Aug 13, 2018
Executives
Cody Slach - IR Don Daseke - Chairman & CEO Scott Wheeler - President Bharat Mahajan - CFO
Analysts
Jason Seidl - Cowen & Company David Ross - Stifel Steve Dyer - Craig-Hallum Matt Brooklier - Buckingham Research Group Willard Milby - Seaport Global Bruce Martin - Still Lake Capital
Operator
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for participating in today's conference call to discuss Daseke's financial results for the second quarter ended June 30, 2018. Delivering today's prepared remarks is Don Daseke, CEO; Scott Wheeler, President and Director; and Bharat Mahajan.
After their prepared remarks, the management team will take your questions. Before we go further, I would like to turn the call over to Cody Slach of Liolios Group, Daseke's IR Advisor as he reads the company's Safe Harbor statement within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 that provides important cautions regarding forward-looking statements.
Cody, please go ahead.
Cody Slach
Thanks, Shelby. Today's presentation includes forward-looking statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Such forward-looking statements include projected financial information. Forward-looking statements, including those with respect to revenues, earnings, performance, strategies, prospects and other aspects of Daseke's business are based on current expectations that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations and projections.
I encourage you to read our filings with the SEC for a discussion of the risks that can affect our business. We undertake no obligation to revise our forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances occurring after today.
During the call, there will also be a discussion of some items that do not conform to U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles or GAAP, including adjusted EBITDA and acquisition adjusted measures.
Reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures to the their most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in the appendix to the Investor presentation and press release issued this morning, both of which are available in the Investors tab of the Daseke website, www.daseke.com. In addition to being in the flatbed specialized trucking business, Daseke is in the business of acquiring other flatbed specialized carriers to join Daseke.
Therefore, investors in Daseke stock should assume Daseke is always evaluating, negotiating and performing due diligence on potential acquisitions. Now, I would like to turn the call over to Daseke's CEO, Mr.
Don Daseke. Don?
Don Daseke
Well, thank you, Cody, and good morning, everyone. It's a pleasure to be joining you.
We look forward to addressing the four main topics presented on Slide 3. First I'll provide an overview of our strong second quarter results and other operational highlights.
This will set the stage for Bharat to discuss our second quarter results in more detail. From there, Scott will provide an update on our strategic priorities for the remainder of the year and walk through our increased 2018 financial outlook.
We believe the information outlining these topics firmly supports our change in compelling long-term date to build the premier flatbed specialized such as risk [ph] carrier. Discussing our highlights for the quarter, please follow me to Slide 4.
The momentum in our businesses continued in the second quarter the strong growth in revenue on adjusted EBITDA. Excluding acquisitions, this was driven by year-over-year increases in rates and revenue per tractor in both the flatbed and specialized solutions segments.
Our partners on various organic growth initiatives was also evident in the 13% increase in our second quarter acquisition-adjusted EBITDA to $48.1 million. We had a terrific quarter and then organic growth is manifesting itself in the results.
We're building up a momentum of the first quarter with a $6.5 million increase in adjusted EBITDA from operations in the quarter alone. So we were up $4.3 million after investing in the business to support our continued growth.
We believe we executed on all three of our strategic priorities that we laid out the beginning of the year. Therefore, we are raising our outlook for the year.
Our industry is seeing significant growth and demands and rates. Internally, we are focused on cost and in May, we launch Daseke Fleet Services, which allows us to systematically address expenses and grow margins.
We have only just begun and have lots of opportunities to uncover. And finally, we are well-positioned to strategically grow our business and accelerate our operating companies and build and organization of scale.
All of which are why I'm extremely excited about our business. With that I want to get Bharat a proper introduction.
Bharat will officially become our CFO soon once the administrative paperwork is complete. Bharat previously served as CFO for Aveda Transportation and Energy Services and he brings Daseke a wealth of knowledge and experience.
As the leader of the team at Aveda, the formerly publicly traded transportation company, Bharat has a proven record of helping businesses grow or maximizing profitability. He is a perfect fit to help us achieve our vision of continued growth.
So welcome, Bharat. I'll turn it over to you.
Bharat Mahajan
Thank you for that introduction, Don. It's great to be here.
I was consistently impressed with the team during the months leading up to Aveda's merger into Daseke and have been even more impressed with how Daseke quickly has integrated Aveda into the overall platform. It's a thrill to now be part of the team.
With that, I will now move to our second quarter financial details which are presented on Slide 7. Revenues increase 91% to $376.9 million, compared to $197.3 million in the year ago quarter.
The increase was largely driven by the acquisitions of seven operating companies of scale during 2017. Adjusting for the inclusion of the acquisitions in the prior period as well as Aveda, revenues increased organically by 12% to $412 million, compared to $367 million in the year-ago quarter.
Operating income improved to $8.5 million, compared to $4.5 million in the year-ago quarter despite an increase in the step up in basis of depreciation from acquisitions of $5.4 million, an increase in amortization of $4.8 million and an impairment charge of $2.8 million related to intangibles. Net income for the second quarter improved significantly to $13.5 million or $0.20 per share compared to a net loss of $4.1 million or $0.15 per share in the year-ago quarter.
Adjusted EBITDA increased 91% to $46.3 million compared to $24.3 million in the second quarter of 2017. Looking at results by segment.
Our flatbed solution revenue in the second quarter increased 87% to $162.2 million, primarily driven by the acquisition of Tennessee Steel Haulers last December with adjusted EBITDA up 36% to $18.8 million. The addition of Tennessee Steel Haulers, 1,000 trust owner-operator fleet caused Asset Light revenues in our flatbed segment to increase from 40% in Q2 last year to 68% in Q2 2018, which is reflected in the change in EBITDA margins.
Specialized solutions revenue increased 95% to $218.4 million due largely to the six specialized acquisitions of scales we made following the first quarter of 2017. As such, specialized adjusted EBITDA was up 118% to $33.2 million.
Before providing further commentary by segment, as a reminder, there is seasonality in our business. We move open-deck freight, so our freight is exposed to the elements and demand is higher in the warmer months.
Typically, you will see higher levels of rates, revenues and earnings in the second and third quarters and typically lower levels in the first and fourth quarters. Moving on to a more detailed view of our segment results.
On Slide 8, we have provided Q2 revenue and adjusted EBITDA on a GAAP basis and excluding acquisitions for our flatbed segment. On a GAAP basis, moving from 40% Asset Light to 68%, naturally moved our EBITDA margin down, ending the second quarter at 11.6%.
The point here is that even though our Asset Light operations have smaller EBITDA margins, they also have lower CapEx requirements. Excluding acquisitions, our Asset Light mix still increased from 40% to 46% and EBITDA margins only declined to 14.9%.
Drivers continue to be the biggest challenge we're facing in the segment as we experience an increase of approximately 75 unfilled driver positions from Q1 2018 to Q2 2018. Scott will talk about some creative things we're doing to address this challenge in his prepared remarks.
Slide 9 zeroes in on a few revenue metrics within flatbed. We continue to have strong increase in rates.
For the second quarter rates per mile, up 13% to $2.03 compared to $1.80 in the second quarter of 2017. Excluding the Tennessee Steel Haulers acquisition, rate per mile was up organically by 14%.
This shows a market improvement continuing to manifest itself in our contract rates as rates per mile was up 10% organically in the first quarter compared to the prior year quarter. Flatbed revenue per tractor increased 7% to 45,700 compared to 42,900 in the second quarter of 2017.
This performance is despite continuous headwinds in unseated tractors. Ultimately, our flatbed business continues to benefit from tight capacities leading to an increase in realized rates and revenue per tractor on a year-over-year basis.
We continue to feel positive about the upward trends we're seeing in our flatbed segment. Slide 10 provides Q2 revenues and adjusted EBITDA on a GAAP basis and excluding acquisitions for our specialized segment.
The shift in the percentages of revenues from Asset Heavy to Asset Light has been more moderate compared to our flatbed segment as specialized move from 65% heavy in the year ago quarter to 58% heavy in Q2 2018 on a GAAP basis. The margin improvement to 15.2% was a function of the higher margin business in high security cargo and glass as well as the operating leverage in the business as rates and freight mix improved.
On Slide 11, you can see we realized the 10% increase in rates per mile to $2.88 compared to $2.62 in the second quarter of 2017 driven by growth in high security cargo, commercial blast and heavy equipment moves. Revenue per tractor increased 17% to $57,400 compared to $49,100 in the year-ago quarter which is driven by the increase in rates, but also a 2% improvement in unseated tractors.
As was mentioned in our first quarter call, we experienced lower volumes related to the timing of wind projects which we expected to carry into the second quarter but ramp up in the final two quarters of the year. This remains the case and we look forward to filling this demand in the back half of the year.
Speaking of our specialized business, Aveda is largely a project-based transportation company and as such has a much-higher revenue per mile profile. To show this and provide some additional color, on Slide 12, we're presenting a similar rate per mile and revenue per tractor slide, but excluding Aveda.
Looking at the figures this way, we realize that 5% increase in rates per mile and 16% increase in revenue per truck. On Slide 13, acquisition adjusted EBITDA for our flatbed segment which takes into account the results of acquisitions as if they were part of Daseke for the entire period increased 10% to $18.8 million, compared to $17 million in the year-ago quarter.
The acquisition-adjusted EBITDA in our specialized segment increased 16% to $35 million from $30.2 million in the year-ago quarter. And finally in the corporate adjusted line item, you will see the effects of our ongoing investment in building Daseke to support our future growth.
As Don mentioned in his opening, the key takeaway in this slide is the 13% acquisition-adjusted EBITDA we reported in the quarter which tells us our organic growth initiatives are working. Now turning to our balance sheet as Slide 14 indicates, at June 30, 2018, we have cash of $78.7 million compared to $91 million at the end of 2017.
Total debt was $632 million with net debt of $553.3 million. Adjusted for the acquisition of Builders Transportation and two small tuck-in transactions, cash would have been $25 million, net debt would have been $635 million with $82 million of available capacity on our revolver.
It is worth noting that we recently increased the committed capacity on our revolver to $100 million. Slide 15 shows our leverage metrics as of June 30.
GAAP leverage was 4.2x but 3.6x on a pro forma basis including Aveda, Builders and the recent tuck-ins. In accordance with our debt facility, leverage as defined would have been 3.4x.
Our companies [indiscernible] and steps down to 4x beginning in Q1 2019. Now, I will turn the call over to our President and Director, Scott Wheeler who will review our accomplishments within our 2018 strategic outlook and walk through our increased financial guidance.
Scott?
Scott Wheeler
Thank you, Bharat, and good morning, everyone. On our fourth quarter 2017 call, we introduced our 2018 strategic priorities and they are reiterated on Slide 17 -- organic growth, organizational effectiveness and focused M&A.
With two quarters behind us, I would like to inform you on our execution within each pillar. As you can see on Slide 18, we were very pleased with our organic growth from quarter operations in the second quarter.
We focused on the increasing rates, enhanced our focus on controlling cost and took advantage of the trucking opportunities and specialized niches. EBITDA on our flatbed segment increased 10% and our specialized segment grew 16% for a total acquisition-adjusted increase from operations of $6.5 million in this quarter alone.
A large contributor to this success was achieved by increasing our rates in both segments and higher volumes in commercial glass, high security cargo and heavy equipment. We anticipate a continued healthy rate environment and expect that savings from our Daseke Fleet Services Group will begin to reduce cost which will contribute to our operating income, operating ratio and margins.
We're also investing in capacity in our commercial glass fleet to continue to take market share or an investing in optimizing our trailer fleet in the newest consolidated high security cargo division to maximize operational efficiency and flexibility. And finally, tightness in the availability of drivers has required us to look at innovative ways to attract and retain those drivers that we would like on our team.
One main area of focus has been to simplify paid plans to reduce the uncertainty and the large fluctuations in driver's take-home pay from week to week. We implemented a pilot program on the Northwest region that we believe will achieve those two goals, moving to a more salary-like pay structure.
Three months into the pilot, the results have been extremely successful with driver hires of 85%, compared to the first five months of the year in the same location. Applications were up over 1,000% compared to 2015 through 2017.
This resulted in filling several empty [ph] trucks to quickly having a wait list. This also provided the opportunity to replace our lower driver performers and to improve overall quality and productivity.
We have other pilot programs under way in different locations and as we evaluate the results from these new pay structures, we may look to roll them out further across their operating companies. These types of programs are designed and implemented very close to the drivers by our stellar teams that are operating divisions and we applaud them on this early result.
Next on organizational and operational effectiveness, we would like to highlight our new Daseke Fleet Services Group that we created in May. So details behind this can be found on Slide 19.
Daseke Fleet Services was created as part of our effort to implement a structure to support our growing scale with an effort to assist our operating divisions in the management of all three phases of the live cycle of our revenue-producing equipment. At the acquisitions phase, the emphasis is on specifying equipment that optimizes fewer mileage, resale value, interchangeability of equipment, reliability, consolidation of sub component manufacturers and of course pricing and delivery.
During the time, we operate the equipment, this team will lead the efforts to maximize our pricing for consumables such as diesel, tires, parts outside maintenance services and coordinate activities and performance that are in-house shop facilities. Finally, at the end of an economic life of an asset to Daseke, this team will be engaging in direct sales and disposition of the equipment.
This is a departure from our previous practice of trading in equipment that would be typical and most entrepreneurial in family-owned trucking companies that have joined Daseke. Moving to Slide 20, we have presented several examples of the word Daseke Fleet Services has accomplished in a very short period of time since launching in May and only two full months of activity of the team, renegotiated with two of our smaller fuel suppliers and one of our tire manufacturers and that we expect $600,000 in annualized savings alone.
They sold over $1 million worth of equipment, producing $90,000 in gains and the team made a preventative maintenance interval adjustment at one of our recent acquisitions that will save over $250,000 annually. All of these combined to around $1 million in savings we would expect to realize over the next 12 months.
We expect a great deal more to be realized as this program continues to develop. Our third strategic priority is M&A.
As we've stated, we have three focused acquisition times: First, our strategic niches and we accomplished this with our acquisition of Aveda which we have highlighted on Slide 21. The transaction closed in June and continues to perform as anticipated; Second is tuck-ins.
We announced in early July the Kelsey Trail, an operator with 75 trucks will become a division of big freight and we believe there are many synergies between the two companies across Canadian freight. And third is flatbed.
We announced last Thursday we acquired Builders Transportation. Slide 22 walks through the transaction highlights.
Builders Transportation is a Memphis-based carrier of metals and building materials. It operates a fleet of more than 300 company trucks and 450 trailers.
The company is solely focused on traditional flatbed operations primarily in the eastern two-thirds of the U.S. Builders significantly expands our relationships with blue chip customers like Alcoa and U.S.
Steel and also adds to our existing business with customers such as American Cast Iron Pipe, Tenaris, Gardelle and ArcelorMittal. The total consideration was $53.8 million, which included $3.4 million in Daseke stock.
The balance was cash and $17.5 million in assumed debt. For the trailing 12-month period ended June 2018, Builders Transportation did $72.4 million in revenue and $9.7 million in EBITDA where a trailing multiple not including anticipated synergies of 5.5x.
We are very pleased with this addition and believe it will be an excellent addition to the Daseke family as we look to expand our steel hauling and general flatbed capabilities. We're also incredibly excited about the momentum in our business which leads me to our increased 2018 financial outlook.
We're in the midst of an industrial resurgence, continued rate growth represents a step up in the market and tight market conditions have allowed us to get capacities to shippers to yield the highest return. You can see the organic growth manifesting itself on our results.
Moving to Slide 23, given our strong performance in the first half of 2018 including growth from organic growth from acquisitions, we are raising our full-year outlook. We now expect revenue to increase to $1.55 billion versus $846.3 million in 2017.
Adjusted EBITDA is now expected to increase 86% to $170 million, compared to $92 million in 2017. Net replacement capital expenditures in 2018 are now expected to be approximately $85 million or 5.5% of revenues.
We see organic growth opportunities that will now allow us to invest up to $40 million and growth capital expenditures that will yield results in 2019. These investments will primarily support the growth in our glass business and in our high security cargo business.
Based upon our adjusted EBITDA guidance of $170 million of replacement CapEx of $85 million, this would result in free cash flow before interest of $85 million. The remaining free cash flow after interest will be available to invest in our growth opportunities as discussed.
Slide 24 shows a bridge for our adjusted EBITDA guidance. We exited 2017 at $140 million.
Given our great first and second quarters, we are updating our guidance to $155 million. Including the results of the 2018 acquisitions which we expect to contribute $15 million in adjusted EBITDA which is up from $10 million last year, our new 2018 full year guidance is $170 million.
Looking at it on a run rate basis, that would be approximately $185 million in acquisition adjusted EBITDA and $1.7 billion in revenues. Now, to reiterate our key takeaways from today's discussion, please move to Slide 25.
First, we produced another record-quarter with continued expansion in revenue, profitability and adjusted EBITDA. Second, we experienced strong revenue per tractor growth in both our specialized flatbed segments and we are experiencing continued positive year-over-year rate increases.
Third, the growth plan we initiated at the outset of 2018 is driving tangible result as demonstrated in the 13% increase in acquisition-adjusted EBITDA on our second quarter. Fourth, the implementation of Daseke Fleet Services is a major strategic asset to scaling our company and reducing costs.
Fifth, we had the liquidity to execute on the addition of Builders Transportation which is benefiting from a strong flatbed market. And finally, the strength of our first half along with the acquisition of Aveda were significant contributors in our decision to increase our 2018 outlook.
This sets the stage for another record year at Daseke and we look forward to updating you as the year unfolds. Before we conclude our remarks, please note that we're doing the slide and not pre-recorded so we had a couple of moments where our words did not match the slide deck.
From Don's section, he mentioned we were up 4.3 in adjusted EBITDA after investing in the business to support our growth -- we were actually up 5.5 million as illustrated on Slide 13. And Bharat's section on Slide 7, he said an acquisition adjusted revenues increased organically by 12% compared to the year-ago quarter -- the percentage was 13% as correctly shown in the deck.
This concludes our remarks. Now, I'll turn this back over to the operator.
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Jason Seidl from Cowen & Company.
Your line is now open.
Jason Seidl
Thank you, Operator. Don, Scott, how are you guys?
Bharat, welcome. A couple of questions for me.
If I look at the specialized section, you guys said you had the 5% increase in your rate per mile, but you had a 16% increase in a rate per truck. Can you walk through that difference?
I'm assuming a lot of that was a mix in miles.
Scott Wheeler
It certainly was mix. We were up slightly in the seated trucks as well, but the biggest component of that was freight mix.
So heavier component of heavy equipment, high security security cargo and commercial glass all contributed to that.
Jason Seidl
Okay. And that's something that we should expect to continue on into the second half of this year?
Scott Wheeler
We anticipate strong markets in all three of those categories, yes.
Jason Seidl
Okay. And speaking in the second half of the year.
Can you give us some color into how July has started for each of your two main divisions? July and August.
I'm already in the wrong month.
Scott Wheeler
We typically don't release those results until the quarter's end, but we continue to fee very positive and constructive about where Daseke's financial results will be in the remainder of the year.
Jason Seidl
Okay. Turning to your new guidance of $170 million.
What out of that $170 million, how much is Builders Transport? Is that somewhere between like $4 million and $5 million?
Scott Wheeler
Yes. I would say it's about half of the number that they did previously.
So we had them at $9.7 million. So let's call it $5 million roughly.
Jason Seidl
Okay, all right, that's good. Final one before I turn it over to somebody else here.
There has been a lot talked about the potential impacts of the tariffs on the supply chain. We really haven't seen a lot of people try to change their supply change.
What sort of exposure does Daseke have to the tariff marketplace?
Scott Wheeler
Right now we're not seeing much of an impact in the aggregate. There are some microcosms [ph] within us that you'd see some very small effects thereof, but freight demand remained so high, capacity is so tight it's really very difficult to feel any of that.
But the real diversity of Daseke is our strength -- diversity is the strength of Daseke, but we are beginning to see and have seen some very positive rates and volumes related to domestic steel which is one of the big categories in the tariffs.
Jason Seidl
And you guys are more exposed to the domestic side than the export side. Correct?
Scott Wheeler
Very much so. Yes, we're very much more of a domestic producer.
And by domestic, we think North American primarily. But the vast majority of the steel that we move is generated and in the United States.
Jason Seidl
Okay, fantastic. Well, gentlemen, thank you for the time as always.
Scott Wheeler
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from David Ross from Stifel.
Your line is now open.
David Ross
Yes. Good morning, gentlemen.
Don Daseke
Good morning.
Scott Wheeler
Hi, David.
David Ross
I'm going to actually start off with Bharat. How do you found Daseke to be different from Aveda and a follow up to that would be what did Aveda do better that you can bring to Daseke?
Bharat Mahajan
Great questions. Daseke has a lot of I'll say similarities to Aveda.
We got a really great team and a growing company. If you look at Aveda's history, we did a bunch of acquisitions from 2012 all the way through 2015.
And Daseke has also been going strongly through acquisition. I look at bringing all of that experience of things that we got to do through those acquisitions, and integrating and bringing those companies together.
I see all of that as part of the experience I bring to the Daseke team.
David Ross
Is there something you used to do with Aveda that you're not seeing done at Daseke that is going to be implemented going forward to improve the business, or the operations, or the integration?
Bharat Mahajan
It's still very early days for me. I'm still getting to know the Daseke team and all those sorts of things.
So it's really hard for me to comment on that at this service stage.
David Ross
Okay.
Scott Wheeler
The thing is the person who held the title CFO, I believe we're headed towards a significant upgrade in the position.
David Ross
Next question is just going to be on the guidance with 13% acquisition adjusted EBITDA margins in the quarter, guidance implies only a 10% incremental EBITDA margin from here and especially with Builders having an EBITDA margin over 13%. I'm struggling with why on $200 million as higher revenues that you'd only pull through $20 million to the bottom line.
Scott Wheeler
Some of it is the shift from heavy to light and some of that will also be -- the back half of 2017 was tougher or was better than the first half of '17. The comps will be tougher.
That's one of the reasons that we point out the differences between core operations, EBITDA growth and total EBITDA growth because we continue to invest in the business. So we will invest in things like Daseke Fleet Services before they really begin to pay off.
We will invest in new equipment for high security cargo or commercial glass before it really begins to pay off. The net to EBITDA would be resulted in that investment in the future.
David Ross
Okay. It sounds like you're increasing investments in the back half of the year.
Scott Wheeler
Yes.
David Ross
Okay. Great.
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from Paul Penney from Northland Capital.
Your line is now open.
Unidentified Analyst
Good morning. This is Greg [ph] on for Paul.
Thanks for taking my questions. First, what kind of trends are you seeing with repricing of contacts?
And are you continuing to see strength and upward movement as you renegotiate on contracts for customers?
Scott Wheeler
We continue to see very strong rate growth. The rate of rate growth may be declining slightly, but rates continue to increase upon renewals like in almost all categories.
Unidentified Analyst
Okay, perfect. And then second, we kind of understand a lot of the cost synergies that you're achieving from acquisitions, but you hinted revenue synergies as well and we were just wondering if there's anything you can share here in terms of nationwide contracts that you have to benefit from?
Scott Wheeler
Could you repeat the last part of that sentence, please?
Unidentified Analyst
Just more color on revenue synergies you can get in particular, maybe nationwide contracts that you can benefit from?
Scott Wheeler
I would say yes. Clearly, the larger Daseke becomes, the more we are of interest to the largest shippers.
There's a great deal of activity around that and it's still a very large undertaking to undergo, but revenue synergies on the national contracts are clear and discernible to us. But I would point it to Builders for example where we have somewhat adjacent operations between Builders, Boyd Brothers and some others inside our system, we believe that the active management of that freight movements can help us reduce debt head and that relates to efficiency and revenue synergies as well.
So we try and seek out every revenue synergy we can with each opportunity. Sometimes when we buy businesses, they're a great deal of revenue synergies.
For example, in the high security cargo business and the commercial glass business, we have some revenue synergies, some are very, very specialized without limited revenue synergies, but still attractive targets for us. They can always take advantage of our cost structures and scale.
Unidentified Analyst
Okay, great. And then just given the stock price on the performance, would there be any consideration of a buyback?
Scott Wheeler
We are continuing on evaluating everything inside of our capital structure, both debt and equity on a regular basis. We would certainly discuss things, but that doesn't necessarily means that it rises to the level of possible execution.
But our focus is really to continue to produce great results, build a great company and we believe that the market will reward us in the long run, but certainly the last two quarters, we begin to demonstrate our capability in that regard and we are very focused on the execution.
Unidentified Analyst
Great. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from Steve Dyer from Craig-Hallum.
Your line is now open.
Steve Dyer
Thank you. Good morning.
Just a couple of points of clarification as it relates to CapEx. The press release's net CapEx of $90 million and you had indicated in the slide $85 million of replacement and another $40 million of growth for $125 million.
I'm wondering if I'm mixing those two up?
Scott Wheeler
No. Apparently, we did.
It should be $85 million, not $90 million.
Steve Dyer
So it's $85 million of total CapEx both growth and replacement?
Scott Wheeler
No. It's $85 million of replacement, which is about 5.5% of revenues, which is the number that we had always guided to.
The number looks a little bigger than in the past with the additions of these new companies, we're a much bigger company. Some of that CapEx may have taken place prior to the acquisition, but it's included in that total number.
So you can calculate, but certainly, it's $85 million of replacement and then we would have whatever available free cash flow after that to be able to invest in the future whether that's on potential mergers and acquisitions or growth CapEx.
Steve Dyer
Got it. And then just I guess as it relates to free cash flow, Bharat, do you have cash from operations in the quarter?
Bharat Mahajan
Cash from operations, we look at about net CapEx of $29 million here. That's what we're showing right now.
Steve Dyer
What about cash from operations?
Bharat Mahajan
It's $29 million.
Steve Dyer
That's not CapEx? That's cash from operations?
Bharat Mahajan
Yes. Correct.
Steve Dyer
Okay. And then I guess obviously there's a lag between spot rates and contract.
Is there still some room for improvement in terms of rolling over some old contracts and the new? We're obviously a couple of quarters into the better spot rate environment and that's showing through really nicely in your results.
Is there still some room to go in terms of repricing some old stuff?
Don Daseke
Yes. As contracts renew, we will always evaluate current market conditions.
As we alluded to earlier, the market continues to be very characterized by a great deal of tightness of capacity and supply and still creating attractive rate and rate growth environment. The rate of rate growth as I alluded to earlier may be slowing down, but still rate growth.
Steve Dyer
Got it. And then I guess lastly for me, nice sequential increase in rate per mile [ph] on both sides of the business.
Would you expect that sequentially to tick up again in Q3?
Don Daseke
Yes.
Steve Dyer
Okay. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from Matt Brooklier from Buckingham Research Group.
Your line is now open.
Matt Brooklier
Hey. Thanks and good morning.
Bharat, congratulations.
Bharat Mahajan
Thank you.
Matt Brooklier
I was going to ask the repricing question a little bit differently. If we look at year-to-date and your contract freight, how much of that freight has been repriced at this point in time, just like rough percentage?
Scott Wheeler
It's divided by August or I suppose to the end of the second quarter, probably 70%.
Matt Brooklier
Okay. And you then anticipate the other 30% is going to get repriced from September into the end of the year?
Scott Wheeler
Yes. As those contracts renew or market conditions require, we will certainly continue to have those conversations with our customers.
They full well know why we need to have rate increases to continue to support them and while they will refer cost to be as low as possible, they certainly understand market conditions.
Matt Brooklier
Okay, that's helpful. And then did you put a number to like on average how much your contract rates have increased on that 7%?
I think we did talk to some numbers, maybe in first quarter.
Scott Wheeler
No, I haven't and I really don't like doing that. What I prefer to talk about -- because rate increases are one thing, but it's not like we have absolute guaranteed volumes from them or we will supply guaranteed volumes to our customers in most situations.
In certain situations, yes, but in most situations, no. So I really prefer to look at what rate increases were we actually able to realize?
What do we actually goner [ph], not what we put in place in the contract. In the fourth quarter 2017, we realized rate increases of 4% and the first quarter, we realized rate increases of 10% and in the second quarter, we realized rate increases of 12%.
Really continued strong realized rate growth environment.
Matt Brooklier
Okay. I guess what I'm getting at is given the market, given the continued tightness, are these realized rates coming in-line with your expectations?
Or maybe they're a little bit better than you'd thought? I'm just trying to get a relative framing of where you think market pricing is right now.
Scott Wheeler
On with our expectations and one thing though, the term that we use a lot that is about and someone alluded to it earlier is freight mix shift. So some of it is if one truck is holding a load of one type of goods from one location A to location B, it may have one revenue profile but if that's holding different type of goods with the different level of sensitivity or timeliness et cetera.
It might have a very different revenue profile. So what we move will affect our realized rates often times as much more as the actual negotiated rate increases.
Matt Brooklier
Right. Okay, that's helpful.
And then maybe if we could just talk about the drivers and driver wage increases. I'm not sure if you want to put a number to how much your driver wages are up this year, but again, I'm trying to get a sense for -- it seems like the flatbed business is having a little bit more, having incremental challenges in the terms of keeping and recruiting drivers.
But I guess my question being, if we looked at driver wage increases, are they about in-line with your expectations? Or they're may be a little bit ahead just given the continued tightness?
Where do we sit right now with respect to drivers?
Scott Wheeler
Yes. Driver wages are up 11%, which -- like we'd communicated to the market to expect and we expected it.
We need an environment where our employees and owner-operators can make a call of a living and we're happy to be able to provide that to them. The rate increases are somewhat -- I guess the biggest effect that you may see that we've seen in the shift is in a higher rate environment.
We've seen a higher appetite among drivers for owner-operator positions as opposed to company driver positions. Then you will see a shift particularly in the flatbed segment from the mix between company drivers and owner-operator-drivers.
It's approximately the same number. So the net effect of that is that your margins will be compressed slightly as you move to an asset lighter revenue stream, but then your CapEx is lighter as well.
Matt Brooklier
Okay. And then maybe if you could just talk again specifically to the flatbed division.
Maybe you can give a little bit more color in terms of what you've done with respect to pay. It sounds like you have a pilot program in one of the regions where you're trying to smooth out the pay.
It's more kind of a normalized salary base, but are there any other things that you're doing, you're thinking about to try to improve the unseat in the flatbed division?
Scott Wheeler
Yes. We're confidently trying to evaluate the earnings power of our drivers and trying to help maximize their earnings.
The pilot program I alluded to was in our specialized segment and had great results. In a similar geography, we're starting a very similar program and a straight flatbed to see if they can have similar results.
We hope that it does. If it does we will continue to roll that out across the country.
We have certainly tried minimum guaranteed pay in different places. You would get this regardless and then if you did X, Y or Z, you could earn more.
That had a fairly strong effect, but not nearly as strong as what we've gone from too long on the pay leveling programs. We've had great success in the salary product in the Northwest on specialized.
We were engaging it on flatbed now and certainly hope to have similar results. Once we approve those experiments out, we'll be able to rule them out quickly across the country.
Matt Brooklier
Okay, good to hear. And then just my last question, quickly.
You talked about the establishment of this Daseke Fleet Services Group and the company you're looking to save about $100 million all-in over the next 12 months. If we look out a couple of years from now when we think about the company getting bigger from a top line perspective, you're scaling up, what are your thoughts?
You don't have to give a number, but could we be talking about more meaningful savings on a go-forward basis? And are these savings incremental?
You talked about in the past realizing like a 20% improvement in terms of EBITDA and acquired companies over 24-ish month period. Is this incremental to that 20%?
Just wanted a little bit more color on what's the potential here with establishing this group and maybe squeezing out a lot more cost over the next couple of years.
Don Daseke
Sure, Matt. There were a lot of questions in there, but I'll try and remember it all.
Number one is that million dollars in annualized savings is what they've actually accomplished in two months of work. That is far less that we anticipate that they we're able to produce on an annualized basis.
I would certainly have a goal for this group to be able to rank [indiscernible] on a cash basis -- not necessarily on a GAAP earnings basis, but a cash basis of tenfold of that. With that, perhaps after a year of being established and as they grow, hopefully those numbers can grow as well and our purchasing sales increase.
But we do believe that this incremental savings is going to be able to provide us would be addition to and incremental to our target of post-transaction EBITDA improvement.
Matt Brooklier
Okay, that's helpful. I appreciate all the color on my questions and congratulations on the quarter.
Don Daseke
Thanks.
Scott Wheeler
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And our next question comes from Willard Milby from Seaport Global.
Your line is now open.
Willard Milby
Hey, good morning, everybody. If I could start out, if we could get an update on initiatives regarding bringing more, I guess of the outsource freight on the Daseke-owned or Daseke-controlled trucks.
I know that was a program started several quarters ago. Just trying to see where you all were in an implementation point of view on that?
Scott Wheeler
I'm not sure exactly which program you're alluding to.
Willard Milby
I guess it was the freight management system.
Scott Wheeler
Absolutely, yes. The freight management system continues to improve daily.
Daseke, we have a culture of continuous improvement. We want to be better tomorrow than we are today and we continue to see great abilities to do several things with that system.
One is which is management of overflow of freight and unplanned freight and unplanned trucks as additional source to the regions. It's more of a national look as opposed to a regional look that gets very site-specific for those people trying to plan loads in trucks.
We have used it as a single source, almost 3PL [ph] with assets type function where producers put 100% of their freight into our system and then we manage it throughout Daseke very successful. And we continue to use it as another analyst question that's about earlier, as for national RFQ responses.
It is a very strong tool for that as well. It also provides a great deal of analytics back to our partners in great ease of EDI [ph], so that continues to grow and improve.
Though we see a great deal of continued opportunity there.
Willard Milby
All right. And as far as I guess keeping freight within Daseke-owned or controlled trucks a part of that, can you give us a look on how that has improved in the last quarter or last year?
Don Daseke
I think it has improved. We believe there is much more room for even greater improvement.
The biggest issue we have there is that most of our trucks are actively engaged on very high-quality producing freight and have little capacity to take on incremental. So the key to that would be adding incremental Daseke-company trucks.
We have not done that recently. We increased company-seated trucks who specialize, but lost a few on the flatbed side.
Willard Milby
Got you. All right.
And if I could shift over to Builders. When I kind of look at their footprint, obviously a sale overlap with Boyd Brothers there as you mentioned, also terminals that I believe you have leased terminals in Houston and Memphis.
Is there any chance we could see another benefit from facility consolidation, assuming Builders owns their own facilities or has some facilities that would mesh well with the current established Daseke facilities?
Don Daseke
I would say as Daseke continues to grow, mature and evolve and frankly, addressing leases are not, you will see a consolidation of facilities. We have a consolidation of facilities in Savannah today, Houston is another location where we have done that, we've worked on some of that in Southern California.
Yes, you will continue to see great cross utilization and/or consolidation of facilities. Loreto was another example.
That is something that we will do to bring out cost out of the system, but many times as we bring on these new companies to our team, they have existing encumbrances on the real estate that takes a while to burn off. We can attempt to sub-lease it or whatever, but certainly that would be a goal to take advantage of what we have.
We really have also some opportunities in the utilization maintenance that we think the Daseke Fleet Services people can help us achieve greater cross utilization there, but just greater visibility, management, et cetera.
Willard Milby
All right. Thanks very much.
That's it for me. Appreciate the time.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from Bruce Martin from Still Lake Capital.
Your line is now open.
Bruce Martin
Thanks. Couple of high-level questions.
I don't know if these are for Don. But when you look at the multiple total enterprise value to EBITDA, I think Daseke looks like it's right around 7x when you use the pro forma run rate and I think the whole industry, it was like 10 different comps or 10x or higher.
And I think most of those guys are more driving. Is there a fundamental difference that flatbed should have a lower multiple?
Still getting more familiar with flatbed as an industry? That's one question.
Second question, just as we look forward in terms of white space, in terms of how big you could get or how big a piece of market share you could have as you look at acquisitions over the next multiple years or even organically, what are your thoughts there? And the last question is on Bharat.
Is there a specific reason or skill set that Bharat brings to the table that made it important to bring him in at this point that will either change the trajectory or just felt high debt at certain area of Daseke that you're looking to improve upon?
Don Daseke
For the first question, I don't think there's a fundamental reason why flatbed should trade different multiple than other public companies. I think that long-term, we'll be judged by our results, we'll be judged by our growth rate, we'll be judged by our execution and I think we're relatively new public company and so we've got a lot to prove to the market and we're going to prove it.
That's why I'm so excited about where we are. As historical perspective, we started 10 years ago with $30 million in revenue and now acquisition-adjusted, we're in a $1.7 billion range.
We started with $6 million of EBITDA on acquisition-adjusted, we're close to $200 million and I think we've just begun. So we've had an exciting last 10 years, we've got an exciting future and we're long-term stockholders and we believe that the market wants us to show that we are doing a good job in execution and I'm confident we're going to do that.
Scott Wheeler
There was a question on Bharat. Don and I can both speak to that.
We felt for a position like this to have some background as a public company CFO and having a hands-on experience in transportation-style public company, acquisitive growth companies, all were very, very additive. We've got to know Bharat through the process of the acquisition of Aveda and as my role shifted and I was wearing a lot of hats and we needed someone to take the CFO hat, I think probably the first time after I met Bharat, I looked at Don and I said, 'We could sure use a guy like that.'
And lo and behold, we were able to not only bring Aveda on board, but we were able to elevate Bharat to the CFO role and think he can really help us have just more time spent on the CFO role than I was able to do when it was split. I know I said it kind of [indiscernible] earlier, but I honestly believe that you will see an upgrade in this position with the addition of Bharat over what I was achieving previously.
Bruce Martin
All right. Thanks, guys.
Sounds terrific and keep on keeping up.
Don Daseke
Thanks, Bruce.
Operator
Thank you. At this time, this concludes our question-and-answer session.
I would now like to turn the call back over to Mr. Daseke for closing remarks.
Don Daseke
Well, thanks, everyone. We really appreciate you listening today's call and we look forward to speaking with you individually.
If any of you have any further questions on anything about Daseke, please let us know and we'll look forward to having another exciting report for you when we report our third quarter results. Thanks again for joining us.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you. This does conclude today's teleconference.
You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.