that progressed as of Q2 in terms of month-on-month changes in buy rates, that, of course, you have the full run rate impact from market conditions that developed late into Q2, into Q3. You know, as you think about how the quarter progresses, you know, from a July standpoint, as we mentioned, we're seeing some encouraging trends in terms of gross profit per load stabilization. We're seeing revenue per load on truckload flat relative to the month of June.
That's the first time that's occurred since Q1 of last year, so certainly an encouraging development. To your point, you know, as you think about the remainder of the, the quarter, you know, I think it's still too early to call. You know, we're seeing some encouraging signs, as Drew mentioned, with respect to tender rejections and talking about the waterfall on the routing guide. I think that's...
We'll see how the quarter plays out, but I think those three scenarios are, are how we're looking at the rest of the quarter in terms of whether or not we see the typical seasonality uplift that we see, in August in terms of gross profit per load, whether or not the environment remains the same, or whether or not carrier, carriers continue to accelerate in terms of the exit to the market, and then whether or not we've got the staging for peak season.
Scott Group (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Then when I think about net operating margins, last year, they were about 20%. This year, you know, we're modeling closer to 10%. As you think about the next upcycle, is there something that we can do to get to higher ultimate net operating margins in the next upcycle to just get better underlying profitability?
Jared Weisfeld (Chief Strategy Officer)
Yeah, you know, from, from our standpoint, you know, we, we continue to look at free cash flow on a per share basis as our primary, as our primary, North Star. From, from our perspective, I think Jamie hit on this a little bit, right? We're priming the cost structure for significant operating leverage. When the cycle inflex, we expand the EBITDA margins by 20 basis points sequentially, despite a 500 basis point decline in sequential revenue. When you think about what we're doing, you know, I gave some color on the commentary in terms of how to think about contribution margin, right? When we think at this point in the cycle, when the cycle inflex, we're going to have greater than 50% EBITDA contribution margin, which gives us confidence for rapid earnings growth when the cycle inflex.
Scott Group (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Thank you, guys.
Jared Weisfeld (Chief Strategy Officer)
Thanks, Scott.
Operator (participant)
Next question will be from Allison Poliniak at Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
Allison Poliniak (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Hi, good morning. On that, on the volume growth, sort of share gain commentary, is there a way to unbundle that in terms of what's coming from new customers versus increasing your share of wallet with existing customers? Any differential in margin contribution, you know, if it's coming from one way or the other? Thanks.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Yeah, no, absolutely. The majority of it is coming from existing customers, because typically, whenever you're bringing on a new customer, you're not starting out with huge chunks of business. You're showing your capabilities, you're showing them what your technology can do, and you continue to move the ball forward over time. The majority of it's coming from existing customers, and if it's lanes that we have strong capacity in, they're power lanes for us across the country, it's easy to integrate, and the margins run similar to how the overall business is performing. If it's a newer lane and somewhere, somewhere that we're building out a power lane, then the margins improve over time.
Allison Poliniak (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Then the business wins in Managed Transportation, understanding those wins will probably use more than one of your, your lines of businesses. You know, is there a way to understand sort of what that contribution could be in 2024 or sort of an algorithm there? Thanks.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
If you look right now, 62% of our revenue comes from customers who do business with more than 1 line of business, and we think that that can continue to improve. We're just scratching the service, surface with what we're able to do from the integrations that we've got across our customers.
Allison Poliniak (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Thank you.
Jared Weisfeld (Chief Strategy Officer)
Allison, it, it's Jared.
Allison Poliniak (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Yes.
Jared Weisfeld (Chief Strategy Officer)
We, we secured several key wins in the quarter, to your point, just to, to emphasize that, that we feel comfortable are going to be onboarded in early 2024. You know, growth of freight under management within our Managed Transportation business is a real strategic priority for the organization. When we think about the ability, we talked about in the quarter in terms of sequential and year-on-year synergy loads from our Managed Transportation business, they were up significantly. As we think about the confidence level we have with the business momentum and Managed Transportation on those new wins, we think that's going to be a really exciting opportunity for us next year.
Allison Poliniak (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Perfect. That's helpful. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Next question will be from Thomas Wadewitz at UBS. Please go ahead.
Thomas Wadewitz (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Yeah, good morning. I wanted to see if I could ask clarification on the load growth comment. When you talk about 10% load growth, is that truckload growth or is that including LTL growth? If it does include LTL, what did the truckload volume growth look like?
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
That is our overall load count growth, Tom, was 10%, and the majority of that was came from the truckload. We haven't broken it out, but the more that we grow LTL is something that we should consider.
Thomas Wadewitz (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
You were pretty close to 10% on truckload volume growth, too? I guess the reason I ask is just obviously, LTL loads, you know, revenue per load is a lot lower, and so you can kind of skew the load growth number if you, if you see a meaningful change in the LTL loads.
Jared Weisfeld (Chief Strategy Officer)
Hey, Tom, it's Jared. Yeah, no. To Drew's point, you know, a majority of that growth that we talked about in the quarter is coming from our core full truckload. I think it's important to emphasize also, you know, when we think about the LTL loads that we're winning, why we're winning them, right? We're winning them because we're servicing that contractual freight on full truckload so well. You know, we talked about LTL synergy loads in the quarter contributing as a % contributing to growth. You know, maybe to give you comfort or to give you some more perspective, you know, LTL mix in the quarter was relatively unchanged relative to the prior quarter. To Drew's point, you know, a majority of our volume growth in the quarter was certainly attributable to our core full truckload.
Thomas Wadewitz (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. All right, great. When I look at, you know, one of the big challenges, obviously, revenue per load, down pretty significantly year-over-year and down sequentially, quite a bit as well. How, how do we... You know, I mean, the market is going to do what it's going to do, right? How do we think about responsiveness of revenue per load for RXO when spot rates move up? Because you're, you know, you're at a very high contractual level, but, you know, I think broker contracts can be pretty flexible. How, how do you think about your revenue per load responsiveness when spot rates move up? Is that a, you know, a couple of quarter lag?
Do we have to wait for the next bid season to really see the kind of responsiveness and improvement in your, your revenue per load? Just trying to understand that, you know, that time lag between the two.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
The market can turn quick, Tom, I don't think that, you know, I mean, I, I don't, I don't think anybody's got a crystal ball on when it, when it's going to turn, but it can, it can inflect at a very fast rate. Whenever you start to see spot loads, those will be at a higher revenue per load. How, how much higher they will be at a revenue per load will depend on how tight capacity comes during that time.
Thomas Wadewitz (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
But if you're running 79% of loads or contract, how like, maybe I should ask it a little bit more fine, fine point on it. How quickly would your contract revenue per load respond to change in spot? Is, you know, are your contracts all one year, or is there a mix where you can get to some a lot quicker than that?
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
It, it, it varies, Tom. You know, a lot of our contracts are 1 year, but you also, whenever a market turns like that, you start to see more mini-bids, and you start to see more project freight come out. So, you can see your contract, you can see your contract revenue per load go up during that same time, and some of that's just a function of, carrier give backs within the customer.
Jared Weisfeld (Chief Strategy Officer)
Encouragingly, in the month of July, we talked about Full Truckload Revenue per load, flat sequentially relative to June. We are starting to see some encouraging trends, and that was the first time that remained flat since since Q1 of last year, Tom.
Thomas Wadewitz (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Sounds good. Thanks for the time.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Next question will be from Jack Atkins at Stephens. Please go ahead.
Jack Atkins (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay, great. Thanks, good morning. I guess just maybe following up on Tom's question. If I go back to last quarter's call, I think the comment you guys made was that you thought you could skew or change that mix of contract versus spot by 1,000 basis points relatively quickly when the market began to turn. I guess, how do you, you know, A, is that still feel like that's the case? B, you know, if that is, how do you square the idea of maybe taking market share and keeping market share with the reputational kind of challenges of going back to customers and, you know, walking back your rate commitments?
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Yeah. I'll start with the latter part of your question. The reputational thing is something that we've got a strong reputation. That's why you've seen us outperform over the last decade. You know, Jack, if you remember, from 2013 to through 2021, we grew 3x faster than what the brokerage industry has grew. Over the last year, you've seen our share gains accelerate. That's because we have strong service. We've got great relationships with our customers. We've given them solutions that have had huge impacts on their business. The reputational piece is, is not one that we, it plays to our, our advantage.
Jared Weisfeld (Chief Strategy Officer)
... Yeah, Jack, you know, I think you're, you're exactly right. I mean, we touched on this a little bit in the prepared remarks, and we talked about this last quarter as well. You know, our ability, you know, to mix shift aggressively to the contract from contract versus spot, we think is, is, is best in class. You know, we're a flexible and agile organization. We're still going to haul the same contractual freight, to Drew's point. Reputation and ability to service our customers is paramount to the organization, but then, because of how well we service that contractual freight, we're going to get rewarded the mini-bids, the special projects, the spot freight. We're going to move fast.
We have in cycles, to your point, moved the spot contract mix by as much as 1,000 basis points in a given quarter. Obviously, that's going to be a function of how quick the recovery is, but I think the important takeaway is that, you know, we're going to get rewarded that spot volume because of how well we service that contractual freight.
Jack Atkins (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay, got it. I guess thinking about the longer term outlook, you know, a year ago, when you all spun out from XPO, you know, I think that if we kind of fast-forward to where we are now, it's been a more challenging down cycle than I think really anybody would have anticipated. You know, the trough is maybe deeper, and it's a, you know, longer kind of haul back to that $475 million-$525 million kind of longer term target that you guys laid out for adjusted EBITDA in 2027. You know, are you guys still comfortable with that longer term target? You know, have sort of the key building blocks of that changed some just based on, you know, how the last year's progressed?
Any sort of, you know, kind of comments on that?
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
We're still, we're still comfortable with the $475-$525 EBITDA range for 2027 that we provided you with. We're making the right moves and investing in the business. We're building the foundation and preparing for the inflection. Jack, when you look at what we're doing within the business, we're creating higher highs and higher lows. You know, we're setting ourself very, up very well for when the market turns, so we're, we're in a good position right now.
Jack Atkins (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Thank you for the time.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Next question will be from Jordan Alliger at Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Jordan Alliger (VP and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Yeah, hi, morning. Just a quick question, around the SG&A. As you noted in your presentation, it's a, it's a pretty good sequential as well as year-over-year decline, and you mentioned cost initiatives and stuff in the call a few times, but. I guess there's the variable cost aspect. Can you maybe talk a little bit more specifically about some of the actions taken, and how do we think about that going forward? Thanks.
Jamie Harris (CFO)
Yes, this is Jamie. Yeah, we, we were able to take out, you know, run rate of $27 million, which we talked about. The overwhelming majority of that is what we would call structural cost removal, where it will not be added back, you know, as volume increases. I think you'll see, as Jared mentioned, that, you know, we're positioning the company from a cost structure to have a very good contribution margin as the market inflects. You've heard us talk before about productivity, you know, loads per head per day. That is set up to, to continue to grow, to continue to become more productive. You know, so the cost structure, you know, some came out of SG&A, some came out of direct OpEx.
The way I would think about it, predominantly, it is a structural removal of cost that won't be added back with growth.
Jordan Alliger (VP and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Great, thanks. Then just a quick follow-up, just on contracts again. Obviously, 79% is a pretty high level. Drew, maybe if you could just comment on sort of how you think about contracts over the cycle, how you feel, you know, that could flex over time, up or down, and, and, and is this, you know, level... I, I mean, assume it's a level that you feel comfortable with because you're there, but sort of strategically, you know, why you sort of boosted it up so high right now? Thanks.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
In a softer market, there's not a lot of spot loads. The way to grow your business is to grow it through contractual business. For customers who trust you, the first step that you get is through contractual business. You know, contractual businesses are base, and spot loads come as the market inflects, as you start to see changes in capacity. The first place that customers lean on for whenever they see a tightness in capacity is for the people they have the strongest relationships with. When the market does inflect, we are in a very good position because of the relationships that we've got with our customers and the service that we provide to them.
Jordan Alliger (VP and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Is there one particular quarter or two, though, where we could look towards the bulk of the renewals? Like, is it going to start in the fourth quarter of this year, or is it more second quarter next year? Thanks.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
typically, you start to see it in Q4 and Q1.
Jordan Alliger (VP and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
All right. Thanks so much.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. At this time, I would like to turn the call back over to Mr. Wilkerson for closing remarks.
Drew Wilkerson (CEO)
Thank you, Sylvie. In the second quarter, RXO delivered significant brokerage volume growth and solid margin performance. This is an important part of the freight cycle. The decisions that we're making right now will position us for significant earnings growth when the cycle inflects. We've got a seasoned leadership team that's focused on continuing to take share while optimizing our cost structure and making the investments for future growth. With our cutting-edge technology, massive capacity, and the best people and strong customer relationships, RXO is well positioned over the long term. We remain confident in our ability to deliver our 2027 adjusted EBITDA targets. Thank you for your time today, and I look forward to seeing many of you in the coming weeks.
Operator (participant)
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, this does indeed conclude your conference call for today. Once again, thank you for attending, and at this time, we do ask that you please disconnect your lines.