U-Haul - Q4 2020
May 28, 2020
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Good day, and welcome to the AMERCO Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2020 Year-End Investor Conference Call and Webcast. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your touchtone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Sebastien Reyes. Please go ahead.
Sebastien Reyes (Head of Investor Relations)
Good morning, and thank you for joining us today. Welcome to the AMERCO Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2020 Year-End Investor Call. Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that certain statements during this call, including without limitation, statements regarding revenue, expenses, income, and general growth of our business, may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Safe Harbor provisions of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Forward-looking statements are inherently subject to risks and uncertainties, some of which cannot be predicted or quantified. Certain factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected.
For discussion of the risks and uncertainties that may affect AMERCO's business and future operating results, please refer to Form 10-K for the year ended March thirty-one, 2020, which is on file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. I'll now turn the call over to Joe Shoen, Chairman of AMERCO.
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Good morning. Thanks for being on the phone with us. Much of what I have to say relates to the April and May timeframes. As you all know by now, U-Haul is part of the critical, essential infrastructure in the United States. As such, we remained open through the recent pandemic, and we did the same in Canada. There have been, and are still evolving, many blows to the U-Haul organization. However, this is a disciplined group, and we will work through matters as they become clear. Obviously, our self-move rental revenues were cut substantially. It has not yet returned to last year's level, let alone the levels we planned on. Today, I have many locations and some markets where our self-move revenue and transactions are above last year. However, this is still the exception, not the rule. Self-storage revenue has held up through March, April, and May.
This revenue, though, is below plan and could well deteriorate more. This is an evolving situation. Sales of moving supplies reflects our decreased moving business. Competitive responses by our self-storage competitors has too often been knee-jerk reactions to lower rates. With many markets arguably oversupplied, we should brace for continued rate pressure. Like other people in the vehicle business, sales out of our fleet were and remain far below what is necessary to roll the fleet over. This has tied up some cash. Automaker shutdowns and continued difficulty in restarting their enormous factories has created a temporary inability to acquire new fleet. That missed new fleet simply will not be caught up in the short term. However, this largely just kicks the can down the road and will increase CapEx sometime in the future. We have experienced similar disruption in the past and basically know what to do.
However, at some point, we need the government to allow the economy to attempt to restart. Many of our other expenses were largely fixed in the short term. We have cut multiple expense categories, but in no case can measure it with the drastic revenue declines, which we don't believe will continue. Of course, sales teams across the continent have scratched hard for new business. We have certainly found some. We plan to hold on to these new customers into the future. As you've heard before, we have a full complement of touch-free, consumer-facing digital tools. These served us well in our self-move and self-storage business. Some of the customers who experienced these tools may prefer to use them going ahead. We're leading the industry, I believe, in both our self-move and self-storage touch-free tools.
This experience has validated our multiyear investment in development and rollout of these tools. Our vehicle maintenance teams remained on deck over the recent months. As a result, our fleet is fully maintained and ready for more use. In summary, U-Haul personnel have experienced trauma before. We have a committed, focused management and operational team. I expect we will make the most of recent events, learn some lessons, and make the best of the situation as the economy restarts. With that, I'll turn it over to Jason for some of the specific numbers for year-end.
Jason Berg (CFO)
Thanks, Joe. Yesterday, we reported fourth quarter earnings of $6.24 a share, as compared to $0.04 a share for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2019.
In the fourth quarter of this year, we recorded an additional net tax benefit of $146 million. That's $7.45 per share, as we recognize the effects of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security, or CARES Act. We feel another useful supplemental measurement is to look at our earnings excluding this item. This results in adjusted losses for the quarter of $1.21 per share. For the full year of fiscal 2020, we reported net earnings of $22.55 per share. In fiscal 2019, we reported $18.93. Also included in our fiscal year 2020 results was the CARES Act tax benefit.
Excluding this benefit, our earnings per share for the full year in fiscal 2020 were $15.10. We have a reconciliation of this in our press release as well. Before I go into some comments on the business, I want to provide some additional color regarding the CARES Act tax adjustment that I just mentioned. The CARES Act allows companies with net operating losses to carry those back up to five years, and it also made some other technical corrections that we've availed ourselves of. We have net operating losses that have previously been recorded in our deferred tax provision, assuming that we would use them in the future at today's current 21% federal income tax rate. These tax losses were generated largely from our reinvestment activities used in growing the business.
With the CARES Act now, which allows us to carry these losses back to years before the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, these losses are now valued and are being used at the previous 35% federal income tax rate. It's this difference in rate that accounts for the majority of the unusual income tax benefit this quarter. We've isolated this EPS effect of the tax adjustment, so you can evaluate our performance without it. Now, moving on to some comments on the business. Equipment rental revenue decreased 2% or about $11 million for the quarter. We finished the full year up $39 million. That's about 1.5%. First, some positives from the year. We increased the number of retail locations, as well as trucks and trailers in the rental fleet.
Also, revenue for both our in-town and one-way markets improved across trucks and trailers. However, in the fourth quarter, these improvements were more than offset by a reduction in the volume of corporate account rentals, along with the decline in overall rental activity during the second half of March due to the COVID-19 related stay-at-home orders. By eliminating some of the noise, and I'll call the noise the last-mile business decline, the COVID-19 related decline, and we did have an extra day this February. Our core moving revenues were closer to +3% in the fourth quarter and +2% for the year. Revenues this April for our self-moving equipment have experienced an approximate 30% decline. Looking into May, the decline in equipment revenues has been improving.
Capital expenditures on new rental trucks and trailers were $1.374 billion for fiscal 2020. Last year, in fiscal 2019, we invested $1.163 billion. While proceeds from the sale of retired rental equipment were $678 million, that's up from $603 million in 2019. Our initial projection for rental equipment CapEx in fiscal 2021 contemplates a decrease in box truck, cargo van, and pickup spending. We are estimating just under $850 million. That's before netting any sales proceeds against them. We're also projecting a reduction in proceeds from the sales of rental equipment, resulting in net fleet CapEx of approximately $460 million. Just to remind everyone, this year, that number was close to $700 million.
This projection assumes reduced sales in April and May due to constraints on auction locations from the COVID-19. Proceeds from the sale of rental equipment were down right around $40 million in April of 2020 compared to April of last year. Storage revenues were up over $12 million. That's about 13% for the quarter, and for the full year, we were up 14% or $51 million. The growth in revenues and units rented comes from a combination of occupancy gains at existing locations and from the addition of new facilities to the portfolio. Looking at our occupied unit count at March 31st of this year compared to last year, we were up 49,300 more occupied rooms.
This quarter, we took a look at facilities that had occupancy over 80%. As of March first of this year, we had 725 owned locations, that's about 60%, that were over 80% occupancy. Compared to last year at this time, that's an increase of 48 locations, and the average occupancy at these 725 locations was up just slightly at a little over 90%. Our real estate-related CapEx for the year was $751 million. That's down from $1.3 billion last year. During fiscal 2020, we added $5.8 million net rentable sq ft. About $1.2 million of that came online during the fourth quarter. In April and May of this year, we've opted to slow the development of new self-storage projects to preserve liquidity.
We will calibrate our capital spending based in part upon the evolving effects of COVID-19. Operating earnings at the moving and storage segment decreased by $34 million for the quarter, resulting in a loss of $21 million. For the fiscal year, operating earnings decreased by about $97 million to $472 million. I want to go through some of the, some of the expense highlights. Depreciation expense associated with, with the fleet increased $13 million for the quarter, $55 million for the full year, as we continue to add new equipment to the fleet in fiscal 2020. We are seeing the rate of depreciation increase begin to trend back down. Depreciation on all other assets, primarily storage location assets, increased by $7 million for the quarter, $28 million for the full year, and that's largely a function of our self-storage development.
Repair costs associated with the rental fleet experienced a $5 million increase for the quarter, and for the full year, we're up $19 million. With the increase in the number of trucks in the fleet, preventative maintenance costs have gone up in relation. Additionally, during the quarter, we saw a higher count of trucks sold before the COVID-19 shutdowns, and that resulted in higher repair costs as we prepared those units for auction. Outside of depreciation and maintenance, other costs, including personnel, property taxes, liability and property insurance, and freight and utility costs, are the items that generated the bulk of the increases. In aggregate, they accounted for about $13 million of the increase in the quarter and a little over $101 million for the full year.
Towards the end of March and into April and May, COVID-19 has negatively affected our incoming cash flows through lower self-moving equipment rental revenues, along with a near total reduction in equipment sales proceeds coming from the closure of the commercial auto auctions. However, cash and credit availability to moving and storage segment has remained strong. At March 31st, we had $498 million, and at the end of April, we had an excess of $400 million. In May, we've entered into a $200 million term loan to further strengthen our liquidity position in the short term. With that, I'd like to hand the call back to Sean, our operator, to begin the question and answer portion of the call.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed, and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. Our first question will come from Ian Gilson with Zacks Investment Research. Please go ahead.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
Good morning, gentlemen. I have a similar question.
Jason Berg (CFO)
Morning, Ian.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
The impact of the tax, is that a book entry, or can you actually claim cash?
Jason Berg (CFO)
Ian, this is Jason. We have filed for refunds associated with the CARES Act. So, we've amended our fiscal 2018 and 2019 returns, and those should result in... Well, they've resulted in a refund request totaling $123 million. For our fiscal year 2020 return, which we're probably gonna file sometime around October, we're expecting a refund in excess of $250 million. And then we've also filed for a return of some cash that was former payments that we made, that we've been applying against operating income, and that should result in about $109 million. So in total, we're looking at somewhere north of $490 million in refunds.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
When might we expect a check or checks?
Jason Berg (CFO)
Those were filed in April, so if you were to give the Internal Revenue Service the ninety-day service expectation, that would be sometime in August or September. In the meantime, what we've done is we've worked out a deal with several of our banks in our lending group, where we've essentially borrowed about $200 million against those refunds currently, and then as we receive those refunds, we'll pay down that loan.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
Okay. Given the necessity of conserving cash, wouldn't it be an advantage to you to lease trucks rather than buy them?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
As you know, Ian, we've done both over the years, and we've done a variety of leases. We are continued to explore that, and I don't know the current status of where we are, but we're gonna still push for the best net cost to us. We don't yet see this as a situation where getting 100% financing is necessary. We're still optimizing, and we'll see what Jason says to the same question.
Sure. Our basic borrowing program for equipment is the equity out is anywhere from zero to 30%. So we're continuing to mix that. The current liquidity position that we're in isn't something where we need to stress that. We've... Our fleet, our assistant treasurer responsible for fleet has already reached out to our lending groups to speak to them about if we needed to borrow at a higher loan-to-value. That option is available with many folks, but right now, it doesn't have to be at the top of our list of things to do.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
Okay, the storage business, I would have thought would have been less volatile than the truck rental business, particularly in face of the fact that people can't move things out of storage as easily as they could have earlier. So has storage not been impacted as much as truck rental?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
I think that's a fair thing to say in the short run, Ian. However, a bunch of people, as you know, are stressed, a big percentage of the population. So as things evolve here further, we'll either get some delinquencies or more move-outs, and it's, you know, workhorse doing everything we can to give terrific customer service to retain these people as tenants. But you're right. The people have been impacted, but the visibility of that impact may be deferred, and we'll have to see how that develops. I can't give you, we don't have a forecast that's a usable forecast. And again, we're going to stretch to try to keep these people in through top quality service, and I expect we will retain the vast majority of them.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
Okay. With the fact that the sale of trucks and the deferment of the moving new trucks into the fleet, shouldn't maintenance expenses decline somewhat?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Actually, probably not. They probably will go up because maintenance basically varies linearly with the age of a vehicle. So what will actually happen, we'll end up keeping some vehicles longer than we had intended to. So their expense, their repair expense per mile, Ian, will probably try to creep up. So, and that's been our experience, you know, over the last forty years, is you can do what you want to, but maintenance varies linearly with mileage, which equates to age, and that we're going to see some vehicles not be sold out of the bottom of the fleet because there's no market for them. We can rent them, fine, but they probably will bump maintenance a little bit.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
Okay. Hertz U.S. has declared bankruptcy. That includes Budget. Have you noticed, or do you think that this would probably help U-Haul truck rental?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Well, actually, the Hertz organization is separate from the Budget. The Budget organization is connected with the Avis organization, and they, last I saw, were very solvent, and they were out executing new financings at kind of a higher rate. But we're not planning on any big capital markets issues. If we have an advantage over our competitors right now, it's because they're still reeling from this, and they're not providing the level of service that the customer demands. And we've doubled down on service, and we're going to give the customer what they want in the hopes of retaining those customers or even perhaps gaining some more customers.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
Okay. And back to Jason. Did you say that April was down 30% in truck rental?
Jason Berg (CFO)
Yes. Correct.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
May showed some strength. I presume that is compared sequentially rather than year over year.
Jason Berg (CFO)
Year over year is down about half of what we saw in April, so maybe it's trending somewhere around 12%-15% for the first half of it.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
Okay, great. That does it. Thank you very much.
Operator (participant)
As a reminder, if you have a question, please press star then one. Our next question will come fr`om`` Jamie Weilen with Wilen Management. Please go ahead.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
Hi, fellas. Sometimes necessity is the mother of invention, and I'm glad to see that you're altering your capital allocation program. Sometimes it's good to plant the seed, sometimes it's good to harvest, and I'm glad we're taking this pause to reevaluate and maybe slow the expenditure so we can harvest more of the profits. What is your your plan for self-storage as you move forward?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Of course, long term, we're committed to the self-storage market, Jamie. There's been, as I've spoken of in the past, considerable expansion in the product in specific markets. And I don't know where you live, but you can see whatever is in your area. But most of the country has experienced a lot of new product, and much of that new product is still coming online. So I don't think anybody really knows what's going to happen with demand. We have a bunch of projects that are in process, and we'll, our plan is to complete them. But so I think short term, that we'll have more product come online, and then it will kind of stop coming online.
I don't know what's going to happen in the overall industry, but I think that it won't be too different from us, and that a lot of new product is still going to come online, and as I said in my prepared remarks, we'll probably... put pressure on rates because many of these people are new to the industry, arguably over-financed, and they're going to make the mistake that many people do, which is now cut your prices in the face of this, and they're basically gonna cut their throats. I don't want them to injure us in the process, so we're doing what we can, but there's gonna be some rate pressure, and I think that's going to have the inevitable effect on earnings for people because these projects are basically huge fixed cost projects. The variable cost is really personnel, utilities, and property taxes.
There’s gonna be a pause in the self-storage business, would be my best guess. Of course, we don’t intend to pause, and we’re up even in March and April and May. We have no intention of pausing renting up rooms, but we’re pausing building more of them. Hopefully, you know, that works out well. I don’t think anybody has a real fix on what’s happening. I’m in stores. I was in a store yesterday. We were at 99% occupancy. The woman who manages it was saying, “God, get me more rooms. I could rent more rooms.” Well, I’m unlikely to go spend another $1 million and get her more rooms. I’m probably gonna just enjoy being at 99% for a few years.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
Okay. A couple questions. What are your estimated self-storage capital expenditures in the current fiscal year?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Jason, do you have a number on that?
Jason Berg (CFO)
We provision pretty much what we spent in the previous year. This last year, we spent $750 million on that. I would say that our existing... I'll break it down into a couple pieces. Deals in escrow were down significantly from the prior year. I think we have, like, 23 deals that we have sitting out in escrow. We've pushed back the closing dates on those just to see how the environment reacts. Acquisitions of new properties, fiscal 2019 to fiscal 2020, are down about $320 million. Now, we have...
If, if we were to complete everything that we currently have and, and would like to work on and complete, that number is a little over $900 million, but that's gonna be spread out over several years. So we have work to take us several years from now, and we have been slowing the input. So, I think apples to apples, probably our, our pipeline of projects to work on is down probably about $350 million-$360 million from this, this time last year.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
So your CapEx versus the 750 in 2020, you expect it to be what in 2021?
Jason Berg (CFO)
It's opportunistic. We, when we set out, I kind of set out a cash and availability plan that we could spend up to $800 million on the current capital plan, and then that will get adjusted up or down based upon the availability of opportunities and what we're seeing. Right now, we're. We've pushed back or slowed down about $110 million worth of development. So that, you know, slowdown over the next couple months is probably going to lead to a decline in how much we spend this year. It's gonna be spent at some point, it just might not fall into this fiscal year.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
Okay. Given that,
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
So what we're actually doing is we're completing everything we've got in the ground, and we have concrete. We're completing all that at this time, and then no new starts until we see where things are. And you know, it's everybody's guess, but we're gonna act rationally on that, just because we can sit on the property. We have a whole bunch of undeveloped sites, but we can sit on those. They're already baked into our current expense ratio. In other words, the property taxes, and that's already all baked into, and the capital costs is all baked into what you've been seeing. So that will get no worse, and we'll just see how this property that comes on. Jason, how many square—we did five point one million last fiscal year?
Jason Berg (CFO)
$5.8.
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
$5.8 million, and I don't have a firm number just here today, but we probably put in 1 million sq ft between March 31st and, I'll say, June 15. It's gonna be real close to that. So those projects will come online and hopefully start renting up. So we have a lot that's, you know, what are we gonna call it? Near term, gonna get completed, and then we'll have other stuff kind of flow in on the next three quarters, but we won't be fueling the fire there. So I wish I had a hard number I could give you, but I really don't.
I think what Jason says is we're gonna act prudently, but what this is doing, and it's been doing for some months, is we'd already turned this down before we had the pandemic, and so it takes a while for that train to slow down. Well, that train's slowed down now, and we have an inventory that we can or we can build out or we can sit on. We're not in a disastrous situation, and as a shareholder, you won't see increased expenses because they're all basically rolled into our current financing costs and our current property taxes, and those aren't gonna change, you know, 2% or 3% or something, not much.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
Joe, given that, REITs value relatively fully occupied self-storage facilities at a very high level, and we obviously don't get credit for our facilities that do that. As you say, we've got the, whatever the number was, six or seven hundred facilities that average over 90%. What would be the thought of packaging up 50 to 100 very productive facilities and realizing full value for them by selling a package to the REITs, who obviously, you know, trade at very low yields, borrow for very little, and are willing to pay up for those properties, and to be able to do that, and then continue to reinvest in programs where we have much greater upside.
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
I don't see it being under serious consideration at this time. It's been a number of years before we did a real hard workup on that. Of course, the fly in the ointment there is that all these locations, but two or three, if they're big in self-storage, they're also big in U-Move. That's the fly in the ointment. And so I don't think that near term there's much of a push to go try to do that, but I'm aware of the more or less the concept, and aware of various ways you could even REIT out the whole company. That's not beyond the pale. So I wish I had a better answer for you.
I know more what the answer is you're looking to hear, but I really don't have that answer.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
Okay. I would hope you'd look at somewhat in that direction to consider it, you know, in the near future. On the U-Box program, how did that fare within this whole process? Was that profitable in the past fiscal year, and what is your current outlook for the business?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
I'll let Jason speak to profitability.
Jason Berg (CFO)
Yes, it was profitable. It was in absolute dollars and a slight improvement on kind of our internal, internally calculated margin number. It was a plus this year, and we've seen strong growth in revenue, even during what's happening right now.
So I would say, Jamie, on that, that's still a growth program, and like our self-storage program, it's gonna... Its growth is gonna outpace the growth of the truck rental industry. And we are continuing to invest in that. We believe it's prudent investments. It's not a huge drain on capital, but we'll continue to invest there, and we think that we're improving our position constantly. We have a very good response from the customer. It doesn't seem to erode our U-Haul truck rental business in a measurable amount. I'm sure there's some modest amount of it, but it complements it in some ways, too. So I think it's clearly a viable program. It had increases all through the last year and had increases in the last couple months. So now, you know...
But it ought to, because it's a growth program, just like self-storage. It should, it should outpace the truck rental business, and I would look for it to continue to do so.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
Okay. Also, Joe, you mentioned that corporate accounts were down in 2020 and in the fourth quarter. Could you detail a little bit about why and what's your outlook in that direction?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Sure. We did a lot of business with Amazon. They cost us more in equipment damage than they generated in revenue. Totally abusive situation. Amazon rents very, very many pieces of equipment to contractors. They aren't actually Amazon personnel. They're very abusive to equipment. We recently reached an agreement with Amazon, where they would backstop the damage on that equipment. And under those circumstances, we would rent to them. Of course, during the period where we would not rent to them, they formed other business relationships, and so now whether those people are losing or making money, I have no knowledge, but we were losing money with Amazon. And if, and to the extent we do any other business with them, it will be where we can make a modest profit.
At the same time, UPS and FedEx continue to do business with us, and they're both pretty straight-up organizations, and we make some modest profitability doing business with them. But Amazon was the elephant in the room, and they were just simply bringing our equipment back so beat up that we were losing money on the overall transaction.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
Okay. And lastly, accounting-wise, depreciation expense moving forward should be relatively flat in 2021 versus 2020, given the reduced expenditures?
Jason Berg (CFO)
We're still gonna see that. We're still gonna see depreciation on the, well, for both the fleet and for real estate increase through 2021, but I think the way that it's heading each quarter right now, it's been coming down. The rate of increase has been coming down, so based upon the current fleet plan, I would suspect that it's gonna flatten out by the end of fiscal 2021 on the fleet side.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
Okay. Thanks, fellas. Appreciate it.
Jason Berg (CFO)
You're welcome.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is a follow-up from Ian Gilson with Zacks Investment Research. Please go ahead.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
Hi, thank you. The automakers had problems and essentially closed down most of their facilities and brought some of them up to do other work than making cars or trucks. If we get a second wave or a flattening out instead of a declining count of patients, will you meet your unit number projections, or will that go down? And if you reduce the trucks purchased in 2020, what does that do to depreciation?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
So that's a very complicated question to give you an accurate answer to. If the automakers reclose their plants, in other words, they get them started, then they shut them down, we will lose that amount of forecasted production. Ordinarily, we are not forecast to get a lot of production in the last quarter of the calendar year. We usually have heavy production now, which is why we suffered for a big lack of new equipment coming in. So it wouldn't impact us nearly as much as it has in the quarter we're in right now. But certainly, it would impact us. And then what will happen, Ian, is that at some point, you have to replace the vehicles. If we don't replace them this year, we'll have to replace them the subsequent year.
So it's gonna bump, in some way, the amount of money we have to spend in subsequent years, assuming our customer transactions remain large enough to accommodate that fleet. I mean, it's not beyond the pale that there could be a permanent reduction in the economy. I see these numbers for every single market, and there's markets that have been savaged. You can figure out who they are if you watch the TV. It's the politicians who simply are enforcing some sort of an authoritarian state on the consumer, and the consumer is shut down, totally done, gone. Now, you go to another place like Utah. Utah, everybody's doing business, U-Haul is doing fine, but they have a different government orientation.
So, I have no idea what will happen other than revenue will decline, if we have another partial or full shutdown of the economy in the fall. Revenue will decline, there's no question about it. And revenue decline, a bunch of expenses won't decline, and profits will get smacked. So, of course, we've reduced some costs, but those costs aren't of the nature of 30% or 50%, which is what we saw business. We saw a 30% decline overall, I think Jason quoted. What percentage did you say, Jason?
Jason Berg (CFO)
In April, 30%.
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
30% in April. So our expenses don't go down 30%. Our depreciation actually went up. So I mean, it's a real negative leverage problem. So, we're not going to run out of cash, but such an event like that would slaughter profitability in the short run.
Jason Berg (CFO)
Ian, this is Jason. To your question about what it would do to depreciation, just so far, what's happened to date with the cancellations of orders due to the plant shutting down, depreciation will probably continue. The increases will become less and less each quarter. I would suspect towards the end of this year, and then probably into the next fiscal year, we will see probably a decline in what we call gain on the disposal of equipment as we're selling older units. You know, without buying the new pickups and cargo vans, we're holding that fleet longer than we typically do. So we will see the gain on the disposal of those units begin to trend down a little bit, the longer that we hold them.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
Okay, you said that the orders were canceled. Does that mean you will have to reorder at a later date?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Well, there's no way we can. They can't build that many, and until we can sell trucks, we can't afford that many. So it's kind of a, an unhappy coincidence. They can't build them, and we don't have any money to buy them because we can't sell the existing ones. Now, we expect that market to improve, and we see signs of it, and we're not, you know, frozen with fear, Ian. But until we can sell the older units, it's imprudent for us to bring in new units, and we're not gonna do that. So it's anybody's guess, and Ford and General Motors have been trying to restart their plants, and if you follow in the press, they get somebody test positive for COVID, they send the whole place home for a day or two.
I've never run an automotive plant, but I can't imagine you can open it for a day, shut it down for a day, and get any production to speak of. Last week, I believe I'm correct in saying that they told us they built two trucks for us. That's not quite what you would call production, okay? In other words, they do that, like, every 20 minutes, normally... So the volume of trucks that we would be getting this time of the year is just drastically cut and with negative consequences, as far as I can tell, for all involved. It's got to be hurting the automakers, it's definitely hurting us.
And as Jason alluded to, when we ultimately do sell these vehicles, they're gonna sell for less because they're gonna be older and have more miles, and values vary linearly with age and mileage. So we've continued to depreciate them, so we're not caught in a trap there. So we continue to depreciate, and we try to watch that carefully because the last thing you want to do is find out you're upside down in your fleet. So we are not presently upside down in our fleet. We don't intend to get there. But we'll do that by varying the depreciation rate if circumstances dictate that.
Ian Gilson (Senior Ananlyst)
Okay, great. Thank you very much.
Operator (participant)
Now our next question will come from Craig Inman with Artisan Partners. Please go ahead.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
Hey, guys. Can you all hear me?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Hi, Craig.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
Hey, you know, one of the issues with this business is always, you know, you're always trying to manage the fleet in certain locations because of, you know, migration out of areas into other areas. With the pandemic, has that changed? Has that created any problems with stacking up trucks anymore? I mean, has that become another issue down the line?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Craig, I'll try to take that. Certainly, it has, and it's changed the timing, so we'll just take students for an instance. Ordinarily, this time of year, we'd just see a deluge of student moves, but what actually happened is some of them went away entirely, and some of them occurred six weeks ago. So we can't quite sort that out to say, you know, what are we gonna be down this weekend compared to last year. We know that the big schools are already all let out and have been let out for some time. Yet there's residual business coming through. These schools are now doing phased move-outs, so they're contacting students and saying, "Everybody in X building," or whatever, "has to move out on the 27th of May," and they're, and so then we see a little bump in transactions in that specific market.
So it's caused a lot of dislocations. We also, this time of year, see a lot of second home type end-of-school-year thing, and that, again, is real mushy. I think here in Arizona, most of the grade schools broke this last Friday, so, we, with a little luck, will pick up a little business, but how many people are gonna go up to their second home, I can't predict. On the other hand, we got a bunch of people who had second homes, you know, we'll say, in Maine or New Hampshire, and they got out of New York and Connecticut six weeks ago. So there's a whole bunch of tiny disruptions. To say that that overall has put us in a worse or a better situation, I would say it's about, it's about normal amount of dislocated fleet.
It's not gotten horribly worse, but that's the day in, day out problem we have: is managing that to a certain... You know, I have some optimists here who think because the students are moving out in a smoother way, that we'll get more business, and I hope they're right. But this is very new to us. Some of the flows we recognize very well, but the timing's different. And so, how this will kind of work into the summer, I got no idea. And then we're gonna have strange flows going into the fall because already a bunch of the universities have noticed that they're going to move in at different rates.
And so that even if all the COVID and everything goes away in August we're gonna have some carryover effects that we are certainly thinking of and trying to anticipate but we don't really know what they're going to do. But yes it's. There's been a huge difference in where people move. Very strangely we've seen less disruption in long-distance moves and more disruption in short-distance moves. And maybe it's the short-distance moves are more elective maybe the long-distance moves were totally need-driven. I really don't have an absolute take on that. But normally we do a phenomenal amount of short-term moves short-distance moves and they're coming back up. They're not where they used to be.
Whether they'll come back up that, whether by the end of June, this will be, you know, looking like, a little bit more like last year, I can't tell. And as I said in my prepared remarks, I have some places that are up over last year. They're, you know, these are people making bonuses, okay? Which I, of course, want to pay. They're salespeople, and their business is up. Well, it means there is business out there, but if you get into New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Boston, you know, hang on, it's . . . Those are, what's happening there is maybe, I don't know where you live, but in those areas there, they've severely shut down the economy, and people are literally afraid. I, you know, I'm in Arizona. In Arizona, this week, it almost seemed like normal traffic.
Atlanta has come back well for us. Northern Florida has come back well. Southern Florida, still in a struggle. So there's a lot of different activity. We're trying, of course, to capitalize. Anytime we see a flow in our favor, we're trying to push that flow, and that's just trying to be nimble and be responsive. You could argue that if we could really execute perfectly, we'd use some of these disruptions to better distribute the fleet, and that, of course, is the mandate I've given to people who have that job, but it's a little easier said than done.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
Okay, that's good color, so and then on the truck side, with the, you know, if you can't get new trucks from Ford and GM, and the auctions are... Are the auctions still closed?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Yes. They're starting to open virtually. The largest, I think they're the largest, the Manheim furloughed over 10,000 people, and their stated intent is to attempt to not reopen, to transfer to a virtual business, change their whole economic structure. During that time, sales have just collapsed. Now, whether that's because of the virtual format or a whole bunch of other factors, I could only guess. We see what we're able to move on a daily basis, and that's just, you know, it went to just almost zero for a couple of weeks. Now, it's slowly creeping back, but it's nowhere near. I would say it's less than 12 or 15% of what we would have expected. Jason, would you-
Jason Berg (CFO)
Yeah. It's yeah, at the most.
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
It's a drastic decline. Now, we watch it every day, and every so often, we see a little glow, and we kind of encourage each other and all that. But when the money finally comes into Jason, it's disappointing. So, I don't know what's going to happen with the auction business, and I don't know if you've ever been to one, but they... It's a big social event as well as a sales event, and so there's a whole bunch of people who have their business social activity built around this, but they're all rubbing shoulders with each other. It's hustle, bustle, and if people are unwilling to be in that environment, compare it to an open air market or something, people may not be willing to be back in that environment.
If that happens, it's going to change the whole auction industry, and Manheim is making the right bet. I have no idea what's going to happen.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
So if we have a scenario where the auctions are, you know, if they are back online, but a little slower and you can't get trucks from Ford and GM, does that put too much pressure on, you know, being able to sell trucks to raise cash in this environment? I mean, how do we-
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
We just won't sell.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
In operation.
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
We'll slow way down. The truck gets a little bit older. We spend a little bit more money on depreciation, and we've done that. Our fleet is in, far and away, the best condition it's been in my working life, far and away. I would say. There's no comparison. I'm caught up on all maintenance. Every preventive maintenance is on schedule today. My fleet is newer than it's ever been and has less mileage than it's ever had. If there's to be a time where we have this problem, today is the day, and we have been building towards this because these things always happen. I'm a real big believer in seven good years, followed by seven bad years, and I think there's a long history to that trend.
And so I'm always trying to put, you know, something away just because it's going to happen. In this case, we're sitting there right with this fleet. The fleet is got common parts. We know how to maintain them. We have all our support systems totally operating, and if we had to go two years without a single addition, we'd go two years without a single addition. Now, I would rather not, 'cause then you'd be a little long in the tooth, but we could. We could go two years easily, and the consumer would never see a difference. They would have the same reliability to the truck. They would appear the same, you know, as modern as they need them to appear. So I can go two years. Now, that's not my choice. I don't think that's going to happen.
but if that's happened, if that's where this is gonna go, we'll go that way with it.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
Yeah, and with the... That's good. I mean, that's good to know. And with the revenue trends, though, if they, you know, overall remain weak and the auctions are closed, do you-- and you want to build this, the self-storage, you know, for the stuff that's already in the ground under construction, do you need the proceeds, you know, if you were shrinking the fleet some for cash flow-
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
No.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
purposes?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
No.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
Okay.
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
We don't need them. I mean, you're, this is the guy who's never going to turn down a dollar, okay? So, but do we need them in order to proceed ahead? No. But Jason constantly monitors that, and this is a week-by-week process with him. I know, Jason, if you want to give some color to that, but he, he's on me like, you know, whatever. He, he wants to know constantly where we are because he has to wonder what's going to happen.
Jason Berg (CFO)
Craig, this is Jason. I'm not sure if I'm reading more into the question or not, but the auction proceeds aren't used for general operations. They're typically used just as capital to buy the next round of trucks. So if the next round of trucks aren't being purchased, then the auction proceeds aren't that necessary. So for us, I would say that if the auctions were to stay shut down for another six to nine months, or we get closer to a two-year hold period on the pickups and cargo vans, then it'll become more of a capital planning issue as we'd have to work through some issues in our revolving facilities for holding the trucks more than two years.
But at least for the next, you know, year or so, that that's not something that we need in order to fund operations.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
Yeah, that's what I meant, just more from a cash flow planning perspective. If, you know, if you've got a top line pressure, OpEx isn't that, you know, it isn't as flexible, and you want to build the self-storage, just do you have enough cash if you can't raise proceeds from selling trucks? And I get you wouldn't be... You don't need them to for cash flow purposes if you're not ordering new trucks.
Jason Berg (CFO)
Yeah, we had essentially a one-time use of cash from this whole freeze-up. So when auction sales stopped, we still had several thousand trucks in the pipeline to be delivered. So we did pay for trucks that were in the pipeline, and we didn't have the auction proceeds for those. So April had kind of like a one-time use of cash to buy trucks that didn't have auction proceeds to offset it, but we were able to deal with that outflow, and it hasn't been a problem.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
Okay. And then, I gotta hop in just a second. But on the self-storage side, rates, which is a key component of the in-place rents because of shelter-in-place orders, are y'all seeing rate pressure because of similar dynamics?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Downward rate pressure, exactly. And we're not the first one to flinch in that circumstance, okay? My guy who manages rates is little. He's not the one who's going to take the high dive, okay? And so of course, the answer with the customer is it worth whatever, let's just say $50 a month, is it worth it to move? Well, that has a lot. $50 is $50, and times 12 months, it's $600. And so you could see a person would say, "I can get it $50 cheaper, I'm going to move." And $50 would be an extreme rate cut, maybe 35%, let's say.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
Right.
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
So, in that case, we're trying to sell on service. And I would say our service is right up at the top. I won't say our service is the best because that, that varies by manager, by location. Our service is the best it's ever been in U-Haul's history, and I believe our combination of security, ancillary services, and locations helps us be able to address rate issues in a way other than simply matching rates. But there's going to be some recent entrants, and you probably know more than I do about apartment rents or multifamily rents or some other, you know, real estate, process. But when there's a oversupply, there's some people who are financed in at real high leverage rate, and they're underoccupied.
I'm seeing these knee-jerk reactions, "Well, let's drop our rate 50% to see if that helps." Well, it's not going to help. If you're going to go out of business because you can't survive even one year at 50%. If you filled the whole place, you still wouldn't be making your cost of capital. So, I don't know of all their financing, but there's a typical bunch of people are out there on one and two-year financings at full cost. If they dump rates, they're essentially transferring title, is how I view it. And, but they'll, it'll damage us as they go through that process, and they'll damage some other people in the business. So I can't, I don't control them, but again, you've seen it, no doubt, in some other real estate deal, like apartment, of what happens.
And hopefully where we see it, it'll be contained to a specific market. Nobody who's a nationwide or a large footprint competitor will take a knee-jerk reaction. We would hope that those people would have a more long-term perspective and... But we'll see. We'll see.
Craig Inman (Portfolio Manager)
Okay. Thank you, guys.
Jason Berg (CFO)
Thanks, Craig.
Operator (participant)
Now, our next question will come from Jamie Weiland with Weiland Management. Please go ahead.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
Given your outlook for the auctions and the ability to get new equipment, would you expect your fleet size to diminish in this fiscal year?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
No, because precisely because there's no place. The only way to get the fleet smaller is to sell them. And if we don't get a sales market, it's not going to get smaller. Now, Jason talked about, we picked up some extra trucks, and I'll have a number that'll be wrong. Let's just say we picked up 1,500 extra trucks in late March and early April. Those are kind of a, you know, a millstone around our neck. We have a program to attempt to deploy them in marginal markets to see what we can get for income on them. But that is changing easily weekly as we start to regain the business.
My bet is we're going to shrink the fleet a little bit, but I don't know if we'll be able to shrink it before September or October because the sales market, there's just no point in going into the market and dumping your prices. The sales we're getting now are full price sales, and that's our intention. There's no reason for us to go trash the used truck market. We're a big player in that market. We don't need to go trash that market. We have good merchandise. I think if the auctions were running, this might have been an opportunity because the factories have been shut down, and so the supply is down. I've read several articles that said that dealers are begging for pickups.
Dealers buy a lot of our pickups and vans, clean them up, put them on their lot as low mileage used cars that are still available for standard bank financing. So, if we were able to, if that market existed, we've made some sales to dealers because, of course, we know these people, and we can deal direct and go around the auction. But they're still constrained because in some states, they made them close the car dealership industry, and so they really haven't seen their business. I have a couple of dealer friends, a couple of my dealer friends are starting to see business where the government has lifted these orders. So say in Arizona, I've seen dealers in Arizona do better, almost the last year's level. Now, whether that's some pent-up demand, it's a really murky picture.
But one of my friends, he did 30 trucks on Saturday, maybe three weeks ago, and he said that was exactly what he would have hoped for a year ago. Now, but was that people who should have bought in March? And I, I, he doesn't know, and I don't.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
If the resa``le market continues to open up, would you like to reduce the fleet size a bit to increase utilization going forward?
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Absolutely. In specific model.
Jamie Weiland (Portfolio Manager and President)
Correct. Okay. Thanks, fellas. Nice job of managing the business. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
This will conclude today's question-and-answer session, and I would like to turn it back over to management for any closing remarks.
Joe Shoen (Chairman)
Okay, this is Joe. Thank you very much. I appreciate your attention, your question, and we're going to obviously learn a bunch of new things over the next, between now and the next earnings call, and I expect we'll make as good out-of-the-factual circumstances as anybody can make out of the factual circumstances. Sebastian, anything? Closing comments?
Sebastien Reyes (Head of Investor Relations)
Thanks for your support. We look forward to speaking with you again in August.
Operator (participant)
The conference call has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation, and you may now disconnect.