Feb 28, 2013
Executives
Joseph P. Boutross - Director of Investor Relations Robert L.
Wagman - Chief Executive Officer, President and Director John S. Quinn - Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President
Analysts
Bret David Jordan - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division Craig R. Kennison - Robert W.
Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division John Lovallo - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division Nathan Brochmann - William Blair & Company L.L.C., Research Division Scott L.
Stember - Sidoti & Company, LLC Gary F. Prestopino - Barrington Research Associates, Inc., Research Division William R.
Armstrong - CL King & Associates, Inc., Research Division John R. Lawrence - Stephens Inc., Research Division
Operator
Greetings. Welcome to the LKQ Corporation Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2012 Earnings Call.
[Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Joe Boutross, Director of Investor Relations, LKQ Corporation.
Thank you, Mr. Boutross, you may now begin.
Joseph P. Boutross
Thanks, Rob. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today.
This morning, we released our fourth quarter and full year 2012 financial results and provided our full year 2013 guidance. In the room with me today are Rob Wagman, President and Chief Executive Officer; and John Quinn, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
Rob and John have some prepared remarks, and then we will open the call for questions. In addition to the telephone access for today's call, we are providing an audio cast via the LKQ website.
A replay of the audio cast and conference call will be available shortly after the conclusion of this call. Before we begin with our discussion, I'd like to remind everyone that the statements made in this call that are not historical in nature are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
These include statements regarding our expectations, beliefs, hopes, intentions or strategies. Forward-looking statements involve risk and uncertainties, some of which are not currently known to us.
Actual events or results may differ materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements as a result of various factors. We assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statement to reflect events or circumstances arising after the date on which it was made, except as required by law.
Please refer to our Form 10-K and other subsequent documents filed with the SEC and the press release we issued this morning for more information on potential risk. Hopefully, everyone has had a chance to look at our 8-K, which we filed with the SEC earlier today.
As normal, we are planning to file our 10-K in the next few days. And with that, I am happy to turn the call over to Mr.
Rob Wagman.
Robert L. Wagman
Thank you, Joe. Good morning, and thank you for joining us on the call today.
We are pleased with the results we reported this morning with both a solid fourth quarter and full year 2012. Diluted earnings per share in Q4 were $0.21, an increase of 10.5% as compared to $0.19 for the fourth quarter of 2011.
Revenue reached a new quarterly high of $1.07 billion in the quarter, an increase of 13.7% as compared to Q4 2011. Organic revenue growth for parts and services was 8.2% for the quarter.
Total organic revenue growth for the quarter was 7.4%. For the full year, our EPS was $0.87, representing an increase of 22.5% from the $0.71 reported in 2011.
Please note that both full year 2012 and 2011 diluted earnings per share included a loss equal to $0.01 per share resulting from restructuring and acquisition-related expenses and the change in fair value of contingent consideration liabilities. Additionally, full year 2011 diluted earnings per share included a charge of $0.01 per share as a result of the loss of debt extinguishment.
Revenue reached a record $4.1 billion in 2012, an increase of 26% as compared to 2011. Organic revenue growth for parts and services for 2012 was 6%.
Total organic revenue growth for the year was 4.1%. I am also pleased with our organic growth considering the mild weather conditions we faced in the first and second quarter, increased fuel prices throughout the year, fluctuations in the scrap market, a reduction in claims volume and minimal relief from our relatively high vehicle procurement costs during the first half of the year.
Despite those headwinds, we continue to grow our business and gain market share in the quarter and for the full year, which we believe it was a result of the broadening of our product line offerings for both collision and mechanical repair shops, our efforts to optimize our North American regional distribution network, the ongoing growth in insurance-based Direct Repair Programs and the continued positive performance of Euro Car Parts. Next, I'd like to talk about other aspects of our business.
During the fourth quarter, we purchased approximately 68,000 vehicles for dismantling by our wholesale operations, which is a 16% increase over Q4 2011. As for volume at the auctions, the outlook for supply remains good starting out in 2013.
With inventory already on hand and a continuation of our current run rate for acquiring cars, we should have sufficient inventory to grow our recycled parts operations. As mentioned during our last call, we are optimistic about the favorable pricing trends we are witnessing at the auction.
This trend played a role on a sequential improvement on gross margin for the quarter, which John will touch on momentarily. In our heavy-duty truck operations, during the fourth quarter, we purchased over 2,500 units for resale or parts as compared to nearly 1,900 in Q4 2011 or a 37% increase.
Overall, the heavy-duty truck business performed well in 2012, posting double-digit organic growth for the year. We continue to believe that this business presents a long-term growth opportunity for our shareholders, and we anticipate additional developments in this line of business for the company.
Turning to our self-service retail business. During the fourth quarter, we acquired over 114,000 lower cost self service and crush-only cars as compared to over 90,000 in Q4 2011 or a 26% increase.
Turning to Euro Car Parts. We continue to be impressed with the performance of Euro Car Parts and its ability to capture market share and open new store branches.
In Q4, ECP achieved strong organic revenue growth of 34.1%. During the fourth quarter, we opened 10 new branches, and we opened 2 additional branches in January, bringing our total branch count to 132.
I would also like to update everyone on our collision parts program in the U.K. I am quite pleased with the progress our industry relations team has made since we launched the program in March 2012.
At the end of 2012, we had supply relationships with 8 carriers in the U.K., with 8 multi-shop operators. During the quarter, we again witnessed strong double digit year-over-year growth with our collision parts sales in ECP.
Though the volume increases off of a small base, the expansion in carrier and MSO penetration is encouraging. We believe we are positioned well for the driving ECP collision part sales in 2013 and advancing our presence in that 3 billion U.K.
collision parts market. Moving onto acquisitions.
Q4 and full year 2012 were the most acquisitive quarter in the year, respectively, since the company's founding in 1998. This milestone is a testament to our strength in identifying businesses that will allow us to expand our geographic footprint and broaden our product offerings to continue our growth.
We are confident of our regional management's team's ability to effectively integrate these acquired businesses and leverage our existing distribution and sales network to drive organic revenue growth. As mentioned on the Q3 call, in our total, we purchased an aftermarket parts distribution that operates 12 locations in 7 Canadian provinces and an aftermarket parts distribution business that operates 3 locations in Québec.
During the balance of Q4, we acquired 15 additional companies. We purchased 2 self-service businesses in Florida and aftermarket parts distribution in West Virginia; 3 paint distributions with locations in Nebraska and Ohio; a bumper and fender distributor in Ontario, Canada; 3 wholesale salvage businesses with locations in Virginia, Minnesota and South Carolina; 2 heavy-duty truck aftermarket cooling and radiator businesses with locations in Michigan, Florida, Georgia and Missouri; 2 heavy-duty truck businesses with locations in Florida and Georgia; and finally, we purchased a self-service business with an adjacent auto shredder in Florida.
These acquisitions brought our year end total to 30. I'd like to briefly highlight 2 recent acquisitions.
In December of 2012, we acquired a self-service yard in an adjacent vehicle shredder in Florida. This acquisition marks the company's first entry into the vehicle shredding business.
Given that some of our car volume competition, our vehicle shredding companies, having a shredder allows us to procure vehicles that we historically wouldn't buy. We believe that by adding these new types of vehicles to our procurement mix, will lower our average cost per vehicle because we will be increasing our total share of buying in auction.
Also in markets, where there's limiting -- limited shredding capacity, we typically find that we get less revenue per car. But by having our own shredder, we reduce the risk of loss revenue and continue on our focus on maximizing the profitability of each of these vehicles we procure.
Currently, this shredder is operating at half capacity. We anticipate running at full capacity by the end of 2013 with all current and future volume being generated internally with no reliance on third-party sources.
Lastly, on acquisitions, on February 1, 2013, the company purchased Autoclimate Limited, a U.K.-based distributor of collision repair parts and products primarily for automotive climate control systems. Autoclimate's products, systems and strong relationships with U.K.-based insurance carriers and collision repair shops compliment ECP's ongoing effort of growing our collision program in the U.K.
Autoclimate marks our second acquisition in the U.K. and our first tuck-in acquisition for ECP, further highlighting our confidence in our acquisition growth strategy outside of North America.
At this time, I'd like to ask John Quinn to provide some more detail on the financial results for the quarter.
John S. Quinn
Thanks, Rob. Good morning, and thank you for joining us today.
Hopefully, everyone's had a chance to review our press release this morning. We expect to file our 10-K with the SEC in the next few days.
Please watch for that as well. Also as a reminder, we split the stock in September 2012, so any discussions regarding the number of shares, earnings per share, reflect that split.
We are commenting today on Q4 and the full year of 2012, as well as giving 2013 guidance. So please note that my comments may switch between the quarter and the full year's.
Rob's already given you a breakdown of the major year-over-year revenue changes, so I'll supplement what he said with a few other data points. In Q4 2012, our total organic revenue growth was 7.4%, and we delivered additional growth of 5.9% from acquisitions.
Rob mentioned that the Q4 2012 organic growth for recycled and aftermarket parts and services was 8.2%. Other revenue, which is where we record our scrap and commodity sales, was higher by 19.2%.
The majority of this growth was driven by acquisitions, which accounted for 17.3% of the change. We saw modest organic growth of 1.9% because higher volumes slightly more than offset the fall we saw in commodity prices.
We saw the average price achieved for scrap steel fall about 14% year-over-year. In Q4 2012, revenue for our self-service business was $89.7 million or 8.4% of LKQ's total revenue.
Approximately 35% of this revenue was part sales and included in recycled and related products and 65% scrap and car sales included in other revenue. Our acquisition revenue growth was driven by the 33 deals we completed since Q3 2011 and excludes ECP, which closed the first day of the quarter in Q4 2011.
In Q4 2012, the impact of revenue from acquisitions was $55 million. Gross margin of 41.7% for the fourth quarter of 2012 was flat as compared to the same quarter 2011.
There was little year-over-year change in any of our operating segments. However, within the North American segment, we saw margins in our late model salvage operations improving with the drop in the cost of cars.
But that improvement was offset by mix and the lower margin precious metals business that we acquired in Q2. Probably worth taking a moment to add a few comments on the sequential gross margins.
Gross margins improved to 40.3% in Q3 2012 to 41.7% from Q4 2012, an increase of 140 basis points. The primary driver of this increase was the wholesale North American segment.
And similar to the year-over-year variance, we saw the cost of vehicles decrease more steeply than the drop in scrap prices. There were minor up and downs in the other segments, but nothing significant.
Our facility and warehouse distribution and SG&A expenses was 30.3% of revenue in Q4 2012 and Q4 2011. Slightly higher distribution costs, as a percent of revenue, were offset by lower SG&A costs.
This is primarily due to ECP, which tends to run higher distribution costs. In addition, ECP's distribution costs were higher in Q4 2012 compared to Q4 2011 due to our additional infrastructure to support the new branches and the addition of crash parts to the ECP product lines.
The lower SG&A cost was primarily due to compensation-related expenses. During the fourth quarter of 2012, we recorded $200,000 of restructuring and acquisition-related expenses.
In the same quarter last year, we incurred $2.3 million of these expenses as a result of legal deal and other restructuring costs related to the acquisitions. Our operating income was $104.3 million in Q4 2012 compared to $90.1 million in 2011, an improvement of $14 million or 16%.
Interest expense of $8.4 million was $1.5 million higher in Q4 2011. This increase is due to our higher average debt balances as we incurred debt to fund our acquisitions and slightly higher average interest rate.
Our effective borrowing rate was 3.15% for Q4 2012 compared to 2.84% in Q4 2011. Our year-to-date tax rate was 36.2% as compared to 37.4% in 2011.
The lower rate in 2012 is primarily the result of a higher portion of our earnings being attributable to foreign subsidiaries in lower tax jurisdictions than the U.S. On a reported basis, diluted earnings per share from continuing operations was $0.21 in Q4 2012 compared to $0.19 in 2011.
The impact on EPS of restructuring acquisition-related cost and income was immaterial in both years. So year-over-year, EPS grew $0.02 in Q4, an increase of 11%.
For the full year 2012, we reported diluted earnings per share of $0.87 compared to $0.71 in 2011, an increase of 23%. In 2012, the $0.87 of EPS included $0.01 of restructuring and acquisition cost and contingent consideration adjustments.
2012 also included the previously disclosed legal settlements, which totaled $0.04 over the year. Adjusting for these 2 categories, 2012 EPS would have been a net $0.84 compared to the reported $0.87.
2011, we incurred a $0.02 impact from restructuring and debt write-off cost, net of about $0.005 favorable EPS impact contingent payment adjustment. Without these items, 2011 EPS would have been $0.73.
On an adjusted basis, 2012, $0.84 EPS is $0.11 favorable to the 2011 adjusted $0.73 or an improvement of 15.1%. Cash flow from operations.
The full year was $206 million compared to $212 million in 2011, a decline of $6 million. The main reasons for this decline and the decline relative to our earlier expectations were in the area of working capital, particularly in the Q4 inventory and accounts payable.
Excluding the impact of acquisitions, during our Q4, our inventories increased $47 million, while accounts payable was a use of cash of $7 million. The buying environment for our salvage operations improved in Q4, and we purchased almost 8,000 additional vehicles compared to Q3 2012.
As a result, we ended the year with higher inventories than we had earlier expected. Further, as a result of the threatened port strikes, we accelerated our normal seasonal build of aftermarket product in order to protect ourselves.
In addition, we saw our European operations reducing their accounts payable in order to capture additional early-pay discounts, so whereas with their growth, ECP's accounts payable had normally been a source of cash. In 2012, it was actually a use of cash.
The underlying EBITDA of the business was strong with full year EBITDA of $511 million in 2012 compared to $418 million in 2011, an increase of $92 million and 22%. In 2012, we invested $88 million in capital assets, slightly underspending our guidance of $90 million to $100 million.
During the year, we spent $265 million in cash from acquisitions, including $132 million in Q4 2012. For the year, we issued 3.9 million shares of stock related to exercise of stock options and equity compensation, and that resulted in $33 million in cash, including tax-related benefits.
At the end of the year, LKQ's debt was $1.1 billion, and cash and cash equivalents were $60 million. Availability under our $1.4 billion credit facility, after taking into account $40 million of Letters of Credit supported by the facility, was $356 million.
With our cash of $60 million in the balance sheet, our liquidity was $416 million. Our debt under the credit facility and our asset securitization program was 59% fixed and 41% floating as of year end.
Turning to guidance. I'd like to remind listeners a few items that we exclude from our guidance.
The guidance excludes any restructuring costs and transactions cost, gains or losses, capital expenditures or cash flow associated with the acquisitions. We expect to incur some additional charges in contingent consideration liabilities, which can be either a negative or positive.
In any case, we're excluding them from guidance as well. We don't provide guidance quarterly or on specific line items, but I would like to remind investors that in Q1 2013, we'll have 1 fewer day than in Q1 2012.
We expect to get that day back in Q3. We would expect our Q1 revenue year-over-year comparisons to be negatively impacted by 1 fewer selling day.
Commodity prices create some variability in our income statement quarter-to-quarter. The midpoint of the guidance assumes the commodity prices will be neutral to earnings.
And as our foreign operations grow, foreign exchange could cause additional earnings volatility. Through the first 9 months of 2012, there's no foreign exchange impact from our European operations because they were new to the company.
2013 will be the first full year where we report foreign exchange impact from those operations. In 2012, we recorded using an average exchange rate for the British pound of $1.59 whereas the current exchange rate is about $1.52.
I'd remind listeners that the legal settlements we had last year positively benefited earnings by $0.02 per share in each of Q1 and Q2. Those earnings are not expected to repeat this year.
We expect our parts and services organic growth to be 5.5% to 7.5%. We're not giving guidance by segment, but our internal expectations is the very high growth we've seen in the European segment to lightly slow a bit this year as we're not going to open any new locations until we're sure that the existing branches are fully integrated.
We still believe there remains a significant opportunity in the U.K., and we will revisit the branch opening schedule in the second half of the year and expect to update investors at that time. We assumed a more normal weather pattern for 2013 for North America compared to the mild winter and dry summer of 2012.
When that comes to pass and unemployment in the U.S. continues to abate, we'd expect to see our North American growth to improve over our 2012 results.
Also at the end of 2012, we had closed one of our aluminum furnaces. We don't expect any material impact on our earnings as a result of those closure, but we expect our sale of aluminum, which is recorded in other revenue, to be about $10 million lower each quarter this year.
Our guidance for net income is $305 million to $330 million, which equates to $1.09 to $1.00 diluted earnings per share. Compared to the $0.84 EPS we reported in 2012, after adjusting for the legal settlements and acquisition-related items, our guidance represents an improvement of 19% on the low end of the guidance and 30% if we achieve the high end.
We expect to spend in the range of $100 million to $115 million of capital expenditures. This figure is higher than the $88 million in 2012, but we're obviously a much larger company, and we have some carryover spending from 2012 on several greenfield projects that we started last year.
Cash from operations is expected to be approximately $300 million. This represents a significant improvement of almost 50% over 2012, mainly due to the higher projected income and our assumptions that Q4 inventory build will not be as large in 2013 as accounts payable will be the source of cash as opposed to the use of cash that we saw in 2012.
One other item regarding cash flow for your modeling. In 2013, we have approximately $72 million of scheduled debt repayments and $42 million of payments related to contingent consideration.
The $3 million of these payments will be recorded as an outflow in our cash flow from operations. I'd like to turn the call back to Rob to summarize before we open the call to questions.
Robert L. Wagman
Thanks, John. To summarize, we are pleased with the fourth quarter and our 2012 performance.
During 2012, we were challenged with multiple elements that were not in our control, including year-over-year accident frequency that was down roughly 2%, paid claims down on average over 3%. Our average price per ton of scrap was down 14% and, according to a recent collision repair shop survey, over 70% of all shops reported flat or negative sales compared to 2011.
Despite all of those challenges, our company was able to deliver positive growth across many financial performance metrics. ECP continues to provide exciting growth opportunities for the company, and we are quite pleased with its performance and the value it has created for our shareholders.
We plan to continue to expand our ECP branch comp in the U.K., while simultaneously leveraging their network to drive collision part sales by educating our U.K. customers on our value proposition of alternative parts and driving APU.
In addition, given our success with ECP and our ability to identify growth opportunities outside of North America, the company continues to explore additional international acquisition targets. As witnessed by our fourth quarter acquisition and development efforts, we also believe there are opportunities to continue our North American growth.
We see strategic tuck-in and greenfield markets available across all of our businesses. We will continue our efforts to add additional product lines as we execute our one-stop shop goal for our collision mechanical customers.
All of these business units, supported by our 20,000 plus dedicated employees, allow us to project solid EPS gains for 2013. The low end of our guidance represents a 19% increase over 2012 results, and at the high end, we would increase our EPS 30% year-over-year.
Keep in mind that our 2012 EPS exceeded 2011 EPS by over 23%. So you can see that we expect to continue the success we achieved in 2012.
Rob, we are now prepared to open the call for Q&A.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our first question is from the line of Bret Jordan, BB&T Capital Markets.
Bret David Jordan - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division
Question on the precious metals recovery. If you look at its impact in the fourth quarter, I guess, its ramp rate, could you give us some more color and how that business is spooling up as you get some of the airbags processing?
Robert L. Wagman
The question -- was the revenue...
Bret David Jordan - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division
What was the impact, I guess, the margin impact on the precious metals recovery because that was expected to be margin dilutive, I guess, in the early stages?
Robert L. Wagman
Sorry, Bret. I thought [indiscernible] question.
John S. Quinn
It's about 30 bps net drag on margin.
Bret David Jordan - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division
Okay. And I guess what's the expected ramp rate on that?
Is that something that as we get into the middle of 2013 and sort of anniversary its acquisition, it should be running fairly efficiently? Will that always be just running at a lower...
Robert L. Wagman
I think it will always be running at a lower, at a lower margin.
Bret David Jordan - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division
And then I guess, speaking about margin trends in North America, as you look more to the auto parts business and, you've certainly done some parts acquisitions in Canada in the recent quarter, where do you see that margin relative to your traditional North American collision margin?
John S. Quinn
Which -- the Canadian one? Is that what you're asking?
Bret David Jordan - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division
Canadian auto parts. As you're getting more into internal engine parts as opposed to collision panel parts, where did you see a much margin differential between those 2 business categories?
Robert L. Wagman
The businesses that we bought in Canada were primarily aftermarket collision part distributors.
John S. Quinn
And we see the margins being very similar to what we see in North -- in the United States, Bret.
Bret David Jordan - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division
So nothing changing on that mix? Okay.
And then one last question, as you look at the shredding business and its 50% capacity and you get a volume, is it cost effective to distribute longer distances, or is it mostly Southeastern volume that's going to go into that shredder?
John S. Quinn
It's mainly going to be Southeastern volume. We figure about a 300 mile radius, Bret, to be able to cost effectively haul it in there.
And because it's in Florida, we have such a concentration in Florida and Southern Georgia, we believe we can fully run the setup with our own volume and now have to buy anything on the street.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Craig Kennison of Robert W. Baird.
Craig R. Kennison - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
John, I know organic growth is a more complicated number today because of ECP. Could you help us deconstruct that, and let us know what North American organic growth looks like in 2013 based on your guidance?
And then what the same-store sales growth rate and ECP is looking like?
John S. Quinn
Sure. The -- let me put it in a perspective for you.
Last year, parking services in North America was 3.6% and the ECP on a full year basis was a little over 50% waiver part of the organic growth. And in Q4, ECP was around 34% organic, which of 19% was same store.
So what we're thinking is, ECP has got the benefit of all the locations that we opened last year. We're going to take a little bit of a breather there, make sure those are integrated, all the new managers are firing on all cylinders.
We understand the crash business, and that they're trained up on that and then we'll take a look at that in Q -- probably in Q2 we'll start looking at it again to see if we get some new locations open for 2014. Rob can speak to that in a second.
In terms of the North American business, our expectation is that if we get to some kind of normalized weather -- and last year, we had very mild Q1 and very dry summer -- we think that those things probably would have been a big drag on our organic growth. If we see the miles driven continue to improve [indiscernible] driving a little bit more, we would expect the North American business to do a little bit better than it did last year on the organic side.
Robert L. Wagman
Just add a little color in the U.K. We're still standing by our projections of 150 to 175 what we call, Tier 1 ECP locations and an additional 25 or so, Tier 2, the smaller or remote markets.
With the 12 we did in Q4 originally scheduled for 2013 so we pushed them in 2012. So as John said, we're going to reevaluate this in Q2, but I would expect if we feel comfortable, we'll add another 10 in 2013 to fill up the 242, again, with still some growth for 2014 and '15 as well.
Craig R. Kennison - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
Do have a same-store sales metric for ECP?
Robert L. Wagman
Yes, it was around 19% in Q4. They're taking market share.
John S. Quinn
Absolutely.
Craig R. Kennison - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
And then just as a follow-up, the way we calculate organic growth, I think is similar exactly how you do it, we think ECP adds 3 to 4 percentage points to growth in 2013, which would imply that your North American business is growing at a slower pace. Any -- is that the right way to look at it?
And if so, why would North America growth rates have slowed?
Robert L. Wagman
I'm not -- maybe we can get it on the call afterwards to see how your math is. I'm not sure.
If you look at the top end of our guidance, it would be easier numbers. I think you still see an expansion of our growth for North America.
Craig R. Kennison - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
We see expansion just to slow down. Maybe we'll take it offline.
The next question I have is just in terms of the acquired revenue in Q4, can you quantify it? And then did you do any deals in Q1 that you could quantify as well?
John S. Quinn
I do have that, let me just grab it for a second. So the expected revenue as of Q4 acquisitions on an annualized basis is about $150 million, but we already recorded some of that in Q4.
So if you're trying to model it, I would use somewhere between $20 million and $25 million order incremental revenue in Q1.
Craig R. Kennison - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
Does that mean you had over $50 million in Q4?
John S. Quinn
It would be about $16 million in Q4.
Craig R. Kennison - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
16, okay. And then Q1, did you do any deals that you haven't -- that you can quantify for us?
Robert L. Wagman
The other one, we've announced the [indiscernible]. It is 20 to 25 years [indiscernible], including that one.
John S. Quinn
Craig, if I could just go back to your question about the deceleration that we saw on 2012, I do want to comment on that. Obviously, I think it's a bad news, good news story.
2012, of course, we had no winter. We did talk about that.
The Asian carpark in our collision business does work a little bit against us as these cars get older. We're now at 11 years old.
People tend to carry less insurance. The cars are more likely to total as it gets older, of course.
And quite frankly, the parts we sell for older cars tend to be a little bit lower priced. Miles driven in December were down 3%, just in December.
Year-over-year, it was just up 0.3%, so we saw that as a little bit of a headwind as well. Fuel, obviously increasing, obviously, creates a little bit of drag.
And unemployment remains stubbornly high. And I think those are the bad news for 2012.
I think the good news for 2013 is that the SAR [ph] rate is increasing. In January, it was at 15.3 million.
I just saw our report this morning projecting February to be 15.7 million. So that means a lot of late-model cars, which will reduce the aging carpark, and also those late-model cars all carry full insurance so we see that as a positive for 2013.
The options are strong, obviously as a result of Sandy, I think, pumping in quite a few cars into the mix, but again allowing us to buy more cars. And finally, our certification programs really just incredible growth.
Year-over-year increase in certified programs in 14%. So we see a lot of good tailwinds coming in 2013.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of John Lovallo of Bank of America.
John Lovallo - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
First question would be on in the interest margin [indiscernible] you expect the amount [indiscernible].
Robert L. Wagman
John, you're -- sounds like you're on a cell. It's very faint.
But I think your question was, do we expect any margin impact on the Q4 acquisitions? Once we get them fully integrated, we expect to be more or less in line with the corporate averages.
When you look what they are, they're aftermarket businesses, salvage businesses, the truck, so forth, everything tends to run. It's a good mix of the businesses we currently have.
So it'll take a quarter or two to get those integrated, but then we expect them to be more or less with our run rate.
John Lovallo - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
And in terms of the cars coming in from Hurricane Sandy, do you anticipate most of that still ahead of us? And what are you thinking in terms of the quality of the reusable parts, and, potentially, the pricing of those vehicles?
John S. Quinn
John, they are starting to really start to flow through now. There's a general lag of about 60 days before the title starts coming in.
This was a little bit slower because people's houses were destroyed, and I think that became a priority. We really see no real impact to our business model.
These are flood damaged cars. Saltwater is the worst for parts because it gets in the electrical systems, so they really don't make good parts cars.
They actually do a lot of rebuilders on that, which is unfortunate for the buyers, perhaps, but the eventual buyer of that car. But the volume is projected to be around 250,000 cars.
We did purchase about 5,000 cars direct from insurance companies and from other sources, so we did bring some cars in direct. Most of those cars will be stripped down for certain parts and stay away from the -- obviously, the motor and transmission because the saltwater does a lot of damage.
The benefit to us, though, the availability in that particular market, basically that New England corridor down into the Mid-Atlantic, there was such a high availability of salvage. A lot of our competitors are focusing on the builder side of it, which is opening up some really great opportunities from the collision cars, that are of course, still happening since Sandy impacted us.
So we actually see this as a slight uptick for us, but the flood cars themselves, we generally stay away from, on a saltwater flood.
John Lovallo - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
And if I can sneak one more in here. With the delay in tax refunds this year, have you seen any incremental volume at the self-service lots, potentially customers trading down?
Robert L. Wagman
Interesting. Our admissions -- we track our admissions [indiscernible] and they're pretty steady, so really no major impact there at all.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Nate Brochmann with William Blair.
Nathan Brochmann - William Blair & Company L.L.C., Research Division
Wanted to -- sorry to go back to this on your North American organic growth rate a little bit. And I know that there's maybe more math to do, and we can take it offline.
Just in terms of conceptually, Rob, you gave some of the puts and takes in terms of the positives in mind and negatives. But I mean, again, with the easy comps, and, obviously, the APU rate going up and all the positives that you do have, and I get there's still a headwind, unemployment, miles driven, but with that I would think that you would have been kind of in the North American side still within your historical, I don't know, maybe the mid single-digit growth range.
Is there just a little bit of conservatism, do you think, in that North American range being -- again, if you assumed just roughly 3% for ECP that would imply maybe 2.5 to 4.5 for the North American side, which again still feels a little bit low, but is that kind of a little bit of embedded conservatism? If you could just talk about that a little bit, I'd appreciate it.
Robert L. Wagman
Nate, we are working off of a much bigger base now, and, quite frankly, [indiscernible] log large numbers. Let me talk a little bit about the weather that we faced this year versus last year.
It really is a story of extremes. Last year, we had no winter, as we all know, but this year it's just been -- I use the New England as an example.
Prior to the blizzard that hit in New England, they were well below year-over-year comps for normal snowfall, and in 24 hours, they got 30 inches of snow which put them over-the-top. The problem of that is it shut down New England for about 4 days.
Nobody was driving. In fact, I believe, the governor ordered people off the roads before the storm actually hit.
Kansas is another example. Blizzard hit there last week, and, again, everyone was off the road.
They were told to stay home. We certainly believe that the weather has been better this year than last year.
We'll take certainly, what we are today versus last year. Really it's a story of large numbers now.
We hope that the normalized winter will provide an opportunity to increase the same-store sales growth in North America. But the reason why we went with 5.5 to 7.5 was just because of a bigger number.
Nathan Brochmann - William Blair & Company L.L.C., Research Division
And then in terms of, obviously, the facility costs were up a little bit, and part of that is the expansion from ECP. And I know part of that is building out some of the larger facilities here in North America.
Could you talk about a little bit just where you are? I mean you talk about adding 10 more for ECP, but where you are in terms of the expansion in North America in that category, and whether maybe we'd see a little bit of leverage this year, whether there's still investment going on?
John S. Quinn
I'll start, then maybe Rob [indiscernible]. Basically, the infrastructure is built.
As we grow, though, we do find that, as leases come up, we tend to try to buy these larger locations [indiscernible] so growth or higher, highest footprint. And so we've budgeted to add a number of the locations, add additional wares and capacity.
But you're right, we would hope that with -- if the volumes come up, rebounding off of last year that we should leverage in that area.
Robert L. Wagman
I think John covered it. But certainly, in terms of the acquisitions and the pipeline where we sit today, we think there's plenty of opportunity still here in North America to keep growing the business and in the U.K, as well.
So mentioned in our scripts, Nate, that the continent, we are still doing our research on the continent. And we expect to look for possible expansions there as well.
Nathan Brochmann - William Blair & Company L.L.C., Research Division
And just final question. Rob, you talked about signing up, I think you said maybe 8 carriers in the U.K.
on the collision side. Is that kind of brand new in terms of those relationships?
And I assume that you're referring to insurance carriers. That was obviously one of the things, as you talked about, you continue to work through and could be one of the big potential upsides over the next couple of years if they really aggressively adapt that.
Can you just explain that a little bit further in terms of where you're at and maybe in terms of those 8 carriers, whether they're just small guys are just starting or whether there were any of the big guys. If you could give us a little more color?
Robert L. Wagman
We started this a year ago, as you know. It'll be a year ago next month.
We're been very pleased with what we've been able to do. The APU usage in the U.K.
is circa 5% versus 37%, 38% here in the United States. So we certainly believe there's a great growth opportunity.
Those 8 carriers are small, medium and large carriers. They are all in pilot stage, Nate.
We haven't got a full rollout yet. They've got to walk before we run.
We knew this was going to be a marathon, not a sprint. But we're very encouraged, great relationships with the carriers.
And those MSOs are working with the carriers -- insurance carriers to be clear. Those are insurance companies, starting to push our product types into the system.
The Autoclimate was done exactly for that purpose. They already had those relationships with insurance companies on the cooling products so the Autoclimate will leverage those relationships even deeper.
So we're very encouraged with what we have. As I mentioned, we had seen double-digit growth and we don't see that ending anytime soon, quite frankly.
Operator
Our next question is coming from the line of Scott Stember of Sidoti & Company.
Scott L. Stember - Sidoti & Company, LLC
I understand you guys do not give detailed line-by-line guidance for '13, but just looking at the bottom line range and assuming pretty nice ramp up in margin recovery, could you maybe just talk about on a high level what some of the buckets will be that will be driving that now, particularly with the lower margin ECP business being fully integrated?
John S. Quinn
There are a couple of things. And we have seen some improvement in the cost of sold associated with the salvage business.
That takes a while to come through the income statement. We talked a little bit about the fact that, sequentially, in Q4 we saw the margins go up and that was primarily driven by the late-model business in North America.
That's one aspect. We talked a minute ago on -- it was Nate's call question with respect to the leverage.
We would hope to get some leverage at this -- the bond steps back in North America again, putting more products through the same pipeline. We hope to get some leverage out of there, as well.
We are continuing to look at our pricing programs. And I know we've been talking about this for some time.
And we're starting to see a little bit of traction on that in the aftermarket. And we made some fairly decent progress on the salvage business over the last couple of years and starting to a little bit of traction on the aftermarket and potentially that could improve some things as well.
And we did a lot of acquisitions last year when Nate asked about facilities. As we bring those facilities, where there's duplicate locations in, we should be able to get a little bit of leverage out of the portfolio on those as well.
Scott L. Stember - Sidoti & Company, LLC
And then just last question. Just following up, Rob, about the trends that you've seen up like in with weather up in the Northeast, outside of that with some of the other snowfall that we've seen throughout the country, can you talk about how that's trending to your business right now?
Robert L. Wagman
Obviously, Scott, our guidance includes what we've seen in January and February thus far. We expect, hopefully, we have another month of inclement weather coming our way.
We obviously prefer smaller storms and businesses that shutdown, kind of shutdown the entire motoring public. But we expect certainly to see hopefully normalized condition rather than these extreme storms.
If we get that, we expect to be obviously in our guidance.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Gary Prestopino with Barrington.
Gary F. Prestopino - Barrington Research Associates, Inc., Research Division
Most of the questions have been answered. But, Rob, with these pilots that you're having in the U.K., is that for collision and mechanical and aftermarket and salvage parts?
Robert L. Wagman
Mainly just coalition aftermarket. As you know, Gary, we don't have salvage products yet in the U.K.
This would just be aftermarket collision parts. Insurance carriers do write some hard parts, so that is falling into that line of business.
And that's where the Autoclimate actually comes in with the cooling product, so mainly focused on collision aftermarket today.
Gary F. Prestopino - Barrington Research Associates, Inc., Research Division
So there's no salvage parts right now in the U.K. but that would be, obviously, an obvious step in the future if this gets adopted?
Robert L. Wagman
Absolutely on our radar and 100% correct.
Gary F. Prestopino - Barrington Research Associates, Inc., Research Division
Okay. And then in terms of your accelerated 10 of these branch openings for Euro Car Q4, you pulled them from this year, back in the last year, was that contemplated at the end of Q3 in the guidance that you gave for Q4 and year end?
Robert L. Wagman
Yes, we announced that on the Q3 call. That was our intention.
It was in the guidance, yes.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Bill Armstrong with CL King.
William R. Armstrong - CL King & Associates, Inc., Research Division
Could you tell us what your average price that you paid for the wholesale cars in Q4, and what that was a year ago?
Robert L. Wagman
In Q4 2012, it was around 1800, and a year ago, Q4, it was about 1890.
William R. Armstrong - CL King & Associates, Inc., Research Division
1800 versus 1890?
John S. Quinn
Right. It dropped about 5%.
William R. Armstrong - CL King & Associates, Inc., Research Division
Anything to call out in terms of price trends of the parts that you're selling? Any actions by the OEMs, perhaps, the competitive actions, that might either squeeze or expand margins going forward?
Robert L. Wagman
Not really. They tend to increase prices by 1% to 2% a year.
Some product, older product equipment, they might actually drop it, some of it increase. But on average on our product mix, we look at our product mix, it seems to be 1% or 2% per year and obviously we try to match that.
William R. Armstrong - CL King & Associates, Inc., Research Division
And then finally, you mentioned you're closing an aluminum smelter and that's going to reduce revenues by about $10 million per quarter. I was wondering if you could just kind of flesh out why you're closing that smelter, what's the thought process behind that and what are you going to do now with those aluminum wheels that are no longer being smelted in that facility?
Robert L. Wagman
They were buying some product on the open market. [indiscernible] We've gotten -- we made some systems changes.
We've made [indiscernible] cores a little bit better, the higher value cores, and identified them little bit better. We have two of these facilities.
We just added another shift to the other one to handle the volume. The other one is actually more efficient anyway.
And so we think we'll still have sufficient cores for our own business. This is really -- we're going to try to avoid buying cores that we don't need that we were just melting down [indiscernible] low margin.
We don't really anticipate much of a margin in error, operating impact.
John S. Quinn
It's more of a playbill just to get out of the open market of having to buy on the market. Now we can supply it internally and not have to worry about fluctuations in the price that cause us that margin erosion.
Scott L. Stember - Sidoti & Company, LLC
So in other words, with 2 smelters -- your basically had more capacity than your system needed and so you're just buying open market parts to, basically, to utilize the capacity?
John S. Quinn
That's correct. The volume we needed to feed our remand operations is being satisfied by the one operation.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line John Lawrence from Stevens.
John R. Lawrence - Stephens Inc., Research Division
Rob, would you talk about the environment itself to mild winters? You look at acquisition candidates, what's the profile, anything changed there as you look at that group of companies to buy?
Robert L. Wagman
The pipeline, John, it's surprisingly still active. We know we had a little bit of a rush in Q4 because of the pending tax consequences, but our pipeline is as active as it's ever been still, in North America.
And now, we're starting to see opportunities over in the continent of Europe. Our strategy is going to be the same here.
We'll continue to do the aftermarket tuck-ins. For self-serve, really just filling geographic holes with both acquisitions and greenfields.
HD, I announced that we did some strategic tuck-ins already in terms of cooling. We'll continue that.
We still have plenty of growth opportunity in the HD. European, the landscape I said, we've been spending a year over there just learning the landscape, learning the laws.
We now feel comfortable that with ECP firmly under our belt we're pretty -- we're more receptive actually to looking at opportunities now in Europe. And I'll just point to one full-service like Miami.
A year ago, in South Florida, we had nothing, and now we've really filled out that market very nicely. So we'll continue to look on the full serve, just really strategic tuck-ins.
Los Angeles is still one that really bothers me when I look at our map. We have 1 location, Southern California.
I think we can do a lot more there, so plenty of opportunities still in North America as well.
John R. Lawrence - Stephens Inc., Research Division
Lastly, on that, as you look at those, the pro formas don't change, it's still the same returns that we saw 2 or 3 years ago as we look at those potential acquisitions.
John S. Quinn
I think that right, John. I think some of the yards that we're seeing are possibly a little bit stressed, but we pay less for them.
John R. Lawrence - Stephens Inc., Research Division
And you get that same return based on facility closures and combinations in that?
John S. Quinn
Exactly.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of our allotted time for question-and-answer session today. I will now turn the floor back to management for closing comments.
Robert L. Wagman
Thanks, Rob. I just want to thank everyone for joining the call today, and we look forward to speaking to you in a couple of months to report our Q1 earnings.
Thanks, everybody. Have a great day.
Operator
This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines this time, and we thank you for your participation.