Oct 19, 2017
Executives
Michael Kneeland – Chief Executive Officer William Plummer – Chief Financial Officer Matt Flannery – Chief Operating Officer
Analysts
David Raso – Evercore ISI Tim Thein – Citigroup Rob Wertheimer – Melius Research Scott Schneeberger – Oppenheimer Joe Box – KeyBanc Ross Gilardi – Bank of America Joe O’Dea – Vertical Research Partners Seth Weber – RBC Capital Markets Steven Fisher – UBS
Operator
Good morning, and welcome to the United Rentals Third Quarter 2017 Investor Conference Call. Please be advised that this call is being recorded.
Before we begin, note that the company’s press release, comments made on today’s call and responses to your questions contain forward-looking statements. The company’s business and operations are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond its control, and consequently, actual results may differ materially from those projected.
A summary of these uncertainties is included in the safe harbor statement contained in the company’s earnings release. For a more complete description of these and other possible risks, please refer to the company’s annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2016, as well as to subsequent filings with the SEC.
You can access these filings on the company’s website at www.ur.com. Please note that United Rentals has no obligation and makes no commitment to update or publicly release any revisions to forward-looking statements in order to reflect new information or subsequent events, circumstances or changes in expectations.
You should also note that the company’s earnings release, investor presentation in today’s call include references to free cash flow, adjusted EPS, EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA, each of which is a non-GAAP term. Please refer back to the company’s earnings release and investor presentation to see the reconciliation from each non-GAAP financial measure to the most comparable GAAP financial measure.
Speaking today for United Rentals is Michael Kneeland, Chief Executive Officer; William Plummer, Chief Financial Officer; and Matt Flannery, Chief Operating Officer. I will now turn the call over to Mr.
Kneeland. Mr.
Kneeland, you may begin.
Michael Kneeland
Hello, everyone, and thanks for joining us this morning. I want to open the call by saying that we are extremely pleased with the strong third quarter results we reported yesterday.
It was a pivotal quarter and one that require disciplined execution in light of many different dynamics at play, both internally and externally. Some of our strategic actions we took to grow the business, others were market conditions that were broadly positive for our industry where we could realize more value through scale.
And then there were the hurricanes, which created immediate challenges and longer-term opportunities. Now our third quarter results and our new full year guidance were shaped by these dynamics.
Well, I’ll start by recapping some of the financial highlights. Now as a reminder, the year-over-year numbers are pro forma for the acquisition of NES in April, pro forma meaning the combination is presumed to be in effect for the third quarters of 2016 and 2017.
Now one of the reasons we give pro forma numbers is to be as transparent as possible about how the business is performing, and in the third quarter our performance exceeded expectations. Now here are our four key metrics that reflect well in our execution in the quarter.
One is our volume of equipment on rent; we delivered volume growth of 7.6% year-over-year. This was a solid step up versus the prior two quarters.
Second is rates; a major one in the quarter. We generated positive rental rates both sequentially and year-over-year for every month in the quarter.
This is the first period since the second quarter in 2015 that rates were positive year-over-year. If you recall last quarter I said that our rate trend looks encouraging, but we wouldn’t rest.
Well, we didn’t rest, and I can promise you that we won’t rest going forward. The industry backdrop on rates has become more constructive.
And now that we’ve turned the quarter, our team is excited to build on that. Third is time utilization.
This metric has been running at record highs and we delivered again in the third quarter. Utilization increased 180 basis points year-over-year to 71.9%.
That’s probably a milestone for the quarter as a whole, but also for each of the months individually. And fourth, free cash flow.
Through September was a solid $582 million which is ahead of expectations. That’s after nearly $1.5 billion of growth rental CapEx and another $52 million of merger and restructuring costs.
Before I move on I want to give you an update on our integrations. The heavy lifting behind us on NES we’re tracking better than the $40 million of cost synergies we projected.
With revenue synergies we remain confident that we’ll achieve the $35 million target by year three. The Cummins rental acquisition is just two months old and it’s already paying dividends.
The assets and the team we brought onboard are fully integrated into our Power & HVAC businesses. And the Neff deal as you know closed earlier this month.
So that’s a fourth quarter impact. But here’s an update on the integration.
As of this week, the acquired branches are all running on our operating system. That’s going to jumpstart our collaboration on sales and fleet.
The rest of the integration is right on schedule. We’re merging that back office sales, the operating teams, and adding telematics to the fleet.
And we’re analyzing the combined operations to identify efficiencies, as well as cross-sell opportunities with our combined customer base. None of these activities would ensure successful acquisition if we didn’t have good people.
And what we got with Neff is great people that come from a culture similar to our own. We knew that was true going in, and it’s nice to see that first hand.
Let’s step up in scale. Neff gives us a larger platform for growth going into 2018 just as NES did in the spring.
Both acquisitions are timed to capitalize on the continued strength of the cycle. In fact, the operating environment in the third quarter was among the best I’ve seen in a while.
Our core general rental business which excludes specialty, jumped 4.7% year-over-year pro forma. And from a company wide perspective, both the U.S.
and Canada are trending well. Our business in Canada is up 9% in local currency.
In the U.S. the coast remained strong and the Gulf and Southeast are starting to rebuild after the hurricanes.
And our regions are broadly positive in their projections. In addition there’s a lot of evidence pointing to sustained project activity, particularly in commercial construction.
Our customer survey indicated that optimism has increased sequentially in the third quarter. Given the demand is so broad, I thought I’d share some insights into our vertical activity.
In the construction sector, our revenues from both non-residential and infrastructure increased by double digits year-over-year, and that would have likely been the case even without the NES contribution. Infrastructure is a target of our Project XL initiatives.
So clearly that’s paying off. And now residential construction is our core business because of the mix of commercial projects is so diverse, a double-digit increase in that space is exciting to see.
In the industrial space with oil and gas we saw large year-over-year revenue increases across drilling, production and transmission. Refining was the only notable headwind and that’s largely due to part of the storms.
Elsewhere in industrial, the standouts in the quarter were the food and beverage, manufacturing and pharmaceuticals. And by contrast, activity in the chemical processing industry was flat as expected.
And overall I’d say that we’re in the strongest position yet to capitalize on the growth of industrial. I want to comment on specially operations.
Our Trench, Power and Pump segment delivered a major increase in rental revenue in the quarter of 33%, primarily through organic growth. Break that out, Trench was up 16%, Power was up 44%, and Pump was up 46%.
I’m most impressed by what the teams did with the margin. Rental gross margin for that segment as a whole increased 280 basis points to an outstanding 54.8%.
And we’re on track to meet our target for 16 specialty cold-starts by year end, and in 2018 you’ll see us continue to grow that segment as a cornerstone of our strategic plan. I also want to bring you up to date on the hurricanes, Harvey, Irma and Maria.
We always hope for a quiet hurricane season. And while we don’t always get our wish, this time the storms were particularly devastating.
Our people are to be commended for how quickly they responded across our network. Harvey distorted hundreds of our employees and customers in Texas, some of them lost their homes and businesses.
In Florida, the keys are still digging out and the West Coast has a long recovery. And it just wasn’t limited to those two states; Louisiana took a hit, as did Georgia.
In Puerto Rico where Maria was catastrophic, we’ve been shipping fleets to our national accounts that are helping out with the recovery. Now our best estimate is the storm-related business accounted for about $6 million of incremental revenue in September, and I’ll share something else about September.
In the aftermath of historic hurricanes in the middle of the integrations and at a time that peak seasonality we had just three minor reportable incidence for the entire month and that’s new safety record for us. Something else came out of Harvey that makes me proud.
And I’ve spoken about our united compassion fund before. Our employees donate to the fund to help their colleagues.
After the Harvey hit the compassion fund’s board which is made up of branch employees voted to make Neff employees eligible for emergency grants even though the deal had not yet closed. That tells you everything you need to know about our culture.
So let’s talk about CapEx. Our new guidance increases our CapEx plan to up to $200 million this year.
And the broad growth of end market demand is starting to strain our fleet in some geographies. Our customers needed equipment for projects and we needed to be there for them.
This is consistent with our strategy of protecting customer relationships that generate high returns over time, and we’ll use a portion of the $200 million to address the natural disasters. And we expect this quarter to be a time of severe need for many of our customers.
And so we’re comfortable pulling some CapEx forward for that purpose. As always we can be very flexible adjusting the timing and the amount of our spend in a relatively short notice.
So I’ll close with this comment on the quarter. The most powerful tailwind behind our growth has been our disciplined execution across a combination of factors.
Our Project XL initiatives, prudent investments in fleet, accretive acquisitions, and most of all a robust market demand. And we expect the same combination to bear fruit in the fourth quarter and our updated guidance reflects that.
The fourth quarter is also where we’re seeing new benefits from the Neff acquisition, a further injection of rental CapEx and the market activity that we think will exceed normal seasonality. So in short we’ve added horsepower at a time when the cycle is trending in our favor.
That gives us a great deal of confidence about where we go from here. So now Bill is going to review the numbers in detail, and then we’ll go to Q&A.
So, over to you, Bill.
William Plummer
Thanks, Mike, and good morning to everybody. As Mike said, there’s a lot going on in this quarter, so I’ll get to the bridges pretty quickly and then we’ll try to address some of the other items that are present in the quarter.
Starting with rental revenue. As usual, let’s go with the third quarter of 2017 totaled $1.536 billion, that’s up $214 million over last year or 16.2% as you’ve seen.
We had a nice result in the quarter for ancillary and re-rent revenue, up $24 million on ancillary and $9 million on re-rent. And really that increase reflects the impact of NES along with the higher volume across our business overall.
So ancillary is things like delivery, fuel our rental purchase protection program and so forth, nice increase there up about 18% over the prior year, and re-rent is re-rent of equipment that was up 19% as well. The OER increase totaled $181 million.
Volume was a major driver there. Volume attributed $208 million of increase year-over-year, and then rate added another $1 million on top of that.
And the deducts were replacement cost inflation calculated in our usual way, that cost is about $17 million in the quarter. And then mix and everything else was a headwind of about $11 million there as well.
So those are the key pieces for the revenue change. The only other highlights for revenue include the impact of the storms.
Michael mentioned that we recognized about $6 million of revenue incrementally for storm affected areas in the quarter, that’s in the year-over-year change. Looking ahead that $6 million should grow to something like $20 million of storm-related revenue impact in the fourth quarter.
Moving to used equipment sales. $139 million of proceeds in the quarter, that’s on a sale of $238 million of OEC equipment in the quarter.
So $139 million represents a $27 million or 24% increase year-over-year in proceeds from used equipment sales, and that included about $26 million of proceeds for a former NES equipment that were sold in the quarter. I called that out because as in the second quarter those units brought along a higher margin based on the greater depreciation attached to the NES equipment.
So that impact is coursing through the overall result in the quarter. It shows in the margin.
Our margin in the quarter for used equipment sales in adjusted basis was 56.8% and that’s up 10.4% – percentage points over last year. So the NES impact is certainly part of that year-over-year increase, but not all of it.
We are selling used equipment into a pretty strong market overall, I think that’s supported by a number of external measures. But it’s also very directly supported by our results year-over-year in our retail sales.
On a like-for-like unit basis compared to last year we were selling equipment in our resale channel, it’s something around 5% higher prices than we did last year in the third quarter. So robust market overall, supported by the sale of older and more depreciated NES units, explains that 56.8% margin for the quarter.
Whatever way you want to look at it though, it’s a pretty good result for us. The average age of the units that we sold were about 93 months, and yet we still brought back over 50% – 53.2% in fact of the original value of the fleet in our used equipment sales, so a pretty strong result down the line.
Moving to adjusted EBITDA. $879 million is an increase of $132 million over last year or 18% increase, and the margin in the quarter was 49.8%, that’s 30 basis points better than last year.
Similar story here, volume is the main driver, a positive $139 million impact from the 18% increase in volume, and rental rates contributed only another $1 million or so positive there. The strong ancillary result, we calculated $14 million of positive year-over-year contribution, and then our used sale result as I called out before the margin was up about $27 million year-over-year.
Other lines of business contributed another $4 million outside of used rental and the ancillary that I called out previously. The deduct fleet inflation we calculate is $12 million of headwind, our merit, our usual $6 million in the quarter.
The biggest deduct was the increased bonus accrual that we had in the quarter. Compared to last year our bonus accrual program was up $28 million, that’s an increase reflecting the strong performance this year, but it also compares to a slightly lower than normal number last year as we – many of you might recall we adjusted our bonus program accrual downward in the third quarter of last year to reflect its performance.
So that’s the biggest headwind, that leaves about $6 million, $7 million of mix and other negative year-over-year to explain the $132 million overall impact. Just to call out the impact of the storm-related revenue on EBITDA, that $6 million of incremental revenue from the storm areas translated into about $4 million of EBITDA benefit spread throughout these various lines in the third quarter.
And as we look to the fourth quarter, the $20 million of incremental revenue in the storm areas that I called out, we expect to translate into something like $12 million of EBITDA benefit in Q4. Flow through from this EBITDA was 51.2% in the quarter, but that does include that merit – that bonus accrual increase that I called out.
If you adjust for that $28 million, our flow through in the quarter would be 62% for the quarter, which is in line with the 60% that we typically – Mike talked about. Moving to free cash flow.
Mike called out the $582 million of free cash flow, once you adjust for $52 million of merger and restructuring related cash outflows, that number moves up to $634 million year-to-date through September. And I put out that number because that’s the basis on which our guidance is given for the full year, excluding the merger-related and the structuring charges.
So it’s a pretty strong free cash flow result so far this year. It is down from last year at the same time last year was a particularly strong free cash flow year for us.
If you’re interested in the year-over-year bridge, the main driver is obviously $200 million year-to-date of increased adjusted EBITDA is a good guide, but against that our rental CapEx is $340 million higher than it was last year, so that’s a deduct. Our cash taxes are higher by about $100 million so far this year, that’s a deduct.
And then the net of interest paid merger and restructuring charges and all other working capital adjustments gets you to the $264 million delta between this year and last year. Our rental CapEx expenditure for the year totals $1.5 billion so far year-to-date, and again that’s up about $340 million versus last year, and reflects the higher plan spend but also adjust the overall strength in the market that we’ve been addressing with our rental spend and maybe some timing differences this year versus last year.
That net rental CapEx year-to-date is $1.1 billion, and again it’s up about $325 million or so versus last year. In the debt activity and liquidity it was a very busy quarter for us in our debt transactions.
In addition to financing the Neff acquisition, we also refinanced our 6 1/8 note. We upsized our accounts receivable facility by about $50 million, we have upsized our ABL by about $500 million, and we call the remaining balance of the 7 5/8 notes that were still around all during the quarter.
The 7 5/8 redemption will actually fund later this month in October, so it didn’t show in the year end balance of debt, but the activity was very robust in the quarter. It left us with a net balance at the end of the quarter of net debt balance of $8 billion, up a little bit from last year.
And again, I’ll remind you that does not include the settlement for the Neff purchase. That settled on the second.
And so when you add that funding net debt on top, our net debt balance right now is something about $9.4 billion. We also improved our liquidity during the quarter.
It shows at the end of the quarter it’s $2.9 billion, but that did not take into account the payment for Neff. So if you make that adjustment, we finished the quarter with about $1.6 billion of total liquidity, including ABL availability and our cash balance.
Let me touch on share repurchase just briefly. You saw in the announcement that we announced the reauthorization of repurchases under the existing $1 billion repurchase program that we have, and that program has about $370 million remaining to be executed.
The reauthorization is basically housekeeping. When we initially announced the $1 billion repurchase, we put a time limit of about 18 months on it.
While we have the program paused as we settled in on the NES acquisition and got ready for the Neff acquisition, that 18-month time period expired, and so this was just a reauthorization of the same program. Our intent is to evaluate our cash flow position for the remainder of this year after the Neff settlement and as we build our confidence that cash flow is on the path that we expect.
We would expect to begin executing under that program with the intention of completing it by the end of 2018. Real quickly on Project XL.
We have continued to make good progress on the Project XL initiatives toward the $200 million run rate impact that we called out by the end of next year. A variety of the projects are all moving along nicely.
We did put in the investor material a look at one of the other initiatives under Project XL, which is our focus on improving our realization of used equipment pricing. We look to improve it relative to fair market value of the units that we sell.
So we gave you a schedule that just shows you how we progressed on that year-over-year improvement measure throughout the course of this year and the cumulative EBITDA impact that we realized during the course of this year because of that improvement. I think it shows up in the commentary that I made about our used equipment results in the quarter earlier, and it is just one more view of the kind of thing that we are doing under Project XL.
Real quickly on the integration of NES. Just to give you a synergy update, as Michael mentioned, the integration is essentially complete at this point with the major actions having been taken already.
And our run rate now for the realized synergies is nicely higher than the $40 million that we initially called out. For the sake of discussion, we could call it about a $40 million run rate.
In fact, in the quarter, we realized about $10 million -- $45 million run rate, I would say, about a $45 million run rate. In the quarter, we’ve realized just a little over $10 million in Q3, and that puts us on a path to realize something north of $20 million, call it $23 million to $25 million in the full year of 2017.
So nice progress there for the expense saves, synergies. And then regarding the fleet procurement savings, we called out a range of $5 million to $10 million, and we believe that we’ll be delivering at the higher end of that range once it’s all said and done.
Let me wrap up with some commentary on the guidance update that we gave. You all have seen the numbers, but just to add a little bit more color, the increase in our EBITDA and revenue guidance really reflects a couple of major drivers.
Obviously, the impact of adding Neff in Q4 is included there, but it also reflects just the overall strength of the business that we saw build during the third quarter. So I’ve called that already.
The impacts of revenue and EBITDA from Neff additions. So just to be -- I haven’t done Neff.
I did the storm-related. But just to give you some more insight on what Neff is included in that guidance update, we expect the revenues from Neff in the fourth quarter to be about $110 million, and we expect EBITDA to be somewhere in the neighborhood of $55 million from Neff alone.
On CapEx, Mike hit the real motivation behind our CapEx increase. Certainly, it’s partially due to the demands from the hurricane-affected areas, although not from replacing fleet that was damaged.
That amount was fairly minimal for us. If you look at both the Harvey and the Irma areas, in total, we lost about $13 million of OEC fleet due to the storms.
So clearly, we’ll have to replace those, but it’s not a major part of the increase in CapEx that we guided. Really, that increase was importantly guided by the overall demand that has spiked in those hurricane-affected areas.
We’ve moved about $100 million of fleet into the hurricane-impacted areas. And so we will up our spend a little bit to cover the fleet that came out of other areas into hurricane-affected and to put some more fleet back into those areas that donated into the hurricane areas.
And then we’re going to add a little bit more fleet that will land in the hurricane-impacted areas to help with what we expect to be a nice incremental demand from the rebuild activity as that plays out. Maria, just to mention that, we haven’t done a lot with Maria.
We’ve certainly shift some equipment to customers who are taking it over to Puerto Rico. We expect that there’ll probably be a little bit more demand that plays out there as we go forward, but haven’t really put a strong number to that just yet.
Michael mentioned that some of the increase in CapEx we’re thinking about as a pull forward for next year, and that’s certainly the case. That is the way that we’re managing the uncertainty around how long the rebuild incremental demand will play out.
If we see it play out for a longer period of time, then we can increase our spend next year to replace what was pulled forward into this year. But if it dies down more quickly than we expect, then we can adjust by thinking about the spend this year as pull forward for next year.
So hopefully, that gives you a little bit more color in how we’re thinking about CapEx. But certainly, we can address it further in Q&A if a question is still out there.
Finally, on free cash flow, we increased our guidance at the midpoint, something like $75 million. And certainly, that reflects the increase in CapEx net of incremental EBITDA and any working capital impacts and just the other components of our free cash flow.
Importantly, our cash tax expectation in the quarter and in the year is lower as a result of the extra CapEx and the bonus depreciation attached to that, but also of the Neff addition, right? You all remember when we announced Neff that it brought along a nice tax -- cash tax benefit with the step-up in depreciation and small -- a balance of NOLs that Neff added.
So as that plays out in the fourth quarter, it benefited our cash taxes and certainly was a part of that increase in our guidance for the full year. That’s a lot, but we certainly wanted to give you a little bit more detail on a variety of these areas to help give a sense of the impacts in the third quarter and what we think in fourth quarter.
But certainly, we’d be glad to answer any questions about anything I may have missed in the Q&A. So let’s go to the Q&A right now.
Operator, let’s open up the lines.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of David Raso from Evercore ISI. Your question please.
David Raso
Thanks very much. I was just trying to think through what you just reported and what you guided, how does it sort of influence how I think about your earnings power next year?
And what caught my eye was the implied fourth quarter. You have an incremental EBITDA margin implied around 47%, which is actually a little lower than the 51% you just did.
And I’m just thinking about the incentive comp drag, I would think would be a little lower than we just went through. Neff stand-alone comes in at higher EBITDA margins than 47%.
And maybe most importantly, if we’re thinking about 2018, it seems like the fourth quarter maybe the first time in, I don’t know, two years, three years where your rate growth year-over-year could be as much or more than your fleet utilization growth, which historically is a positive mix for profitability. So can you help us understand why the incremental EBITDA margins will be worse in the fourth quarter than the third quarter?
William Plummer
Thank you, David. I’ll start on that one.
Regarding our bonus accrual, you’re right. It shouldn’t be as high as what it was in the third quarter.
But I do remind you that we gave ranges. And the ranges, I would argue, if you look at the extreme of the ranges, it might be a little bit more normal in terms of the incrementals in Q4.
David Raso
Okay. So thinking after then to the 2018 thought process, the way you thought about CapEx and given what appears you’re going to have some carryover from rate utilization, obviously, is also going to be healthy with -- especially in the hurricane areas in the fourth quarter.
When you set up the framework for 2018 and it’s framework, it’s early, is next year a year where the framework is rate growth should be higher than your utilization growth? Just given how hot the utilization is and how we’re exiting the year, I would think that would be base case.
But just so I understand so again I think about the potential implications on incremental margins.
William Plummer
Sure. So I don’t make a link between rate growth and utilization growth the way your question implies.
What I would say separately is that our utilization growth has been pretty strong over the course of this year and actually going back into last year. And it’s, in my view, not reasonable to expect that we’re going to continue to deliver 160, 180 basis point improvement year-over-year forever and ever.
So I wouldn’t be surprised to see that year-over-year comparison come down a little bit in 2018. And so that’s the way I would think about that.
Rate growth, we’ve established momentum in the right direction, right? The question is how far can that go?
And that’s really going to be handed to us by the market as well as our execution. I feel confident that our execution and focus on rate is going to be good.
Will the market continue to offer up the kind of year-over-year improvements that we started to see here? Time will tell.
So those two components I think about separately. But I think in any case, both of them are set up nicely going into 2018.
And we’ll execute as best we can in 2018 to take advantage of what’s there.
David Raso
And with this, just sort of clear, though, you’re thinking separately, but fundamentally, rate provides a better incremental margin than utilization, correct?
William Plummer
Absolutely. We certainly want to get as much rate as we can and do it within the operational framework that allows us to deliver time utilization improvement, right?
That’s how we’re thinking about it. The question is, is the market environment there that allows us to do it?
If it is, I think we can deliver pretty effectively as you saw in Q3.
David Raso
All right. I appreciate the time.
Thank you.
Michael Kneeland
Thanks, David.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Tim Thein from Citigroup.
Your question please.
Tim Thein
Great, thank you. And Bill, just to follow up on rates, can you update us in terms of where you are today in terms of repricing the NES contracts?
It would -- at least, based on the pro forma you gave last night, it would appear that you did make further progress in terms of narrowing that spread. But just kind of want to get an update there as to where we sit today on harmonizing those contracts.
And then just as related to that, where, based on the midpoint of your revenue guidance for 2017, what would the carryover impact be at the midpoint in 2018 on rates?
Matt Flannery
So Tim, this is Matt. I would say as far as NES contract harmonization, they didn’t have a lot of fixed price business in NES.
So that would be an area where you would actually technically go to the customer and harmonize any gap that would exist between the two. We don’t -- we’re not really tracking, at this point, any NES stand-alone metrics.
The business is so fully integrated right now, as Mike had mentioned in his opening, that the customers are seeing it all as one. And most of the pricing is spot pricing at this point.
I will say that wherever there are gaps, they’re all in one price zone right now. So you continue to see movement towards -- much closer towards United historical pricing.
But we’re also very cautious that these are relationships that we value and we paid a lot of money for, and we’re going to maintain those relationships. So it’s not directly answer your question, but I think directionally, you’ll see in the rate results that we’ve done a good job of creating a lesser gap.
William Plummer
Yes. And Tim, on carryover, I mean, you guys can all fill out a spreadsheet as well as we can and make your own assumptions about how the rest of this year finishes out.
But if you make any reasonable assumptions, I think you’re going to be a point of carryover, if not a little higher going into next year if this year finishes out with anything decent. So the backdrop is a good starting point, but that’s not where we want to rest on our laurels, right?
We want continue to try and manage the rate and do it in the context to what the markets offer.
Tim Thein
Okay thanks a lot.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Rob Wertheimer from Melius Research.
Your question please.
Rob Wertheimer
Thank you operator and good morning everybody. So you are effectively achieving record time utilization.
And you guys have worked hard and getting rate also, which is lovely. You guys have worked hard on operational improvement.
Can you see at a branch-by-branch or region-by-region level whether you can actually push time utilization higher than you might have thought two and three and four years ago, and therefore, you can get more out of less fleet? Or do you think you’re actually at pretty good levels here and if the market’s strong, you’ll continue to add fleet to keep it at this level?
William Plummer
Yes, Rod. So we’re certainly are at pretty good levels and considering we’re at record levels.
So we already enjoyed significant time use advantages over the industry benchmarks. I think that we ask our questions all the time is how high can we go?
Density helps us with that, and I think that some of what we’re seeing is we’ve grown to be a bigger company. Density and marketplace certainly gives us the opportunity to drive higher time than you could have in the past.
It’d be difficult for me to say that we’re going to beat the record year next year, but I guarantee you, that is our goal is to continue to push time use as high as possible.
Matt Flannery
Look at September, right, 73.6% utilization in the month of September. Imagining operating at that kind of level all year long, it’s certainly something that would be great to see.
But it’s a real challenge, right? It’s tiring to operate at that level.
As we continue today, our lean initiatives and our focus on improving our operations are all about getting us more a capability of operating at higher levels of utilization. I think it’s fair to say a few years ago the thought of being at 73.6% in September might have been intimidating to some people.
Well, we just did it, and so there’s opportunity to do better. That’s what we’re trying to do on a continual basis.
Rob Wertheimer
That is wonderful. Can I ask you a little bit of a more, same idea but a little bit more of a structural one?
Can you see yet results from Total Control that go beyond anecdotal and served indicator or not that you can widen your competitive gap versus the industry and how you’re able to provide better efficiency to your customers’ utilization or otherwise? I mean, just maybe see if that is widening out on the data versus industry results.
Matt Flannery
Yeah absolutely Rob. Our penetration with our TC customers continues to grow.
It’s a big differentiator for those customers that value that tool. And we will continue to separate further by enhancements to those tools.
Technologies moving quickly, and we have to keep up with it. If you think about just GPS alone, we have over 200,000 with GPS, telematics on it right now, and our goal is now 270,000 with the addition of the extra Neff and NES fleets.
So we continue to fill out that value prop to our customers on technology, telematics, and TC is a big part of that.
Rob Wertheimer
Thanks, I will turn it over. Appreciated.
William Plummer
Thanks.
Matt Flannery
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Scott Schneeberger from Oppenheimer.
Your question please.
William Plummer
Hey Scott.
Scott Schneeberger
Good morning everyone. Two quick questions.
I’ll ask them both upfront. One, on the CapEx pull-forward, I understand that the storms in strong demand environment.
Could you discuss is there any pricing benefit to that with OEMs since we’re in that season and how we might think about that as a pricing perspective next year? And then the second question is with the mention of the resumption of the share repurchase program, are we taking a step back here from the M&A pipeline?
Just curious the implications of that. And if not, kind of areas you’re looking at.
Michael Kneeland
Yeah Scott, I will take the second. I’ll start with the second.
And then, of course, Matt and Bill can jump in on the first one. But no, I think Bill outlined it, as we talked about a little bit of housekeeping.
But we look at every acquisition on its own merits. The team has done a wonderful job of providing lots of dry powder for the company, and we’re very disciplined about our approach.
That will not change. I’ve talked about it ad nauseam about how we think about strategic fit financial and cultural.
And we will continue to look and see what those opportunities bring. We’re not afraid to do an acquisition, and we’re not afraid to pass on them either.
So I think the disciplined approach that we’ve had has yielded great benefits. And you’re seeing that in some of our results.
As far as the first question, I’ll pass it over to Matt.
Matt Flannery
Sure, so we most of the fleet that we buy are from strategic partners that we set up on an annual basis. And we don’t leverage them in a last-minute order, and they don’t leverage us when things are tight.
So there’s really no movement there in pricing. These are more important longer-term relationships that we have with our vendors, and we’re very pleased with the way we’re treated.
Scott Schneeberger
Thanks very much guys.
William Plummer
Thanks Scott.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Joe Box from KeyBanc.
Your question please.
Joe Box
Hey good morning guys. So maybe just to dovetail off of Scott’s question.
I mean, it seems like utilization is pretty tight across the entire space right now. Curious to your sense for maybe the industry’s appetite to grow fleet.
And then related to that, is there any risk right now that the OEMs actually can’t deliver on your $200 million CapEx increase?
Matt Flannery
So Joe, we – no, we have POs aligned, slots aligned we got everything we need to execute on that. If the demand remains, we’ll go all the way up to that $200 million.
If not, it’ll be towards the 70 50. But we’re all dialed in with as far as slots and deliverables from the OEMs.
Michael Kneeland
The market dynamic will be the market dynamic. We don’t know what the competition will do or not.
We are myopically focused on our customers and the value proposition that we can bring, but we’re cognizant of it. We watch it.
And again, we are very disciplined around our capital spend.
Joe Box
So maybe just a follow-up. I’m just trying to understand some of the moving pieces for CapEx and free cash flow for next year.
Certainly, not asking for guidance, but directionally, how should we be thinking about total replacement need here? Obviously you guys have added Neff, which probably need some replacement.
And then are we thinking more or less replacement needed as we started to climb out of maybe the lack of purchases from 2009 to 2011.
William Plummer
Yes. So Joe, regards replacement, if you think about it as the legacy United business needing to replace, we’ve been selling something like $1 billion of OEC before the NES deal.
So that continued with a little bit of growth, plus you add a need for replacing, let’s say, 100 each for NES and Neff, just to use round numbers, that gets you up to $1.2 billion kind of replacement spend on an OEC basis. And obviously, the inflation impact there, you have to add in, right?
Because you’ve got every unit that you buy today replaces a 7, 8-year-old unit at 15% lower price. So you add 15% on top of that, you’re probably in the neighborhood of $1.4 billion kind of replacement need out of your CapEx next year.
So that’s a rough starting point. And then we’ll debate, of course, growth on top of that, and that will get us to a 2018 CapEx number.
We’re going through that process right now, our budgeting process. So clearly, we haven’t decided on the final number.
But in terms of replacement spend, that’s the logic that’s pretty good starting point.
Joe Box
That’s helpful.
Operator
Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Ross Gilardi from Bank of America.
Your question please.
Ross Gilardi
Hey good morning guys. I wanted to ask you guys just a couple of macro questions.
Just first on interest rates in general. I mean, we’ve obviously been in this low interest rate environment seemingly forever now.
What happens to the business in the rental industry if we get a spike in interest rates? How should we think about your position versus some of the smaller players and so forth and just the overall growth dynamics?
William Plummer
So we’ve always said it depends on what caused the spike in interest rates, right? I mean, obviously, the cost of interest goes up, but if the spike is driven by incremental economic activities across the economy, then in construction, you would expect the benefit from that.
And so the net-net impact might be positive associated with a spike in interest expense. As it relates to sort of the competitive position of us versus the rest of the rental industry, well, I certainly feel great about the position that we’re in, right?
We’ve got a very low level of floating interest in our overall debt structure. And so we would feel an impact, but I’m going to go out on a limb here and say it might be less of an impact than some of our competitors.
And so that should put us in a little bit more advantage position in terms of financial performance. Could it stress some of our competitors to the point of them impacting the actions they take in the marketplace?
I guess, it could, but it depends on the individual competitor that you’re talking about.
Ross Gilardi
Okay, thanks Will it is helpful. And then do you think the repricing on NES and I imagine you’re going to go through some of that with Neff as well, do you think the repricing of the contracts because they’re pretty big players in the grand scheme of things after you and Sunbelt, I mean, is that contributing to the general pricing environment that we’re seeing in the market?
Matt Flannery
Ross, this is Matt. There are some contribution to it, right, from NES.
Neff, we’re pretty aligned across the board about our pricing, our pricing methodology and the culture around pricing. But with NES, we got a little bit of lift from that.
I think more importantly even in our non-NES overlap markets. We have seen similar pricing increases.
So although it’s not a driver for the macro, it is certainly a couple of bps improvement over the normal.
Ross Gilardi
Thanks guys.
Michael Kneeland
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Joe O’Dea from Vertical Research Partners.
Your question please.
Joe O’Dea
Hi good morning. First just thinking about some of the EBITDA lifts next year related to Neff and NES.
Could you talk about what’s remaining on the stub portion there just with some of the seasonality that we could see in 4Q or 1Q and stuff that wasn’t captured with them. What your thinking as we roll into 2018 on that?
And then any additional contribution on some of the realized synergy savings.
William Plummer
Joe, it’s Bill. I’m going to have to ask you the question again.
I’m missing your question.
Joe O’Dea
Sorry. So really just looking at the tailwinds to EBITDA from Neff and NES, as you get full realization of those next year and then on top of that, you get some cost synergies?
William Plummer
So I think if your question is about sort of the full year effect next year of adding NES and Neff, we’ll have an extra quarter of NES next year. This year, that number was about $30 million.
So that could be a good starting point. So call it $30 million of impact from adding a quarter of NES.
For Neff, call it $150 million for adding the three quarters that we didn’t own it next year. And then the synergies for NES, I called out north of $20 million of synergies realized this year.
If you had a 45 run rate, you call it 25 realized this year, that nets out to an incremental 20 year-over-year. So that’s a benefit next year.
For Neff synergies, let’s – you can pick your own number, right? We said 35 of synergies fully realized at the end of two years, I think, it was.
So $25 million, $30 million of synergies realized during the course of next year. You pick [Audio Dip] that’s an impact there that we might see.
Is that helpful?
Joe O’Dea
That’s perfect. Thank you.
And then just in the press release, it noted fourth quarter market activity would exceed normal seasonality. And just any additional context on that.
In particular, how do we think about if there is such a thing as normal seasonality for rates and based on EBITDA margin that’s implied, it doesn’t look like you’re suggesting better-than-normal rate experience?
Matt Flannery
Yes, Joe. This is Matt.
I think that was more referring to demand and partially an explanation of why you saw an increase in the capital spend ranges. We normally wouldn’t spend that much in a Q4, so we thought it noted an explanation.
But that demand is there, and it’s not all just storm-related. As far as rate, I mean, we’re going to always push to do more, but we all understand the seasonal patterns of rate, and all of this is embedded in the guidance that we just updated.
Joe O’Dea
And can you add anything just on the months? I mean, normally, sequentially, I think we’d still see growth in October, maybe a little bit November, December, sometimes under a little bit of pressure.
Anything that you could do in terms of adding numbers to that?
William Plummer
Yes. Normally, the normal – what’s normal but if you go back over an overview as you would see a positive October.
November can go either way, depending on the year that you’re in, and December typically would be a slight negative. But how much on each of those is always the challenge, right?
So I’ll leave that to your imagination.
Joe O’Dea
Perfect. Thanks a lot.
Matt Flannery
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Seth Weber from RBC Capital Markets.
Your question please.
William Plummer
Hi, Seth?
Seth Weber
Hey, good morning guys. Hi good morning.
Matt Flannery
Hi, Seth.
Seth Weber
So just going back to the CapEx pull-forward question. Is it safe to assume that most of that is tilted towards Gen Rent versus specialty?
And I guess, the spirit of my question is if you look at dollar utilization for the quarter, it was actually down for booms and lifts and forklifts as well year-over-year. So I mean, earthmoving was up.
So can you give us any flavor for where that incremental CapEx was going and maybe any color on why dollar
Matt Flannery
Sure, Seth. Well, first, I think you’ll have to remember, if you’re looking on a year-over-year basis, we did – you’re looking at a comp that didn’t have the NES boom business in it and then does in Q3 this year.
So that was a little bit of drag on the age that we’ve been moving down and a little bit of a drag on the dollar but which will continue to improve that spread as well. As far as the pull-forward spend, it looks very much like what our normal spend would be, maybe a little more heavily weighted on specialty.
Because some of the immediate response that we needed and a little less on booms and reach forks for the same exact reason we have more of those around. So other than that, it looks similar to our profile.
Almost all of it core fleet and very fungible assets.
Seth Weber
Okay. So more on specialty, Matt, is that what you said?
Matt Flannery
Yes, a little bit more on specialty just because some of the remediation, some of the power. And we might even got some more pumps, as busy as pump was to help.
Seth Weber
Okay. That’s great.
And then maybe, Bill, just a quick follow-up on Project XL. Appreciate the disclosure of the 10 – I think it was $10 million or $11 million from that one initiative on the used sales.
But can you just give us an update kind of where you’re at? And we’re getting close to needing to have some sort of line of sight to that $200 million number.
Can you help us frame out the steps to get – how should we think about the cadence to get to that $200 million run rate number versus where we’re at today?
William Plummer
Sure, Seth. So we’ve discussed this every quarter since we’ve talked about Project XL.
And we debated about the best way to tell the story in a way that’s useful, right? And the way that’s useful is what’s the incremental impact on our profitability, right?
And the challenge that we have – and I’m giving you a background here, but the challenge that we have is that the individual projects each have their own set of metrics. And those metrics may not necessarily directly tied to an incremental EBITDA impact.
And so we’re looking at ways, various ways to try and back out the things that you shouldn’t count as incremental EBITDA. That’s a long-winded way of saying that I don’t have a specific number for you right here now on the incremental EBITDA impact of each of those projects.
What we’ve tried to do is to pick out the ones where we feel like there’s clarity around the incremental EBITDA impact. So obviously, improving the utilization of equipment versus fair market value is true cash flow impact.
And so we wanted to show that, wanted to show a little bit more of what we’re doing. But I’ll ask for further patience as we try to look for the best way to give you what you’re asking for, which is more concrete pacing about how we’re getting to the $200 million impact.
Seth Weber
But is it fair to assume that 2018 is going to be a bigger benefit versus 2017 just to – as you ramp to that $200 million number? I mean, that seems like a reasonable assumption.
William Plummer
Absolutely. That’s fair.
The exact quantification of that is what we want to put some more thought to. But what I can say is this, Seth.
As we look at how the projects, in aggregate, are tracking versus the targets that were laid out when we kicked off Project XL, we’re performing very nicely against those targets. So the ramp-up on the metrics at each initiative uses is, in aggregate, nicely ahead of the targets that we’ve laid out.
But we want to – when we communicate something out, we want to make sure that it’s useful and clear. And right now, there’s just too much analysis and discussion we would have to give in order to relate the measures that we have to the $200 million run rate that we’re targeting.
So we’ll ask you again for your patience.
Seth Weber
Okay. I’ll ask you again next quarter then.
William Plummer
I’m sure, you will.
Michael Kneeland
By then, it should be embedded in our guidance.
Seth Weber
All right, thanks guys.
William Plummer
Thanks Seth.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Steven Fisher from UBS.
Your question please.
William Plummer
Steve?
Steven Fisher
Thanks, good morning.
Michael Kneeland
Good morning.
Steven Fisher
I know you guys said that you don’t know what the market’s going to do in terms of CapEx going forward, but to what extent are you actually seeing some discipline and restraint in the market today? And if you are seeing some general discipline, is it more on the pricing side or on the CapEx side?
And I’m wondering if given the robustness of the conditions that you’re seeing out there if you would have ordinarily expected to see other players already putting more CapEx into the environment where we are.
Matt Flannery
Steve, this is Matt. I would say that we’re seeing both – we are seeing discipline.
We measure it by absorption, and we’ve been seeing that for the entire year, really starting fourth quarter last year that the discipline on the capital spend versus the incremental demand has yielded positive absorption. And we think that’s played out into stabilizing rate and given us the opportunity to get pricing where it was pre-2015.
So I would think that the industry has been disciplined on both fronts.
Steven Fisher
Is consolidation having any real impact there? And what else do you think is driving it?
William Plummer
Yes. That’s a hard one to quantify.
I would say sort of based on basic economics that consolidation could be helping. How much?
It’s hard to say. What we try to do, though, is just to make sure that we’re looking at the market realistically and we’re taking actions in a disciplined way.
And if we continue to do that and if the rest of the industry continues to do that, we certainly think that it should position the industry to perform better.
Steven Fisher
Okay. And then can you just remind us the timing of repricing of all your National Account contracts?
And if it’s around the next couple of months, what extent would this quarter’s results set you up for stronger pricing as you head into those discussion?
Matt Flannery
So it’s not really on a calendar schedule anymore, Steve. We actually intentionally try to address those throughout the cycle.
It makes it easier for our team and with the acquisitions that was just some triggers that actually made it necessary to harmonize some set pricing at different times. So there’s not really an annual trigger like maybe four, five years ago where we’re doing everything in Q4 and Q1.
It’s a little more spread out.
Steven Fisher
Okay. Thank you.
William Plummer
Thank you.
Matt Flannery
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. This does conclude the question-and-answer session of today’s program.
I’d like to hand the program back to Mr. Kneeland for any further remarks.
Michael Kneeland
Well, I want to thank everyone for joining us on today’s call. Our third quarter investor presentations are available online if you haven’t had a chance to see it.
Obviously, you can reach out to Ted Grace, our Head of IR, with any additional questions. It’s been a busy year, and we’re looking forward to starting 2018 with a lot of momentum, so stay tuned for our next call.
Thank you, and have a great day.
Operator
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your participation in today’s conference. This does conclude the program.
You may now disconnect. Good day.