Apr 18, 2013
Executives
Cheryl Scully - Former Vice President Michael J. Jackson - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Michael J.
Short - Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President Michael E. Maroone - President, Chief Operating Officer and Director
Analysts
N. Richard Nelson - Stephens Inc., Research Division John Murphy - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division Yejay Ying - Morgan Stanley, Research Division James J.
Albertine - Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., Inc., Research Division Simeon Gutman - Crédit Suisse AG, Research Division Patrick Archambault - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division Matthew R. Nemer - Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division Colin Langan - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division Dan Galves - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division Brett D.
Hoselton - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division
Operator
Thank you for standing by, and welcome to AutoNation's First Quarter 2013 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Today's conference is being recorded.
If you have any objections, you may disconnect at this time. Now I will turn the call over to Ms.
Cheryl Scully, Treasurer and Vice President of Investor Relations for AutoNation. Ma'am, you may begin.
Cheryl Scully
Good morning, and welcome to AutoNation's first quarter 2013 conference call and webcast. Leading our call today will be Mike Jackson, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Mike Maroone, our President and Chief Operating Officer; and Mike Short, our Chief Financial Officer.
Following their remarks, we will open up the call for questions. Robert Quartaro and I will also be available by phone following the call to address any additional questions that you may have.
Before we begin, let me read our brief statement regarding forward-looking comments and the use of non-GAAP financial measures. Certain statements and information on this call will constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Federal Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Such forward-looking statements involve risks, which may cause the actual results or performance to differ materially from expectations. Additional discussions of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially are contained in our SEC filings.
Certain non-GAAP financial measures, as defined under SEC rules, will be discussed on this call. Reconciliations are available on our Investor Relations website at investors.autonation.com under Financials.
And now I'll turn the call over to AutoNation's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Mike Jackson.
Michael J. Jackson
Thank you. Good morning.
Thank you for joining us. Today, we reported an all-time record of quarterly adjusted EPS from continuing operations of $0.68 in the first quarter, a 21% increase as compared to $0.56 for the same period in the prior year.
First quarter revenue totaled $4.1 billion compared to $3.7 billion in the year-ago period, an increase of 12% driven by stronger performance in all of our business sectors. In the first quarter, AutoNation's new vehicle unit sales increased 9% or 6% on a same-store sales basis.
And used vehicle unit sales increased 10% or 7% on a same-store basis. Today, we also announced the acquisition of 3 stores that support our strategy of acquiring dealerships that will round out our brand offering in each of our major markets.
We will add Toyota to the Dallas market and Honda and Hyundai in the Phoenix market. Our coast-to-coast branding rollout, which began in February, is well underway and is approximately 30% complete based on total unit sales as of March 31.
We are pleased that we have seen positive market share gains in the markets we have re-branded. It's progressing well, and we look forward to completing the re-branding in the second quarter.
AutoNation is well positioned, capitalizing on the recovery with an optimal brand and market mix and disciplined cost structure. We will continue to drive strong results across all our business sectors during the multiyear recovery in auto retail.
I now turn the call over to our Chief Financial Officer, Mike Short.
Michael J. Short
Thank you, Mike, and good morning, ladies and gentlemen. For the first quarter, we reported net income from continuing operations of $83 million or $0.68 per share versus net income of $74 million or $0.56 per share during the first quarter of 2013 (sic) [ 2012 ], a 21% improvement on a per share basis.
In the first quarter, revenue increased $439 million or 12% compared to the prior year and gross profit improved by $61 million or 10%. SG&A as a percentage of gross profit was 71.3% for the quarter, which represents a 50 basis point improvement compared to the year-ago period.
As part of our AutoNation re-branding initiative, we incurred approximately $6.5 million or $0.03 per share of incremental SG&A expenses during the first quarter of 2013. Excluding these expenses, our SG&A as a percentage of gross profit would have been 70.3%.
We expect to incur approximately $11.5 million in re-branding expenses in the second quarter, bringing the total spend to $18 million, as previously announced. Returning to first quarter results.
Net new vehicle floorplan was a benefit of $6.3 million, a decrease of $0.5 million from the first quarter of 2012 due to higher floorplan balances, partially offset by lower floorplan interest rates. Floorplan debt was approximately $2.5 billion at quarter end, which was relatively flat compared to December 31, 2012.
Non-vehicle interest expense was $22.3 million for the quarter, an interest -- an increase of $1.8 million compared to $20.5 million in the first quarter of 2012, due to an increase in fixed-rate debt from our 5.5% senior notes issuance in February of 2012. At the end of March, we had $420 million of outstanding borrowings under the revolving credit facility and total non-vehicle debt balance of $2 billion.
This was a decrease of approximately $139 million compared to December 31, 2012. The provision for income tax in the quarter was $53 million or 38.8%.
During the first quarter of 2013, we repurchased 56,000 shares for $2.2 million, at an average price of $39.42 per share. AutoNation has $317 million remaining -- in remaining board authorization for share repurchase.
As of April 17, there were approximately 121 million shares outstanding. This does not include the dilutive impact of stock options.
Our leverage ratio at the end of the first quarter was 2.59x or 2.38x on a net-debt basis, including used floorplan availability, compared to the covenant limit of 3.75x. Capital expenditures were $23 million for the quarter.
Capital expenditures are on an accrual basis, excluding operating lease buyouts and related asset sales. Our quarter-end cash balance was approximately $46 million, which, combined with our additional borrowing capacity, resulted in total liquidity of $879 million at the end of March.
We continue to demonstrate strong operating leverage, robust cash flow generation and disciplined capital allocation, with a focus on driving shareholder returns. Now let me turn you over to our President and Chief Operating Officer, Mike Maroone.
Michael E. Maroone
Thanks, Mike, and good morning. We're very pleased with our start to the year.
In the first quarter, AutoNation delivered strong growth in revenue and gross profit across all sectors of our business: New vehicles, used vehicles, customer care and finance and insurance. Overall, we also delivered solid unit volume growth, and we're especially pleased with the strong recovery of our Florida and California markets, where combined, we had a 10% increase for new and used vehicle sales on a same-store basis.
This, along with very solid 4.1% operating margin, and an all-time record adjusted EPS. In addition to a very strong operational performance, we began the launch of the AutoNation brand that will be rolled out to over 200 of our domestic and import franchises coast-to-coast by the end of June.
We also signed agreements to acquire 3 stores, 1 each for Toyota, Honda and Hyundai. I'll expand on this later in my remarks.
As I continue, my comments will be on a same-store basis compared to the period a year ago, unless noted otherwise. Starting with new vehicles.
In the quarter, new vehicle revenue increased $194 million or 10% to $2.2 billion, on new vehicle sales volume of 65,300 new vehicles, an increase of 3,800 vehicles or 6%, with growth across all 3 segments, particularly the Premium Luxury segment. At $33,519, revenue per new vehicle retailed was up $1,100.
We noted increased average selling prices across all 3 segments, with the Premium Luxury segment being the largest contributor. New vehicle gross profit of $137 million increased $3 million or 2% in the quarter.
Gross profit per new vehicle retailed of $2,097 was off $81, primarily attributed to aggressive volume-based manufacturer incentive programs that were more lucrative in the prior period, and to a lesser degree, a mix shift within the Premium Luxury segment in the current period. Our new vehicle inventory is in good shape, and we will continue to buy aggressively for the remainder of the selling season.
At March 31, our new vehicle days supply was 63 days or 61,700 units compared to 54 days and 47,400 units a year ago. Turning to used vehicles.
Retail used vehicle revenue of $870 million was up $69 million or 9%. In the first quarter, we retailed 49,200 used vehicles, an increase of 3,100 vehicles or 7%.
Revenue per used vehicle retailed of $17,687 increased $316. Retail used vehicle gross profit of $81 million was up $2.5 million or 3%.
Gross profit per used vehicle retailed at $1,646 was off $56, attributable in part to the increased cost to acquire vehicles for our certified preowned programs, and our desire to retail higher mileage vehicles we would have previously wholesaled. At March 31, our used vehicle days supply was 29 days, the same as a year ago.
Next, Customer Care or service parts and collision. In the quarter, we had solid growth across the board in customer pay, warranty, internal, wholesale parts and collision for both revenue and gross.
We also recorded our highest overall Customer Care margin in nearly 2 years of 42.8%, a 110 basis point improvement on a total store basis. Customer Care revenue increased $23 million or 4% to $623 million.
And Customer Care gross profit increased $16 million or 6% to $266 million. In the quarter, we noted impressive year-over-year increases in warranty gross of 15%, internal gross of 12% and customer pay gross of 4%.
This marks the 11th consecutive quarterly increase in customer pay gross. We're very pleased with this performance, especially given the fact that the industry units in operation are just now bottoming out and the service base will start to grow again this year.
We believe that the focus by our Customer Care team on operational excellence, margin improvement and driving sales effectiveness delivered very strong results and positions us well moving forward. I'll also note that the quarter had 2 less selling days than Q1 2012, so when adjusted for days, our Customer Care same-store revenue would be up 7% and gross would be up 10%.
Turning to finance and insurance. We had another great performance from our store and store F&I teams, who once again delivered a record gross profit per vehicle retailed of $1,323, an increase of $113 or 9%.
Total F&I gross profit of $152 million increased $21 million or 16% compared to the period a year ago. Our preferred lender network, OEM service contract alliances, strong product penetration and store level execution continue to drive outstanding performance in F&I, and we remain focused on continuous improvement.
On February 1, we opened Fiat of Roseville, our fifth Fiat location. This and other activity in the quarter brought our store portfolio to 222 stores and 263 franchises representing 32 brands in 15 states as of March 31.
As mentioned earlier in the quarter, we signed agreements to acquire 3 stores, a Toyota store in the Dallas area that will operate as AutoNation Toyota of North Arlington; and Honda and Hyundai stores in the Phoenix area that will operate as AutoNation Honda Chandler and AutoNation Hyundai Tempe. Each of these acquisitions add brands we previously didn't represent in these markets.
As noted in previous calls, last year, we were awarded new ad points for Maserati, MINI and Audi. Maserati of Stevens Creek will open on May 1.
MINI of Valencia is on track to open in mid-June, and construction is scheduled to begin on Audi of Orlando that will be completed in the first quarter of 2014. As always, we continue to actively pursue acquisition opportunities that meet our market, brand and return on investment criteria.
In closing, we're particularly pleased that, since Q4 2009, our revenue has increased 47% and gross profit has increased 40%, while headcount has only increased by 15%. We attribute this to continuous improvement of our core business, including our disciplined cost structure and initiatives to advance our capabilities, which drive associate productivity and create a win-win for our associates and shareholders.
We believe that our significant investments in facilities, technology, associate development and branding are helping to lay the groundwork to further differentiate AutoNation. As we take the AutoNation brand coast-to-coast and continue to pursue our vision to be America's best place to buy and service cars and trucks, I'd like to thank our 21,000 associates for their commitment and dedication to AutoNation.
With that, I'll turn it back to Mike Jackson.
Michael J. Jackson
Thanks, Mike. During the first quarter, we saw continued strength in auto industry sales as consumers enjoyed a broader array of choices than ever before, as well as a strong credit environment.
We believe the recovery in auto sales will remain strong due to accelerated product launches, of which we expect 55 for model year 2014, up from the already impressive 37 in model year 2013. Of course, we have continued replacement demand and robust availability of consumer credit.
In addition, our Customer Care business will benefit as industry units in operation begin to recover in 2013. We are at the beginning of a broad-based recovery for the economy in auto retail.
As we look at the rest of 2013, we believe that the improvement in new vehicle sales will continue, and we expect new vehicle sales to be in the mid-15 million units for the year. Thank you very much, and we're happy to take your questions.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] The first question is coming from Rick Nelson of Stephens.
N. Richard Nelson - Stephens Inc., Research Division
Mike, capital allocation priorities seem to have really shifted here from buybacks toward acquisitions. I'm wondering if you can provide some color on that.
Is it a case where the valuations are now coming into the wheelhouse on the acquisition side?
Michael J. Jackson
Actually, the process or the priorities have not changed one iota. We're doing, every month, several times a month, exactly what we've been doing for the last 13 years.
We sit there and discuss where our capital can be applied best. It's definitely done on an opportunistic basis.
It has to do with where the price of stock is, where we think the market is going, and what kind of acquisition opportunities are presented in the marketplace. Do they fit?
And can we come to a meeting of minds on price. Obviously, if you look at the past 6 months, we've done over $800 million of revenue run rate on acquisitions, meaning that it's been a very good period of alignment on acquisitions.
We have further discussions going on right now. But as I said in the past, you never know if you get to the finish line on these transactions, so I can't commit in the future.
So it's done on an opportunistic basis. That's the way we've always done it.
And right now, if we look at what is being presented to us in the marketplace and what we're discussing, it's the best return for our capital.
N. Richard Nelson - Stephens Inc., Research Division
Also, you mentioned the improvement that we're at an inflection point now with units in operation positive for the several [ph] business. I'm interested in the used car business, how that's improving supply -- you see that evolving?
The comps look good this quarter, and we did see a sequential improvement in margin. Is that supply-driven improvement?
Michael E. Maroone
Rick, it's Mike Maroone. I don't think the supply has yet changed, although we are anticipating that it will get better.
Especially for the certified preowned units, they're still very tight and the supply is very limited, so we're having to pay a lot of money to get those vehicles, and that's a growing part of the segment. The other factor is, the used vehicles out there are coming in with very high mileage, and we're really working hard to retail those.
So it's keeping -- putting enough pressure on the margins. But I think as it loosens up going forward, and there is more supply, I think there is more opportunity on the margin side.
But we are pleased that, sequentially, our margins are up and looking for more.
N. Richard Nelson - Stephens Inc., Research Division
And finally, if I could ask about F&I. If you've seen any change at all in the pricing as a result of the CFPB or discussions along those lines?
Michael J. Jackson
No. Absolutely not.
No developments there. Don't expect any developments.
We're very confident of our added value in the finance and insurance business. We negotiate great wholesale rates for our customers because we have -- we can offer the financial institutions a very cost-effective way to acquire a lot of loans.
We have a very reasonable margin on that business of 125 basis points. And so if you look at the added value we have for the customers and the financial institutions, I do not expect any changes in that business that would materially affect our performance or results.
Operator
The next question is coming from John Murphy, Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
John Murphy - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
First question just on acquisitions, to follow-up on Rick's question. As we look at this, you're getting a little bit more aggressive on acquisitions, or at least there's more coming through at this point.
Has something change in the way that you're evaluating your targets and maybe baking in more synergies because you are operating so much better? Or is this really just a function of what's available and how things are going in the market?
Michael J. Jackson
I would describe it -- the journey this way, John. If you go back to '08, '09, transactions came to a standstill.
You had a very disrupted marketplace and sellers said, "I will not get anything near fair value for my business in this environment, and I'm going to hang on." And buyers were in no mood to step up and pay the kind of multiples you would have to pay in that environment, with the expectation that everything's just going to work out.
So deals came to a standstill. Now, there is a natural flow of deals to the marketplace every year, the same -- the motivation to sell.
And we always talk to motivated sellers, we don't make offers that can't be refused. We talk to people who want to sell.
Whatever the reasons are, capital demands from the manufacturers, succession problems with the family, et cetera, et cetera. So every year, there's a graduation of deals that would normally come to the market.
So by the time you get to '10 or '11, there's a backlog of deals. Then there was a gap in understanding around price, which further pushed things out.
And then there was finally a meeting of the minds of what's a fair price around our threshold returns and what sellers would take. So now you're seeing the catch-up from all that postponement, that there's a lot of discussions and a lot of opportunity.
And when we see alignment, we're going to step up and do it. You'll have to get our report card quarter-by-quarter.
I'm not going to sit here and say, "We're going to do x billion this year." That's not us.
That's not how we do it. We take it quarter-by-quarter, but that -- I would paint that as a background description of what's going on.
John Murphy - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
That's incredibly helpful. Second question, as we think about the success of your branding efforts, it sounds like early on in the markets where you've launched, you mentioned that you gained some market share.
I was just curious if you can kind of quantify that for us, because it sounds like it's very successful very quickly. I'm just trying to understand what the benefits are that you're seeing in early days.
Michael J. Jackson
So it's not a step that we took without some trepidation. We had local market brand names, some of them were in the marketplace 80 years old.
You don't walk away from those too easy. We would have strategically taken this step, even if we were to go backward for a given period of time to establish the new brand.
If -- so, if we had to accept some disruption, we still would have greenlighted the project. And we sort of said, best case is we hold steady.
And the reality has turned out that we actually have some market share gains. You could attribute those market share gains also to the surge in spending in those markets.
You couldn't miss us in those markets during the re-branding period. So we consider anything that's on the plus side of the ledger at this point, out of the box, a success.
And bodes very well for the long-term future, that we've had this kind of response from the marketplace and from our customers. I can also tell you the enthusiasm and the morale of our associates in embracing this branding is nothing short of phenomenal.
They are very proud of the company that we've built. And you know, if I go back years ago, we had a choice.
We could brand early and overpromise and under-deliver or we could be patient and disciplined. And when we finally brand it, really deliver on the expectation.
And our associates know that we have a peerless product in the marketplace. And now to be able to unify under one flag, AutoNation, and declare it to the marketplace, yes, I am an employee and associate of AutoNation, has been a tremendous morale boost for the company.
And we're very satisfied where we are at this point and are very excited to get back on the road after we wrap-up these quarterly reports, and do the rest of the company and complete it here in the second quarter.
John Murphy - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
That's helpful. Then just on pricing and incentives.
The industry seems to be relatively capacity constrained right now, so it doesn't seem like there's big incentive or pricing actions that are being taken by the automakers. But there's this constant drumbeat of fear with a weak yen, that the Japanese are going to start a price war.
I'm just curious what your take on that is. And if you're seeing anything below the covers that we're not seeing externally that's going on.
Michael J. Jackson
Yes, John. I would differ with your premise slightly.
I don't think the fact that we have rational behavior around incentives is because there's capacity restraint. If you look at inventories, they are actually quite healthy.
I think where -- the industry is at 3.2 million units out there. That's probably $100 billion worth of inventory, so there's plenty of inventory out there.
And I think this discipline is more transformational, in the sense that at the end of the day, all the segments are filled by everybody. Everybody has a really high-quality distinctive product offering and there is stability around share, where you would have to pay a tremendous price to move a point one way or the other.
So I really see a stabilization around share, with the Detroits being somewhere in the mid-40s, the Asians somewhere in the mid-40s, and the Europeans taking the rest. And I really don't expect a strategic incentive price war to be unleashed.
Second, in talking with all the manufacturers, I don't care whether it's Asian, German or Detroit, everybody understands in this business that you have to produce where you sell. And you have to remove exchange rates from your business plan and balance them out.
And everybody -- the situation is not comparable if we were having this conversation 10, 15, 20 years ago. Great progress has been made.
So on the margin, exchange rates do not play the role they once did. I still -- I understand, for an export country like Japan and globally, it's an issue.
But if you look at where they are in the U.S., it's certainly not the issue it was 15, 20 years ago. So my view is that we have genuine rational discipline around incentives.
I don't see incentives going away. There'll always be tactical incentives, but I don't see anyone unleashing a price war.
I just don't see who is going to do that, and I do not expect it to come from the Japanese because of what's happening with the yen. By the way, they sort of view these exchange rates from a market perspective, and I've been in this chair, from a strategic point of view and the variability is profitability, all-in.
They sort of take a strategic price positioning in the marketplace and either eat or reap the swings in the currency. But long term, they're all trying to balance it out with production.
John Murphy - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
And then just the last question. You mentioned that you thought housing was supporting truck sales recently, but housing starts, in absolute terms, are still relatively low versus where they've been historically.
I mean, is there something in the end markets that you can identify specifically? Because it seems to us like this housing recovery may actually not be the big driver and it might still be on the come for pickup trucks.
I'm just trying to understand what you're seeing in your data that gives you that level of confidence.
Michael J. Jackson
Here's what we're looking at. Okay, we all know we had a bubble in housing construction '04, '05, '06, up over 2 million units a year, including multiple households.
Then we had the collapse and household construction dropped to less than 500,000 a year. And basically, we've been sitting there for 4 or 5 years, clearing the inventory.
And anybody who was in home construction did not buy a new pickup truck. We're now approaching 1 million units, and I agree with you, John, completely, we're not back to trend yet on household construction.
It should be, let's say, a sustainable rate of 1.5 million, something like that, but it's certainly double. This year will be double what it was 3 or 4 years ago.
So you have to take into effect, we had a depression in housing. We had a depression in autos.
And housing has finally cleared the inventory, and we're seeing that disruption [ph]. And all these contractors are looking out in the next several years and see they're going to have work, and they're coming in and buying pickup trucks.
I would also not underestimate the impact of the energy sector, particularly in Texas, Colorado. For us, this frac-ing technique is like a production technique.
It's not like drilling a well. It's very labor-intensive compared to other ways to get petroleum, and they're high-paying jobs.
So all of a sudden, you have these 2 industries, housing and energy, that have jobs that can't be outsourced to India or any place else in the world. These are good American workers.
And they all want full size pickup trucks to drive to work, and our pickup truck sales in the first quarter are up 18%. So listen, I'm not forecasting the recovery in the economy, but I am saying, compared to 2 years ago, 3 years ago, there are bright spots in this economy in housing, energy and automotive that would say this tepid recovery is moving into a phase where it can stand on its own 2 legs.
And as fiscal policy and monetary policy become less supportive over the next year or 2, we can still -- the economy can still probably support GDP growth to 2% to 3%. That's the transition phase that I feel we're in.
Operator
The next question is coming from Ravi Shanker, Morgan Stanley.
Yejay Ying - Morgan Stanley, Research Division
This is actually Yejay in for Ravi. My first question, I wanted to drill a bit deeper into the F&I business.
Could you maybe breakout for us what the growth drivers here were for the segments? Specifically, maybe how much of the improvement was driven by banks and lenders getting more aggressive as opposed to increased penetration and things like service contracts and prepaid maintenance, and then maybe how much road we have ahead of us in terms of growth from here?
Michael E. Maroone
Well, first of all, I think there's tremendous competition, and there's a lot of capital available for the space that really reflects on the strong performance of those loans, even in the downturn. And Mike Jackson said many times, people pay for their cars before they pay for their credit cards or their houses, and I think that's a fact.
So we've got a lot more lenders who are very hungry for the business. Our overall finance penetration hasn't changed a lot.
It's still around 70%. Where the income growth is coming from is both in the product penetration, where we're seeing improvements in our service contracts, our prepaid maintenance and our other products.
And also, where we've been able to use our size and scale to get incremental earnings from lenders and from companies that provide those products. So we're really leveraging our scale to do a better job of gaining more gross.
We are certainly not getting it on the rate side.
Yejay Ying - Morgan Stanley, Research Division
Okay. Would you say that it's been, I guess, the growth has been skewed more because of the product growth, like the service contracts and the prepaid contracts as opposed to using your size and scale to get incremental earnings from lenders?
Michael E. Maroone
I think it's both. I think if you asked me to rank them, I would say, product penetration would be slightly ahead, but we work hard in both areas.
Yejay Ying - Morgan Stanley, Research Division
Got it, and that's very helpful. My next question, if we could focus more on gross profit per unit, and would love to hear thoughts on both new and used.
But given that we're now mostly past the distortions caused by the Japanese tsunami, and maybe to a lesser extent, past the effects of Hurricane Sandy, do you see yourself -- your -- the company being able to maintain GPU at current levels? Do you see this changing if we start seeing any incremental changes in the pricing environment, like if the yen maybe does start to have a negative impact on incentives?
Michael J. Jackson
This is Mike Jackson. We feel -- we're dissatisfied with our front-end margins and have the ambition to improve them.
Saying that and doing it is 2 different things. It's a very competitive marketplace out there, and it's a very complex marketplace out there.
What do I mean by that? While I talked about the overall level of incentives are appropriate and tactical, the structure of many of the incentives are really out of step with today's customer and extremely disruptive.
And there, I'm talking about stair-step incentive programs that are really out of step with today's customer and today's marketplace. And when they are unleashed in the marketplace, it really wreaks havoc in trying to manage front-end margin.
So we're hard at work on it. We have the ambition to improve.
We think we can maintain where we are. The ambition is to improve, and we're fighting tooth and nail not to go down.
Mr. Maroone, do you have anything to add to that?
Michael E. Maroone
No, I think that's a great description on the new side. On the used side, I think it's -- the opportunity is in better and better execution.
And I think our used car team has made very good progress, and I think there's more that we can do.
Yejay Ying - Morgan Stanley, Research Division
Got it. And if I could sneak in one final one.
Could you guys comment a bit on where subprime penetration trends have been for you guys? And if that's been a big driver in retail sales improvement or has that sort of remained steady and perhaps a source of improvement further on down the road?
Michael E. Maroone
I think subprime financing is more abundant. I think, due to some credit failures in the downturn, there is more customers out there that are in that category, so I think it is a growth opportunity for us, and I think that it will continue to be.
Especially in some of our bigger markets, the subprime business is a big part of that market.
Yejay Ying - Morgan Stanley, Research Division
Was that a big driver of growth specifically in 1Q?
Michael E. Maroone
I'm sorry?
Yejay Ying - Morgan Stanley, Research Division
Was that a big driver of growth specifically for the first quarter?
Michael E. Maroone
No. I think it's been that way for the last few years.
So we've seen improvements over the last year. I don't see it as radically changing in this one quarter.
Operator
Your next question is coming from Jamie Albertine, Stifel.
James J. Albertine - Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., Inc., Research Division
Quick housekeeping items, just have some follow-ups on a few of the comments you mentioned earlier. If you could clarify.
I think you said pickup truck sales up 18%. Could you fill in the gap with respect to maybe car sales, because I guess we had seen some choppiness on the car side as it related to cars versus trucks in the quarter.
And then as it relates to your M&A environment, can you talk a little bit about -- we understand the cadence here, and we're excited, quite frankly, about hearing more deals getting closed. But we understand it's tough to pull the trigger, and there's a lot of stuff that can happen before you close.
Can give us a sense of how many deals you've reviewed and to the point where you could only find 2 that worked, just so we could understand how active you are in that environment?
Michael J. Jackson
I would say we're in discussion on 15 to 20 transactions at any time. That's the bandwidth of what's in discussion.
So a lot of opportunity there. But I can't make a forecast on what would happen.
I'm not going to paint myself into that corner. On trucks versus cars, where we are -- our company, 48% trucks, 52% car, that's our split.
Mike, do you have some bottom [ph] lines?
Michael E. Maroone
I think, on a total store basis, cars were up 9%, trucks were up 10%, on a same-store basis 6% and 7% for car and trucks, so we're seeing growth in both sides.
Michael J. Jackson
But if you look at those numbers, and then you say, large pickup trucks are up 18%, I mean, that is really an outlier or a standout number. It jumps off the page.
That, to me, says something about the economy.
James J. Albertine - Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., Inc., Research Division
Absolutely. We would share your sentiment and the response you gave earlier to that end with the energy sector and so on and so forth.
I guess from a bigger picture question, and then I'll get back in the queue. Can you help us parse how you're thinking about fixed cost leverage opportunities relative to growth in the future and organic?
And to the extent that you can sort of delve into where you see the biggest opportunities within your existing footprint and how that plays into the magnitude of your longer-term plans?
Michael J. Short
Jamie, this is Mike Short. The way to think about it from a high level is, we generally look for about a 50% flow-through from the incremental gross profit dollars that we drive through the P&L, all the way down to operating income.
And if you exclude the re-branding numbers that we called out earlier in our commentary, that's about what we drove this quarter, and that's been a fairly consistent trend for us for the past several quarters. The way we accomplish that is, when you look within the areas of SG&A on the comp side within your variable compensation, you're really looking for productivity enhancements.
Happy to pay sales associates a lot more money, but we like to see them drive a lot more gross profit associated with that. And that's a win-win for us and our associates.
On our fixed-cost comp, what we're looking to try and accomplish is identify areas for process improvement, whether that's our Shared Service Center or other opportunities that we have to improve technology to drive additional productivity and leverage that fixed cost structure. On the advertising side, the other area of SG&A, we're putting a lot of analytical support behind trying to identify that, that 50% of your advertising that's really working for you that we can identify what the return is on that and how do we maximize it.
And then when you get into the SG&A categories, those other SG&A things, the administrative cost within our stores, is benchmarking and trying to maximize the identification of best practices and roll those best practices out across the rest of the stores. That's basically the formula that we've been on now for several years.
It seems to be working well for us.
Operator
The next question is coming from Simeon Gutman of Crédit Suisse.
Simeon Gutman - Crédit Suisse AG, Research Division
A couple of clarifications first. First on F&I, the $1,300 or so per vehicle.
Can you just break down, maybe in order of magnitude, how much is coming from either service contracts or penetration rate -- or not rate, but just penetration dollars versus financing vehicles? And then the second follow-up, on gross profit per new.
I heard in the prepared remarks, you were cycling some incentives. But did you also suggest that the margin within luxury or premium was coming down?
Can you just clarify that, please?
Michael E. Maroone
First, in F&I, the way we look at it really is, is that 2/3 of the income comes from product, 1/3 of the income comes from rate, and that's a variable bucket. I don't have a breakdown for you within the product of how much each of those segments contribute.
And the question on new vehicle gross?
Simeon Gutman - Crédit Suisse AG, Research Division
Yes. On new vehicle gross.
Michael E. Maroone
Can you repeat the question?
Simeon Gutman - Crédit Suisse AG, Research Division
Sure. I think you mentioned in the prepared remarks, part of it was you were cycling some incentives from a year ago.
But I guess I would have expected, if the mix of premium went up year-over-year versus Import, the profit per unit would have looked a little better. And I didn't know if I missed the comment that you said that there was some pressure in -- within the luxury premium segment.
Michael E. Maroone
Yes, I think there's 2 pressures. One in the Import segment.
It was very competitive with much higher volume targets in the stair-step incentives. In the luxury segment, you're right, we did do a better job in luxury.
Where we really saw a change there is in the mix shift, where there was a shift to some lower margin vehicles. The one I'll call out is BMW, where we had a really big quarter in BMW, but the X1 and some of the smaller products took a bigger piece of that share.
So I don't think it's a major structural problem. I think it's just a mix in the quarter.
And we're happy to have that Premium Luxury business.
Simeon Gutman - Crédit Suisse AG, Research Division
Okay, that's helpful. And then regarding the marketing program, it was mentioned that you gained share in some of those markets.
Are some of the markets that are seeing the marketing changes, is that -- is the back-end also seeing some of the Shared Service Center change at the same time? And where I'm going is, are you leaving something on the table still as you go through this process?
Meaning, we should see stronger results once -- obviously when this gets done, but in this disruption period, you're losing something.
Michael J. Jackson
The Shared Service Center was a precondition to launch the brand. We had to have no risk of systemic failure, so it took us quite some time to build our Shared Service Center.
That gave us complete transparency and control of the business, that we could not have a systemic issue. At the same time, something that was very cost effective and efficient.
So that was the precondition. That's done across the enterprise.
Simeon Gutman - Crédit Suisse AG, Research Division
Okay. And then my last question is on the parts and service margin.
Can you talk about the drivers of why that's increasing and then how we should think about that going forward?
Michael J. Jackson
We announced that we were going to put a lot of energy and focus into Customer Care, including the arrival of a new Senior Vice President to lead that effort, Alan McLaren, who came from Mercedes-Benz. And we said that, in this approach as we made this effort, we would go for revenue first and come for the gross margin later.
And so we spent a couple of years just looking for new opportunities for revenue and really got into those business segments, understood them, and then found a way to have added value and retain that business and gradually begin to expand our gross margins. So it's a classic business move that we're executing very effectively.
And to say that we're seeing these kinds of results, when we just now are approaching the structural bottom of the Customer Care business due to the meltdown back in '08, '09, gives us a lot of encouragement for the future.
Simeon Gutman - Crédit Suisse AG, Research Division
And as the units in operation come back, are there levers in the gross margin where that creates leverage? Or does that come down to, I guess, SG&A leverage as well?
Michael J. Jackson
Not sure I understand the question.
Simeon Gutman - Crédit Suisse AG, Research Division
So if -- as units come back into the operation, so you see more volume, are there any levers in the gross margin side, whether it's either your leveraging the cost of the service person doing the work and that gross margin continues to go up as the units come back or is that leverage all contained in your SG&A line?
Michael J. Short
It's primarily contained in the SG&A line. There is a little bit of fixed-cost leverage within the Customer Care business.
And as Mike mentioned, the continued press for improvement in margins as we get into this next phase will help that as well, but most of that operating leverage will occur at the SG&A line, Simeon.
Operator
The next question is coming from Patrick Archambault, Goldman Sachs.
Patrick Archambault - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
A number of my questions have been answered, but one I wanted to delve in on is the used performance this month. You had a used-to-new ratio of 0.75.
That's the highest you've seen in 3 quarters. Can you tell us a little bit of how much of that is market dynamics, potentially used normalizing a little bit if your wholesale inventory is becoming a bit more available, and how much of that is market share and things you are doing to capture a bigger piece of that business?
Michael J. Jackson
Patrick, I think you'll recall over the last several quarters of last year, we called out that we were dissatisfied with our used vehicle point of view and felt we had an operational opportunity. We're always very frank when we look at an issue that, if it's us, it's us, and we say it.
And so we've worked very hard to improve our capabilities around used cars, have made changes and they seem to be working. It's still a tough environment out there on the supply and demand side, but we definitely consider the first quarter a step forward.
Mike, you want to add anything on that?
Michael E. Maroone
I think you said it. We've got a new team.
Steve Strader, we brought in as a Senior Vice President, heads up that team. And he and the used car folks really focused on wholesaling less, retailing more, moving units appropriately and pricing to market, controlling our discounting.
There's a whole series of execution issues that I think they've done an excellent job of working through. And we think there's even more opportunity in that business in the recovery.
Operator
The next question is coming from Matt Nemer, Wells Fargo.
Matthew R. Nemer - Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division
I have 2 questions. The first is, as you look at the units in operation recovery, how do you think that the cadence of that varies by brand or by market segment, i.e., does luxury rebound first?
And what are the implications of that on your margins? And then secondly, as you've re-branded the markets, can you talk about any early changes that you've seen on Google or other Internet platforms in terms of how you're ranking?
Michael J. Jackson
Well, first on the units in operation, it's a pure math exercise. We assume that we are carrying for vehicles from brand new to year 5 or 6.
You go back and you look at the sales rates of our various markets, we've calculated it all out. And I would say our bottom and inflection point is actually the third quarter, something like that.
And it is a very gradual turn. I would say Premium Luxury is leading the way of the turn, but it's -- we're just so happy not to be going down anymore and to be leveling off and to see the turn coming.
And Mike, do you want to talk about digital?
Michael E. Maroone
Yes. When Mike talked about attacking different areas of the business, we also brought in some incremental talent in the marketing group, headed by Greg Revelle, who's got a very strong digital background.
So in the re-brand, we have really focused on driving more traffic to our websites and our traffic is much improved. And certainly, in a re-brand opportunity, we are spending a lot of money to drive that traffic, but we're really pleased with the progress we're making, both in our phone calls, our e-leads and our walk-ins to our stores.
So I think a lot of that is driven by our digital efforts, in addition to a strong media buy to make that -- so that consumers can make the connection between our old brand and our AutoNation coast-to-coast brand.
Matthew R. Nemer - Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division
And just bigger picture, given Greg's hire, and I know you brought on people from other Internet companies like eBay, how do you think the digital experience will change for AutoNation, bigger picture, over the course of the next few years?
Michael E. Maroone
Well, we are making significant investments both in bringing in real talent, some of which you called out, in technology. So we're excited about the future.
We think consumers are having experiences in other industries that they're very pleased with, and yet auto retail, in many cases, has lagged. So I'm hopeful that you'll see a lot from AutoNation, and you'll see us be the leader in that space.
I probably won't take it any deeper than that until we can come out and demonstrate our capabilities even to a higher extent.
Operator
The next question is coming from Colin Langan of UBS.
Colin Langan - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
You mentioned earlier in the call that you're confident there will be no impact from the proposed changes from the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau. I just wanted to clarify, does that mean you -- if they move to flat fee structure, which I think is what they're recommending, that your profits wouldn't change?
Or do you think that the rules just won't get adopted, that they're proposing going forward?
Michael J. Jackson
It's not certain at all that there will be a change to reflect the arrangement. But if that's what it comes to, I think we'll find a way to manage it.
So we are very close. We have very narrow bandwidth on our markup.
As I said, it's 125 basis points. They're already talking about a flat fee out of the box of 100 basis points.
So it seems to me to be an entirely manageable situation, if that's what it comes to. But I think it's got a long way to go before we can say for sure how it's going to go.
Colin Langan - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
And any color on -- of your F&I, how much actually comes from the finance side of the business and how much...
Michael J. Jackson
Yes, we covered that earlier, 1/3 from finance, 2/3 from product.
Colin Langan - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Okay. And products means?
Michael J. Jackson
Product means service contracts, warranties.
Colin Langan - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Okay, okay. And my last question, I just want to clarify.
You made comments that you gained share. But when I look at the same-store sales, you were -- on the new side, you're up 6%, which was pretty in line with the market.
Were you gaining share in just the markets where you rolled out the new brand or am I just misreading the data?
Michael J. Jackson
No, that's correct. In the markets where we changed the brand.
Colin Langan - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Okay, because last year you actually did -- outperformed. So any reason why you're just in line this quarter?
Is there a brand mix per geography?
Michael J. Jackson
We are overweighted on the Japanese. 50% of our retail unit volume new is branded Asian, primarily all that's Japanese.
Last year was a recovery year for the Japanese, after the collapse of 2011 due to the earthquake. Therefore, we benefited from the overrecovery of the Japanese last year.
Operator
The next question is coming from Rod Lache of Deutsche Bank.
Dan Galves - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
It's Dan Galves in for Rod. Just 2 quick questions.
The first one, as late-model supply of used cars does start to improve and acquisition prices come down, does -- in your opinion, does that impact the consumer choice between used and new? And do you think that the OEMs will respond in terms of lowering the price on new to counteract that?
Michael J. Jackson
No, I really don't see that happening, whatsoever. Mike, do you want to add anything?
Michael E. Maroone
Well, I think, the OEMs have a big incentive to support their CPO product. And they -- what they do is, when that gap gets tight, they will put interest rate incentives or other warranty extensions to make that CPO product more desirable.
I think they need to support both. What -- I think the reference there is, as more supply becomes available, I think it will be slightly less competitive and maybe give us some gross margin opportunity.
Dan Galves - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
Okay. And just one other one, a more modeling-based question.
The incremental $18 million of re-branding spend in the first half this year, should we consider all of that to be onetime in nature, and so won't be in the cost structure next first half?
Michael J. Jackson
That's correct.
Operator
And the last question is coming from Brett Hoselton of KeyBanc.
Brett D. Hoselton - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division
First, I want to start off on used cars and just, it sounds like you made a personnel change in your used car department. You've seen some positive changes there and so therefore, you're optimistic about the outlook for your used car performance from a volume standpoint going forward.
Is that a fair conclusion?
Michael E. Maroone
I think it's more than just one person, although we did bring in new leadership. I think Mike Jackson called out earlier that we were very open about our dissatisfaction with our performance and felt there was more there.
Our whole team is focused on the very basic fundamentals of used, and what we felt we needed to do. And we put more training resources, we've got more people in the field, we're working hard at acquiring product at the right time at the right price.
So it's a comprehensive effort. And that's what gives us confidence that we think, going forward, we'll be able to continue to perform in a good way here.
Brett D. Hoselton - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division
Okay. And we've seen wholesale prices at the auctions kind of drifting down a little bit, which would suggest that we might see a little gap or increase in the gap between the value of the used car versus the new car, which might allow you to improve your gross profit per unit or discount your used car prices more.
Do you think it will have any effect on your gross profit per unit or volume?
Michael E. Maroone
Not sure. I don't think we've seen that much weakening in prices.
And really, you really have to go inside and look at the segments. So the more desirable the product, the less movement in price.
So used car prices are holding up pretty good. I think that our opportunity is really on the execution side, and I think everybody in our organization knows that.
Brett D. Hoselton - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division
Okay. And then on the parts and service margins, 3 quarters in a row, you've seen some year-over-year improvement there.
It sounds like you've seen some company-specific initiatives positively impacting you, as well as some market dynamics positively impacting you. The outlook seems like we should continue to see some improvement there.
Is that -- would that be reasonable -- would that be a reasonable expectation?
Michael J. Jackson
I think that's a reasonable expectation.
Brett D. Hoselton - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division
And then finally just on acquisitions. You bought a couple of Japanese and Korean brands.
Your thoughts on brand preference. The domestics certainly are doing well recently and their product has certainly improved over the years.
Do you have any particular brand preference or bias at this point in time?
Michael J. Jackson
As often discussed, our strategy is to have all the major brands in any market that we are in. So if you look at these acquisitions, those were brands that we were missing in those markets.
If you look at last month in Texas, we were missing the Chrysler franchises, so we bought a big Chrysler store. So that really -- filling out our offering to the market is our #1 acquisition goal.
We want to really be able to say to a marketplace that, if you live or work in one of our branded markets, you have to shop us. There's us and everybody else.
And to really have that said in the marketplace in the most compelling way, you really need to offer all the major brands. And as I discussed earlier, I think that the Detroit renaissance is for real.
It's sustainable. The products are marvelous.
The Europeans have a unique selling position, and we have a big position with the Japanese. So we're very comfortable with where we are at.
So thank you, everyone, for joining us today. We appreciate it very much.
Thank you.
Operator
This will conclude today's conference. All parties may disconnect at this time.