NASDAQ:DSKE Daseke Q4 2022 Earnings Report Daseke EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.09Consensus EPS $0.02Beat/MissBeat by +$0.08One Year Ago EPS$0.09Daseke Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$408.20 millionExpected Revenue$399.85 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$8.35 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/ADaseke Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2022Date2/6/2023TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateMonday, February 6, 2023Conference Call Time11:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckAnnual Report (10-K)Company ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Daseke Q4 2022 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 6, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Morning, everyone, and thank you for joining today's conference call to discuss DESCY's Financial Results for the 4th Quarter and Full Year Ended December 31, 2022. With us today are Jonathan Shepko, CEO and Board Member Erin Coley, EVP and CFO, Adrian Griffin, VP of Investor Relations and Treasurer and Tracy Graham, VP of FP and A and Business Analytics. After your prepared remarks, the management team will take your questions. As a reminder, you may now download the PDF of the presentation slides that will accompany the remarks made on today's conference call as indicated in the press release issued earlier today. You may access these slides in the Investor Relations section of DESCY's website. Operator00:00:50I would now like to turn the call over to Adrian Griffin, who will read the company's Safe Harbor statement that provides important caution regarding forward looking statements within the meanings of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Adrienne, please go ahead. Speaker 100:01:08Thank you, Michelle, and good morning, everyone. Please turn to Slide 2 for a review of our Safe Harbor and non GAAP statements. Today's presentation contains forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Projected financial information, including our guidance outlook, are forward looking statements. Forward looking statements, including those with respect to revenues, earnings, strategies, prospects and other aspects of Daseke's business are based on management's current estimates, projections and assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations and projections. Speaker 100:01:47I would also like to highlight our decision to update our reporting segment results. Previously, the company had disclosed a corporate segment, which was not an operating segment and included acquisition transaction expenses, corporate salaries, interest expense and other corporate administrative expenses Beginning with the Q4 of 2022, we began eliminating intersegment revenue and expenses at the segment level and allocating corporate costs to our 2 reportable segments based upon respective segment revenue. All financial information discussed and included in our materials aligns with the new allocations and eliminations. I encourage you to read our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a discussion of the risks that can affect our business and not to place any undue reliance on any forward looking statements. We undertake no obligation to revise our forward looking statements to reflect events or circumstances occurring after today, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as may be required under applicable securities laws. Speaker 100:02:55During the call, there will also be a discussion of some items that do not conform to the U. S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles or GAAP, including and not limited to adjusted EBITDA, adjusted operating ratio, adjusted operating income, adjusted net income or loss, free cash flow and net debt. Reconciliations of these non GAAP measures to their most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in the appendix of the presentation and press release issued this morning, both of which are available on the Investors tab of the Daseke website, www.daske.com. In terms of the structure of our call today, I will start by turning the call over to Jonathan, who will review our business operations And the progress we are making as we execute against our strategic priorities and then Aaron, who will provide a financial review of the 4th And Jonathan will then speak about our 2023 outlook and wrap up our remarks with a few closing comments before we open the line for your questions. Speaker 100:03:54With that, I'll turn the call over. Jonathan? Speaker 200:03:57Thank you. Good morning, everyone. I'd like to start the call today by welcoming Adrienne to the team. She joins us as the Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasurer, and we are pleased to have her focus on further elevating our IR and treasury functions. I would also like to thank each of the Daseke team members and especially acknowledge the disciplined commitment of our professional driver community. Speaker 200:04:18It's due to the collective effort of team Daseke and we will today report our company's 3rd consecutive year of record adjusted EBITDA. I'd like to spend just a moment on this Slide 3. Whether you are a long time holder of Daseke or new to our story, given the amount of change we have successfully affected over the last years, We thought it made sense to provide this snapshot slide to help everyone appreciate who we are today. As mentioned, 2022 was yet another record year for our company, both in total revenue and adjusted EBITDA. This performance is a noteworthy bellwether of our progress and highlights the continued earnings potential of our business as demonstrated by comparing this past year's record adjusted EBITDA of $234,900,000 which was generated during the peak rate environment of the current cycle to the last cycle of peak rates in 2018, where EBITDA was approximately $60,000,000 less at $174,300,000 This is a peak to peak improvement of nearly 35% and was generated by a 2022 fleet That was 16% leaner than our 2018 fleet before we began to work on initiatives to improve our asset utilization. Speaker 200:05:29With that as a backdrop, I'd like to move to Slide 4, where I will share some of our 2022 accomplishments that set the stage for our 2023 outlook. 2022, we delivered solid revenue growth and posted our 3rd consecutive year of record adjusted EBITDA. We executed a meaningful transformational share repurchase from our founder, which was accretive and removed the perceived overhang on our stock, given the percentage of the company and the founders ownership represented. We affirm our ongoing commitment to enhance the strength of our balance sheet through accelerated deleveraging. We have been more vocal about the resiliency of our operating model, one that is unquestionably different from any other publicly traded transportation and logistics peer. Speaker 200:06:13A blend of asset light and asset based capabilities exclusively serving the industrial economy with strong diversification by end market and subvertical. And through a combination of transformation initiatives and strengthening macro environment, we believe we are well positioned to outperform when the cycle does inflect. If you will turn with me to Slide 5, I'd like to discuss our Q4 2022 share repurchases. On September 30, we announced the $40,000,000 share repurchase plan, ultimately purchasing over 803,000 shares under this plan at a weighted average price of $6.05 before supplanting this plan with the announcement of a founder share repurchase on November 14. We subsequently closed on the Founder share repurchase, repurchasing all shares then held by Daseke's Founder through negotiated terms very favorable to company and common shareholders. Speaker 200:07:06In total, we purchased nearly 30% of our then issued and outstanding common shares funded with $45,000,000 of cash on hand and the issuance of Series B perpetual redeemable preferred stock. I'll note that the Series B preferreds Our redeemable and our sole option in whole or in part were $67,600,000 plus any accrued and unpaid dividends. The Series B preferreds are not convertible and have no affirmative or negative covenants. As is outlined in this slide, these transactions were immediately and significantly accretive based upon adjusted with pro form a EPS of $1.52 for full year 2022. Simply put, This repurchase will provide one of the most profound uplifts for our shareholders in the coming years, providing exponential growth opportunity as our consistent performance and strategic execution gives rise to a more aptly valued share price. Speaker 200:07:59And while the allocation of capital in support of this buyback It's squarely within our shareholder value creation framework. With our focus now on delevering, the company has no intention to repurchase any additional stock in the foreseeable future. With that, I will now hand the call over to Aaron, who will provide a more detailed walk through of our Q4 and full year results. Aaron? Speaker 300:08:21Thank you, Jonathan, and good morning, everyone. I would like to start with Slide 6, which represents a high level review of our consolidated results for the quarter. Once again, our resilient business model facilitated growth as we delivered quarterly revenue of 408 $200,000 up 3.5 percent or $13,900,000 compared to revenue of 394 $300,000 in the Q4 of 2021. This included demand strength from high security cargo and the agriculture end market, partially offset by declines primarily in the steel end market and renewable energy vertical, plus contributions from a tuck in acquisition completed early in 2022. Compared to the Q4 of 2021, Our adjusted operating ratio declined as inflation increased our total expenses faster than revenue. Speaker 300:09:19The cost increases came primarily from salaries, wages and benefits and operations and maintenance expense. And while we achieved year over year improvement in our rate per mile, we also realized a reduction in miles per tractor. That said, we're very focused on consistently improving operating ratio by driving operational excellence and strategic execution. In the quarter, we delivered adjusted EBITDA of $49,600,000 equal to the Q4 of 2021. Now turning to Slide 7. Speaker 300:09:57Specialized Solutions revenues were 242,900,000 up 10.9% versus the prior year, as our team performed very well in shifting asset capacity to end markets with strength, including high security cargo, agriculture and aerospace, which was more than offset by moderating demand in construction end markets and the renewable energy vertical. Furthermore, segment rate per mile was strong at $3.50 an improvement over the prior year as our teams capitalized on demand growth with our asset right fleet mix, delivering a 2% increase in company miles. Specialized Solutions adjusted operating ratio improved 110 basis points to 91.8%, while adjusted EBITDA improved 19.1 percent to 32,400,000 Productivity in the quarter was impacted by shorter length of haul loads in high security cargo and a soft decline in total miles per tractor per day that was magnified by the recent receipt of new tractors near the end of the year. We expect a rebound in our miles per tractor per day productivity as seasonality and new equipment deliveries normalize. On slide 8, we outlined Flatbed Solutions segment results. Speaker 300:11:24Despite the 1st year over year decrease in flatbeds market rates since the pandemic, Datsky was still able to garner a premium rate compared to the market, as shown in the top right chart on the slide. Declining rates and cooling demand into the steel end market partially offset demand growth in manufacturing, construction, in the agriculture end markets resulted in a revenue decline of 5.7 percent to 165,300,000 The use of our asset right model in this segment enabled us to focus on company asset utilization, which traded lower loading higher margin freight on the company assets from brokerage revenues, which decreased. Lower revenue and cost inflation, primarily in operations and maintenance, resulted in the segment's adjusted operating ratio increasing to 95.9 percent from 91.8 percent in the prior year and adjusted EBITDA of $17,200,000 which was 23.2% lower than the prior year period. Now moving to Slide 9. In 2022, we achieved a consolidated record revenue of $1,800,000,000 representing a 13.9% improvement over the prior year, driven particularly by strength in our high security cargo end market, which grew at nearly 50% over 2021, as well as growth in agriculture, manufacturing, construction and aerospace, partially offset by declines in the renewable energy vertical and steel end market. Speaker 300:13:09We also achieved increases of 10.5% in the rate per mile and 5.4% in revenue per tractor over 2021. In 2022, we reported income from operations of $98,400,000 compared with $112,800,000 in 2022. However, in 2022, We had incremental insurance and claims expense of $15,400,000 a $9,400,000 non cash impairment expense resulting from integration and elimination of trade names, dollars 3,800,000 in acquisition related expenses and $2,100,000 restructuring expenses as compared to fiscal year 2021. Adjusting for all of these Income from operations would have exceeded 2021. The adjusted operating ratio was 91.6% 2022, an increase from the 90.9% in 2021. Speaker 300:14:08Though we continue to experience inflationary pressures that built Crossed the year primarily in salaries, wages and benefits as well as operations and maintenance. We were able to offset some of these headwinds on our operating ratio by shifting freight to higher margin company assets and redirecting assets to the most profitable lanes. The Daseke team delivered commercial execution and our flexible asset rights strategy to deliver value for our shareholders and we set an adjusted EBITDA record of $234,900,000 suppressing the previous record of 200 and $3,100,000 set last year. We're very proud of the entire Daseke team for achieving this record as it shows The agility and resiliency of our team and our operating model. Let's now look at the segments on a full year basis, Starting with Specialized Solutions on Slide 10. Speaker 300:15:06Segment revenue grew 15.9 percent to just over $1,000,000,000 and accounted for nearly 65% of the company's total revenue growth. This success was based on strong demand in high security cargo, Agriculture, manufacturing and construction end markets robust commercial execution using all aspects of our asset rights strategy to deliver profitable growth and contributions from a tuck in acquisition, modestly offset by demand degradation in the renewable energy vertical. We're pleased to report 12.1% increase in the rate per mile and an 8 0.4% increase in revenue per tractor versus full year 2021 on essentially flat company miles compared to 2021. Furthermore, adjusted operating ratio improved by 30 basis points to 90.8% versus full year 2022 And adjusted EBITDA increased 11.5 percent to $141,200,000 versus the prior year due to strong revenue growth. Wrapping up the segment discussion on a full year basis, we look at slide 11 for Flatbed Solutions for full year 2022. Speaker 300:16:21Flatbed Solutions year was predicated on the ability to capture attractive rate in strong end markets and from softer end markets and pivoting from softer end markets to company owned assets, which when circumstances necessitated. Segment revenue was up 11.4% year over year to $769,000,000 as gains primarily in construction, manufacturing and agriculture end markets outpaced the decline in the steel end market. Compared to 2021, segment rate per mile increased 7.5%, though total miles declined 8.5 percent and overall revenue per tractor grew 1.2%. Adjusted OR of 92.7 percent worsened from 90.8% in 2021, primarily due to cost inflation pressures such as market rate driver compensation, operations and maintenance and insurance claims more than offsetting revenue growth. Adjusted EBITDA of $93,700,000 and adjusted EBITDA margins of 12.2 percent both declined modestly from 2021 full year results, despite cost inflation and sequential decline in market rates over the second half of twenty twenty two. Speaker 300:17:47In terms of cash flow on Slide 12, you will see our ability to generate Significant free cash flow as well as our robust liquidity position. In 2022, free cash flow was $135,800,000 with cash purchases and proceeds from the sale of equipment property and equipment nearly offsetting for the 2nd year in a row. We continue to maintain robust liquidity over $264,000,000 with our cash balance created from strong cash flow from operations plus our revolving credit facility where we had over $110,000,000 of undrawn availability at year end. I'll note, our cash balances give effect to the $45,000,000 of cash repurchases in the 4th quarter that Jonathan discussed and the $19,100,000 to fund a tuck in acquisition. Without these two uses of cash, our year end Could have been in excess of $325,000,000 On Slide 13, we provide a strategic update on our balance sheet. Speaker 300:18:51With another yet record year of our results, we have established a trend of improved performance. The change our business has taken Undertaking over the last few years is real, it's lasting. And we remain confident in our ability to generate significant positive free cash flow regardless of the prevailing macroeconomic environment. Given this confidence, we are committed to directing free cash flow to reduce our leverage and are establishing a long term gross leverage target range of 1.5 Two times for normalized ongoing operations. We do note that given the seasonality of the business and the front end loaded capital expenditure plan, Our leverage will increase slightly in Q1 before declining to the upper end of the range of the target range in the Q4 of 2023. Speaker 300:19:40We are proactively evaluating options to expedite our progress toward this goal. We believe this commitment to fortifying our balance sheet provides another example of our focus to de risk the business and deliver value to our shareholders. I'll now turn the call back to Jonathan for an update on our 2023 outlook. Jonathan? Speaker 200:20:01Thank you, Aaron. Now before we turn the call over and take questions, I'd like to provide some perspective on the market environment in 2023. Our outlook for the business in that context on Slide 14. As 2023 unfolds, we expect an improvement in operational productivity, Improvements in driver availability, which should allow for the seating of additional higher margin company tractors and ultimately improvements in demand for freight haul services by mid year when our business is seasonally on trend. We believe in the cross cycle strength of more than a dozen industrial facing end markets we serve, some of which are set for continued growth given their limited correlation to consumer spending or the prevailing macro backdrop. Speaker 200:20:42We expect that all of this will translate into flat to low single digit revenue and net revenue growth compared with 2022. Though in the near term, we do readily acknowledge the ongoing rate environment challenges that began in the second half of twenty twenty two and inflationary cost pressures that continue to work through worked their way through the markets. However, as stated on our last quarterly call, we continue to feel conviction in the ability of our ongoing transformation initiatives to largely offset these collective headwinds and to provide additional upside to our earnings profile during the expansionary leg of the next impending cycle. Given our view of the current macro environment, our specific end market exposure and the levers we have available in each of our variable operating model and transformation initiatives, We see full year 2023 adjusted EBITDA approximately in line with our record 2022 print. In sizing our 2023 net capital We view our reinvestment in the fleet as a strategic opportunity, one that positions Daseke to maintain the age of our fleet, drive margin improvement, continue to attract and retain drivers and preserve our favorite standing with our valued OEM partners. Speaker 200:21:49Our expectation is for $145,000,000 to $155,000,000 in net CapEx expenditures for 2023 with most of the capital spend expected to occur in the first half of twenty twenty three. We are very pleased with this 2023 outlook, especially building upon record results in 2021 2022. Now we will turn the call back to the operator and take your questions. Operator00:22:12Thank And our first question comes from the line of Bert Svan with Stifel. Your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:22:37Hey, good morning. Thanks for the question. Speaker 100:22:42Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 300:22:43Good morning, Bert. Good morning. Speaker 400:22:44Hey, Can you maybe give us a little more of an update on how you're thinking about guidance? It seems like you have, if I think about last year's $235,000,000 in EBITDA and then we go forward this year. Can you talk about how much of keeping it flat is related to the cost program versus I guess your expectation that specialized will stay strong in 2023. Speaker 200:23:11Yes, sure. I can I'll address that and let Erin or Adrian chime in accordingly. So we look, we've said this on the last few calls. We do still believe That through our transformation initiatives, we're going to see exit run rate uplift In 2023 of about $20,000,000 to $25,000,000 in kind of incremental value. That's going to start to really taper in Through the year, you're going to start to see more of that by midyear. Speaker 200:23:41So we do look, we do think probably on a 2023 basis, if you're taking a snapshot of those transformational activities, I'd probably say probably likely kind of on average plus or minus 15% to 17% of that in 2023. The other kind of components of our thesis this year in 2023, As you mentioned, our look, outperformance continued outperformance in specialized, we do think that flatbed, although a little bit softer Then Q1 comps, we'll have the Q2 kind of typical Q2, Q3 seasonality where we think that By mid year, the rate environment will be healthy again. I'm not sure it touches 2022 peaks, but certainly healthy again. So We do feel generally pretty confident that we're going to have overall a good year from a rate standpoint. We also have a couple of other things going for us. Speaker 200:24:38So we talked a little bit About the diversification of our end markets, you acknowledged our specialized end markets, which continue to outperform. We also will probably have, Bert, Another 100 to 150 trucks on the road this year. So we are kind of net we'll kind of net be growing our fleet about 100 trucks. I don't think you'll see the benefit of that probably until Q2. We got a lot of new equipment at the end of the year. Speaker 200:25:03So we're bringing the older equipment Back, we're preparing the new equipment. We're reseating those trucks. So I think we'll start to see the full effect of that really And are on peak season in Q2 and Q3 and then certainly in Q4. We also expect, as Aaron mentioned in his discussion, we do expect increased productivity. We had some end markets on the specialized side. Speaker 200:25:30We also had some headwinds on the flatbed size that kept our miles per truck per day this year around Kind of $380,000,000 We're forecasting something in the low 400s, so kind of an 8% to 10% improvement in productivity on miles per truck. And I think that look, we've gone back really, really on the flatbed side of the business and stressed improvements in productivity. So making sure that We're getting trucks turned faster. We're not laying over trucks. We're making sure that we're not Being too particular about the loads that we take, really looking for that unicorn long haul, High rate per mile, but understanding and appreciating trucking is about velocity. Speaker 200:26:17So getting those trucks out, keeping them out longer. So being willing a little bit more willing to take a more moderated rate per mile load if it has kind of length of haul with So we're really thinking about a lot of those things and collectively, we think that's going to allow us to hold the line. We also have a few $1,000,000 net of some incremental reserves we took this Few $1,000,000 of headwinds in insurance that we knock on wood that we hope we don't see. So that also provides a little bit of downside support and keeping EBITDA flat this year. Speaker 400:26:49So maybe just like a follow-up on that. We haven't don't have great data For the last downturn, if we're having this conversation in 12 months and EBITDA was, let's say, sub $200,000,000 Which part of that do you think would have been most would have been the driver of that? And the only reason I ask Doing 235 again or something in that range would clearly be a good outcome, but I'm sure there's some Assessment of what's the potential downside. It sounds like the cost program is pretty solid and that should be savings. From what you're seeing today, specialized Is resilient and there's some strength in particular end markets. Speaker 400:27:30And so then it comes down to what happens in the rate side and what happens on productivity. If we're looking at this in 12 months and you didn't hit those marks and it was a little worse, what are the things that are maybe a little more exposed or just What's your assessment of the risk? Speaker 200:27:47Yes. I mean, I think you hit it. It comes down to rate. I mean, I think that's at the end of the day for For all of us in this industry, I mean rates the biggest thing out of our control that will kind of make or break things. Again, we have a lot of these, we mentioned self help Business improvement initiatives that we're going to be working on that will offset that. Speaker 200:28:07We also had we talked about it as really a headwind the last two quarters of 2022, which We think it will be a tailwind going into 2023 and that's really the shift away from owner operator drivers, LP drivers to more company drivers. The last few weeks of 2022 and certainly strong into 2023 so far, we've seen a marked shift in our ability to see company trucks, which have a much better margin profile. And I think that If the rates continue to stay moderated this year, that trend will only continue. I think a 200 or something certainly below 200 is a pretty draconian assumption or target To suggest we might hit 2, I think that the Daseke business model today is much, much stronger than it was in the last downturn, the last trough. And so I think that we're fundamentally we fundamentally have just a different range of earning profile, operating profile in our business today. Speaker 200:29:12I think that If you look at where we're at in the cycle, and I know everybody's kind of talked about this, but we've these are look, these are typically 36 48 month cycles and we had 18 months or so 18 to 20 months of expansion, really 21 into 2022. And then for the better part of 2022, at least the spot rate since January has been slowly falling away. We started to see some shakiness in our contract rates in July or August of this year and kind of a more pronounced Leg down in our contract rates. Again, we're 80% to 85% contract rates. But in October, we took a leg down On contract rates, as we look at spot rates today, those are certainly starting to firm up and our contract rates are starting to firm up as well. Speaker 200:30:03So I think that we can debate about whether or not we're at the bottom. But I think when you look at the margins that are more commodity End markets are generating when you look at the demand or sorry, the supply destruction, the capacity destruction that's going on today In the industry, I mean, I read something that said net revocations of carrier authorities are 6000 to 8000 carriers per week right now. When you look at a lot of those different things, when you look at the loss of LP drivers, owner operator drivers, and the shift to company drivers, when you start like pulling a lot of those things together, I just think the rate environment is at the bottom. We've never had a Q2 or Q3 where we haven't benefited With some kind of uplift in seasonality, even if you look at the Great Recession, we still had good seasonality in the business. And I don't know that people appreciate this, but really if you take the trough that we had in the Great Recession, we were back to 80%, 90% of peak rates, pre recession Peak rates within 12 months. Speaker 200:31:05So I think that people underestimate, I can't speak for flatbed, but I think people underestimate that the resiliency of the industry, particularly Diversification of our model and that it's exclusively industrial facing. So I think is 2023 going to be from a rate standpoint A blowout year? No, it's not. It's not going to match what we had in 2022, but we haven't assumed that. There's a lot of other things that we have going for us this year, as I mentioned. Speaker 200:31:30But I do think that 2024, we're expecting 2024 will be at 2022 peak rates. And really, if you look at cycles and assume that you get some repetition in cycles to predict kind of future performance, by 2025, we'll have another massive peak. So we're again, we're pretty bullish on things and we think that 2023 will be the low point if you had to call it. Speaker 500:31:58Yes, I Speaker 300:31:58would just add to that that look we can on the forward looking statements we can kind of talk about that. But Just to reiterate, we feel very comfortable with our outlook in achieving flat year over year results. We Have a great net CapEx that delivers quite a bit of free cash flow for value to the shareholders. So we're fully committed to this. And when we talk about 200, it's a nice theory, but we believe the peak Trough frame put in our current budget that we're putting forth is a reasonable assumption that we can deliver. Speaker 400:32:34Got it. That's super helpful. Maybe just my last question and a clarification. How should we think about brokerage? Jonathan, I know you made Comment saying you shift from some of the overflow to using your own assets and that's a higher margin opportunity. Speaker 400:32:50But We think about it from a modeling standpoint, we expect flatbed, I guess, that brokerage there sees Double digit declines and I guess logistics is maybe a little more healthy. And then just my clarification question, in terms of share count that's been all over And now you have to repurchase. Should we assume like $54,000,000 $53,000,000 as the year starts out? Thanks again for the question. Speaker 200:33:15Yes. So brokerage, we have going down 6% or 7% this year. And you acknowledge that we're and we saw it at the very end of Q4, and we see it so far into January. We're shifting those loads that would have otherwise been taken by 3rd party carriers onto our company trucks, which is Again, the model that we've talked about, I think the model that a number of our peers employ. So it's really that kind of control valve, if you will. Speaker 200:33:46I would say that what we've seen at the end of the year and going into 2023 so far is that while brokerage is down, The margin on our brokerage is up. So it's actually performing reasonably well. The share count, let me get you the exact share count that we're working off of now. It's $47,000,000 Bert. Speaker 500:34:11Got it. Okay, great. Speaker 400:34:13Well, thanks again for all the time. I'll pass it over. Absolutely. Thanks, Marty. Operator00:34:18Thank you. And one moment for our next question, please. And our next question comes from the line of Jason Seidl with Cowen. Your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:34:36Hey, thank you, operator. Hey, Jonathan and team Harrows, everyone. Speaker 200:34:40Hey, Jason. How are you? Speaker 600:34:43Hanging in. It's still earning season for us. But I wanted to Ask a couple on you guys here. Can you put a little more clarity on the productivity decline in 1Q, That was a big step down. I know you sort of mentioned it. Speaker 600:34:57Was that a mix shift towards some high security cargo stuff that was much shorter length at all? Speaker 200:35:05In Q1 of 2022, you're saying there was Speaker 600:35:09a Not the most recent quarter here. Speaker 200:35:11Yes. Okay, okay, okay. Yes. That's right. I mean, look, a little bit of it was on the high security cargo side. Speaker 200:35:22Those were shorter length of hauls on the specialized side that weighed on some of the kind of average productivity metrics. On the flatbed side, we lost some productivity. As again, If you remember, we really shifted more to Asset Light LP owner operator Moving into 2022. And so we saw some of that fall away, either owner operators parking their trucks going, hey, I've done well for this year and I'm taking myself Out of the market right now or yet LP drivers that weren't making the same amount of money because the rate environment changed and they're reevaluating whether or not they exit the industry or ultimately shift over to being a company driver. So there's some movement around there, which we'll figure out where those drivers land probably in Q1 of this year. Speaker 200:36:15You also had look, you also had just the time of the year you had 2 holidays in Q4 and you're having to route a lot of those drivers back home. So just by virtue of that, you lose productivity. So that's hopefully that answers your question. We Speaker 300:36:30also took a Speaker 400:36:31lot of late Speaker 300:36:35deliveries of Trucks which are harder to see when you get them late in Q4 like that. And so that's part of what drove it as well. So we would expect that to start to rebound in Q1. We've been pretty successful with our recruiting classes in January. Speaker 600:36:51And I would imagine you've already probably seen some improvement in that just By some of the seasonality that you mentioned? Correct. Okay. Next question, Josh, I think you talked about an expected rebound and sort of be at peak rates and back to peak 22 rates in 2024. And I think you said you expect like another big year for trucking, if you will, in 2025. Speaker 600:37:22What's sort of behind those numbers for you guys when you make those forecasts out? Speaker 200:37:27Yes. I think we've looked at a number of The past cycles. And as I mentioned, as I mentioned to Bert, I mean, we look at these and look at them as really 3 to 4 year cycles. And If we look at if we try to overlay the cycle that we're currently in, a lot of different things floating around. But We think it generally is going to track what you saw in 2015, kind of the industrial recession, right? Speaker 200:37:56We had You had about 18 months of kind of uplift 18 months to 24 months of uplift leading into that peak in kind of summer of 2015. Again, And that was on the heels of the trough where you had back in 2011, you had everybody worried about the debt ceiling. You had the downgrade of U. S. Debt, you had the kind of the sovereign debt issues around the world, quantitative easing, all that. Speaker 200:38:19People kind of got nervous and things tanked and they quickly came back It ultimately peaked in 2015. And you had kind of a fall down into that winter of about 10% or so. And then you had your normal seasonality, so you got some of that back. And then the next winter, so going into 2016, You kind of fell down some more. So that 2015, that summer 2015 peak to the trough in winter of 2016, You were down about 15%. Speaker 200:38:51And again, if you look at these cycles, they typically average peak to trough about 10% to 15%. The only cycle that we've seen that exceeded that was the Great Recession where it was closer to 20%, 22%, But again, 80%, 90% of those rates you got back within 12 months. So we look at that and go, okay, we think that The kind of characteristics and the drivers of the cycle different, but we look at where we're at today and go we kind of feel like we're on that same type of cycle where you have a slow 18 months fall down, you do still have seasonality. You kind of peak in winter, which for us will probably be winter 23. And then you'll have kind of a firming up to whereby by early to mid-twenty 24, You'll be at 2022 peaks again and you'll have a runway you'll have kind of a continued runway from there on out back up to a new peak in 2025. Speaker 200:39:50And again, Who really knows, but we've done a lot of work again on looking at cycles and that's our thesis. That could obviously change depending What the Fed does, I think there's a lot of noise in data when you look through data. Cautiously optimistic that they don't over tighten. A little bit concerned about some of the takeaways with this last jobs report and how the Fed receives interprets those. And again, you had 21,000,000 jobs lost as part of The kind of COVID effects of 15% of our workforce is taken out. Speaker 200:40:28And if you look at employment trends, We're still 3000000 to 4000000 jobs short where we would have otherwise been had that employment trend continued. So I think that When the Fed looks at this and said it's a hot jobs market, everything else, I think we're still way behind. And so I think if they continue to over tighten, That could cause some issues, but I think you go back to, okay, we've got the self help initiatives, we've got the diversified end market exposure, we've got some other Going forward, seeding more company drivers, shifting away from LP, lower margin LP owner operator drivers. So look, we're pretty bullish on things to come. Speaker 600:41:07I appreciate the color on that. I wanted to try to dive deeper into your comments on the contract market. I think you said You started seeing some softness in November, but it seems like it's truing up now. Can you give us some numbers behind that? Speaker 200:41:23Yes. I don't have numbers right now to kind of provide, but I think Part of this really goes back to, Jason, the customers look, our shippers are just frankly becoming a lot more sophisticated. And Yes. When they're seeing the spot market fall since January of 2022 and they're looking at their contracted rates, they can't ignore that. And so what we had is October, November, there was some softening, as I mentioned, in July. Speaker 200:41:54And And I think what you've seen with a lot of these shippers is they've really recalibrated their RFQ process and their RFQ approach. And so a lot of these guys now are going, you know what, we're going to go to our ship we're going to go to our carriers, on the flat I'm speaking of the flatbed side. We're going to go to them before their softer kind of low points in the year, when they're really focused on getting freight, really focused on visibility going into Going into Q3 going into Q4, going into Q1, and we're going to ask them to submit rates and submit pricing for that. And look, they're going to be hungrier because they want that visibility going into softer part of the year. And then they've also added an RFQ cycle In April, so right in front of our peak season, right? Speaker 200:42:43So they've kind of hit you and said, look, we're going to we want you to really be hungry for capacity going into your down point. And then before you have a good sense of really how good Q2 and Q3 is going to be for you, we also want you to kind of bid the freight. So I think that's part of what you saw. So it's really in keeping with October, November laid down where a lot of those guys have come out before our kind of seasonally soft time of year And said, hey, bid this freight really playing on everybody's concerns, expectations that it could get a little tougher. And so I think that's what you saw manifest in a little bit of a leg down for us in October on contracted rates. Speaker 600:43:20No, I appreciate all that. And last one, then I'll turn it over to somebody else here. Obviously, you mentioned that debt repurchases sort of top of the list here. Can you talk about, what are you targeting First, is it the Series B preferred? And then I guess if you can give any comments on the acquisition market and how it looks now and maybe what you guys would Looking forward, if you were to pull the trigger on something? Speaker 200:43:46Yes. So from a debt standpoint, I think we're looking at debt pretty holistically. We had there was a kind of a stark difference in opinion between the two ratings agencies Whether or not that new preferred should be treated as equity or debt, one said it should be treated as debt, one said it should be treated as equity. We're focused on really how our investors, how our shareholders evaluate that new security. But we're looking at that holistically, and it's going to be probably a meaningful Paydown when we ultimately make it. Speaker 200:44:23We really want to again, we really want to start to approach in a quick way, start to approach that 1.5 to 2 turns of gross leverage target We have now it's a long term target, but we think that there's line of sight in doing that within the next 24 months given the cash flow we're going to generate this year And hopefully next year as well. So there's a path there plus the cash on hand, plus you've got some Rolling stock dispositions that we can clean up. We've got some real estate assets, some duplicative terminals, yards, things like that, that we've looked at cleaning up really to expedite the pay down of our debt. But on the preferred side, we think it's very investor friendly. It's very company friendly paper, but you can't ignore the fact The $20,000,000 of that $67,000,000 has a 13% coupon. Speaker 200:45:09Now what I would tell you is that Currently, our the pricing on our term loan is about 8.5%, right? So 2022 is 4.75, But with all the rate hikes, we're at about 8.5%. So the Series A I'm sorry, the Series B tranche 1 that carries 7%, Good, very friendly paper, good coupon, good dividend relative to our current interest payment on our term loan debt, so that will likely stay in. But 13% is a bit onerous and we're looking for ways to delever the company and improve the free cash flow profile of the company. So that will likely come out as part of our overall balance sheet enhancement through some kind of large pay down here in the near term. Speaker 600:45:54That makes sense. And in terms of the acquisition market after the debt pay down? Speaker 200:46:00Yes. The acquisition market is still interesting. It's Been a little bit slower because of this bid ask spread that it heavily pops up when rates move too quickly up or down. We do have one acquisition under nonbinding LOI, And we're cautiously optimistic that we'll have that probably closed late February, early March. It's going to look a lot like The last acquisition we did, a little bit bigger, but from kind of a value standpoint, still immediately accretive, still a great Multiple that we're paying and immediately accretive. Speaker 200:46:44We also have another few acquisitions that we're close to getting under LOI. So we're cautiously optimistic more so on the specialized side that we can find good acquisitions that we can transact on, That will be immediately accretive. But I think that again, we made the comment in our presentation, we do want to live within this Target leverage profile, we might intermittently take leverage up a little bit to transact on an acquisition if there's line of sight to getting that leverage profile back down. But what we have on the table today, even some of these potential acquisitions that we're looking at, we think that we can fund it with incremental debt And cash on hand, even net of a meaningful pay down using cash on hand, we think that the remaining cash on hand will allow us to fund some of these acquisitions that we have in the pipeline. So we're feeling pretty good about it. Speaker 200:47:37And I think that We've sized our acquisition appetite and our expectations right based on where we're at in the cycle and where we're at with our transformations. Speaker 600:47:46Jonathan, Aaron, team appreciate the time as always. Speaker 400:47:49Thank you. Thank you. Operator00:48:04Our next question comes from the line of Greg Gibas with Northland Capital Markets. Your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:48:10Hi. Good morning, Jonathan and Aaron. Thanks for taking the questions. Hi, Ryan. It's a good follow-up on your outlook. Speaker 500:48:19Just wondering maybe kind of high level how it's changed relative to maybe your sentiment on kind of the Q3 earnings call and Maybe what factors have changed the most? Speaker 200:48:31Yes. Look, I mean, I think it's rate. We saw a little bit more softening And specifically flatbed than we did before. I think we said we'd be modestly up from an EBITDA standpoint. Now we're saying Flat to modestly up. Speaker 200:48:46So I think that within a if you had to quantify within a couple percent probably of where we may have guided, guided on the last call, so not meaningfully different. But Flatbed has changed, which we've I think we've highlighted some of the mitigants to that. Still optimistic we're going to have a good year, but I think that would be the delta where we kind of step back just a little bit on what we talked about in this last quarter. Speaker 300:49:18Sure. Speaker 500:49:19And then I guess with regard to your comments on commitment to accelerated deleveraging in 2023, is that kind of Reflective of change in strategic priorities as a result of those rates changing or maybe M and A expectations changing at all or Was that kind of the plan all along? Speaker 200:49:40No, I mean, I think we've been pretty vocal About bolstering the strength of our balance sheet for the last couple of years now. I think that the market created certain opportunities, namely the buy Of Mr. Daseke, which we thought was very opportunistic and very attractive. And so we kind of staged that as priority 1 that when that opportunity came about. We had previously announced $40,000,000 share repurchase, so directionally, we feel like we ended up in a good spot there. Speaker 200:50:15But that's always been one of our stated priorities. I think that When you look through things now, you absolutely can't ignore the incremental cash Cost of our debt, I mean, it's going to be an incremental $16,000,000 or so this year of cash expense. So we Can't ignore that, but I think that again, we continue to look around at our peers, look around at our valuation and go, what do we need to do to get Our shareholders more comfortable that Daseke is going to be able to weather storms and to take certain things off the table, certain, I think, Adverse things off the table that disadvantage us from kind of a valuation standpoint relative to our peers and leverage continues to be a consistent theme. And so we're in light of some of that feedback, we did a massive share repurchase. Yes, doing an open market share repurchase now doesn't make sense and it wouldn't move the needle. Speaker 200:51:17And so now our priority Is really repaying debt. As we talked to Jason about, we feel like even net of a pretty meaningful pay down in debt, We can fund 2023 the 2023 M and A pipeline that we have in front of us with incremental debt. Again, think about incremental debt is look incremental debt, but still not funding acquisitions with more than that 1.5 to 2 turns of leverage and with the rest In cash or cash and equity? Let me say cash. I don't want to say equity. Speaker 200:51:49I don't want you to think we're going to issue equity for those. But half cash, half debt, We think we have plenty of runway with the acquisition pipeline we have in front of us today to do that and still have cash left over and Still allow for a meaningful pay down in leverage. So, we're looking for things to slowly take off the table To give potential investors, current investors excuses that we should trade at the discount we are to our peers, we've demonstrated continued Strategic execution, we've delivered consistently on our financial performance. We've affected a massive share repurchase. And now we look at this and go, look, it's leverage and margins. Speaker 200:52:28We think we're going to continue through transformational initiatives, We're shifting drivers from LP to company. That'll improve margins. Certainly, on the next cycle, you're going to really see more of the benefit of that. And now it's really focusing on leverage. So that's the plan. Speaker 500:52:47Great, very helpful. Wondering if Speaker 700:52:49you could just discuss kind Speaker 500:52:51of the outlook on the supply side of the market and maybe update on the timing of your new equipment purchases? Speaker 200:53:00Sure. So, look, are you referring to ours Specifically with respect to our supply or just industry supply? Thoughts on industry supply side? Speaker 500:53:11Industry supply was kind of part of the first question and then just the update on the timing maybe this year of new equipment purchases. Speaker 200:53:17Yes. So I'll hit the first the latter first. So new equipment purchases for us are front end loaded. We're looking to make sure that we have that new equipment, so we can mobilize it, utilize it during our Got a peak season, which is Q2 and Q3. So a lot of the CapEx spend is disproportionately slanted to Q1 and Q2 versus the dry van guys who Our focus on having that equipment in front of Q4, their busy season. Speaker 200:53:46So it's a little bit different for us. I mean typically We see 75% or so of our CapEx going out the door in Q1 and Q2. We're trying to smooth that a little bit this year. So it might be $60,000,000 to $65,000,000 in Q1, Q2. That said, we also if you noticed on the slide, we also had about 22,000,000 And rollover CapEx, so our Q4 2022 CapEx number was projected to be 55 $1,000,000 which is a massive spend in Q4 of 2022 because of supply chain issues and delivery delays By the OEMs, we didn't get all that out the door. Speaker 200:54:26So that's spilling over into mostly Q1 and a part of Q2. So we have an extra $22,000,000 going out the door in Q1, Q2 on top of our normal cycle normal replacement cycle CapEx. That is baked into the $145,000,000 to $155,000,000 of total 2023 CapEx though. And then supply, look, I I mentioned it to Bert. We're seeing massive net revocations of carrier authorities based on FMCSA data, 6000 to 8000 carriers per week. Speaker 200:55:01If you look at some of the data That's out on Class 8 orders for January. They're sequentially down 40%, which is a little higher than normal. Year over year, so January to January, they're down 12%. It doesn't quite jive with The increase in 2023 CapEx guides that a lot of our peers are giving. So I think people are just being cautiously optimistic. Speaker 200:55:31They're making sure they have the allocations from the OEMs, but they're not signing up to anything until there's a little bit more visibility into what Q1 is going to look like. But again, I think we're already seeing demand destruction, I keep saying demand destruction, supply destruction, Capacity destruction, we're seeing, LP drivers, owner operator drivers leave the market. We do think that rates are At the bottom or closer to the bottom and there's more upside than the downside at this point. I think A few people have acknowledged this that look on an inflation adjusted basis, we're probably flat. If you look at kind of Peak 2019 rates to peak 2022 rates, where you look at trough, kind of off season peak, I'll say it differently, off season peak 2019 rates to off season peak 2022 rates, both of those are up about 35%, okay? Speaker 200:56:34If you look at that and say so it's about a 10% CAGR, so 10% CAGR over those 3 years in rate increases. Historically, we've seen those rate increases track to CPI, so about 2.5% a year, year in, year out. So you can go, okay, well, you guys are massively up. I think that the counterpoint to that the credible counterpoint to that is if you inflation adjusts A lot of those rates were probably flat to maybe even down. If you look at diesel prices having nearly doubled, if you look at driver wages Increasing 30 plus percent. Speaker 200:57:10If you look at things like maintenance costs or tires increasing 50% to 60%, Lubricants, things like that, and you truly adjust rates based on an inflation adjusted basis, so you get to kind of a real rate growth. I think we're flat to down. So I think that you've got a bunch of embedded costs that you're simply not going to walk back. And if you do, you're going to You're going to blow up the supply side of the equation for your shippers. So we think that things are starting to stabilize and we're cautiously optimistic again that 2023 going to be good with a really strong rebound in 2024. Speaker 500:57:49Got it. Very helpful. Thanks, Moshe. Operator00:57:52Thank you. And one moment for our next question please. And our next question comes from the line of Ryan Segal with Craig Hallum, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:58:05Good morning, guys. Just one for me at this point. What do you guys think is the right maintenance CapEx level? Because if I look at kind of D and A in the past couple of years, dollars 90 ish million CapEx, including all finance costs was about $145,000,000 last year and then a little bit more than that this year in 2023. So Curious kind of as we think about fully baked free cash flow, what the right maintenance CapEx number is? Speaker 700:58:31And then secondly, How confident are you in generating free cash flow again inclusive of all equipment purchases and $150,000,000 of CapEx? Speaker 300:58:41Yes. Thanks, Ryan. So we'll talk a little bit about your first question, which is on the maintenance CapEx. And so our guide for this year is 145 to 155, which includes that's net of proceeds. And so the right way to think about our CapEx is this year we've got about 8,000,000 to 10,000,000 Transformational CapEx where we're lightening up trailers for a one time event and then we've got about $5,000,000 that we're buying Specialized trailers for one of our verticals to pull forward, so we can be in a good position for our renewable energy vertical. Speaker 300:59:15And so This year is a little bit of a down CapEx for us. We're pretty happy with where our trucks are at. We think one of the ways to measure those is on miles. And so we're 2.5 Or 2 to 2.5 times, 2.5 years on a mileage basis. So we're pretty happy with where our overall fleet is. Speaker 300:59:34An outlook number on replacement given our current profile and truck count is probably $130,000,000 to $140,000,000 for an Outlook perspective, that's kind of how we think about that piece of it. Is there another piece you want to Andres, Speaker 700:59:51I know I'm Yes, no I'm Free cash flow. So if you think about, call it, dollars 140,000,000 of recurring maintenance CapEx and you back out the interest expense, which It's going to be higher tax expense, preferred dividends, etcetera. I guess how confident are you after kind of fully baking everything free cash flow generation this year? Speaker 301:00:09Yes. I think we feel very confident with that. We're doing a good job on our balance sheet management. I think we've got opportunities there On our cash conversion cycle, but overall we feel very comfortable with where we're at in the cash flow numbers that you mentioned. Speaker 201:00:26Yes, Ryan. And we're still look, we're still philosophically, we're still looking at kind of a 30%, 70% split, 70% financed equipment, 30% cash pay on that equipment. Obviously, the equipment loans And the cost of the equipment debt hasn't gone up as much as the spread on our term loan debt. So we still think It's a prudent way to fund CapEx and we'd rather kind of preserve our cash at least in the near term for optionality. We think that there's Probably better things we can do with that cash that will create more outsized growth and return versus the cost of that equipment debt. Speaker 201:01:10So that's That's our philosophy at least now as it stands today. Speaker 701:01:17Great. Thanks guys. Good luck. Speaker 201:01:19Thank you. Operator01:01:20Thank you. And I would like to turn the conference back over to Jonathan Shipko for closing remarks. Speaker 201:01:26Thank you, Michelle. I'd like to close today's call on Slide 15 with some final thoughts on our 2022 performance and the Daseke opportunity for 2023 and beyond. As the market leading servicer to complex industrial end markets, we delivered solid revenue growth in the 3rd consecutive year of record adjusted EBITDA. Our resilient business model includes a diverse portfolio of more than a dozen industrial end markets that span multiple industry verticals, many with unique non correlated drivers that support our resilience and growth. A large and diversified fleet with expansive geographic breadth that serves the unique needs of over 4,000 plus customers and and a commitment to the financial strength that will continue to provide us with strategic optionality to support growth across cycles. Speaker 201:02:08We funneled our strong cash flow generation into a vector Changing opportunity to effect an immediately accretive share repurchase, providing increased ownership to our shareholders in the expanding earnings profile of our business. And even in the midst of a challenging backdrop, our current expectations are for flat to low single digit growth over record 2022 levels with intense focus on continuing to build a strong foundation for outperformance when the economic cycle inflects. We remain committed to our fortress balance sheet, goal to which we initially committed to in 2021, relying on continuous improvement in our business and strategic execution to generate free cash flow that will enable us to accelerate our deleveraging goals. With confidence in our company, our team members and our perspective results, We believe we are well positioned as an attractive option for outsized performance within the transportation and logistics industry. Thank you for your time today. Speaker 201:03:01This concludes our Q4 full year 2022 earnings call. Operator01:03:06This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallDaseke Q4 202200:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckAnnual report(10-K) Daseke Earnings HeadlinesGlancy Prongay & Murray LLP Announces Investigation of Daseke, Inc. (DSKE)April 22, 2024 | businesswire.comDaseke, Inc. (DSKE)April 21, 2024 | finance.yahoo.comAltucher: Turn $900 into $108,000 in just 12 months?We are entering the final Trump Bump of our lives. But the biggest returns will not be in the stock market.April 17, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)DSKE Mar 2024 10.000 callMarch 14, 2024 | ca.finance.yahoo.comDaseke, Inc. (DSKE) Stock Historical Prices & Data - Yahoo FinanceMarch 10, 2024 | finance.yahoo.comDASEKE INVESTOR ALERT by the Former Attorney General of Louisiana: Kahn Swick & Foti, LLC Investigates Adequacy of Price and Process in Proposed Sale of Daseke, Inc. - DSKEFebruary 27, 2024 | businesswire.comSee More Daseke Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Daseke? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Daseke and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About DasekeDaseke (NASDAQ:DSKE) provides transportation and logistics solutions in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. It operates in two segments, Flatbed Solutions and Specialized Solutions. The company transports aircraft parts, manufacturing equipment, structural steel, pressure vessels, wind turbine blades, commercial glass, high security cargo, industrial and hazardous waste, arms, ammunition and explosives, lumber, and building and construction materials, as well as heavy machinery, such as construction, mining, and agriculture. It also offers logistical planning and warehousing services. As of December 31, 2023, the company operated 2,971 company-owned tractors and 1,798 independent owned and operated contractors tractors; and 9,669 trailers. 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There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Morning, everyone, and thank you for joining today's conference call to discuss DESCY's Financial Results for the 4th Quarter and Full Year Ended December 31, 2022. With us today are Jonathan Shepko, CEO and Board Member Erin Coley, EVP and CFO, Adrian Griffin, VP of Investor Relations and Treasurer and Tracy Graham, VP of FP and A and Business Analytics. After your prepared remarks, the management team will take your questions. As a reminder, you may now download the PDF of the presentation slides that will accompany the remarks made on today's conference call as indicated in the press release issued earlier today. You may access these slides in the Investor Relations section of DESCY's website. Operator00:00:50I would now like to turn the call over to Adrian Griffin, who will read the company's Safe Harbor statement that provides important caution regarding forward looking statements within the meanings of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Adrienne, please go ahead. Speaker 100:01:08Thank you, Michelle, and good morning, everyone. Please turn to Slide 2 for a review of our Safe Harbor and non GAAP statements. Today's presentation contains forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Projected financial information, including our guidance outlook, are forward looking statements. Forward looking statements, including those with respect to revenues, earnings, strategies, prospects and other aspects of Daseke's business are based on management's current estimates, projections and assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations and projections. Speaker 100:01:47I would also like to highlight our decision to update our reporting segment results. Previously, the company had disclosed a corporate segment, which was not an operating segment and included acquisition transaction expenses, corporate salaries, interest expense and other corporate administrative expenses Beginning with the Q4 of 2022, we began eliminating intersegment revenue and expenses at the segment level and allocating corporate costs to our 2 reportable segments based upon respective segment revenue. All financial information discussed and included in our materials aligns with the new allocations and eliminations. I encourage you to read our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a discussion of the risks that can affect our business and not to place any undue reliance on any forward looking statements. We undertake no obligation to revise our forward looking statements to reflect events or circumstances occurring after today, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as may be required under applicable securities laws. Speaker 100:02:55During the call, there will also be a discussion of some items that do not conform to the U. S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles or GAAP, including and not limited to adjusted EBITDA, adjusted operating ratio, adjusted operating income, adjusted net income or loss, free cash flow and net debt. Reconciliations of these non GAAP measures to their most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in the appendix of the presentation and press release issued this morning, both of which are available on the Investors tab of the Daseke website, www.daske.com. In terms of the structure of our call today, I will start by turning the call over to Jonathan, who will review our business operations And the progress we are making as we execute against our strategic priorities and then Aaron, who will provide a financial review of the 4th And Jonathan will then speak about our 2023 outlook and wrap up our remarks with a few closing comments before we open the line for your questions. Speaker 100:03:54With that, I'll turn the call over. Jonathan? Speaker 200:03:57Thank you. Good morning, everyone. I'd like to start the call today by welcoming Adrienne to the team. She joins us as the Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasurer, and we are pleased to have her focus on further elevating our IR and treasury functions. I would also like to thank each of the Daseke team members and especially acknowledge the disciplined commitment of our professional driver community. Speaker 200:04:18It's due to the collective effort of team Daseke and we will today report our company's 3rd consecutive year of record adjusted EBITDA. I'd like to spend just a moment on this Slide 3. Whether you are a long time holder of Daseke or new to our story, given the amount of change we have successfully affected over the last years, We thought it made sense to provide this snapshot slide to help everyone appreciate who we are today. As mentioned, 2022 was yet another record year for our company, both in total revenue and adjusted EBITDA. This performance is a noteworthy bellwether of our progress and highlights the continued earnings potential of our business as demonstrated by comparing this past year's record adjusted EBITDA of $234,900,000 which was generated during the peak rate environment of the current cycle to the last cycle of peak rates in 2018, where EBITDA was approximately $60,000,000 less at $174,300,000 This is a peak to peak improvement of nearly 35% and was generated by a 2022 fleet That was 16% leaner than our 2018 fleet before we began to work on initiatives to improve our asset utilization. Speaker 200:05:29With that as a backdrop, I'd like to move to Slide 4, where I will share some of our 2022 accomplishments that set the stage for our 2023 outlook. 2022, we delivered solid revenue growth and posted our 3rd consecutive year of record adjusted EBITDA. We executed a meaningful transformational share repurchase from our founder, which was accretive and removed the perceived overhang on our stock, given the percentage of the company and the founders ownership represented. We affirm our ongoing commitment to enhance the strength of our balance sheet through accelerated deleveraging. We have been more vocal about the resiliency of our operating model, one that is unquestionably different from any other publicly traded transportation and logistics peer. Speaker 200:06:13A blend of asset light and asset based capabilities exclusively serving the industrial economy with strong diversification by end market and subvertical. And through a combination of transformation initiatives and strengthening macro environment, we believe we are well positioned to outperform when the cycle does inflect. If you will turn with me to Slide 5, I'd like to discuss our Q4 2022 share repurchases. On September 30, we announced the $40,000,000 share repurchase plan, ultimately purchasing over 803,000 shares under this plan at a weighted average price of $6.05 before supplanting this plan with the announcement of a founder share repurchase on November 14. We subsequently closed on the Founder share repurchase, repurchasing all shares then held by Daseke's Founder through negotiated terms very favorable to company and common shareholders. Speaker 200:07:06In total, we purchased nearly 30% of our then issued and outstanding common shares funded with $45,000,000 of cash on hand and the issuance of Series B perpetual redeemable preferred stock. I'll note that the Series B preferreds Our redeemable and our sole option in whole or in part were $67,600,000 plus any accrued and unpaid dividends. The Series B preferreds are not convertible and have no affirmative or negative covenants. As is outlined in this slide, these transactions were immediately and significantly accretive based upon adjusted with pro form a EPS of $1.52 for full year 2022. Simply put, This repurchase will provide one of the most profound uplifts for our shareholders in the coming years, providing exponential growth opportunity as our consistent performance and strategic execution gives rise to a more aptly valued share price. Speaker 200:07:59And while the allocation of capital in support of this buyback It's squarely within our shareholder value creation framework. With our focus now on delevering, the company has no intention to repurchase any additional stock in the foreseeable future. With that, I will now hand the call over to Aaron, who will provide a more detailed walk through of our Q4 and full year results. Aaron? Speaker 300:08:21Thank you, Jonathan, and good morning, everyone. I would like to start with Slide 6, which represents a high level review of our consolidated results for the quarter. Once again, our resilient business model facilitated growth as we delivered quarterly revenue of 408 $200,000 up 3.5 percent or $13,900,000 compared to revenue of 394 $300,000 in the Q4 of 2021. This included demand strength from high security cargo and the agriculture end market, partially offset by declines primarily in the steel end market and renewable energy vertical, plus contributions from a tuck in acquisition completed early in 2022. Compared to the Q4 of 2021, Our adjusted operating ratio declined as inflation increased our total expenses faster than revenue. Speaker 300:09:19The cost increases came primarily from salaries, wages and benefits and operations and maintenance expense. And while we achieved year over year improvement in our rate per mile, we also realized a reduction in miles per tractor. That said, we're very focused on consistently improving operating ratio by driving operational excellence and strategic execution. In the quarter, we delivered adjusted EBITDA of $49,600,000 equal to the Q4 of 2021. Now turning to Slide 7. Speaker 300:09:57Specialized Solutions revenues were 242,900,000 up 10.9% versus the prior year, as our team performed very well in shifting asset capacity to end markets with strength, including high security cargo, agriculture and aerospace, which was more than offset by moderating demand in construction end markets and the renewable energy vertical. Furthermore, segment rate per mile was strong at $3.50 an improvement over the prior year as our teams capitalized on demand growth with our asset right fleet mix, delivering a 2% increase in company miles. Specialized Solutions adjusted operating ratio improved 110 basis points to 91.8%, while adjusted EBITDA improved 19.1 percent to 32,400,000 Productivity in the quarter was impacted by shorter length of haul loads in high security cargo and a soft decline in total miles per tractor per day that was magnified by the recent receipt of new tractors near the end of the year. We expect a rebound in our miles per tractor per day productivity as seasonality and new equipment deliveries normalize. On slide 8, we outlined Flatbed Solutions segment results. Speaker 300:11:24Despite the 1st year over year decrease in flatbeds market rates since the pandemic, Datsky was still able to garner a premium rate compared to the market, as shown in the top right chart on the slide. Declining rates and cooling demand into the steel end market partially offset demand growth in manufacturing, construction, in the agriculture end markets resulted in a revenue decline of 5.7 percent to 165,300,000 The use of our asset right model in this segment enabled us to focus on company asset utilization, which traded lower loading higher margin freight on the company assets from brokerage revenues, which decreased. Lower revenue and cost inflation, primarily in operations and maintenance, resulted in the segment's adjusted operating ratio increasing to 95.9 percent from 91.8 percent in the prior year and adjusted EBITDA of $17,200,000 which was 23.2% lower than the prior year period. Now moving to Slide 9. In 2022, we achieved a consolidated record revenue of $1,800,000,000 representing a 13.9% improvement over the prior year, driven particularly by strength in our high security cargo end market, which grew at nearly 50% over 2021, as well as growth in agriculture, manufacturing, construction and aerospace, partially offset by declines in the renewable energy vertical and steel end market. Speaker 300:13:09We also achieved increases of 10.5% in the rate per mile and 5.4% in revenue per tractor over 2021. In 2022, we reported income from operations of $98,400,000 compared with $112,800,000 in 2022. However, in 2022, We had incremental insurance and claims expense of $15,400,000 a $9,400,000 non cash impairment expense resulting from integration and elimination of trade names, dollars 3,800,000 in acquisition related expenses and $2,100,000 restructuring expenses as compared to fiscal year 2021. Adjusting for all of these Income from operations would have exceeded 2021. The adjusted operating ratio was 91.6% 2022, an increase from the 90.9% in 2021. Speaker 300:14:08Though we continue to experience inflationary pressures that built Crossed the year primarily in salaries, wages and benefits as well as operations and maintenance. We were able to offset some of these headwinds on our operating ratio by shifting freight to higher margin company assets and redirecting assets to the most profitable lanes. The Daseke team delivered commercial execution and our flexible asset rights strategy to deliver value for our shareholders and we set an adjusted EBITDA record of $234,900,000 suppressing the previous record of 200 and $3,100,000 set last year. We're very proud of the entire Daseke team for achieving this record as it shows The agility and resiliency of our team and our operating model. Let's now look at the segments on a full year basis, Starting with Specialized Solutions on Slide 10. Speaker 300:15:06Segment revenue grew 15.9 percent to just over $1,000,000,000 and accounted for nearly 65% of the company's total revenue growth. This success was based on strong demand in high security cargo, Agriculture, manufacturing and construction end markets robust commercial execution using all aspects of our asset rights strategy to deliver profitable growth and contributions from a tuck in acquisition, modestly offset by demand degradation in the renewable energy vertical. We're pleased to report 12.1% increase in the rate per mile and an 8 0.4% increase in revenue per tractor versus full year 2021 on essentially flat company miles compared to 2021. Furthermore, adjusted operating ratio improved by 30 basis points to 90.8% versus full year 2022 And adjusted EBITDA increased 11.5 percent to $141,200,000 versus the prior year due to strong revenue growth. Wrapping up the segment discussion on a full year basis, we look at slide 11 for Flatbed Solutions for full year 2022. Speaker 300:16:21Flatbed Solutions year was predicated on the ability to capture attractive rate in strong end markets and from softer end markets and pivoting from softer end markets to company owned assets, which when circumstances necessitated. Segment revenue was up 11.4% year over year to $769,000,000 as gains primarily in construction, manufacturing and agriculture end markets outpaced the decline in the steel end market. Compared to 2021, segment rate per mile increased 7.5%, though total miles declined 8.5 percent and overall revenue per tractor grew 1.2%. Adjusted OR of 92.7 percent worsened from 90.8% in 2021, primarily due to cost inflation pressures such as market rate driver compensation, operations and maintenance and insurance claims more than offsetting revenue growth. Adjusted EBITDA of $93,700,000 and adjusted EBITDA margins of 12.2 percent both declined modestly from 2021 full year results, despite cost inflation and sequential decline in market rates over the second half of twenty twenty two. Speaker 300:17:47In terms of cash flow on Slide 12, you will see our ability to generate Significant free cash flow as well as our robust liquidity position. In 2022, free cash flow was $135,800,000 with cash purchases and proceeds from the sale of equipment property and equipment nearly offsetting for the 2nd year in a row. We continue to maintain robust liquidity over $264,000,000 with our cash balance created from strong cash flow from operations plus our revolving credit facility where we had over $110,000,000 of undrawn availability at year end. I'll note, our cash balances give effect to the $45,000,000 of cash repurchases in the 4th quarter that Jonathan discussed and the $19,100,000 to fund a tuck in acquisition. Without these two uses of cash, our year end Could have been in excess of $325,000,000 On Slide 13, we provide a strategic update on our balance sheet. Speaker 300:18:51With another yet record year of our results, we have established a trend of improved performance. The change our business has taken Undertaking over the last few years is real, it's lasting. And we remain confident in our ability to generate significant positive free cash flow regardless of the prevailing macroeconomic environment. Given this confidence, we are committed to directing free cash flow to reduce our leverage and are establishing a long term gross leverage target range of 1.5 Two times for normalized ongoing operations. We do note that given the seasonality of the business and the front end loaded capital expenditure plan, Our leverage will increase slightly in Q1 before declining to the upper end of the range of the target range in the Q4 of 2023. Speaker 300:19:40We are proactively evaluating options to expedite our progress toward this goal. We believe this commitment to fortifying our balance sheet provides another example of our focus to de risk the business and deliver value to our shareholders. I'll now turn the call back to Jonathan for an update on our 2023 outlook. Jonathan? Speaker 200:20:01Thank you, Aaron. Now before we turn the call over and take questions, I'd like to provide some perspective on the market environment in 2023. Our outlook for the business in that context on Slide 14. As 2023 unfolds, we expect an improvement in operational productivity, Improvements in driver availability, which should allow for the seating of additional higher margin company tractors and ultimately improvements in demand for freight haul services by mid year when our business is seasonally on trend. We believe in the cross cycle strength of more than a dozen industrial facing end markets we serve, some of which are set for continued growth given their limited correlation to consumer spending or the prevailing macro backdrop. Speaker 200:20:42We expect that all of this will translate into flat to low single digit revenue and net revenue growth compared with 2022. Though in the near term, we do readily acknowledge the ongoing rate environment challenges that began in the second half of twenty twenty two and inflationary cost pressures that continue to work through worked their way through the markets. However, as stated on our last quarterly call, we continue to feel conviction in the ability of our ongoing transformation initiatives to largely offset these collective headwinds and to provide additional upside to our earnings profile during the expansionary leg of the next impending cycle. Given our view of the current macro environment, our specific end market exposure and the levers we have available in each of our variable operating model and transformation initiatives, We see full year 2023 adjusted EBITDA approximately in line with our record 2022 print. In sizing our 2023 net capital We view our reinvestment in the fleet as a strategic opportunity, one that positions Daseke to maintain the age of our fleet, drive margin improvement, continue to attract and retain drivers and preserve our favorite standing with our valued OEM partners. Speaker 200:21:49Our expectation is for $145,000,000 to $155,000,000 in net CapEx expenditures for 2023 with most of the capital spend expected to occur in the first half of twenty twenty three. We are very pleased with this 2023 outlook, especially building upon record results in 2021 2022. Now we will turn the call back to the operator and take your questions. Operator00:22:12Thank And our first question comes from the line of Bert Svan with Stifel. Your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:22:37Hey, good morning. Thanks for the question. Speaker 100:22:42Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 300:22:43Good morning, Bert. Good morning. Speaker 400:22:44Hey, Can you maybe give us a little more of an update on how you're thinking about guidance? It seems like you have, if I think about last year's $235,000,000 in EBITDA and then we go forward this year. Can you talk about how much of keeping it flat is related to the cost program versus I guess your expectation that specialized will stay strong in 2023. Speaker 200:23:11Yes, sure. I can I'll address that and let Erin or Adrian chime in accordingly. So we look, we've said this on the last few calls. We do still believe That through our transformation initiatives, we're going to see exit run rate uplift In 2023 of about $20,000,000 to $25,000,000 in kind of incremental value. That's going to start to really taper in Through the year, you're going to start to see more of that by midyear. Speaker 200:23:41So we do look, we do think probably on a 2023 basis, if you're taking a snapshot of those transformational activities, I'd probably say probably likely kind of on average plus or minus 15% to 17% of that in 2023. The other kind of components of our thesis this year in 2023, As you mentioned, our look, outperformance continued outperformance in specialized, we do think that flatbed, although a little bit softer Then Q1 comps, we'll have the Q2 kind of typical Q2, Q3 seasonality where we think that By mid year, the rate environment will be healthy again. I'm not sure it touches 2022 peaks, but certainly healthy again. So We do feel generally pretty confident that we're going to have overall a good year from a rate standpoint. We also have a couple of other things going for us. Speaker 200:24:38So we talked a little bit About the diversification of our end markets, you acknowledged our specialized end markets, which continue to outperform. We also will probably have, Bert, Another 100 to 150 trucks on the road this year. So we are kind of net we'll kind of net be growing our fleet about 100 trucks. I don't think you'll see the benefit of that probably until Q2. We got a lot of new equipment at the end of the year. Speaker 200:25:03So we're bringing the older equipment Back, we're preparing the new equipment. We're reseating those trucks. So I think we'll start to see the full effect of that really And are on peak season in Q2 and Q3 and then certainly in Q4. We also expect, as Aaron mentioned in his discussion, we do expect increased productivity. We had some end markets on the specialized side. Speaker 200:25:30We also had some headwinds on the flatbed size that kept our miles per truck per day this year around Kind of $380,000,000 We're forecasting something in the low 400s, so kind of an 8% to 10% improvement in productivity on miles per truck. And I think that look, we've gone back really, really on the flatbed side of the business and stressed improvements in productivity. So making sure that We're getting trucks turned faster. We're not laying over trucks. We're making sure that we're not Being too particular about the loads that we take, really looking for that unicorn long haul, High rate per mile, but understanding and appreciating trucking is about velocity. Speaker 200:26:17So getting those trucks out, keeping them out longer. So being willing a little bit more willing to take a more moderated rate per mile load if it has kind of length of haul with So we're really thinking about a lot of those things and collectively, we think that's going to allow us to hold the line. We also have a few $1,000,000 net of some incremental reserves we took this Few $1,000,000 of headwinds in insurance that we knock on wood that we hope we don't see. So that also provides a little bit of downside support and keeping EBITDA flat this year. Speaker 400:26:49So maybe just like a follow-up on that. We haven't don't have great data For the last downturn, if we're having this conversation in 12 months and EBITDA was, let's say, sub $200,000,000 Which part of that do you think would have been most would have been the driver of that? And the only reason I ask Doing 235 again or something in that range would clearly be a good outcome, but I'm sure there's some Assessment of what's the potential downside. It sounds like the cost program is pretty solid and that should be savings. From what you're seeing today, specialized Is resilient and there's some strength in particular end markets. Speaker 400:27:30And so then it comes down to what happens in the rate side and what happens on productivity. If we're looking at this in 12 months and you didn't hit those marks and it was a little worse, what are the things that are maybe a little more exposed or just What's your assessment of the risk? Speaker 200:27:47Yes. I mean, I think you hit it. It comes down to rate. I mean, I think that's at the end of the day for For all of us in this industry, I mean rates the biggest thing out of our control that will kind of make or break things. Again, we have a lot of these, we mentioned self help Business improvement initiatives that we're going to be working on that will offset that. Speaker 200:28:07We also had we talked about it as really a headwind the last two quarters of 2022, which We think it will be a tailwind going into 2023 and that's really the shift away from owner operator drivers, LP drivers to more company drivers. The last few weeks of 2022 and certainly strong into 2023 so far, we've seen a marked shift in our ability to see company trucks, which have a much better margin profile. And I think that If the rates continue to stay moderated this year, that trend will only continue. I think a 200 or something certainly below 200 is a pretty draconian assumption or target To suggest we might hit 2, I think that the Daseke business model today is much, much stronger than it was in the last downturn, the last trough. And so I think that we're fundamentally we fundamentally have just a different range of earning profile, operating profile in our business today. Speaker 200:29:12I think that If you look at where we're at in the cycle, and I know everybody's kind of talked about this, but we've these are look, these are typically 36 48 month cycles and we had 18 months or so 18 to 20 months of expansion, really 21 into 2022. And then for the better part of 2022, at least the spot rate since January has been slowly falling away. We started to see some shakiness in our contract rates in July or August of this year and kind of a more pronounced Leg down in our contract rates. Again, we're 80% to 85% contract rates. But in October, we took a leg down On contract rates, as we look at spot rates today, those are certainly starting to firm up and our contract rates are starting to firm up as well. Speaker 200:30:03So I think that we can debate about whether or not we're at the bottom. But I think when you look at the margins that are more commodity End markets are generating when you look at the demand or sorry, the supply destruction, the capacity destruction that's going on today In the industry, I mean, I read something that said net revocations of carrier authorities are 6000 to 8000 carriers per week right now. When you look at a lot of those different things, when you look at the loss of LP drivers, owner operator drivers, and the shift to company drivers, when you start like pulling a lot of those things together, I just think the rate environment is at the bottom. We've never had a Q2 or Q3 where we haven't benefited With some kind of uplift in seasonality, even if you look at the Great Recession, we still had good seasonality in the business. And I don't know that people appreciate this, but really if you take the trough that we had in the Great Recession, we were back to 80%, 90% of peak rates, pre recession Peak rates within 12 months. Speaker 200:31:05So I think that people underestimate, I can't speak for flatbed, but I think people underestimate that the resiliency of the industry, particularly Diversification of our model and that it's exclusively industrial facing. So I think is 2023 going to be from a rate standpoint A blowout year? No, it's not. It's not going to match what we had in 2022, but we haven't assumed that. There's a lot of other things that we have going for us this year, as I mentioned. Speaker 200:31:30But I do think that 2024, we're expecting 2024 will be at 2022 peak rates. And really, if you look at cycles and assume that you get some repetition in cycles to predict kind of future performance, by 2025, we'll have another massive peak. So we're again, we're pretty bullish on things and we think that 2023 will be the low point if you had to call it. Speaker 500:31:58Yes, I Speaker 300:31:58would just add to that that look we can on the forward looking statements we can kind of talk about that. But Just to reiterate, we feel very comfortable with our outlook in achieving flat year over year results. We Have a great net CapEx that delivers quite a bit of free cash flow for value to the shareholders. So we're fully committed to this. And when we talk about 200, it's a nice theory, but we believe the peak Trough frame put in our current budget that we're putting forth is a reasonable assumption that we can deliver. Speaker 400:32:34Got it. That's super helpful. Maybe just my last question and a clarification. How should we think about brokerage? Jonathan, I know you made Comment saying you shift from some of the overflow to using your own assets and that's a higher margin opportunity. Speaker 400:32:50But We think about it from a modeling standpoint, we expect flatbed, I guess, that brokerage there sees Double digit declines and I guess logistics is maybe a little more healthy. And then just my clarification question, in terms of share count that's been all over And now you have to repurchase. Should we assume like $54,000,000 $53,000,000 as the year starts out? Thanks again for the question. Speaker 200:33:15Yes. So brokerage, we have going down 6% or 7% this year. And you acknowledge that we're and we saw it at the very end of Q4, and we see it so far into January. We're shifting those loads that would have otherwise been taken by 3rd party carriers onto our company trucks, which is Again, the model that we've talked about, I think the model that a number of our peers employ. So it's really that kind of control valve, if you will. Speaker 200:33:46I would say that what we've seen at the end of the year and going into 2023 so far is that while brokerage is down, The margin on our brokerage is up. So it's actually performing reasonably well. The share count, let me get you the exact share count that we're working off of now. It's $47,000,000 Bert. Speaker 500:34:11Got it. Okay, great. Speaker 400:34:13Well, thanks again for all the time. I'll pass it over. Absolutely. Thanks, Marty. Operator00:34:18Thank you. And one moment for our next question, please. And our next question comes from the line of Jason Seidl with Cowen. Your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:34:36Hey, thank you, operator. Hey, Jonathan and team Harrows, everyone. Speaker 200:34:40Hey, Jason. How are you? Speaker 600:34:43Hanging in. It's still earning season for us. But I wanted to Ask a couple on you guys here. Can you put a little more clarity on the productivity decline in 1Q, That was a big step down. I know you sort of mentioned it. Speaker 600:34:57Was that a mix shift towards some high security cargo stuff that was much shorter length at all? Speaker 200:35:05In Q1 of 2022, you're saying there was Speaker 600:35:09a Not the most recent quarter here. Speaker 200:35:11Yes. Okay, okay, okay. Yes. That's right. I mean, look, a little bit of it was on the high security cargo side. Speaker 200:35:22Those were shorter length of hauls on the specialized side that weighed on some of the kind of average productivity metrics. On the flatbed side, we lost some productivity. As again, If you remember, we really shifted more to Asset Light LP owner operator Moving into 2022. And so we saw some of that fall away, either owner operators parking their trucks going, hey, I've done well for this year and I'm taking myself Out of the market right now or yet LP drivers that weren't making the same amount of money because the rate environment changed and they're reevaluating whether or not they exit the industry or ultimately shift over to being a company driver. So there's some movement around there, which we'll figure out where those drivers land probably in Q1 of this year. Speaker 200:36:15You also had look, you also had just the time of the year you had 2 holidays in Q4 and you're having to route a lot of those drivers back home. So just by virtue of that, you lose productivity. So that's hopefully that answers your question. We Speaker 300:36:30also took a Speaker 400:36:31lot of late Speaker 300:36:35deliveries of Trucks which are harder to see when you get them late in Q4 like that. And so that's part of what drove it as well. So we would expect that to start to rebound in Q1. We've been pretty successful with our recruiting classes in January. Speaker 600:36:51And I would imagine you've already probably seen some improvement in that just By some of the seasonality that you mentioned? Correct. Okay. Next question, Josh, I think you talked about an expected rebound and sort of be at peak rates and back to peak 22 rates in 2024. And I think you said you expect like another big year for trucking, if you will, in 2025. Speaker 600:37:22What's sort of behind those numbers for you guys when you make those forecasts out? Speaker 200:37:27Yes. I think we've looked at a number of The past cycles. And as I mentioned, as I mentioned to Bert, I mean, we look at these and look at them as really 3 to 4 year cycles. And If we look at if we try to overlay the cycle that we're currently in, a lot of different things floating around. But We think it generally is going to track what you saw in 2015, kind of the industrial recession, right? Speaker 200:37:56We had You had about 18 months of kind of uplift 18 months to 24 months of uplift leading into that peak in kind of summer of 2015. Again, And that was on the heels of the trough where you had back in 2011, you had everybody worried about the debt ceiling. You had the downgrade of U. S. Debt, you had the kind of the sovereign debt issues around the world, quantitative easing, all that. Speaker 200:38:19People kind of got nervous and things tanked and they quickly came back It ultimately peaked in 2015. And you had kind of a fall down into that winter of about 10% or so. And then you had your normal seasonality, so you got some of that back. And then the next winter, so going into 2016, You kind of fell down some more. So that 2015, that summer 2015 peak to the trough in winter of 2016, You were down about 15%. Speaker 200:38:51And again, if you look at these cycles, they typically average peak to trough about 10% to 15%. The only cycle that we've seen that exceeded that was the Great Recession where it was closer to 20%, 22%, But again, 80%, 90% of those rates you got back within 12 months. So we look at that and go, okay, we think that The kind of characteristics and the drivers of the cycle different, but we look at where we're at today and go we kind of feel like we're on that same type of cycle where you have a slow 18 months fall down, you do still have seasonality. You kind of peak in winter, which for us will probably be winter 23. And then you'll have kind of a firming up to whereby by early to mid-twenty 24, You'll be at 2022 peaks again and you'll have a runway you'll have kind of a continued runway from there on out back up to a new peak in 2025. Speaker 200:39:50And again, Who really knows, but we've done a lot of work again on looking at cycles and that's our thesis. That could obviously change depending What the Fed does, I think there's a lot of noise in data when you look through data. Cautiously optimistic that they don't over tighten. A little bit concerned about some of the takeaways with this last jobs report and how the Fed receives interprets those. And again, you had 21,000,000 jobs lost as part of The kind of COVID effects of 15% of our workforce is taken out. Speaker 200:40:28And if you look at employment trends, We're still 3000000 to 4000000 jobs short where we would have otherwise been had that employment trend continued. So I think that When the Fed looks at this and said it's a hot jobs market, everything else, I think we're still way behind. And so I think if they continue to over tighten, That could cause some issues, but I think you go back to, okay, we've got the self help initiatives, we've got the diversified end market exposure, we've got some other Going forward, seeding more company drivers, shifting away from LP, lower margin LP owner operator drivers. So look, we're pretty bullish on things to come. Speaker 600:41:07I appreciate the color on that. I wanted to try to dive deeper into your comments on the contract market. I think you said You started seeing some softness in November, but it seems like it's truing up now. Can you give us some numbers behind that? Speaker 200:41:23Yes. I don't have numbers right now to kind of provide, but I think Part of this really goes back to, Jason, the customers look, our shippers are just frankly becoming a lot more sophisticated. And Yes. When they're seeing the spot market fall since January of 2022 and they're looking at their contracted rates, they can't ignore that. And so what we had is October, November, there was some softening, as I mentioned, in July. Speaker 200:41:54And And I think what you've seen with a lot of these shippers is they've really recalibrated their RFQ process and their RFQ approach. And so a lot of these guys now are going, you know what, we're going to go to our ship we're going to go to our carriers, on the flat I'm speaking of the flatbed side. We're going to go to them before their softer kind of low points in the year, when they're really focused on getting freight, really focused on visibility going into Going into Q3 going into Q4, going into Q1, and we're going to ask them to submit rates and submit pricing for that. And look, they're going to be hungrier because they want that visibility going into softer part of the year. And then they've also added an RFQ cycle In April, so right in front of our peak season, right? Speaker 200:42:43So they've kind of hit you and said, look, we're going to we want you to really be hungry for capacity going into your down point. And then before you have a good sense of really how good Q2 and Q3 is going to be for you, we also want you to kind of bid the freight. So I think that's part of what you saw. So it's really in keeping with October, November laid down where a lot of those guys have come out before our kind of seasonally soft time of year And said, hey, bid this freight really playing on everybody's concerns, expectations that it could get a little tougher. And so I think that's what you saw manifest in a little bit of a leg down for us in October on contracted rates. Speaker 600:43:20No, I appreciate all that. And last one, then I'll turn it over to somebody else here. Obviously, you mentioned that debt repurchases sort of top of the list here. Can you talk about, what are you targeting First, is it the Series B preferred? And then I guess if you can give any comments on the acquisition market and how it looks now and maybe what you guys would Looking forward, if you were to pull the trigger on something? Speaker 200:43:46Yes. So from a debt standpoint, I think we're looking at debt pretty holistically. We had there was a kind of a stark difference in opinion between the two ratings agencies Whether or not that new preferred should be treated as equity or debt, one said it should be treated as debt, one said it should be treated as equity. We're focused on really how our investors, how our shareholders evaluate that new security. But we're looking at that holistically, and it's going to be probably a meaningful Paydown when we ultimately make it. Speaker 200:44:23We really want to again, we really want to start to approach in a quick way, start to approach that 1.5 to 2 turns of gross leverage target We have now it's a long term target, but we think that there's line of sight in doing that within the next 24 months given the cash flow we're going to generate this year And hopefully next year as well. So there's a path there plus the cash on hand, plus you've got some Rolling stock dispositions that we can clean up. We've got some real estate assets, some duplicative terminals, yards, things like that, that we've looked at cleaning up really to expedite the pay down of our debt. But on the preferred side, we think it's very investor friendly. It's very company friendly paper, but you can't ignore the fact The $20,000,000 of that $67,000,000 has a 13% coupon. Speaker 200:45:09Now what I would tell you is that Currently, our the pricing on our term loan is about 8.5%, right? So 2022 is 4.75, But with all the rate hikes, we're at about 8.5%. So the Series A I'm sorry, the Series B tranche 1 that carries 7%, Good, very friendly paper, good coupon, good dividend relative to our current interest payment on our term loan debt, so that will likely stay in. But 13% is a bit onerous and we're looking for ways to delever the company and improve the free cash flow profile of the company. So that will likely come out as part of our overall balance sheet enhancement through some kind of large pay down here in the near term. Speaker 600:45:54That makes sense. And in terms of the acquisition market after the debt pay down? Speaker 200:46:00Yes. The acquisition market is still interesting. It's Been a little bit slower because of this bid ask spread that it heavily pops up when rates move too quickly up or down. We do have one acquisition under nonbinding LOI, And we're cautiously optimistic that we'll have that probably closed late February, early March. It's going to look a lot like The last acquisition we did, a little bit bigger, but from kind of a value standpoint, still immediately accretive, still a great Multiple that we're paying and immediately accretive. Speaker 200:46:44We also have another few acquisitions that we're close to getting under LOI. So we're cautiously optimistic more so on the specialized side that we can find good acquisitions that we can transact on, That will be immediately accretive. But I think that again, we made the comment in our presentation, we do want to live within this Target leverage profile, we might intermittently take leverage up a little bit to transact on an acquisition if there's line of sight to getting that leverage profile back down. But what we have on the table today, even some of these potential acquisitions that we're looking at, we think that we can fund it with incremental debt And cash on hand, even net of a meaningful pay down using cash on hand, we think that the remaining cash on hand will allow us to fund some of these acquisitions that we have in the pipeline. So we're feeling pretty good about it. Speaker 200:47:37And I think that We've sized our acquisition appetite and our expectations right based on where we're at in the cycle and where we're at with our transformations. Speaker 600:47:46Jonathan, Aaron, team appreciate the time as always. Speaker 400:47:49Thank you. Thank you. Operator00:48:04Our next question comes from the line of Greg Gibas with Northland Capital Markets. Your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:48:10Hi. Good morning, Jonathan and Aaron. Thanks for taking the questions. Hi, Ryan. It's a good follow-up on your outlook. Speaker 500:48:19Just wondering maybe kind of high level how it's changed relative to maybe your sentiment on kind of the Q3 earnings call and Maybe what factors have changed the most? Speaker 200:48:31Yes. Look, I mean, I think it's rate. We saw a little bit more softening And specifically flatbed than we did before. I think we said we'd be modestly up from an EBITDA standpoint. Now we're saying Flat to modestly up. Speaker 200:48:46So I think that within a if you had to quantify within a couple percent probably of where we may have guided, guided on the last call, so not meaningfully different. But Flatbed has changed, which we've I think we've highlighted some of the mitigants to that. Still optimistic we're going to have a good year, but I think that would be the delta where we kind of step back just a little bit on what we talked about in this last quarter. Speaker 300:49:18Sure. Speaker 500:49:19And then I guess with regard to your comments on commitment to accelerated deleveraging in 2023, is that kind of Reflective of change in strategic priorities as a result of those rates changing or maybe M and A expectations changing at all or Was that kind of the plan all along? Speaker 200:49:40No, I mean, I think we've been pretty vocal About bolstering the strength of our balance sheet for the last couple of years now. I think that the market created certain opportunities, namely the buy Of Mr. Daseke, which we thought was very opportunistic and very attractive. And so we kind of staged that as priority 1 that when that opportunity came about. We had previously announced $40,000,000 share repurchase, so directionally, we feel like we ended up in a good spot there. Speaker 200:50:15But that's always been one of our stated priorities. I think that When you look through things now, you absolutely can't ignore the incremental cash Cost of our debt, I mean, it's going to be an incremental $16,000,000 or so this year of cash expense. So we Can't ignore that, but I think that again, we continue to look around at our peers, look around at our valuation and go, what do we need to do to get Our shareholders more comfortable that Daseke is going to be able to weather storms and to take certain things off the table, certain, I think, Adverse things off the table that disadvantage us from kind of a valuation standpoint relative to our peers and leverage continues to be a consistent theme. And so we're in light of some of that feedback, we did a massive share repurchase. Yes, doing an open market share repurchase now doesn't make sense and it wouldn't move the needle. Speaker 200:51:17And so now our priority Is really repaying debt. As we talked to Jason about, we feel like even net of a pretty meaningful pay down in debt, We can fund 2023 the 2023 M and A pipeline that we have in front of us with incremental debt. Again, think about incremental debt is look incremental debt, but still not funding acquisitions with more than that 1.5 to 2 turns of leverage and with the rest In cash or cash and equity? Let me say cash. I don't want to say equity. Speaker 200:51:49I don't want you to think we're going to issue equity for those. But half cash, half debt, We think we have plenty of runway with the acquisition pipeline we have in front of us today to do that and still have cash left over and Still allow for a meaningful pay down in leverage. So, we're looking for things to slowly take off the table To give potential investors, current investors excuses that we should trade at the discount we are to our peers, we've demonstrated continued Strategic execution, we've delivered consistently on our financial performance. We've affected a massive share repurchase. And now we look at this and go, look, it's leverage and margins. Speaker 200:52:28We think we're going to continue through transformational initiatives, We're shifting drivers from LP to company. That'll improve margins. Certainly, on the next cycle, you're going to really see more of the benefit of that. And now it's really focusing on leverage. So that's the plan. Speaker 500:52:47Great, very helpful. Wondering if Speaker 700:52:49you could just discuss kind Speaker 500:52:51of the outlook on the supply side of the market and maybe update on the timing of your new equipment purchases? Speaker 200:53:00Sure. So, look, are you referring to ours Specifically with respect to our supply or just industry supply? Thoughts on industry supply side? Speaker 500:53:11Industry supply was kind of part of the first question and then just the update on the timing maybe this year of new equipment purchases. Speaker 200:53:17Yes. So I'll hit the first the latter first. So new equipment purchases for us are front end loaded. We're looking to make sure that we have that new equipment, so we can mobilize it, utilize it during our Got a peak season, which is Q2 and Q3. So a lot of the CapEx spend is disproportionately slanted to Q1 and Q2 versus the dry van guys who Our focus on having that equipment in front of Q4, their busy season. Speaker 200:53:46So it's a little bit different for us. I mean typically We see 75% or so of our CapEx going out the door in Q1 and Q2. We're trying to smooth that a little bit this year. So it might be $60,000,000 to $65,000,000 in Q1, Q2. That said, we also if you noticed on the slide, we also had about 22,000,000 And rollover CapEx, so our Q4 2022 CapEx number was projected to be 55 $1,000,000 which is a massive spend in Q4 of 2022 because of supply chain issues and delivery delays By the OEMs, we didn't get all that out the door. Speaker 200:54:26So that's spilling over into mostly Q1 and a part of Q2. So we have an extra $22,000,000 going out the door in Q1, Q2 on top of our normal cycle normal replacement cycle CapEx. That is baked into the $145,000,000 to $155,000,000 of total 2023 CapEx though. And then supply, look, I I mentioned it to Bert. We're seeing massive net revocations of carrier authorities based on FMCSA data, 6000 to 8000 carriers per week. Speaker 200:55:01If you look at some of the data That's out on Class 8 orders for January. They're sequentially down 40%, which is a little higher than normal. Year over year, so January to January, they're down 12%. It doesn't quite jive with The increase in 2023 CapEx guides that a lot of our peers are giving. So I think people are just being cautiously optimistic. Speaker 200:55:31They're making sure they have the allocations from the OEMs, but they're not signing up to anything until there's a little bit more visibility into what Q1 is going to look like. But again, I think we're already seeing demand destruction, I keep saying demand destruction, supply destruction, Capacity destruction, we're seeing, LP drivers, owner operator drivers leave the market. We do think that rates are At the bottom or closer to the bottom and there's more upside than the downside at this point. I think A few people have acknowledged this that look on an inflation adjusted basis, we're probably flat. If you look at kind of Peak 2019 rates to peak 2022 rates, where you look at trough, kind of off season peak, I'll say it differently, off season peak 2019 rates to off season peak 2022 rates, both of those are up about 35%, okay? Speaker 200:56:34If you look at that and say so it's about a 10% CAGR, so 10% CAGR over those 3 years in rate increases. Historically, we've seen those rate increases track to CPI, so about 2.5% a year, year in, year out. So you can go, okay, well, you guys are massively up. I think that the counterpoint to that the credible counterpoint to that is if you inflation adjusts A lot of those rates were probably flat to maybe even down. If you look at diesel prices having nearly doubled, if you look at driver wages Increasing 30 plus percent. Speaker 200:57:10If you look at things like maintenance costs or tires increasing 50% to 60%, Lubricants, things like that, and you truly adjust rates based on an inflation adjusted basis, so you get to kind of a real rate growth. I think we're flat to down. So I think that you've got a bunch of embedded costs that you're simply not going to walk back. And if you do, you're going to You're going to blow up the supply side of the equation for your shippers. So we think that things are starting to stabilize and we're cautiously optimistic again that 2023 going to be good with a really strong rebound in 2024. Speaker 500:57:49Got it. Very helpful. Thanks, Moshe. Operator00:57:52Thank you. And one moment for our next question please. And our next question comes from the line of Ryan Segal with Craig Hallum, your line is open. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:58:05Good morning, guys. Just one for me at this point. What do you guys think is the right maintenance CapEx level? Because if I look at kind of D and A in the past couple of years, dollars 90 ish million CapEx, including all finance costs was about $145,000,000 last year and then a little bit more than that this year in 2023. So Curious kind of as we think about fully baked free cash flow, what the right maintenance CapEx number is? Speaker 700:58:31And then secondly, How confident are you in generating free cash flow again inclusive of all equipment purchases and $150,000,000 of CapEx? Speaker 300:58:41Yes. Thanks, Ryan. So we'll talk a little bit about your first question, which is on the maintenance CapEx. And so our guide for this year is 145 to 155, which includes that's net of proceeds. And so the right way to think about our CapEx is this year we've got about 8,000,000 to 10,000,000 Transformational CapEx where we're lightening up trailers for a one time event and then we've got about $5,000,000 that we're buying Specialized trailers for one of our verticals to pull forward, so we can be in a good position for our renewable energy vertical. Speaker 300:59:15And so This year is a little bit of a down CapEx for us. We're pretty happy with where our trucks are at. We think one of the ways to measure those is on miles. And so we're 2.5 Or 2 to 2.5 times, 2.5 years on a mileage basis. So we're pretty happy with where our overall fleet is. Speaker 300:59:34An outlook number on replacement given our current profile and truck count is probably $130,000,000 to $140,000,000 for an Outlook perspective, that's kind of how we think about that piece of it. Is there another piece you want to Andres, Speaker 700:59:51I know I'm Yes, no I'm Free cash flow. So if you think about, call it, dollars 140,000,000 of recurring maintenance CapEx and you back out the interest expense, which It's going to be higher tax expense, preferred dividends, etcetera. I guess how confident are you after kind of fully baking everything free cash flow generation this year? Speaker 301:00:09Yes. I think we feel very confident with that. We're doing a good job on our balance sheet management. I think we've got opportunities there On our cash conversion cycle, but overall we feel very comfortable with where we're at in the cash flow numbers that you mentioned. Speaker 201:00:26Yes, Ryan. And we're still look, we're still philosophically, we're still looking at kind of a 30%, 70% split, 70% financed equipment, 30% cash pay on that equipment. Obviously, the equipment loans And the cost of the equipment debt hasn't gone up as much as the spread on our term loan debt. So we still think It's a prudent way to fund CapEx and we'd rather kind of preserve our cash at least in the near term for optionality. We think that there's Probably better things we can do with that cash that will create more outsized growth and return versus the cost of that equipment debt. Speaker 201:01:10So that's That's our philosophy at least now as it stands today. Speaker 701:01:17Great. Thanks guys. Good luck. Speaker 201:01:19Thank you. Operator01:01:20Thank you. And I would like to turn the conference back over to Jonathan Shipko for closing remarks. Speaker 201:01:26Thank you, Michelle. I'd like to close today's call on Slide 15 with some final thoughts on our 2022 performance and the Daseke opportunity for 2023 and beyond. As the market leading servicer to complex industrial end markets, we delivered solid revenue growth in the 3rd consecutive year of record adjusted EBITDA. Our resilient business model includes a diverse portfolio of more than a dozen industrial end markets that span multiple industry verticals, many with unique non correlated drivers that support our resilience and growth. A large and diversified fleet with expansive geographic breadth that serves the unique needs of over 4,000 plus customers and and a commitment to the financial strength that will continue to provide us with strategic optionality to support growth across cycles. Speaker 201:02:08We funneled our strong cash flow generation into a vector Changing opportunity to effect an immediately accretive share repurchase, providing increased ownership to our shareholders in the expanding earnings profile of our business. And even in the midst of a challenging backdrop, our current expectations are for flat to low single digit growth over record 2022 levels with intense focus on continuing to build a strong foundation for outperformance when the economic cycle inflects. We remain committed to our fortress balance sheet, goal to which we initially committed to in 2021, relying on continuous improvement in our business and strategic execution to generate free cash flow that will enable us to accelerate our deleveraging goals. With confidence in our company, our team members and our perspective results, We believe we are well positioned as an attractive option for outsized performance within the transportation and logistics industry. Thank you for your time today. Speaker 201:03:01This concludes our Q4 full year 2022 earnings call. Operator01:03:06This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by