NYSE:XPO XPO Q4 2023 Earnings Report $124.46 -1.23 (-0.98%) As of 05/20/2025 03:59 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast XPO EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.77Consensus EPS $0.62Beat/MissBeat by +$0.15One Year Ago EPS$0.98XPO Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.94 billionExpected Revenue$1.92 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$24.16 millionYoY Revenue Growth+6.00%XPO Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2023Date2/7/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateWednesday, February 7, 2024Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsXPO's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, August 7, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, July 31, 2025 at 8:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by XPO Q4 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 7, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 15 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the XPO Q4 2020 Day Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. My name is Sherry, and I will be your operator for today's call. Please note that this conference is being recorded. Before the call begins, let me read a brief statement on behalf of the company regarding looking statements and the use of non GAAP financial measures. During this call, the company will be making certain forward looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities laws, which by their nature involve a number of risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected in the forward looking statements. Operator00:00:58A discussion of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially is contained the company's SEC filings as well as in its earnings release. The forward looking statements in the company's earnings release or made on this call are made only as of today, The company has no obligation to update any of these forward looking statements, except to the extent required by law. During this call, the company may also refer to certain non GAAP financial measures as defined under applicable SEC rules. Reconciliations of such non GAAP financial measures to the most comparable GAAP measures are contained in the company's earnings release and the related financial tables or on its website. You can find a copy of the company's earnings release, which contains additional important information regarding forward looking statements and non GAAP financial measures in the Investors section of the company's website. Operator00:01:48I will now turn the call over to XPO's Chief Executive Officer, Mario Herrick. Mr. Herrick, you may begin. Speaker 100:01:55Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining our call. I'm here in Greenwich With Kyle Wissmans, our Chief Financial Officer and Ali Fagri, our Chief Strategy Officer. I'm pleased to report that we capped a strong year with a quarter that exceeded expectations and we've carried that momentum into 2024. Companywide, we reported 4th quarter revenue of $1,900,000,000 which is 6% higher year over year. Speaker 100:02:27And we grew adjusted EBITDA to $264,000,000 for an increase of 28%, excluding real estate gains in 2022. Our adjusted diluted EPS for the company was $0.77 which was also better than expected. I want to thank our team for delivering these great results in a soft freight environment. Looking at our North American LTL segment, we reported our strongest progress since we launched our LTL 2.0 plan in 2021. We grew adjusted operating income year over year by 51% and improved our adjusted operating ratio by 3.80 basis points. Speaker 100:03:15We delivered the best damage claims ratio in our history at 0.3% as well as a record level of employee satisfaction. And we significantly accelerated our year over year yield growth, excluding fuel, to 10.3%. We also improved cost efficiency for the 4th consecutive quarter with further increases in labor productivity and line haul in sourcing. And we continue to deploy capital efficiently as we reinvest back into the business. All of these are proof points that our plan has strong traction. Speaker 100:03:54The 28 service centers we recently acquired from the Yellow network, we'll build on this momentum. This acquisition is a once in a generation opportunity to integrate prime locations into our network to support yield growth and margin expansion. When the market recovers and industry capacity tightens, we'll be in a stronger position to serve our customers and drive profitable growth for years to come. Now I want to share some details of the quarter, starting with the first pillar of our LTL 2.0 plan, service improvements. We improved every major component of customer service quality in the quarter, including our customer satisfaction rating, which has risen by more than 40% since 2021. Speaker 100:04:43Our on time performance was 3 percentage points better than in the prior 4th quarter. And I mentioned that our damage claims ratio of 0.3% is a new record for us. To put that in context, it's a vast improvement from 1.2% when we launched our plan. These are metrics our customers watch closely as an indicator of service quality. Our top priority is to become the customer service leader in our industry, and we're continuing to equip our team with the tools to make this a reality. Speaker 100:05:20One example is the new freight airbags I spoke about on our last call. The rollout has been going well, and this solution is now installed at over 50% of our doors. The airbags have reduced damages by more than 20% at those locations, the benefit will spread across our network. We expect to finish the installations by the middle of this year. The second pillar of LTL 2.0 is to invest in our network to drive long term growth. Speaker 100:05:52We added more tractors and trailers in 2023 than any year in XTO's history to both grow and refresh our fleet. This resulted in record network fluidity and supported our strategy to in source more line haul miles. On the tractor side, we purchased more than 1400 units in 2023. This reduced our average fleet age to 5 years at year end compared with 5.9 years in 2022. On the trailer side, we manufactured over 6,400 units at our in house facility in Arkansas exceeding our production target. Speaker 100:06:31For 2024, we expect our LTL CapEx level to be in the low teens as a percent of revenue and again primarily allocated to our fleet. In terms of the 28 service centers we acquired from Yellow, The largest impact on our capital strategy is timing. We've pulled forward dozens of real estate investments that we plan to make over the next several years. I'll add some strategic color to my earlier comments on the acquisition. These service centers will deliver important benefits to the business for years to come. Speaker 100:07:051st, they'll get us closer to customers and give us larger facilities in major metro areas. This should drive substantial cost efficiencies across our line haul, pickup and delivery and dock operations. 2nd, they'll enhance our yield growth by further improving our service with fewer freight rehandles, reduced damages and better on time performance. And third, they'll give us more capacity in key metros like Indianapolis, Columbus and Las Vegas. These are markets where we are currently turning away profitable customers because we don't have enough door capacity. Speaker 100:07:43We plan to start bringing these locations online in April and have all of them operational within the next 12 to 18 months. We expect the transaction to be accretive to EPS and our LTL operating ratio in 2025. This assumes no underlying recovery in industry volumes. Any market rebound would represent an upside to our baseline forecast. The 3rd pillar of our plan is to drive above market yield growth, which is our single biggest lever for margin improvement. Speaker 100:08:14You can see this dynamic in the 4th quarter when we drove yield excluding fuel higher year over year by 10.3%. This helped us deliver nearly 400 basis points of adjusted operating ratio improvement. We got there by executing on service improvements, accessorials and volume growth within our local customer base. These are the 3 levers for our long term pricing opportunity. The exciting trends in our service metrics translate to value for our customers, with a direct correlation to the price we earn. Speaker 100:08:50Increasingly, our customer see XPO as a high value business partner with the resources to help them succeed. This was reflected in our contract renewal pricing, which was up year over year by 9% for the 2nd consecutive quarter. Accessorials are another opportunity to grow our yield by delivering more value through premium services. We plan to extend our range of offerings this year. We saw an early impact in the 4th quarter with the introduction of our retail store rollout offering. Speaker 100:09:24We already have over a dozen customers using this service to distribute critical product launches for retailers. And with the 3rd lever, our local channel, we grew shipment counts by double digits for the 3rd consecutive quarter. Our local sales team at year end was over 20% larger than in 2022, reflecting the importance we place on this high yielding margin accretive business. So we have a lot of avenues leading to yield growth And each step forward helps to align our pricing with the value we deliver. The 4th and final pillar of LTL 2.0 is cost efficiency. Speaker 100:10:05The main opportunities here are with purchased transportation, variable costs and overhead. In the Q4, we reduced our purchase transportation cost by 22% year over year by in sourcing more miles and paying lower contract rates to 3rd party providers. We ended the quarter with less than 20% of line haul miles outsourced for a year over year reduction of 2 90 basis points. On a sequential basis, we reduced our reliance on outsourcing 190 basis points. We've come a long way since the beginning of 2022 when we were outsourcing about 25% of our line haul miles. Speaker 100:10:47Today, we're well underway to bringing down that percentage to the low teens by 2027. Lastly, a quick update on our initiative to add driver teams and sleeper cab trucks for long hauls. The goal here is to increase the efficiency and flexibility of our line haul network. We started putting these teams in place last quarter and we currently have over 50 teams in operation. We expect to have a few 100 long haul teams on the road by the end of this year. Speaker 100:11:18This should help to accelerate our in sourcing plan. We're also continuing to manage our variable labor costs effectively, growing our volume by more than our headcount year over year for the 4th consecutive quarter. And the spread in the quarter was substantial. Our shipment count was up 5.7%, while our headcount was up just 1.7%. This is a credit to the team's operational discipline supported by our proprietary technology for labor planning. Speaker 100:11:51In summary, in 2023, we made significant progress on our plan across the board, while laying a solid foundation for the future. We improved our operations in all four quarters of the year by generating record service levels, making strategic investments in the network, further accelerating yield growth and operating more cost efficiently. As a result, the business performed above expectations with robust margin expansion and earnings growth and strong forward momentum. I'm going to hand the call over to Kyle to discuss the Q4 financial results. Kyle, over to you. Speaker 200:12:30Thank you, Mario, and good morning, everyone. I'll take you through our key financial results, balance sheet and liquidity. It was a strong 4th quarter overall. Revenue for the total company was $1,900,000,000 up 6% year over year. This includes a 9% increase in our LTL segment. Speaker 200:12:50Excluding fuel, LTL revenue was up 14% year over year. Salary, wages and benefits for LTL were 10% higher in the quarter than a year ago. This increase primarily reflects wage and benefit inflation as well as incentive compensation aligned with our strong 4th quarter performance. These impacts were mitigated by our productivity gains. We've now improved our labor hours per shipment on a year over year basis for 4 straight quarters throughout 2023. Speaker 200:13:25We were also more cost efficient with purchase transportation through a combination of in sourcing and rate negotiation. Our expense for 3rd party carriers was $83,000,000 in the quarter, which was down year over year by 22%. Depreciation expense increased year over year by 23% or $13,000,000 as we continue to reinvest in the business. This remains our top priority for capital allocation in LTL. In the Q4, our CapEx was primarily allocated to our fleet as we purchase new tractors from the manufacturers and build more trailers in house. Speaker 200:14:09Next, I'll add some detail to adjusted EBITDA, starting with the company as a whole. We generated adjusted EBITDA of $264,000,000 in the quarter, up 28% from a year ago and improved our adjusted EBITDA margin by 2.30 basis points. These metrics exclude the impact of real estate gains in the Q4 of 2022 to give you a like to like comparison. We had no real estate gains in the Q4 of 2023. Our 4th quarter corporate expense was $5,000,000 for a year over year savings of 44% or $4,000,000 We're continuing to rationalize our corporate structure for the standalone business and expect to report further reductions this year. Speaker 200:15:03Looking solely at the LTL segment, we grew our adjusted operating income by 51% year over year to $160,000,000 and we grew adjusted EBITDA to $233,000,000 The gains we achieved through revenue growth and cost efficiencies more than offset the non operational headwinds from lower fuel surcharge revenue and pension income. In our European Transportation segment, adjusted EBITDA was $36,000,000 for the quarter. Company wide, we reported operating income of $119,000,000 for the quarter, compared to $4,000,000 in the prior year. Our net income from continuing operations was $58,000,000 for diluted earnings per share of $0.49 compared with a loss of $36,000,000 or $0.31 a year ago. This represents an improvement of $0.80 in diluted EPS from continuing operations, driven by significant year over year reductions in transaction and integration costs and restructuring charges. Speaker 200:16:18On an adjusted basis, our EPS for the quarter was $0.77 which is down 21% from a year ago. This primarily reflects the impact of real estate gains in 2022 as well as lower pension income and higher interest expense in 2023. Our acquisition of the 28 service centers closed on December 20 and did not have a material impact on our operating results and the income statement. And lastly, we generated $251,000,000 of cash flow from continuing operations in the quarter and deployed $151,000,000 of net CapEx, excluding spend related to the acquisition. Moving to the balance sheet. Speaker 200:17:07We ended the quarter with $412,000,000 of cash on hand, Combined with available capacity under committed borrowing facilities, this gave us $920,000,000 of liquidity. We had no borrowings outstanding under our ABL facility at quarter end. In December, We raised $985,000,000 through a combination of $585,000,000 of senior notes $400,000,000 of term loans. We used $870,000,000 of proceeds to complete our acquisition of 28 LTL service centers and we refinanced our existing senior notes due in 2025. We now have no funded debt maturities until 2028. Speaker 200:17:57We also maintained all corporate and issue level credit ratings. Our net debt leverage at year end was 3 times trailing 12 months adjusted EBITDA. The investments we're making in the business will enhance our earnings trajectory for a high return on capital, consistent with our long term goal of achieving an investment grade profile. Before I close, I'll summarize the full year 2024 assumptions we provided in our investor presentation to help you with your models. They are as follows: gross CapEx of $700,000,000 to $800,000,000 interest expense of $240,000,000 to $260,000,000 pension income of approximately $25,000,000 an adjusted effective tax rate of 23% to 25% and a diluted share count of 121,000,000 shares. Speaker 200:18:55Now, I'll turn it over to Ali who will cover our operating results. Speaker 300:19:00Thank you, Kyle. I'll start with LTL segment, which reported another quarter of profitable growth. On a year over year basis, We increased our shipments per day by 5.7% in the quarter led by 12% growth in our local sales channel. This resulted in growth in tonnage per day of 2%. Our weight per shipment was down 3.4% year over year, which was notably less of a decline for the 2nd consecutive quarter. Speaker 300:19:34On a monthly basis, Our October tonnage per day was up 2.5% year over year. November was down 0.5% and December was up 3.6%. Looking just at shipments per day, October was up 6.2% year over year, November was up 3.7% and December was up 6.6%. In January, our tonnage per day was down 1.1% year over year while shipment count was up 1.4%. The transportation industry was disrupted by weather events in January, but we saw a rebound more recently and ended the month with stronger volumes. Speaker 300:20:23And sequentially, both our tonnage and shipment count increased from December to January, outperforming seasonality. We also outperformed on yield in the 4th quarter delivering the 2nd consecutive quarter of acceleration. We grew yield excluding fuel by a strong 10.3% compared with the prior year. Importantly, our underlying pricing trends are strong as we continue to align our pricing with the better service we're providing. Our contract renewal pricing was up 9% in the quarter compared with a year ago. Speaker 300:21:05Turning to margin, our 4th quarter adjusted operating ratio was 86.5% which was an improvement of 3 80 basis points year over year. Our strong margin performance was primarily driven by yield growth and underpinned by our cost initiatives and productivity gains. Sequentially, our adjusted OR increased by 30 basis points, which outperformed seasonality by 280 basis points. Moving to our European business, we delivered revenue growth of 2% year over year Despite ongoing challenges in the macro environment, this growth was supported by strong pricing which outpaced inflation. And in some regions like the U. Speaker 300:21:56K, we grew adjusted EBITDA versus the prior year reflecting disciplined cost control. While our volume declined slightly year over year, we outperformed the industry and we mitigated the decline with new customer wins as the quarter progressed and this trend improved in January. The team is executing well and earning new business from high caliber customers. This momentum together with the growth of our sales pipeline should continue to strengthen our position in key European regions. I'll close with a summary of the 3 main achievements you heard from us this morning as they relate to our expectations for a strong 2024. Speaker 300:22:42First, we're continuing to deliver more value for customers in the form of service quality with our metrics at record levels and we're on an excellent trajectory. 2nd, we accelerated yield growth to double digits as we exited 23 and we expect to deliver another robust yield performance this year with a direct benefit to profitability. And third, we're showing that we can operate more productively by leveraging our technology and improving our cost to serve. In short, we've taken major strides with our network operations and we're still in the early innings of significantly improving our operating ratio. Now we'll take your questions. Speaker 300:23:27Operator, please open the line for Q and A. Speaker 400:23:30Thank Our first question is from Scott Group with Wolfe Research. Please proceed. Speaker 500:24:08Hey, thanks. Good morning. Any thoughts on how to think about the OR from Q4 to Q1 and maybe full year margin improvement. And then I don't know bigger picture Mario, you made a comment that all this terminal growth is Additive to yields and margin, I guess why it should be good for volume, but maybe some thoughts on how it actually helps yield and margin as well? Speaker 100:24:34Sure. Thanks, Scott. First, starting with the Q1 outlook, we typically give tonnage yield and what OR would look like. Starting with tonnage, following the gains we had in the Q4, we do expect to outperform seasonality in Q1. Typically, a normal seasonality for us It's call it flattish tonnage sequentially from Q4 to Q1 and we expect to do better than that. Speaker 100:24:56So we expect Q1 tonnage to be up low single digit, somewhat in the same ZIP code as where we were in the Q4 on a year on year basis. Now when you look at January tonnage specifically, It did do better as Ali mentioned earlier compared to seasonality when you roll forward December into January and we had a strong end of the month as well despite the weather earlier in the month. On the yield front, we expect a strong performance for yield across the board this year. We do expect yield to be up on a year on year basis in the Q1 somewhere in the same zip code as we were in the Q4 year on year. And ultimately from an OR standpoint, usually the typical seasonality for us Q4 to Q1, we see OR deteriorate about 40 basis points And we expect to do better than that. Speaker 100:25:41Now how much better will depend on how the rest of the quarter plays out. Usually Q1, as you know, March is the big month of the quarter, But that implies roughly 300 basis points of OR improvement year on year. For the full year 2024, We also expect a strong year for us in terms of OR improvement, given all the things we're doing in yield and tonnage and cost and efficiency improvement and service improvement, we expect ore to be up in the 150 basis points to 2 50 basis points range for the full year. That's the path for us to do better than the top end of the range, depending on how the year plays out. Now taking a step back on your question on the service and how they impact yield. Speaker 100:26:21So we see a big cost benefit first and that cost benefit comes from higher efficiency and having bigger brake bulks That lead to cost savings and line haul, having service centers closer to the customer that leads to lower D and D costs and also lowering dock re handling costs associated with that. Now the way they help yield is because larger service centers help improve your service product and service product can drive yield. But also we mentioned premium services. And when you think about premium services in some markets like Las Vegas, we're tapped on capacity. And by having now the largest service center in the Vegas market, we're going to be able to launch new offerings like trade shows as an example this come also at a higher yield and higher margin as well. Speaker 500:27:06Thank you, guys. Thank you. Speaker 400:27:10Our next question is from Kent Hoexter with Bank of America. Please proceed. Speaker 600:27:16Hey, great. Good morning. Congrats on some solid performance here on the OR. Maybe just digging into that though, Talk about the ramp of the 28 facilities. How should we anticipate the drag versus your forecast? Speaker 600:27:31And I guess With that, it seems like you're bumping up against your kind of long term targets now of the 600 basis point improvement. How Does that shift or the speed with which you can get there start changing in your thought process? Speaker 100:27:49Thanks, Ken. Well, starting with the ramp of the service centers, well, in terms of getting them up and running, we do expect to get them up and running in the first, call it, dozen or so service centers over the next 3 to 6 months, the next dozen over the next 6 to 12 months and then the remaining 4 or 5 will go live next call it 12 to 18 months. Now we don't anticipate a OR drag from them that would be material to our numbers. And the reason why because the majority of these service centers are in markets where we already operate. So if you think about it, there is one case where we move our our existing team from a smaller service center to a larger service center, the gearing cost of real estate is fairly low on a per door basis, but we get the immediate benefit of cost efficiencies and cost savings associated with having a larger facility to operate from. Speaker 100:28:38In markets where we are adding a service center and keeping the existing one. In that particular case, we split the team between the 2 service centers based on volume and we only step up if there is an inflection in volume and we have incremental volumes. So we don't anticipate the service centers to have a drag on OR this year. Do expect them to be accretive for EBITDA. We do expect them we do expect a drag on EPS driven by the incremental debt there. Speaker 100:29:02And we expect them to be accretive on all these KPIs in 2025 and beyond. In terms of the long term targets, we've always set 600 basis points, I mean, at least 600 basis points. And this is nothing magical about 600 basis points. There's nothing magical about 2027. With all the momentum that we have here and with all with the New service centers, the pricing, the service improvements, we do expect to outperform and I would hope is to get to the 70s and well into the 70s over time from an OR perspective. Speaker 600:29:35Thanks, Mario. Speaker 400:29:38Our next question is from Jon Chappell with Evercore ISI. Please proceed. Speaker 700:29:46Thank you. Good morning. I'm not sure if Mario or Ali wants to take this, but this is the 2nd straight quarter now with contract renewal pricing up 9%. Where do you stand on the book of business as it relates to kind of marking to market for the new service? Do you still have a couple more quarters? Speaker 700:30:01Where do you think that kind of high single digit contract renewal is on the agenda? Or are you kind of close to kind of marking it to market and you think maybe that moderates a little bit to maybe mid single digits kind of in line more with the GRI levels? Speaker 200:30:19Hey, John, it's Kyle. So if you think about contract renewals right now, Speaker 800:30:22we did accelerate heavily in Speaker 200:30:23the back half from 5% to 9%. And so far in the year or in the back half, renegotiated 50% of the book. So there's still some more to work through. I still think we're in a favorable market for renewals and we should expect Palimension to carry forward here in 2024. Speaker 700:30:40Just to be clear though, is it kind of like if you're done with 50%, is this the first half higher end of that range, reacceleration similar to the back half of twenty twenty three and then kind of more of a normalized level in the back half? Or do you think that what you've done over the last 6 months as you continue to improve service kind of leads you more towards what you've done in the last 6 months or so as a percentage basis? Speaker 200:31:04I think renewals are probably going to follow where we see yield for the first half. So we're expecting strong yield to continue. I think our Q1 yield guide, we think Q1 yield is going to be up high single digit in line with what we saw in Q4. That should carry forward into our contract renewal at the start of the year. Speaker 400:31:22Our next question is from Chris Wetherbee with Citigroup. Please proceed. Speaker 600:31:28Yes. Hey, thanks. Good morning, guys. Speaker 300:31:30I guess I want to talk Speaker 100:31:31a little bit about some Speaker 600:31:32of the initiatives that maybe you guys are thinking about for 2024. So we've talked about sort of the team drivers. You've about sort of the in sourcing of line haul. I'm curious kind of as you start to think about adding those up in the context of the 150 basis points to 250 basis points OR improvement, how much you get from that versus maybe what would be kind of core pricing above cost inflation and maybe a little bit of leverage on the volume? I don't know if you can unpack that, but any details you can give us would be Yes. Speaker 100:31:57I'll start on the all the initiatives. And Chris, the way we look at it, I mean, our plan involves substantial yield improvement. It does involve continuing our great service momentum or service product improvement momentum. Tonnage improvement, we do see tonnage going up for the full year, But we do expect it to be up, call it, in the same zip code of where we were in the Q4. So low single digit because our goal is to drive more yield than it to drive volume. Speaker 100:32:23Similarly, our goal is to drive cost efficiencies as you mentioned. So I'll give a quick update on the initiatives. We as part of our plan is to in source more to the 3rd party line haul miles because that comes both at a cost benefit, but it also comes as a service benefit. When we go from using a 3rd party carrier with a 53 feet trailer versus having 2 28 feet pumps, which gives us more space, gives us safe stack in the trailers where we can separate the freight physically and our drivers show up on time 100% of the time, can continue to improve that service product. Now that will come with cost savings here in 2024, but the longer term cost savings also come when you think of inflection in truckload rates at some point, that's going to be obviously material savings for us from what we would be spending internally on a per mile basis versus what we're spending for 3rd party carriers. Speaker 100:33:14So our expectation is to continue to we in sourced to 90 basis points here in the Q4 year on year. We are sub-twenty percent at this point. We're at 2019 and change. Now we're going to drive that in the first phase down to the low teens and beyond that as we end up those teams as well. Speaker 600:33:32Okay, that's helpful. Appreciate it. Thank you. Thanks, Greg. Speaker 400:33:36Our next question is from Fadi Chamoun with BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed. Speaker 900:33:44Yes, good morning team. So my question is, you mentioned the double digit growth that you're seeing in the local account, I guess. I'm thinking this has obviously been a Pretty decent tailwind for density and cost per shipment and ultimately the yield. Where are you in this kind of trajectory of improving local account penetration, are we in the first innings of that? Is there an opportunity that is of significant size still in front of you? Speaker 100:34:22When we look at the local account strategy, Thadry, it is a segment that we are planning on growing over the years to come here. Now if you look back at 2023, we were run rating at roughly 20% of our volume and revenue is generated from that channel. What we have done through the course of the year is that we increased the size of our local accounts. We hired more than 20% more local sellers through the course of 2023 and the goal here through 2024 is to add roughly another 10%. So all in to be 30% higher on the overall sales force size that is selling to that channel. Speaker 100:35:00Now as you can imagine, whenever we onboard new people, it does take a ramp usually about 6 month for them to be fully productive and fully up and running. Now if you look at the full year, we did improve our local accounts on a higher run rate than the rest of our book here in the Q4, we grew our local shipments in that channel by 12% on a year on year basis. And we do expect to continue to see those really strong gains in that channel since we onboarded 20% more sellers. Now in terms of the innings, I would say we're still in the early innings in terms of results, but we are very well underway in terms of having the team and having them seeing a couple of quarters of ramp here being pretty productive in 2024 and beyond. Speaker 900:35:46Appreciate that. Thank you and congrats on the strong results. Speaker 100:35:49Thank you, Paddy. Speaker 400:35:52Our next question is from Stephanie Moore with Jefferies. Please proceed. Operator00:35:58Hi, good morning. Thank you. Speaker 1000:36:02I wanted to maybe touch a bit on the I guess continue on the pricing discussion here. I think pricing accelerated over 10% here in the quarter, I think you guided to more high single digits. Can you maybe walk through the drivers of the upside, what you're seeing And kind of your thoughts as we think about 2024 for further pricing acceleration, especially your view of what could happen if the macro does actually turn? Thanks. Speaker 300:36:29Sure, Stephanie. This is Ali. So we're seeing very strong pricing trends as we enter 2024. For the Q1 in we would expect our yield on an ex fuel basis to be up somewhere in the similar range as we just delivered here in the 4th quarter, so call it roughly about 10% growth. Now On a full year basis, we would expect yield to be up somewhere in that mid to high single digit range. Speaker 300:36:52I would add that there's certainly a path to do better than that. It's still very early in the year, so we'll update you as the year progresses. A lot of that yield growth and the outperformance versus the industry is being driven by our internal initiatives. If you think about our service improvement, we're at record levels here in the Q4. We're continuing to lean more into premium services. Speaker 300:37:11We rolled out retail store rollouts here in Q4, we have a lot of traction there. And as Mario just noted, a lot of momentum on the local side as well too and this is higher yielding and margin accretive business. So overall, we feel very good about the yield outlook here in 2024 and expect it to be a strong year for us overall. Speaker 1000:37:31Great. Thank you. And then maybe just as a follow-up to that, but sort of a little bit bigger picture. And as you think about incentive comp across the organization, Maybe talk a little bit about what metrics that have been possibly realigned just to align interest across organizations, yield, margins, EBIT, what's the major metrics we should be focused on based on incentive comp changes in 2024? Thanks. Speaker 100:37:56Stephanie, this is Mario. I'll take that. So in 2023 1st and 2022, we used to compensate predominantly our field based on EBITDA growth and EBITDA performance, but we have added a good portion of the comp plan to be focused on service quality. So as service centers and group service quality and on time service, they effectively they have a good chunk of their incentive comp is based on that. Now in 2024 will be the 1st year where we are switching from compensating our field from EBITDA and EBITDA growth and have it be focused on OR improvement. Speaker 100:38:32So it's now focused on how can we expand our margins over time, because as you know, we want to incentivize effectively driving that better service product that yields a higher yield while managing cost effectively, which would lead to our expansion at the service center level and ultimately the network level as well. Speaker 400:38:52Our next question is from Tom Wadewitz with UBS. Please proceed. Speaker 800:39:00Yes. I just had, I guess, one kind of quick one on The D and A and maybe how we think about the ramp up in that given you are spending a good level of CapEx. So On that, but I guess the broader question would be on how you think about the terminal network. And I guess What's as you bring on terminals like where you sit today, what's your excess capacity from a door and a terminal perspective? And as you bring on more terminal capacity, kind of where do you want to get to, right? Speaker 800:39:34Like the I think we've seen that a high service model, you do have some a decent amount of excess capacity, but kind of wanted to see where you're at today, where you'd like to get to on excess capacity? And then the Specific one just on kind of D and A modeling. Thank you. Speaker 100:39:50Thanks, Tom. I'll start with the network and the capacity side and turn it over to Kyle for D and When you look at our network today before the 28 Service Center acquisition, we were down rating, call it, in the mid to high teens in terms of excess capacity in the current environment. And if we roll forward, we are adding 28 service centers. Out of these, roughly half of them would be additive the other half would be ones where we are relocating from a smaller service center to a larger service center. And we roughly acquired about 3,000 doors And we would be adding in that after we're all set and done with the integration in that 2,000 doors, which is call it, again 15% expansion and capacity. Speaker 100:40:31So once we get these service centers online, we will be in that 25% to 30% excess capacity in our network. That's a great place to be as an LTL network, especially in a soft freight market. So this way, whenever there's a freight market recovery and you see higher demand, historically our industry has been capacity constrained, real estate comes with a very low carrying cost and this would enable us to flex up whenever that demand comes back. So this is how we look at where we are and as we open up those service centers where we'd be at in a capacity perspective. Yes, Tom, if you think about the Speaker 200:41:03D and A ramp, so we are going to see increased CapEx within the LTL segment. So we'd expect about $74,000,000 to $75,000,000 a quarter for LTL, reflecting the increased CapEx spend. Speaker 800:41:15Okay, great. Thank you. Speaker 400:41:20Our next question is from Bruce Chan with Stifel. Please proceed. Speaker 800:41:26Yes. Thanks, operator, and good morning, everyone. Maybe just to start, Kyle, can you remind us of what your target leverage ranges. And then I Speaker 600:41:35know in previous quarters you pulled back on some Speaker 800:41:37of the commentary around the sale of the European business, but With the need for more debt pay down potentially with these new facilities, is there any more urgency Speaker 100:41:46to sell that business now? Speaker 200:41:50Hey, Bruce, it's Kyle. I'm going to start and then I'll hand it over to Mario. So when you think about our long term leverage outlook, our intention is 1 to 2 times trailing 12 months EBITDA. We think we're in a great spot with the investments we made and the EBITDA we can generate to really make a lot of progress on that here in the next couple of years. Speaker 100:42:06And on the European sale, Bruce, our long term plan remains to be a pure play North American LTL carrier and selling the European business is one of our strategic priorities, But we're going to be patient. Our goal is to maximize the return we get on that business. It is a business that has a scarcity value to it. We're either number 1, 2 or 3 and less than truckload, truckload asset light brokerage in many geographies in Western Europe, I think U. K, France, Spain, Portugal. Speaker 100:42:32And it's not a matter of if, but a matter of when. And meanwhile, if you take a step back, the business is performing well despite a soft economy in Europe, but outperforming years, our revenue was up in the quarter. We've improved volume every month of the quarter and further improved in the month of January and it's a credit to the team's strong execution. So again, if you take a step back, it's a matter of time and some point we'll get there. Speaker 1100:42:56Okay. Appreciate it. Speaker 400:43:00Our next question is from Jason Stidl with TD Cowen. Please proceed. Speaker 600:43:06Thank you, operator. Mara, I think you talked about accessorials and that there's about 12 different things that XPO was doing to sort of drive them higher. Can you help us understand timing and sort of the ability your ability to implement these accessorial and the impact we should expect? Speaker 100:43:23So when you take a step back on these accessorials, they are predominantly what we call premium services. So these are services that our customers are asking for that go beyond your typical pick up a few skids of freight and get them delivered to a destination. So examples are, Kyle mentioned earlier, retail store rollouts offering, where in that particular case, you can imagine if you have some sort of a holiday or a new product launch, A customer needs us to ship many, many shipments. Typically, it could be hundreds of shipments in a short time window and they need somebody to coordinate all of those offerings and that leads obviously to a higher price and the customer is happier because they're getting a service that they need. We do have a number of other offerings, trade shows is a good example of that working with retailers that must arrive by date type offering and many others that we are launching through the course of the year here. Speaker 100:44:11We do expect to get them launched. They won't all be launched within a few quarters. Some of them will take a bit longer like an expedited service as an example. As we launch these, we expect them to be accretive to yield over time. In terms of magnitude, roughly today, our assessorial as a percent of revenue is roughly, call it, in the low double digits. Speaker 100:44:31And our goal is to grow that to the mid teens as we launch these programs over the years to come. Speaker 600:44:36That's great color. I wanted to also follow-up on the overall pricing discussion. LTL pricing this quarter has been very strong. Your renewals are at 9%, Saia is almost at 9. ArcBest is the best they've reported since a quarter in 'twenty two. Speaker 600:44:51And this is all in a very sluggish demand drop in super cheap TL pricing. As the economy recovers and capacity tightens overall, is it crazy to think about double digit pricing going forward for you Speaker 100:45:05We had double digit pricing up here in the Q4 and we do expect a very strong first half of the year as well. Mean, there is an environment. If you look at our industry, it's been historically capacity constrained. When you go back before Yellow Sea's operations, we didn't have enough capacity versus the demand that was out there. Now we are currently in a sluggish freight environment where demand is down roughly call it double digit low teens and this is when that capacity went away from the market. Speaker 100:45:33So whenever there is any sort even with some of that capacity coming back into LTL, Whenever there's any form of inflection in demand, there wouldn't be enough doors and service centers in our industry. So you would see pricing accelerate accordingly. For us specifically, we also have all the company specific initiatives we're driving between driving better service, which comes at a premium, between driving premium services, between driving also expansion of our local channel, all of these would be accretive to yield as well. So double digit pricing is not out of the question. Speaker 600:46:02Fantastic. Appreciate the time. Speaker 100:46:05Thank you. Speaker 400:46:06Our next question is from Bascome Majors with Susquehanna. Please proceed. Speaker 800:46:13Thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to go back to the incentives focus from earlier. Can you talk more specifically about how you're tactically Incentivizing your salespeople specifically and if that has changed at all as the business has evolved and your priorities have evolved over the last 10 months. And separately from a long term senior executive management incentive approach, how might those look different this year than they have over the last few years? Thank you. Speaker 100:46:46Thanks, Bascome. So first starting with the sales compensation. So it depends on what type of seller you are in the organization. We change the comp accordingly. So if you're in the local channel, the goal is to grow your book as opposed to, for example, if you're in the different type of accounts, You're going to have to focus on profitability more. Speaker 100:47:07But generally, the theme is that if you look at a service center, they are compensated based on the OAR improvement for that If you're a local account executive, you're incentivized to grow your book and a component of your compensation is driven by operating ratio as well. If you're handling larger accounts, then the lion's share of your compensation is around OR and profit improvement as well associated with that. So this is how typically sales compensate auto compensated, but it is more driven by your book of business as opposed to your region or the network as a whole. Now in terms of senior exec compensation, That's typically part of our proxy, but we incentivize our senior executives based on a combination of OR growth, EBITDA growth and the TSR, so shareholder value creation as well. Speaker 800:47:59And you don't expect the long term incentive formula to really change other than the targets for this 3 year period? Speaker 100:48:07The framework would be very similar to what we had in the past. Speaker 400:48:12Our next question is from Jordan Alliger with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed. Speaker 1200:48:18Yes, hi, morning. Just sort of curious, thanks for the layout in terms of the door opening timing, etcetera. In the context of your thoughts on the economy and the new door openings, is there a way to think about tonnage or volume trajectory as go through the year, you sort of like year over year growth potential or how you expect it to sort of ramp up? That would be the first question. Thanks. Speaker 300:48:48Sure, Jordan. This is Ali. I'll start then pass it to Mario. So for the full year, as we noted, we expect a much higher contribution from yield than volume. We're being very disciplined on the type of volume we're on boarding onto the network and you should expect that to continue through this year. Speaker 300:49:05So overall for the full year, We'd expect tonnage to be up somewhere in that low single digit range for the full year and then yield somewhere in that mid to high single digits or better. Now keep in mind, we do have tougher comps in the second half of the year. It is still early in the year and obviously the macro can be a swing factor. In terms of the new service centers, we don't expect any sort of meaningful contribution from volume this year. We would expect contribution from volume to be sub a percent incremental volumes, so not a meaningful number overall. Speaker 100:49:35And sort of when we think about the service centers in the near term, Ahead of any type of macro infection whenever it comes, there is a big benefit we're going to get from cost savings, as I mentioned earlier on, by having larger facilities. If you think about what we bought from the yellow network, we bought some of the largest service centers. You look at a site like Carlisle, you can't get anymore the 120 acres of land right off I-seventy six and I-eighty one where we have a 300 door service center now in that market. Same thing with Nashville. We got a 40, 50 acre facility west of Nashville with more than 200 doors in it. Speaker 100:50:11So when you think about those larger facilities that enable you to run more efficiently, your line haul, your PND, your dock operations, That's going to lead to cost savings as soon as we start moving into them. The other benefit is some markets when you look at a market like Brooklyn, New York or Columbus or Indianapolis or Las Vegas, we're tapped out on capacity today. So we don't have enough doors in those markets. And by having this incremental capacity, We already have customers that are ready to go where we can onboard them as we open up those service centers. And we have 2 small service centers. Speaker 100:50:42One is in O'Flaherty, Wisconsin, one is Nogales, Arizona, where these are net adds or new markets, but these are small service centers where we already have demand lined up based on existing customer relationships we have as well. Speaker 1200:50:56Got it. And then just sort of Curious, how are you going to manage the terminal opening? So in other words, is there some economic dependency on it? How good the economy is or is there going to be a certain amount that you're just going to open no matter what strategically or otherwise? Speaker 100:51:15When we think about the rollout timing, we prioritize those service centers, those markets where we are capacity constrained today. So in a softer freight environment where we see that we don't have enough capacity and the second priority is based on cost efficiency, so the service centers that will create the most amount of cost efficiency. And when we think about the opening schedule, I'll call it over the next 3 to 18 months, It will be we're going to drive through it regardless of what the freight markets are doing. This would be a reasonable time frame in terms of bringing those terminals up to our standards and doing the rebranding and these kind of things to get them up and running. And then we for us, if you I mentioned this earlier on, if you think about the headcount, there's no need for us to hire people ahead of volume. Speaker 100:51:57So what we do is that we either relocate the existing team into a larger facility or we add a facility to an existing market where we split from an existing facility into 2 different service centers, so there is no incremental cost associated with that. If we do see an infection in volume where the markets are getting better, that we step up to be able to support that volume. And importantly, Jordan, if you look at our year in 2023, we were able to improve efficiency every single quarter of the year. So we have a great ability between operational discipline that Dave and the team are bringing to the table, supported by our proprietary technology to be able to run our network very efficiently from a labor standpoint. Speaker 400:52:36Our next question is from Brandon Oglenski with Barclays. Please proceed. Speaker 1100:52:41Hey, thanks for taking my question. Mario, maybe we can follow-up on that one there. I know you're talking about cost efficiencies of opening new terminals in the network. And it sounds like potentially you're going to move staff from one to the other. But I guess just covering transports for 20 years now, when you open new nodes in the network, especially scheduled network, Isn't there like a spool of time on capacity efficiency, especially on like line haul and local pickup and delivery that we should be anticipating? Speaker 1100:53:11Because it sounds like what you're guiding to that you can instantly match efficiency if not even get better with these new facilities? Speaker 100:53:19Mean, whenever you open up those sites, you do have a small headwind in cost, but that's for us would be very short lived. I mean, you're talking 30 to 90 days of cost headwind as you move into a larger facility. And predominantly, it comes from the carrying cost of the incremental doors. But Brandon, keep in mind that the cost of a door in our P and L It's sub 5% as a percent of total. So it's a small incremental cost associated with that. Speaker 100:53:44But when you think about the immediate efficiency you gain in pickup and delivery, linehauled and all of those pieces, this is where we see that this, again, drag that is short lived doesn't have a meaningful impact on the network as a whole. And to give you an example, over the last couple of years here, we've opened up a dozen service centers and each one of them was accretive within 30 to 60 days. Each one of them is exceeding our return hurdles as well. So we feel very good about our ability to get those onboarded with very, very minimal drag. And that's the reason why don't expect any drag from an OR perspective from the service center. Speaker 100:54:16And finally, I'd say also with having Dave on the team, he has an incredible amount of experience in terms of adding to a network and making sure this accretive pretty quickly. Speaker 1100:54:25I appreciate it. Congrats on the quarter. Speaker 100:54:28Thank you. Speaker 400:54:30Our next question is from James Sponigan with Wells Fargo. Please proceed. Speaker 100:54:36Hey, guys. Thanks. Just wanted to come back Speaker 1300:54:40to pricing a little bit. And of the pricing gap to peers, how much of that pricing gap is sort of attributable to level differences and you've improved service a good bit here. So, of that gap, how much sort of is accessible to you given where service is today? Speaker 300:54:57Sure, James. This is Ali. So overall, we see roughly about a mid teens pricing upside opportunity in the years to come. And it's primarily driven by 3 levers. 1st and foremost, it's driven by service. Speaker 300:55:08So as we continue to improve our service quality, we're going to be able to better align the price the value we're delivering. We quantify that about half of that mid teens pricing gap, so call it about 700 basis points, 800 basis points of pricing opportunity as we continue to improve service and we're realizing that right now in the Q3 we delivered a company record damage claims ratio and our yield growth accelerated to double digits. So we're in the early innings of realizing that opportunity. Then you have another about 500 basis points or 5% of pricing upside that's tied to accessorials and more specifically premium services. As Mario noted earlier, we want to grow our accessorials as a percentage of overall revenue from roughly that 10 range right now to 15 plus percent over time and that's about 5 points of pricing upside. Speaker 300:55:56And then lastly, the local channel is also an opportunity for us a pricing perspective, that's higher yielding and higher margin business for us. Currently, that's roughly about 20% of our revenue and we want to grow that to 30 plus percent over time and that's roughly about another 200 to 300 basis points of pricing upside. So overall, there's multiple different levers we can to grow pricing. And as we move through 2024, we would expect those to translate to very strong yield growth for us. Speaker 1300:56:26Got it. But given where service is today, the full $700,000,000 to $800,000,000 of price that is tied to service, is that like fully accessible to you or does service need to improve further in order for you to get that 700 to 800 basis points as you go move through the contract repricing? Speaker 100:56:44It does take time. I mean, it's not like a switch where as you improve your service product, your customers will give you that premium immediately. But we're seeing we already have been seeing it play out here in the course of 2023 when you look at the improvement we've seen in yield quarter after quarter and having those very strong contract renewals. So currently if you look at it, I mean you go back to years ago, we had a damage claims ratio of 1.2%. We're down to 0.3%, which is a company record. Speaker 100:57:12But our goal continues to keep on improving that. We're a customer loving organization. We want to take care of our customers, pick up the freight on time, deliver it on delivered damage free every single time. And if you think about it from that perspective, that over time earns you a premium. So when we think of that 7 to 8 point A differential, it's going to take us a number of years to claw through it, but that's why when we look forward, we think of our ability to get this above market pricing is going to be driven this continued improvement and continued focus on taking care of our customers. Speaker 400:57:43Lawson Beck with JPMorgan. Please proceed. Speaker 1400:57:48Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking the questions here. So Mario, just to come back to the additional terminals and door counts. Speaker 100:57:55Can you give us a sense Speaker 1400:57:56of what incremental margins overall assuming and it sounds like they're reasonably high from not expecting any real OR dilution. And on that point as well, it's obviously a big purchase price. Price counting takes a while to settle out, but isn't there a big D and A component from this as well? I know Val talked about the component before, but it sounded like that was primarily for CapEx. Speaker 100:58:20So it would be helpful to hear Speaker 700:58:22a little bit about that. Speaker 1400:58:22And if you can maybe just finish what you're seeing on the demand environment, haven't we talked too much about that? Seeing a little bit of improvement in PMIs, maybe some restocking ahead, but we'll be curious to see what you're hearing from your customers to Speaker 100:58:36Thanks, Brian. So I'll start first with the return on the service centers and we expect that to be in the on the long run be in the 30% to 40% range. And I'll turn it over to Kyle shortly here to discuss the details of that. Now when you think about the customer demand environment, It is a fluid environment. It is tough to call what the macro is going to do through the balance of the year from one perspective. Speaker 100:58:57You see the rates where they are from a TED perspective. We were seeing different mixed signals. Now we do survey our customers on a regular basis. And for the first half of the year, Roughly 2 thirds of the customers are expecting either flat or slightly improving demand. So there is a bit more optimism in the first half than what we've seen in the back half of last year. Speaker 100:59:17But there is even more optimism for the back half where the majority of the customers did say that they expect a pickup in demand in the back half of twenty twenty four. So we're cautiously optimistic, but it's tough to call the macro at this point. Now when you look at it more near term, you look at we do watch the ISM manufacturing index 2 thirds of our customers are industrial companies. And when you look through the course here of the Q4, the trough was in October, November, we saw it get better in December. And here in January, it even further improved at ISM and posted at 49% and change, which is very close to 50%, which is typically your point where you start seeing an inflationary environment. Speaker 100:59:53So again, we're seeing demand hold. We're seeing demand slightly improve and with more optimism towards the back half of the year. Speaker 201:00:00And then just to address the CapEx question associated with the yellow. You think about the 28 service centers, we're expecting incremental CapEx about $1,000,000 to $2,000,000 per site. So about $50,000,000 to $60,000,000 in total. Now that's not spread evenly across all 28 service centers and that's really largely tied to refreshing and refurbishing the sites, bring up to standard. So it's going to cover construction, painting, rebranding and that CapEx for those sites is included in our overall guide for the year. Speaker 201:00:27And some of these Some of these sites have already started to work on some of the locations. So going back to Mara's earlier comments, we expect some of these to come online here in Q2. Speaker 401:00:36We have reached the end of our question and answer session. I would like to turn the call back over to Mario Herrick for closing remarks. Speaker 101:00:43Thank you, operator, and thanks all for joining our call today. As you can see from our results, our plan is working and our service improvements are delivering revenue growth, margin expansion and earnings growth. Soon, we're going to start integrating the acquired service centers into our network, which is now more productive and more cost efficient. We a lot of strong momentum here as we start 2024 and we look forward to updating you on the next quarter. Operator, you can now end the call. Speaker 101:01:09Thank you. Speaker 401:01:10Thank you. This will conclude today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time and thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by Key Takeaways XPO closed Q4 with 6% revenue growth to $1.9 billion, 28% higher adjusted EBITDA of $264 million and adjusted EPS of $0.77, carrying strong momentum into 2024. North American LTL delivered its best results since LTL 2.0 launch with 51% growth in adjusted operating income, a 380 bp improvement in operating ratio to 86.5%, 10.3% ex-fuel yield growth and a record low 0.3% damage claims ratio. The acquisition of 28 Yellow service centers adds roughly 2,000 doors in capacity, with the first dozen coming online by mid-2024 and full integration by 18 months, and is expected to be accretive to EPS and operating ratio in 2025 without any industry recovery. XPO invested in its network by purchasing 1,400+ tractors and building 6,400+ trailers, reducing outsourced linehaul miles to under 20% and cutting purchase transportation costs by 22%, with a target to reach low-teens outsourcing by 2027. For 2024, XPO expects low-single digit tonnage growth, mid- to high-single digit yield gains, a 150–250 bp improvement in operating ratio, and gross CapEx of $700–800 million. A.I. generated. May contain errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallXPO Q4 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) XPO Earnings HeadlinesXPO leans on AI to minimize miles, handling for LTL freightMay 19 at 2:24 PM | finance.yahoo.comParkourSC to Showcase AI-Driven Decision Intelligence and Innovative Cold Chain Solutions at Gartner® Supply Chain Symposium/Xpo™ 2025May 13, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comTrump wipes out trillions overnight…Is there anybody more powerful than Donald Trump right now? In a single tariff announcement, he wiped out nearly $5 trillion in wealth from the S&P 500 and $6.4 trillion from the Dow Jones… Not to mention the countless trillions of dollars lost in every market around the world… leaving the major political powers scrambling in fear of Trump’s next move.May 21, 2025 | Porter & Company (Ad)XPO, Inc. (NYSE:XPO) Receives $133.68 Average PT from AnalystsMay 13, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comWas Jim Cramer Right About XPO, Inc. (XPO)?May 12, 2025 | insidermonkey.comXPO sees minimal shipper conversion from LTL to TLMay 12, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comSee More XPO Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like XPO? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on XPO and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About XPOXPO (NYSE:XPO) provides freight transportation services in the United States, rest of North America, France, the United Kingdom, rest of Europe, and internationally. The company operates in two segments, North American LTL and European Transportation. The North American LTL segment provides customers with less-than-truckload (LTL) services, such as geographic density and day-definite domestic services. This segment also offers cross-border U.S., Mexico, Canada, and the Caribbean, as well as engages in the operation of trailer manufacturing. The European Transportation segment offers dedicated truckload, LTL, truck brokerage, managed transportation, last mile, freight forwarding and multimodal solutions, such as road-rail and road-short sea combinations. It provides its services to customers in various industries, such as industrial and manufacturing, retail and e-commerce, food and beverage, logistics and transportation, and consumer goods. The company was formerly known as XPO Logistics, Inc. and changed its name to XPO, Inc. in December 2022. 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There are 15 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Welcome to the XPO Q4 2020 Day Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. My name is Sherry, and I will be your operator for today's call. Please note that this conference is being recorded. Before the call begins, let me read a brief statement on behalf of the company regarding looking statements and the use of non GAAP financial measures. During this call, the company will be making certain forward looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities laws, which by their nature involve a number of risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected in the forward looking statements. Operator00:00:58A discussion of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially is contained the company's SEC filings as well as in its earnings release. The forward looking statements in the company's earnings release or made on this call are made only as of today, The company has no obligation to update any of these forward looking statements, except to the extent required by law. During this call, the company may also refer to certain non GAAP financial measures as defined under applicable SEC rules. Reconciliations of such non GAAP financial measures to the most comparable GAAP measures are contained in the company's earnings release and the related financial tables or on its website. You can find a copy of the company's earnings release, which contains additional important information regarding forward looking statements and non GAAP financial measures in the Investors section of the company's website. Operator00:01:48I will now turn the call over to XPO's Chief Executive Officer, Mario Herrick. Mr. Herrick, you may begin. Speaker 100:01:55Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining our call. I'm here in Greenwich With Kyle Wissmans, our Chief Financial Officer and Ali Fagri, our Chief Strategy Officer. I'm pleased to report that we capped a strong year with a quarter that exceeded expectations and we've carried that momentum into 2024. Companywide, we reported 4th quarter revenue of $1,900,000,000 which is 6% higher year over year. Speaker 100:02:27And we grew adjusted EBITDA to $264,000,000 for an increase of 28%, excluding real estate gains in 2022. Our adjusted diluted EPS for the company was $0.77 which was also better than expected. I want to thank our team for delivering these great results in a soft freight environment. Looking at our North American LTL segment, we reported our strongest progress since we launched our LTL 2.0 plan in 2021. We grew adjusted operating income year over year by 51% and improved our adjusted operating ratio by 3.80 basis points. Speaker 100:03:15We delivered the best damage claims ratio in our history at 0.3% as well as a record level of employee satisfaction. And we significantly accelerated our year over year yield growth, excluding fuel, to 10.3%. We also improved cost efficiency for the 4th consecutive quarter with further increases in labor productivity and line haul in sourcing. And we continue to deploy capital efficiently as we reinvest back into the business. All of these are proof points that our plan has strong traction. Speaker 100:03:54The 28 service centers we recently acquired from the Yellow network, we'll build on this momentum. This acquisition is a once in a generation opportunity to integrate prime locations into our network to support yield growth and margin expansion. When the market recovers and industry capacity tightens, we'll be in a stronger position to serve our customers and drive profitable growth for years to come. Now I want to share some details of the quarter, starting with the first pillar of our LTL 2.0 plan, service improvements. We improved every major component of customer service quality in the quarter, including our customer satisfaction rating, which has risen by more than 40% since 2021. Speaker 100:04:43Our on time performance was 3 percentage points better than in the prior 4th quarter. And I mentioned that our damage claims ratio of 0.3% is a new record for us. To put that in context, it's a vast improvement from 1.2% when we launched our plan. These are metrics our customers watch closely as an indicator of service quality. Our top priority is to become the customer service leader in our industry, and we're continuing to equip our team with the tools to make this a reality. Speaker 100:05:20One example is the new freight airbags I spoke about on our last call. The rollout has been going well, and this solution is now installed at over 50% of our doors. The airbags have reduced damages by more than 20% at those locations, the benefit will spread across our network. We expect to finish the installations by the middle of this year. The second pillar of LTL 2.0 is to invest in our network to drive long term growth. Speaker 100:05:52We added more tractors and trailers in 2023 than any year in XTO's history to both grow and refresh our fleet. This resulted in record network fluidity and supported our strategy to in source more line haul miles. On the tractor side, we purchased more than 1400 units in 2023. This reduced our average fleet age to 5 years at year end compared with 5.9 years in 2022. On the trailer side, we manufactured over 6,400 units at our in house facility in Arkansas exceeding our production target. Speaker 100:06:31For 2024, we expect our LTL CapEx level to be in the low teens as a percent of revenue and again primarily allocated to our fleet. In terms of the 28 service centers we acquired from Yellow, The largest impact on our capital strategy is timing. We've pulled forward dozens of real estate investments that we plan to make over the next several years. I'll add some strategic color to my earlier comments on the acquisition. These service centers will deliver important benefits to the business for years to come. Speaker 100:07:051st, they'll get us closer to customers and give us larger facilities in major metro areas. This should drive substantial cost efficiencies across our line haul, pickup and delivery and dock operations. 2nd, they'll enhance our yield growth by further improving our service with fewer freight rehandles, reduced damages and better on time performance. And third, they'll give us more capacity in key metros like Indianapolis, Columbus and Las Vegas. These are markets where we are currently turning away profitable customers because we don't have enough door capacity. Speaker 100:07:43We plan to start bringing these locations online in April and have all of them operational within the next 12 to 18 months. We expect the transaction to be accretive to EPS and our LTL operating ratio in 2025. This assumes no underlying recovery in industry volumes. Any market rebound would represent an upside to our baseline forecast. The 3rd pillar of our plan is to drive above market yield growth, which is our single biggest lever for margin improvement. Speaker 100:08:14You can see this dynamic in the 4th quarter when we drove yield excluding fuel higher year over year by 10.3%. This helped us deliver nearly 400 basis points of adjusted operating ratio improvement. We got there by executing on service improvements, accessorials and volume growth within our local customer base. These are the 3 levers for our long term pricing opportunity. The exciting trends in our service metrics translate to value for our customers, with a direct correlation to the price we earn. Speaker 100:08:50Increasingly, our customer see XPO as a high value business partner with the resources to help them succeed. This was reflected in our contract renewal pricing, which was up year over year by 9% for the 2nd consecutive quarter. Accessorials are another opportunity to grow our yield by delivering more value through premium services. We plan to extend our range of offerings this year. We saw an early impact in the 4th quarter with the introduction of our retail store rollout offering. Speaker 100:09:24We already have over a dozen customers using this service to distribute critical product launches for retailers. And with the 3rd lever, our local channel, we grew shipment counts by double digits for the 3rd consecutive quarter. Our local sales team at year end was over 20% larger than in 2022, reflecting the importance we place on this high yielding margin accretive business. So we have a lot of avenues leading to yield growth And each step forward helps to align our pricing with the value we deliver. The 4th and final pillar of LTL 2.0 is cost efficiency. Speaker 100:10:05The main opportunities here are with purchased transportation, variable costs and overhead. In the Q4, we reduced our purchase transportation cost by 22% year over year by in sourcing more miles and paying lower contract rates to 3rd party providers. We ended the quarter with less than 20% of line haul miles outsourced for a year over year reduction of 2 90 basis points. On a sequential basis, we reduced our reliance on outsourcing 190 basis points. We've come a long way since the beginning of 2022 when we were outsourcing about 25% of our line haul miles. Speaker 100:10:47Today, we're well underway to bringing down that percentage to the low teens by 2027. Lastly, a quick update on our initiative to add driver teams and sleeper cab trucks for long hauls. The goal here is to increase the efficiency and flexibility of our line haul network. We started putting these teams in place last quarter and we currently have over 50 teams in operation. We expect to have a few 100 long haul teams on the road by the end of this year. Speaker 100:11:18This should help to accelerate our in sourcing plan. We're also continuing to manage our variable labor costs effectively, growing our volume by more than our headcount year over year for the 4th consecutive quarter. And the spread in the quarter was substantial. Our shipment count was up 5.7%, while our headcount was up just 1.7%. This is a credit to the team's operational discipline supported by our proprietary technology for labor planning. Speaker 100:11:51In summary, in 2023, we made significant progress on our plan across the board, while laying a solid foundation for the future. We improved our operations in all four quarters of the year by generating record service levels, making strategic investments in the network, further accelerating yield growth and operating more cost efficiently. As a result, the business performed above expectations with robust margin expansion and earnings growth and strong forward momentum. I'm going to hand the call over to Kyle to discuss the Q4 financial results. Kyle, over to you. Speaker 200:12:30Thank you, Mario, and good morning, everyone. I'll take you through our key financial results, balance sheet and liquidity. It was a strong 4th quarter overall. Revenue for the total company was $1,900,000,000 up 6% year over year. This includes a 9% increase in our LTL segment. Speaker 200:12:50Excluding fuel, LTL revenue was up 14% year over year. Salary, wages and benefits for LTL were 10% higher in the quarter than a year ago. This increase primarily reflects wage and benefit inflation as well as incentive compensation aligned with our strong 4th quarter performance. These impacts were mitigated by our productivity gains. We've now improved our labor hours per shipment on a year over year basis for 4 straight quarters throughout 2023. Speaker 200:13:25We were also more cost efficient with purchase transportation through a combination of in sourcing and rate negotiation. Our expense for 3rd party carriers was $83,000,000 in the quarter, which was down year over year by 22%. Depreciation expense increased year over year by 23% or $13,000,000 as we continue to reinvest in the business. This remains our top priority for capital allocation in LTL. In the Q4, our CapEx was primarily allocated to our fleet as we purchase new tractors from the manufacturers and build more trailers in house. Speaker 200:14:09Next, I'll add some detail to adjusted EBITDA, starting with the company as a whole. We generated adjusted EBITDA of $264,000,000 in the quarter, up 28% from a year ago and improved our adjusted EBITDA margin by 2.30 basis points. These metrics exclude the impact of real estate gains in the Q4 of 2022 to give you a like to like comparison. We had no real estate gains in the Q4 of 2023. Our 4th quarter corporate expense was $5,000,000 for a year over year savings of 44% or $4,000,000 We're continuing to rationalize our corporate structure for the standalone business and expect to report further reductions this year. Speaker 200:15:03Looking solely at the LTL segment, we grew our adjusted operating income by 51% year over year to $160,000,000 and we grew adjusted EBITDA to $233,000,000 The gains we achieved through revenue growth and cost efficiencies more than offset the non operational headwinds from lower fuel surcharge revenue and pension income. In our European Transportation segment, adjusted EBITDA was $36,000,000 for the quarter. Company wide, we reported operating income of $119,000,000 for the quarter, compared to $4,000,000 in the prior year. Our net income from continuing operations was $58,000,000 for diluted earnings per share of $0.49 compared with a loss of $36,000,000 or $0.31 a year ago. This represents an improvement of $0.80 in diluted EPS from continuing operations, driven by significant year over year reductions in transaction and integration costs and restructuring charges. Speaker 200:16:18On an adjusted basis, our EPS for the quarter was $0.77 which is down 21% from a year ago. This primarily reflects the impact of real estate gains in 2022 as well as lower pension income and higher interest expense in 2023. Our acquisition of the 28 service centers closed on December 20 and did not have a material impact on our operating results and the income statement. And lastly, we generated $251,000,000 of cash flow from continuing operations in the quarter and deployed $151,000,000 of net CapEx, excluding spend related to the acquisition. Moving to the balance sheet. Speaker 200:17:07We ended the quarter with $412,000,000 of cash on hand, Combined with available capacity under committed borrowing facilities, this gave us $920,000,000 of liquidity. We had no borrowings outstanding under our ABL facility at quarter end. In December, We raised $985,000,000 through a combination of $585,000,000 of senior notes $400,000,000 of term loans. We used $870,000,000 of proceeds to complete our acquisition of 28 LTL service centers and we refinanced our existing senior notes due in 2025. We now have no funded debt maturities until 2028. Speaker 200:17:57We also maintained all corporate and issue level credit ratings. Our net debt leverage at year end was 3 times trailing 12 months adjusted EBITDA. The investments we're making in the business will enhance our earnings trajectory for a high return on capital, consistent with our long term goal of achieving an investment grade profile. Before I close, I'll summarize the full year 2024 assumptions we provided in our investor presentation to help you with your models. They are as follows: gross CapEx of $700,000,000 to $800,000,000 interest expense of $240,000,000 to $260,000,000 pension income of approximately $25,000,000 an adjusted effective tax rate of 23% to 25% and a diluted share count of 121,000,000 shares. Speaker 200:18:55Now, I'll turn it over to Ali who will cover our operating results. Speaker 300:19:00Thank you, Kyle. I'll start with LTL segment, which reported another quarter of profitable growth. On a year over year basis, We increased our shipments per day by 5.7% in the quarter led by 12% growth in our local sales channel. This resulted in growth in tonnage per day of 2%. Our weight per shipment was down 3.4% year over year, which was notably less of a decline for the 2nd consecutive quarter. Speaker 300:19:34On a monthly basis, Our October tonnage per day was up 2.5% year over year. November was down 0.5% and December was up 3.6%. Looking just at shipments per day, October was up 6.2% year over year, November was up 3.7% and December was up 6.6%. In January, our tonnage per day was down 1.1% year over year while shipment count was up 1.4%. The transportation industry was disrupted by weather events in January, but we saw a rebound more recently and ended the month with stronger volumes. Speaker 300:20:23And sequentially, both our tonnage and shipment count increased from December to January, outperforming seasonality. We also outperformed on yield in the 4th quarter delivering the 2nd consecutive quarter of acceleration. We grew yield excluding fuel by a strong 10.3% compared with the prior year. Importantly, our underlying pricing trends are strong as we continue to align our pricing with the better service we're providing. Our contract renewal pricing was up 9% in the quarter compared with a year ago. Speaker 300:21:05Turning to margin, our 4th quarter adjusted operating ratio was 86.5% which was an improvement of 3 80 basis points year over year. Our strong margin performance was primarily driven by yield growth and underpinned by our cost initiatives and productivity gains. Sequentially, our adjusted OR increased by 30 basis points, which outperformed seasonality by 280 basis points. Moving to our European business, we delivered revenue growth of 2% year over year Despite ongoing challenges in the macro environment, this growth was supported by strong pricing which outpaced inflation. And in some regions like the U. Speaker 300:21:56K, we grew adjusted EBITDA versus the prior year reflecting disciplined cost control. While our volume declined slightly year over year, we outperformed the industry and we mitigated the decline with new customer wins as the quarter progressed and this trend improved in January. The team is executing well and earning new business from high caliber customers. This momentum together with the growth of our sales pipeline should continue to strengthen our position in key European regions. I'll close with a summary of the 3 main achievements you heard from us this morning as they relate to our expectations for a strong 2024. Speaker 300:22:42First, we're continuing to deliver more value for customers in the form of service quality with our metrics at record levels and we're on an excellent trajectory. 2nd, we accelerated yield growth to double digits as we exited 23 and we expect to deliver another robust yield performance this year with a direct benefit to profitability. And third, we're showing that we can operate more productively by leveraging our technology and improving our cost to serve. In short, we've taken major strides with our network operations and we're still in the early innings of significantly improving our operating ratio. Now we'll take your questions. Speaker 300:23:27Operator, please open the line for Q and A. Speaker 400:23:30Thank Our first question is from Scott Group with Wolfe Research. Please proceed. Speaker 500:24:08Hey, thanks. Good morning. Any thoughts on how to think about the OR from Q4 to Q1 and maybe full year margin improvement. And then I don't know bigger picture Mario, you made a comment that all this terminal growth is Additive to yields and margin, I guess why it should be good for volume, but maybe some thoughts on how it actually helps yield and margin as well? Speaker 100:24:34Sure. Thanks, Scott. First, starting with the Q1 outlook, we typically give tonnage yield and what OR would look like. Starting with tonnage, following the gains we had in the Q4, we do expect to outperform seasonality in Q1. Typically, a normal seasonality for us It's call it flattish tonnage sequentially from Q4 to Q1 and we expect to do better than that. Speaker 100:24:56So we expect Q1 tonnage to be up low single digit, somewhat in the same ZIP code as where we were in the Q4 on a year on year basis. Now when you look at January tonnage specifically, It did do better as Ali mentioned earlier compared to seasonality when you roll forward December into January and we had a strong end of the month as well despite the weather earlier in the month. On the yield front, we expect a strong performance for yield across the board this year. We do expect yield to be up on a year on year basis in the Q1 somewhere in the same zip code as we were in the Q4 year on year. And ultimately from an OR standpoint, usually the typical seasonality for us Q4 to Q1, we see OR deteriorate about 40 basis points And we expect to do better than that. Speaker 100:25:41Now how much better will depend on how the rest of the quarter plays out. Usually Q1, as you know, March is the big month of the quarter, But that implies roughly 300 basis points of OR improvement year on year. For the full year 2024, We also expect a strong year for us in terms of OR improvement, given all the things we're doing in yield and tonnage and cost and efficiency improvement and service improvement, we expect ore to be up in the 150 basis points to 2 50 basis points range for the full year. That's the path for us to do better than the top end of the range, depending on how the year plays out. Now taking a step back on your question on the service and how they impact yield. Speaker 100:26:21So we see a big cost benefit first and that cost benefit comes from higher efficiency and having bigger brake bulks That lead to cost savings and line haul, having service centers closer to the customer that leads to lower D and D costs and also lowering dock re handling costs associated with that. Now the way they help yield is because larger service centers help improve your service product and service product can drive yield. But also we mentioned premium services. And when you think about premium services in some markets like Las Vegas, we're tapped on capacity. And by having now the largest service center in the Vegas market, we're going to be able to launch new offerings like trade shows as an example this come also at a higher yield and higher margin as well. Speaker 500:27:06Thank you, guys. Thank you. Speaker 400:27:10Our next question is from Kent Hoexter with Bank of America. Please proceed. Speaker 600:27:16Hey, great. Good morning. Congrats on some solid performance here on the OR. Maybe just digging into that though, Talk about the ramp of the 28 facilities. How should we anticipate the drag versus your forecast? Speaker 600:27:31And I guess With that, it seems like you're bumping up against your kind of long term targets now of the 600 basis point improvement. How Does that shift or the speed with which you can get there start changing in your thought process? Speaker 100:27:49Thanks, Ken. Well, starting with the ramp of the service centers, well, in terms of getting them up and running, we do expect to get them up and running in the first, call it, dozen or so service centers over the next 3 to 6 months, the next dozen over the next 6 to 12 months and then the remaining 4 or 5 will go live next call it 12 to 18 months. Now we don't anticipate a OR drag from them that would be material to our numbers. And the reason why because the majority of these service centers are in markets where we already operate. So if you think about it, there is one case where we move our our existing team from a smaller service center to a larger service center, the gearing cost of real estate is fairly low on a per door basis, but we get the immediate benefit of cost efficiencies and cost savings associated with having a larger facility to operate from. Speaker 100:28:38In markets where we are adding a service center and keeping the existing one. In that particular case, we split the team between the 2 service centers based on volume and we only step up if there is an inflection in volume and we have incremental volumes. So we don't anticipate the service centers to have a drag on OR this year. Do expect them to be accretive for EBITDA. We do expect them we do expect a drag on EPS driven by the incremental debt there. Speaker 100:29:02And we expect them to be accretive on all these KPIs in 2025 and beyond. In terms of the long term targets, we've always set 600 basis points, I mean, at least 600 basis points. And this is nothing magical about 600 basis points. There's nothing magical about 2027. With all the momentum that we have here and with all with the New service centers, the pricing, the service improvements, we do expect to outperform and I would hope is to get to the 70s and well into the 70s over time from an OR perspective. Speaker 600:29:35Thanks, Mario. Speaker 400:29:38Our next question is from Jon Chappell with Evercore ISI. Please proceed. Speaker 700:29:46Thank you. Good morning. I'm not sure if Mario or Ali wants to take this, but this is the 2nd straight quarter now with contract renewal pricing up 9%. Where do you stand on the book of business as it relates to kind of marking to market for the new service? Do you still have a couple more quarters? Speaker 700:30:01Where do you think that kind of high single digit contract renewal is on the agenda? Or are you kind of close to kind of marking it to market and you think maybe that moderates a little bit to maybe mid single digits kind of in line more with the GRI levels? Speaker 200:30:19Hey, John, it's Kyle. So if you think about contract renewals right now, Speaker 800:30:22we did accelerate heavily in Speaker 200:30:23the back half from 5% to 9%. And so far in the year or in the back half, renegotiated 50% of the book. So there's still some more to work through. I still think we're in a favorable market for renewals and we should expect Palimension to carry forward here in 2024. Speaker 700:30:40Just to be clear though, is it kind of like if you're done with 50%, is this the first half higher end of that range, reacceleration similar to the back half of twenty twenty three and then kind of more of a normalized level in the back half? Or do you think that what you've done over the last 6 months as you continue to improve service kind of leads you more towards what you've done in the last 6 months or so as a percentage basis? Speaker 200:31:04I think renewals are probably going to follow where we see yield for the first half. So we're expecting strong yield to continue. I think our Q1 yield guide, we think Q1 yield is going to be up high single digit in line with what we saw in Q4. That should carry forward into our contract renewal at the start of the year. Speaker 400:31:22Our next question is from Chris Wetherbee with Citigroup. Please proceed. Speaker 600:31:28Yes. Hey, thanks. Good morning, guys. Speaker 300:31:30I guess I want to talk Speaker 100:31:31a little bit about some Speaker 600:31:32of the initiatives that maybe you guys are thinking about for 2024. So we've talked about sort of the team drivers. You've about sort of the in sourcing of line haul. I'm curious kind of as you start to think about adding those up in the context of the 150 basis points to 250 basis points OR improvement, how much you get from that versus maybe what would be kind of core pricing above cost inflation and maybe a little bit of leverage on the volume? I don't know if you can unpack that, but any details you can give us would be Yes. Speaker 100:31:57I'll start on the all the initiatives. And Chris, the way we look at it, I mean, our plan involves substantial yield improvement. It does involve continuing our great service momentum or service product improvement momentum. Tonnage improvement, we do see tonnage going up for the full year, But we do expect it to be up, call it, in the same zip code of where we were in the Q4. So low single digit because our goal is to drive more yield than it to drive volume. Speaker 100:32:23Similarly, our goal is to drive cost efficiencies as you mentioned. So I'll give a quick update on the initiatives. We as part of our plan is to in source more to the 3rd party line haul miles because that comes both at a cost benefit, but it also comes as a service benefit. When we go from using a 3rd party carrier with a 53 feet trailer versus having 2 28 feet pumps, which gives us more space, gives us safe stack in the trailers where we can separate the freight physically and our drivers show up on time 100% of the time, can continue to improve that service product. Now that will come with cost savings here in 2024, but the longer term cost savings also come when you think of inflection in truckload rates at some point, that's going to be obviously material savings for us from what we would be spending internally on a per mile basis versus what we're spending for 3rd party carriers. Speaker 100:33:14So our expectation is to continue to we in sourced to 90 basis points here in the Q4 year on year. We are sub-twenty percent at this point. We're at 2019 and change. Now we're going to drive that in the first phase down to the low teens and beyond that as we end up those teams as well. Speaker 600:33:32Okay, that's helpful. Appreciate it. Thank you. Thanks, Greg. Speaker 400:33:36Our next question is from Fadi Chamoun with BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed. Speaker 900:33:44Yes, good morning team. So my question is, you mentioned the double digit growth that you're seeing in the local account, I guess. I'm thinking this has obviously been a Pretty decent tailwind for density and cost per shipment and ultimately the yield. Where are you in this kind of trajectory of improving local account penetration, are we in the first innings of that? Is there an opportunity that is of significant size still in front of you? Speaker 100:34:22When we look at the local account strategy, Thadry, it is a segment that we are planning on growing over the years to come here. Now if you look back at 2023, we were run rating at roughly 20% of our volume and revenue is generated from that channel. What we have done through the course of the year is that we increased the size of our local accounts. We hired more than 20% more local sellers through the course of 2023 and the goal here through 2024 is to add roughly another 10%. So all in to be 30% higher on the overall sales force size that is selling to that channel. Speaker 100:35:00Now as you can imagine, whenever we onboard new people, it does take a ramp usually about 6 month for them to be fully productive and fully up and running. Now if you look at the full year, we did improve our local accounts on a higher run rate than the rest of our book here in the Q4, we grew our local shipments in that channel by 12% on a year on year basis. And we do expect to continue to see those really strong gains in that channel since we onboarded 20% more sellers. Now in terms of the innings, I would say we're still in the early innings in terms of results, but we are very well underway in terms of having the team and having them seeing a couple of quarters of ramp here being pretty productive in 2024 and beyond. Speaker 900:35:46Appreciate that. Thank you and congrats on the strong results. Speaker 100:35:49Thank you, Paddy. Speaker 400:35:52Our next question is from Stephanie Moore with Jefferies. Please proceed. Operator00:35:58Hi, good morning. Thank you. Speaker 1000:36:02I wanted to maybe touch a bit on the I guess continue on the pricing discussion here. I think pricing accelerated over 10% here in the quarter, I think you guided to more high single digits. Can you maybe walk through the drivers of the upside, what you're seeing And kind of your thoughts as we think about 2024 for further pricing acceleration, especially your view of what could happen if the macro does actually turn? Thanks. Speaker 300:36:29Sure, Stephanie. This is Ali. So we're seeing very strong pricing trends as we enter 2024. For the Q1 in we would expect our yield on an ex fuel basis to be up somewhere in the similar range as we just delivered here in the 4th quarter, so call it roughly about 10% growth. Now On a full year basis, we would expect yield to be up somewhere in that mid to high single digit range. Speaker 300:36:52I would add that there's certainly a path to do better than that. It's still very early in the year, so we'll update you as the year progresses. A lot of that yield growth and the outperformance versus the industry is being driven by our internal initiatives. If you think about our service improvement, we're at record levels here in the Q4. We're continuing to lean more into premium services. Speaker 300:37:11We rolled out retail store rollouts here in Q4, we have a lot of traction there. And as Mario just noted, a lot of momentum on the local side as well too and this is higher yielding and margin accretive business. So overall, we feel very good about the yield outlook here in 2024 and expect it to be a strong year for us overall. Speaker 1000:37:31Great. Thank you. And then maybe just as a follow-up to that, but sort of a little bit bigger picture. And as you think about incentive comp across the organization, Maybe talk a little bit about what metrics that have been possibly realigned just to align interest across organizations, yield, margins, EBIT, what's the major metrics we should be focused on based on incentive comp changes in 2024? Thanks. Speaker 100:37:56Stephanie, this is Mario. I'll take that. So in 2023 1st and 2022, we used to compensate predominantly our field based on EBITDA growth and EBITDA performance, but we have added a good portion of the comp plan to be focused on service quality. So as service centers and group service quality and on time service, they effectively they have a good chunk of their incentive comp is based on that. Now in 2024 will be the 1st year where we are switching from compensating our field from EBITDA and EBITDA growth and have it be focused on OR improvement. Speaker 100:38:32So it's now focused on how can we expand our margins over time, because as you know, we want to incentivize effectively driving that better service product that yields a higher yield while managing cost effectively, which would lead to our expansion at the service center level and ultimately the network level as well. Speaker 400:38:52Our next question is from Tom Wadewitz with UBS. Please proceed. Speaker 800:39:00Yes. I just had, I guess, one kind of quick one on The D and A and maybe how we think about the ramp up in that given you are spending a good level of CapEx. So On that, but I guess the broader question would be on how you think about the terminal network. And I guess What's as you bring on terminals like where you sit today, what's your excess capacity from a door and a terminal perspective? And as you bring on more terminal capacity, kind of where do you want to get to, right? Speaker 800:39:34Like the I think we've seen that a high service model, you do have some a decent amount of excess capacity, but kind of wanted to see where you're at today, where you'd like to get to on excess capacity? And then the Specific one just on kind of D and A modeling. Thank you. Speaker 100:39:50Thanks, Tom. I'll start with the network and the capacity side and turn it over to Kyle for D and When you look at our network today before the 28 Service Center acquisition, we were down rating, call it, in the mid to high teens in terms of excess capacity in the current environment. And if we roll forward, we are adding 28 service centers. Out of these, roughly half of them would be additive the other half would be ones where we are relocating from a smaller service center to a larger service center. And we roughly acquired about 3,000 doors And we would be adding in that after we're all set and done with the integration in that 2,000 doors, which is call it, again 15% expansion and capacity. Speaker 100:40:31So once we get these service centers online, we will be in that 25% to 30% excess capacity in our network. That's a great place to be as an LTL network, especially in a soft freight market. So this way, whenever there's a freight market recovery and you see higher demand, historically our industry has been capacity constrained, real estate comes with a very low carrying cost and this would enable us to flex up whenever that demand comes back. So this is how we look at where we are and as we open up those service centers where we'd be at in a capacity perspective. Yes, Tom, if you think about the Speaker 200:41:03D and A ramp, so we are going to see increased CapEx within the LTL segment. So we'd expect about $74,000,000 to $75,000,000 a quarter for LTL, reflecting the increased CapEx spend. Speaker 800:41:15Okay, great. Thank you. Speaker 400:41:20Our next question is from Bruce Chan with Stifel. Please proceed. Speaker 800:41:26Yes. Thanks, operator, and good morning, everyone. Maybe just to start, Kyle, can you remind us of what your target leverage ranges. And then I Speaker 600:41:35know in previous quarters you pulled back on some Speaker 800:41:37of the commentary around the sale of the European business, but With the need for more debt pay down potentially with these new facilities, is there any more urgency Speaker 100:41:46to sell that business now? Speaker 200:41:50Hey, Bruce, it's Kyle. I'm going to start and then I'll hand it over to Mario. So when you think about our long term leverage outlook, our intention is 1 to 2 times trailing 12 months EBITDA. We think we're in a great spot with the investments we made and the EBITDA we can generate to really make a lot of progress on that here in the next couple of years. Speaker 100:42:06And on the European sale, Bruce, our long term plan remains to be a pure play North American LTL carrier and selling the European business is one of our strategic priorities, But we're going to be patient. Our goal is to maximize the return we get on that business. It is a business that has a scarcity value to it. We're either number 1, 2 or 3 and less than truckload, truckload asset light brokerage in many geographies in Western Europe, I think U. K, France, Spain, Portugal. Speaker 100:42:32And it's not a matter of if, but a matter of when. And meanwhile, if you take a step back, the business is performing well despite a soft economy in Europe, but outperforming years, our revenue was up in the quarter. We've improved volume every month of the quarter and further improved in the month of January and it's a credit to the team's strong execution. So again, if you take a step back, it's a matter of time and some point we'll get there. Speaker 1100:42:56Okay. Appreciate it. Speaker 400:43:00Our next question is from Jason Stidl with TD Cowen. Please proceed. Speaker 600:43:06Thank you, operator. Mara, I think you talked about accessorials and that there's about 12 different things that XPO was doing to sort of drive them higher. Can you help us understand timing and sort of the ability your ability to implement these accessorial and the impact we should expect? Speaker 100:43:23So when you take a step back on these accessorials, they are predominantly what we call premium services. So these are services that our customers are asking for that go beyond your typical pick up a few skids of freight and get them delivered to a destination. So examples are, Kyle mentioned earlier, retail store rollouts offering, where in that particular case, you can imagine if you have some sort of a holiday or a new product launch, A customer needs us to ship many, many shipments. Typically, it could be hundreds of shipments in a short time window and they need somebody to coordinate all of those offerings and that leads obviously to a higher price and the customer is happier because they're getting a service that they need. We do have a number of other offerings, trade shows is a good example of that working with retailers that must arrive by date type offering and many others that we are launching through the course of the year here. Speaker 100:44:11We do expect to get them launched. They won't all be launched within a few quarters. Some of them will take a bit longer like an expedited service as an example. As we launch these, we expect them to be accretive to yield over time. In terms of magnitude, roughly today, our assessorial as a percent of revenue is roughly, call it, in the low double digits. Speaker 100:44:31And our goal is to grow that to the mid teens as we launch these programs over the years to come. Speaker 600:44:36That's great color. I wanted to also follow-up on the overall pricing discussion. LTL pricing this quarter has been very strong. Your renewals are at 9%, Saia is almost at 9. ArcBest is the best they've reported since a quarter in 'twenty two. Speaker 600:44:51And this is all in a very sluggish demand drop in super cheap TL pricing. As the economy recovers and capacity tightens overall, is it crazy to think about double digit pricing going forward for you Speaker 100:45:05We had double digit pricing up here in the Q4 and we do expect a very strong first half of the year as well. Mean, there is an environment. If you look at our industry, it's been historically capacity constrained. When you go back before Yellow Sea's operations, we didn't have enough capacity versus the demand that was out there. Now we are currently in a sluggish freight environment where demand is down roughly call it double digit low teens and this is when that capacity went away from the market. Speaker 100:45:33So whenever there is any sort even with some of that capacity coming back into LTL, Whenever there's any form of inflection in demand, there wouldn't be enough doors and service centers in our industry. So you would see pricing accelerate accordingly. For us specifically, we also have all the company specific initiatives we're driving between driving better service, which comes at a premium, between driving premium services, between driving also expansion of our local channel, all of these would be accretive to yield as well. So double digit pricing is not out of the question. Speaker 600:46:02Fantastic. Appreciate the time. Speaker 100:46:05Thank you. Speaker 400:46:06Our next question is from Bascome Majors with Susquehanna. Please proceed. Speaker 800:46:13Thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to go back to the incentives focus from earlier. Can you talk more specifically about how you're tactically Incentivizing your salespeople specifically and if that has changed at all as the business has evolved and your priorities have evolved over the last 10 months. And separately from a long term senior executive management incentive approach, how might those look different this year than they have over the last few years? Thank you. Speaker 100:46:46Thanks, Bascome. So first starting with the sales compensation. So it depends on what type of seller you are in the organization. We change the comp accordingly. So if you're in the local channel, the goal is to grow your book as opposed to, for example, if you're in the different type of accounts, You're going to have to focus on profitability more. Speaker 100:47:07But generally, the theme is that if you look at a service center, they are compensated based on the OAR improvement for that If you're a local account executive, you're incentivized to grow your book and a component of your compensation is driven by operating ratio as well. If you're handling larger accounts, then the lion's share of your compensation is around OR and profit improvement as well associated with that. So this is how typically sales compensate auto compensated, but it is more driven by your book of business as opposed to your region or the network as a whole. Now in terms of senior exec compensation, That's typically part of our proxy, but we incentivize our senior executives based on a combination of OR growth, EBITDA growth and the TSR, so shareholder value creation as well. Speaker 800:47:59And you don't expect the long term incentive formula to really change other than the targets for this 3 year period? Speaker 100:48:07The framework would be very similar to what we had in the past. Speaker 400:48:12Our next question is from Jordan Alliger with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed. Speaker 1200:48:18Yes, hi, morning. Just sort of curious, thanks for the layout in terms of the door opening timing, etcetera. In the context of your thoughts on the economy and the new door openings, is there a way to think about tonnage or volume trajectory as go through the year, you sort of like year over year growth potential or how you expect it to sort of ramp up? That would be the first question. Thanks. Speaker 300:48:48Sure, Jordan. This is Ali. I'll start then pass it to Mario. So for the full year, as we noted, we expect a much higher contribution from yield than volume. We're being very disciplined on the type of volume we're on boarding onto the network and you should expect that to continue through this year. Speaker 300:49:05So overall for the full year, We'd expect tonnage to be up somewhere in that low single digit range for the full year and then yield somewhere in that mid to high single digits or better. Now keep in mind, we do have tougher comps in the second half of the year. It is still early in the year and obviously the macro can be a swing factor. In terms of the new service centers, we don't expect any sort of meaningful contribution from volume this year. We would expect contribution from volume to be sub a percent incremental volumes, so not a meaningful number overall. Speaker 100:49:35And sort of when we think about the service centers in the near term, Ahead of any type of macro infection whenever it comes, there is a big benefit we're going to get from cost savings, as I mentioned earlier on, by having larger facilities. If you think about what we bought from the yellow network, we bought some of the largest service centers. You look at a site like Carlisle, you can't get anymore the 120 acres of land right off I-seventy six and I-eighty one where we have a 300 door service center now in that market. Same thing with Nashville. We got a 40, 50 acre facility west of Nashville with more than 200 doors in it. Speaker 100:50:11So when you think about those larger facilities that enable you to run more efficiently, your line haul, your PND, your dock operations, That's going to lead to cost savings as soon as we start moving into them. The other benefit is some markets when you look at a market like Brooklyn, New York or Columbus or Indianapolis or Las Vegas, we're tapped out on capacity today. So we don't have enough doors in those markets. And by having this incremental capacity, We already have customers that are ready to go where we can onboard them as we open up those service centers. And we have 2 small service centers. Speaker 100:50:42One is in O'Flaherty, Wisconsin, one is Nogales, Arizona, where these are net adds or new markets, but these are small service centers where we already have demand lined up based on existing customer relationships we have as well. Speaker 1200:50:56Got it. And then just sort of Curious, how are you going to manage the terminal opening? So in other words, is there some economic dependency on it? How good the economy is or is there going to be a certain amount that you're just going to open no matter what strategically or otherwise? Speaker 100:51:15When we think about the rollout timing, we prioritize those service centers, those markets where we are capacity constrained today. So in a softer freight environment where we see that we don't have enough capacity and the second priority is based on cost efficiency, so the service centers that will create the most amount of cost efficiency. And when we think about the opening schedule, I'll call it over the next 3 to 18 months, It will be we're going to drive through it regardless of what the freight markets are doing. This would be a reasonable time frame in terms of bringing those terminals up to our standards and doing the rebranding and these kind of things to get them up and running. And then we for us, if you I mentioned this earlier on, if you think about the headcount, there's no need for us to hire people ahead of volume. Speaker 100:51:57So what we do is that we either relocate the existing team into a larger facility or we add a facility to an existing market where we split from an existing facility into 2 different service centers, so there is no incremental cost associated with that. If we do see an infection in volume where the markets are getting better, that we step up to be able to support that volume. And importantly, Jordan, if you look at our year in 2023, we were able to improve efficiency every single quarter of the year. So we have a great ability between operational discipline that Dave and the team are bringing to the table, supported by our proprietary technology to be able to run our network very efficiently from a labor standpoint. Speaker 400:52:36Our next question is from Brandon Oglenski with Barclays. Please proceed. Speaker 1100:52:41Hey, thanks for taking my question. Mario, maybe we can follow-up on that one there. I know you're talking about cost efficiencies of opening new terminals in the network. And it sounds like potentially you're going to move staff from one to the other. But I guess just covering transports for 20 years now, when you open new nodes in the network, especially scheduled network, Isn't there like a spool of time on capacity efficiency, especially on like line haul and local pickup and delivery that we should be anticipating? Speaker 1100:53:11Because it sounds like what you're guiding to that you can instantly match efficiency if not even get better with these new facilities? Speaker 100:53:19Mean, whenever you open up those sites, you do have a small headwind in cost, but that's for us would be very short lived. I mean, you're talking 30 to 90 days of cost headwind as you move into a larger facility. And predominantly, it comes from the carrying cost of the incremental doors. But Brandon, keep in mind that the cost of a door in our P and L It's sub 5% as a percent of total. So it's a small incremental cost associated with that. Speaker 100:53:44But when you think about the immediate efficiency you gain in pickup and delivery, linehauled and all of those pieces, this is where we see that this, again, drag that is short lived doesn't have a meaningful impact on the network as a whole. And to give you an example, over the last couple of years here, we've opened up a dozen service centers and each one of them was accretive within 30 to 60 days. Each one of them is exceeding our return hurdles as well. So we feel very good about our ability to get those onboarded with very, very minimal drag. And that's the reason why don't expect any drag from an OR perspective from the service center. Speaker 100:54:16And finally, I'd say also with having Dave on the team, he has an incredible amount of experience in terms of adding to a network and making sure this accretive pretty quickly. Speaker 1100:54:25I appreciate it. Congrats on the quarter. Speaker 100:54:28Thank you. Speaker 400:54:30Our next question is from James Sponigan with Wells Fargo. Please proceed. Speaker 100:54:36Hey, guys. Thanks. Just wanted to come back Speaker 1300:54:40to pricing a little bit. And of the pricing gap to peers, how much of that pricing gap is sort of attributable to level differences and you've improved service a good bit here. So, of that gap, how much sort of is accessible to you given where service is today? Speaker 300:54:57Sure, James. This is Ali. So overall, we see roughly about a mid teens pricing upside opportunity in the years to come. And it's primarily driven by 3 levers. 1st and foremost, it's driven by service. Speaker 300:55:08So as we continue to improve our service quality, we're going to be able to better align the price the value we're delivering. We quantify that about half of that mid teens pricing gap, so call it about 700 basis points, 800 basis points of pricing opportunity as we continue to improve service and we're realizing that right now in the Q3 we delivered a company record damage claims ratio and our yield growth accelerated to double digits. So we're in the early innings of realizing that opportunity. Then you have another about 500 basis points or 5% of pricing upside that's tied to accessorials and more specifically premium services. As Mario noted earlier, we want to grow our accessorials as a percentage of overall revenue from roughly that 10 range right now to 15 plus percent over time and that's about 5 points of pricing upside. Speaker 300:55:56And then lastly, the local channel is also an opportunity for us a pricing perspective, that's higher yielding and higher margin business for us. Currently, that's roughly about 20% of our revenue and we want to grow that to 30 plus percent over time and that's roughly about another 200 to 300 basis points of pricing upside. So overall, there's multiple different levers we can to grow pricing. And as we move through 2024, we would expect those to translate to very strong yield growth for us. Speaker 1300:56:26Got it. But given where service is today, the full $700,000,000 to $800,000,000 of price that is tied to service, is that like fully accessible to you or does service need to improve further in order for you to get that 700 to 800 basis points as you go move through the contract repricing? Speaker 100:56:44It does take time. I mean, it's not like a switch where as you improve your service product, your customers will give you that premium immediately. But we're seeing we already have been seeing it play out here in the course of 2023 when you look at the improvement we've seen in yield quarter after quarter and having those very strong contract renewals. So currently if you look at it, I mean you go back to years ago, we had a damage claims ratio of 1.2%. We're down to 0.3%, which is a company record. Speaker 100:57:12But our goal continues to keep on improving that. We're a customer loving organization. We want to take care of our customers, pick up the freight on time, deliver it on delivered damage free every single time. And if you think about it from that perspective, that over time earns you a premium. So when we think of that 7 to 8 point A differential, it's going to take us a number of years to claw through it, but that's why when we look forward, we think of our ability to get this above market pricing is going to be driven this continued improvement and continued focus on taking care of our customers. Speaker 400:57:43Lawson Beck with JPMorgan. Please proceed. Speaker 1400:57:48Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking the questions here. So Mario, just to come back to the additional terminals and door counts. Speaker 100:57:55Can you give us a sense Speaker 1400:57:56of what incremental margins overall assuming and it sounds like they're reasonably high from not expecting any real OR dilution. And on that point as well, it's obviously a big purchase price. Price counting takes a while to settle out, but isn't there a big D and A component from this as well? I know Val talked about the component before, but it sounded like that was primarily for CapEx. Speaker 100:58:20So it would be helpful to hear Speaker 700:58:22a little bit about that. Speaker 1400:58:22And if you can maybe just finish what you're seeing on the demand environment, haven't we talked too much about that? Seeing a little bit of improvement in PMIs, maybe some restocking ahead, but we'll be curious to see what you're hearing from your customers to Speaker 100:58:36Thanks, Brian. So I'll start first with the return on the service centers and we expect that to be in the on the long run be in the 30% to 40% range. And I'll turn it over to Kyle shortly here to discuss the details of that. Now when you think about the customer demand environment, It is a fluid environment. It is tough to call what the macro is going to do through the balance of the year from one perspective. Speaker 100:58:57You see the rates where they are from a TED perspective. We were seeing different mixed signals. Now we do survey our customers on a regular basis. And for the first half of the year, Roughly 2 thirds of the customers are expecting either flat or slightly improving demand. So there is a bit more optimism in the first half than what we've seen in the back half of last year. Speaker 100:59:17But there is even more optimism for the back half where the majority of the customers did say that they expect a pickup in demand in the back half of twenty twenty four. So we're cautiously optimistic, but it's tough to call the macro at this point. Now when you look at it more near term, you look at we do watch the ISM manufacturing index 2 thirds of our customers are industrial companies. And when you look through the course here of the Q4, the trough was in October, November, we saw it get better in December. And here in January, it even further improved at ISM and posted at 49% and change, which is very close to 50%, which is typically your point where you start seeing an inflationary environment. Speaker 100:59:53So again, we're seeing demand hold. We're seeing demand slightly improve and with more optimism towards the back half of the year. Speaker 201:00:00And then just to address the CapEx question associated with the yellow. You think about the 28 service centers, we're expecting incremental CapEx about $1,000,000 to $2,000,000 per site. So about $50,000,000 to $60,000,000 in total. Now that's not spread evenly across all 28 service centers and that's really largely tied to refreshing and refurbishing the sites, bring up to standard. So it's going to cover construction, painting, rebranding and that CapEx for those sites is included in our overall guide for the year. Speaker 201:00:27And some of these Some of these sites have already started to work on some of the locations. So going back to Mara's earlier comments, we expect some of these to come online here in Q2. Speaker 401:00:36We have reached the end of our question and answer session. I would like to turn the call back over to Mario Herrick for closing remarks. Speaker 101:00:43Thank you, operator, and thanks all for joining our call today. As you can see from our results, our plan is working and our service improvements are delivering revenue growth, margin expansion and earnings growth. Soon, we're going to start integrating the acquired service centers into our network, which is now more productive and more cost efficient. We a lot of strong momentum here as we start 2024 and we look forward to updating you on the next quarter. Operator, you can now end the call. Speaker 101:01:09Thank you. Speaker 401:01:10Thank you. This will conclude today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time and thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by