Asbury Automotive Group, Inc. (ABG)
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Earnings Call: Q4 2021

Feb 15, 2022

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the Asbury Automotive Group Q4 2021 earnings call. Today's conference is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the conference over to Ms. Karen Reid. Please go ahead, ma'am.

Karen Reid
VP of Corporate Financial Planning and Analysis and Treasurer, Asbury Automotive Group

Thanks, operator, and good morning, everyone. As noted, today's call is being recorded and will be available for replay later this afternoon. Welcome to Asbury Automotive Group's fourth quarter 2021 earnings call. The press release detailing Asbury's fourth quarter and full year results was issued earlier this morning and is posted on our website at asburyauto.com. Participating with me today are David Hult, our President and Chief Executive Officer, Dan Clara, our Senior Vice President of Operations, and Michael Welch, our Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. At the conclusion of our remarks, we will open up the call for questions, and I will be available later for any follow-up questions that you may have. Before we begin, we must remind you that the discussion during the call today is likely to contain forward-looking statements.

Forward-looking statements are statements other than those which are historical in nature, which may include financial projections, forecasts, and current expectations, each of which are subject to significant uncertainties. For information regarding certain of the risks that may cause actual results to differ materially from these statements, please see our filings with the SEC from time to time, including our Form 10-K for the year ended December 2020, any subsequently filed quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, and our earnings release issued earlier today. We expressly disclaim any responsibility to update forward-looking statements. In addition, certain non-GAAP financial measures as defined under SEC rules may be discussed on this call. As required by applicable SEC rules, we provide reconciliations of any such non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures on our website.

We have also posted an updated investor presentation on our website, asburyauto.com, highlighting our fourth quarter and full year results. It is my pleasure to now hand the call over to our CEO, David Hult. David?

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Thank you, Karen, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to our fourth quarter earnings call. In the fourth quarter, we closed on the transformative acquisitions of Larry H. Miller and Total Care Auto, Powered by Landcar, Kahlo Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram, Arapahoe Hyundai, and the Stevinson Automotive Group, representing approximately $6.6 billion in annualized revenue. These acquisitions represent the right brands in high-growth markets and are aligned with Asbury's culture. We look forward to deploying our joint capabilities and growing together, and I'm excited to have our new team members as part of the Asbury family. 2021 was an all-time record year for Asbury. For the full year, we grew adjusted EBITDA by 94% and adjusted EPS by 112%. We delivered an operating margin adjusted at 8.1%.

We succeeded in adding great stores in targeted high-growth markets, and we completed the rollout of our online transactional tool, Clicklane, to all the legacy Asbury stores. In a challenging new vehicle environment, we delivered record profitability by improving our new vehicle margin, increasing our used vehicle sales, and growing our parts and service business, all while maintaining our improved employee productivity levels and using our strong cash flow for acquisitions. Our multiple business lines allow us to adapt and continue to deliver strong earnings in any business environment. We will also deploy Total Care Auto into our legacy stores and roll out Clicklane into our recent acquisitions, allowing us to further grow our earnings. Due to our record performance and strong cash flow, our balance sheet remains solid.

Our adjusted operating cash flow for 2021 was $632 million, an increase of $189 million over 2020. Our net leverage ended this quarter at 2.7 times. We will continue to use our free cash flow to manage our leverage and maximize shareholder return through share buybacks and acquisitions. In our earnings release this morning, we also announced that our board of directors has approved an increase in our share repurchase authorization by $100 million to $200 million. Now I'd like to give you a quick update on our five-year plan. Our same-store adjusted revenue grew almost 12% last year, exceeding expectations. Clicklane continues to deliver impressive metrics, generating over $570 million in additional revenue for three quarters in 2021.

Despite lower new vehicle inventory levels, Clicklane contributed an incremental 7% to our same-store growth. As previously noted, we had a very successful year regarding acquisitions. With these results, we maintain full confidence in the execution of our growth strategy. Based upon our results in 2021, we will update our five-year plan during our Q1 2022 earnings call. I will now hand the call over to Dan to discuss our operating performance. Dan?

Dan Clara
SVP of Operations, Asbury Automotive Group

Thank you, David, and good morning, everyone. Before I share our operating performance, I would like to thank all our teammates in the field for their hard work, dedication, and commitment to delivering an exceptional guest experience. In our earnings release this morning, we reported adjusted EPS of $7.46, a fourth-quarter record, up 68% over the prior year. We delivered strong results, enabling us to deliver an impressive gross margin of 20.4%, an all-time record and an expansion of 370 basis points versus the fourth quarter last year. Our teams continue to maximize productivity per employee, resulting in adjusted SG&A as a percentage of gross profit of 54.3%, a 710 basis point improvement versus prior year.

Our total revenue for the quarter was up 19% year-over-year, and total gross profit was up 46%. We improved our adjusted operating margins for the quarter from 6% in 2020 to 8.9% in 2021, and we'll continue to optimize our portfolio in the future. Now, I will turn to our same-store performance compared to the fourth quarter of 2020, unless stated otherwise. Starting with new vehicles. Based on current market conditions, we continue to be focused on being opportunistic with our inventory and improving grosses to maximize profits. Our new average gross profit per vehicle was $6,335, up $3,441 or 119% from the prior year period. All segment margins were up significantly from the prior year period.

At the end of December, our total new vehicle inventory was $207 million, and our day supply was at eight days, down 32 days from the prior year. We expect the day supply to remain low as we progress into 2022, trending up moderately towards the end of the year. Turning to used vehicles. Our used retail volume increased 15%, while gross margin was 8.2%, representing an average gross profit per vehicle of $2,623. As a result of our performance, our retail gross profit was up 64%. Our total used vehicle inventory ended the quarter at $402 million, which represents a 34-day supply, up three days from the prior year. Our used to new ratio for the quarter was 109%. Shifting to F&I.

Our strong, consistent and sustainable growth in F&I delivered an increase of $213 to $1,961 per vehicle retailed from the prior year quarter. In the fourth quarter, our front-end yield per vehicle increased $2,169 per vehicle to an all-time record of $6,362. Now to parts and service. Our parts and service revenue increased 13% in the quarter. The warranty revenue dropped 19%. Our customer pay revenue continues its healthy recovery, posting a 17% growth. We achieved over 149,000 online service appointments, an all-time record and a 16% increase over the prior year quarter.

Some of the benefits of increasing online service appointments include enhancement to the customer experience, higher customer retention, higher conversion rates, higher margins, and higher returns to our shareholders. With three full quarters of Clicklane at all legacy stores under our belt, we would like to share some performance metrics. We sold over 5,000 vehicles through Clicklane in Q4, of which 47% of them were new vehicles and 53% used. 91% of our transactions this quarter were with customers that were new to Asbury's dealership network. Average transaction time continues to be consistent with previous quarter, eight minutes for cash deals and 14 minutes for financed deals. Total variable front-end yield of $4,298 and F&I front-end yield of $1,846. Average credit score is higher than the average credit score at our stores.

80% of consumers seeking financing received instant approval, while an additional 10% require some offline assistance. 90% of those that applied were approved for financing. 43% of Clicklane sales had trade-ins, with 78% of such trades reconditioned and retailed to consumers with a total front-end yield of $4,490. 92% of our Clicklane deliveries are within a 50-mile radius of our stores, thus allowing us the opportunity to retain our new customers in our parts and service departments. As expected, Clicklane customers are converting at greater rates than traditional Internet leads. During our first few months after launching Clicklane, approximately 60% of our sales were new vehicles. Until inventory levels somewhat normalize, we will not be able to fully assess the full potential of Clicklane. We remain quite excited about the continued growth of Clicklane.

Lastly, I would like to extend a warm welcome to our new team members. All of you have built tremendous organizations that properly align with our North Star of being the most guest-centric automotive retailer. Our future is bright, and I look forward to meeting all of you. I will now hand the call over to Michael to discuss our financial performance. Michael?

Michael Welch
SVP and CFO, Asbury Automotive Group

Thank you, Dan. To our investors, analysts, and other participants on our call, good morning. I would like to provide some financial highlights which mark yet another record quarter for our company. For additional details on our financial performance for the quarter, please see our financial supplement to our press release today and our investor presentation on our website. Overall, compared to the fourth quarter of last year, our actions to manage gross profit and control expenses resulted in a fourth quarter adjusted operating margin of 8.9%, an increase of 209 basis points above the same period last year and an all-time record. Adjusted net income increased 89% to $163 million, and adjusted EPS increased 68% to $7.46.

Net income for the fourth quarter of 2021 was adjusted for acquisition expenses and acquisition-related financing expenses of $289 million or $1.02 per diluted share. Net income for the fourth quarter of 2020 was adjusted for a gain on dealership divestiture of $3.9 million or $0.15 per diluted share. In addition to the net income adjustments mentioned above, our fourth quarter 2021 EPS was negatively impacted by the interest and additional shares issued as part of the acquisition financing that was completed prior to the acquisition closing. If the financing had closed simultaneously with the Larry H. Miller acquisition, our adjusted EPS for the fourth quarter would have been positively impacted by $0.87 as a result of lower interest expense and fewer outstanding shares.

Now for the full year 2021 results compared to 2020. Adjusted operating margin was 8.1%, an increase of 240 basis points and an all-time record. Adjusted net income increased 120% to $549 million, and adjusted EPS increased 112% to $27.29. Our effective tax rate was 23.7% for 2021 compared to 24.8% in 2020. This quarter, we acquired $6.6 billion in annualized revenue. In order to finance the acquisitions, we completed debt and equity offerings totaling approximately $2.1 billion, a syndicated mortgage facility of approximately $700 million, and borrowed under our existing syndicated credit facility.

In addition, we spent approximately $34 million in capital expenditures in the quarter. We generated $632 million of adjusted operating cash flow for the year. Our balance sheet remains healthy as we ended the quarter with approximately $437 million of liquidity, comprised of cash, excluding cash at Total Care Auto, floorplan offset accounts, and availability on both our ABL line and revolving credit facility. Also at the end of the quarter, our net leverage ratio stood at 2.7 times below our targeted net leverage of three times. As David stated earlier, today, we announced that our board has approved an increase to our share repurchase authorization by $100 million to $200 million.

For 2022, we are planning for a tax rate of approximately 25%-26% and CapEx of approximately $150 million. This amount excludes real estate purchases and potential lease buyout opportunities that we consider to be financing transactions. In closing, I would like to thank our teams across the business who continue to work hard to ensure our current and long-term success. I would also like to welcome our new team members. Now I'll turn the call back over to David to discuss our 2022 objectives and expectations. David?

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Thanks, Michael. Turning to 2022, our key objectives are to continue our smooth transition with all of our new valued team members. Execute superior allocation of capital to maximize shareholder return. Continue the innovation and growth of Clicklane, rolling out this fully transactional tool coast to coast into our recent acquisitions. Integrate our insurance and F&I product provider, Total Care Auto, across the entire Asbury platform of dealerships, which will allow us to expand our F&I PVR. Execute our company-wide training initiative to continue the development and growth of our teammates and maintain our best-in-class operating margins in SG&A. I would also like to make a few comments regarding our expectations for this year. We are excited about 2022. We see good opportunities for automotive retail, and we expect that demand will continue to exceed supply for most of the year.

We do anticipate a gradual recovery in inventory levels in the second half of 2022 as OEM production improves. As a result, we are planning our business for a SAR of 15.5-16 million units and vehicle margins consistent with 2021. We will remain nimble and vigilant to adapt as conditions evolve. SG&A, as a percentage of gross profit, should continue to benefit from active expense management and improved employee productivity. We look forward to continuing to deliver strong results for our shareholders, be outstanding partners with our OEMs to steward their great brands, and offer an environment where our team members can thrive while providing the most guest-centric experience in automotive retail. Finally, I'd like to address all of my teammates at Asbury.

Our ability to add quality stores who, like us, care about serving our guests and being highly engaged in our communities could not have happened without you. You all have given us the ability to thoughtfully grow our core business because you align behind our vision. I appreciate all of you, and I am thankful to be a part of this team. People make the difference in any organization, and you're making us a better place to work, and you are creating an environment where people want to do business. Thank you for everything. This concludes our prepared remarks. We will now turn the call over to the operator and take your questions. Operator?

Operator

Thank you. If you'd like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star one on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speakerphone, please make sure your mute function is turned off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. Again, press star one to ask a question. We'll pause for just a moment to allow everyone the opportunity to signal. We'll take our first question from the line of Rick Nelson with Stephens. Please go ahead, your line is open.

Rick Nelson
Managing Director, Stephens

Thanks a lot. Good morning. Another great quarter. I'd like to ask you about the acquired stores. If they operate at a higher front-end yield and lower SG&A than the core Asbury is. I looked at the consolidated SG&A, you know. For example, the SG&A was slightly lower than the same store.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Rick, this is David. I'll start, and Michael can certainly jump in. As when we announced the deals, the comment was made they're accretive to Asbury. You know, it's early on in the fourth quarter. I think we had maybe 12 or 13 days in the quarter with LH, Larry H. Miller numbers, and then you add in the holidays, it's probably 10 or 11 days. Those acquisitions, as stated before, are accretive to Asbury. What you acknowledged and recognized is accurate.

Rick Nelson
Managing Director, Stephens

Got you. Are there opportunities to improve performance of the acquired stores? Is the bigger opportunity, you know, rolling TCA, for example, across the Asbury chain?

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

It's a great question. A couple things. You know, the best operation in the world has plenty of room for improvement, and we certainly do at our core stores and our new acquisitions. We certainly have an opportunity to continue to grow our used car performance. With the rollout of Total Care into the Asbury stores, that will certainly boost our F&I numbers as well, while parts and service continues to grow at a steady rate.

Michael Welch
SVP and CFO, Asbury Automotive Group

One other thing to add, Rick, is another opportunity for us is, you know, putting Clicklane in those acquisitions, and that will just give them some technology they didn't have before. That is an opportunity for us to just help them from a technology perspective.

Rick Nelson
Managing Director, Stephens

Okay. Thanks for that. Also, you know, like to gauge your appetite now to do more acquisitions. Do you slow things here temporarily, integrate what you've got, or, you know, is there an appetite to do something here over the near term?

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Yeah. Rick, this is David. I'll start, and Michael might jump in. Our goal was never to grow to be the largest or grow the fastest. It was really about being opportunistic and finding groups that really aligned with us. We allow them to continue to operate as they have been. It's a much longer integration period to get to know each other and integrate everything over. You know, we feel like our stock price is extremely cheap right now, and we're trading at an extremely low multiple, and we wanna be great capital allocators. You know, that could, you know, be a potential for some acquisitions or buying back our stock. But it's tough to say how the year will play out.

If something comes up that's accretive to our company and for our shareholders, we'll certainly act upon it. If it makes sense, if we feel like our stock price is being devalued, we'll certainly acquire some of our stock back.

Rick Nelson
Managing Director, Stephens

Great. Then the expectation for stable GPUs in 2022, what is the thought there that things would advance maybe in the front end of the year, and then we'd see some pressure on the back end and given your expectations for inventories to normalize?

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Sure. You know, the good news is, in the last year, everyone's been wrong all the time about inventory and trying to figure it out. The way we see 2022 as we sit here today, when you look at 2021, the first two quarters, inventory levels were higher and margins were a little bit lower. Then that reversed itself in the second half of 2021. Inventory really came down and margins went up. We see the reverse of that in 2022. Don't know that we'll be right, but we think the first half of 2022 will certainly have elevated margins like we saw in the fourth quarter. Then the second half of the year might look a little bit like the first half of 2021. Really difficult to gauge what's gonna happen between the pandemic and the chip shortage and everything else.

as we sit here today, that's the way we see it.

Rick Nelson
Managing Director, Stephens

Great. Thanks for all the color and good luck.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Thank you.

Operator

We'll take our next question from the line of John Murphy with Bank of America. Please go ahead, your line is open.

John Murphy
Managing Director, Bank of America

Good morning, everybody.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Good morning.

John Murphy
Managing Director, Bank of America

Good morning. Maybe just to follow up on Rick's just last question there. I mean, where do you think inventory is gonna normalize? I know, I mean, obviously calling the second half this year is tough, right? Because it's a very tough thing to call the timing. When things, the logjam is broken here, what do you think the level is the automakers are gonna go back to, and what do you think it means for gross? Is it somewhere between, you know, here and where it used to be, or is it all the way back to where it used to be?

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Very tough to predict. It's a competitive world and you never know what someone's gonna do to try and gain market share and grow their business. I think everyone's learned from the concept that we can be effective with a lower day supply. Everyone can benefit from that. Does that mean we'll stabilize at a 35, 40-day supply compared to a 65 or 70? I think it's too early to tell. To me, the demand seems so high right now, even when they're able to start catching up on the inventory between, you know, the rental car companies and fleet businesses and everything else, I just don't see the demand settling until sometime into 2023.

John Murphy
Managing Director, Bank of America

Yeah. I generally agree with you there. It's gonna be a while before things normalize. On the SG&A front, you know, the absolute you know, dollars as well as the percent of gross is pretty impressive. Is there a way to think about that going forward? Is it tied more towards units than the grosses, or is there a way for you to maybe link it a little bit more to grosses so we don't have this kind of variability in the numerator and denominator and stays a little bit more static and yet you keep, you know, more of the gross consistently over time?

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

It's a tough one, John. I would tell you, prior to the pandemic, we were focused on our productivity per employee, and that generally keeps your cost down. However, if margins certainly start to go backwards a lot, there will be some leakage into SG&A. I also think as technology continues to evolve over the next few years, that gives you an opportunity to hit new ceiling levels with production per employee. We see it as a pretty stable environment. You know, as margins start to come back in, say, call it 2023 at this point, again, who knows? If it's 2023, we also think we're gonna be that much more productive per employee in 2023.

We think we run lean and mean, and the stores do a tremendous job at keeping their expenses down and operating extremely efficiently, whether it's our marketing dollars that we spend or how we staff the stores. We just think it's a discipline and a core behavior of ours.

John Murphy
Managing Director, Bank of America

Okay. Just lastly, could you just kind of remind us exactly what's going on in Total Care Auto at Larry H. Miller's? Really, you know, is this kinda shedding light on not just, as Rick mentioned, spreading it across stores, but maybe even doing more on F&I and becoming sort of your own underwriter in some cases? 'Cause that's, you know, some of your peers are looking at this stuff and it seems like it might be an incremental opportunity, but also a little bit touchy because you don't wanna compete with the captives.

Michael Welch
SVP and CFO, Asbury Automotive Group

Yeah. I mean, Total Care Auto is a full, you know, F&I product supplier, so they take the place of some of the third parties out there. We basically retain all the profitability that used to go to the third parties. The other benefit is because we control both sides of the equation, we have the F&I side and we have the sale and the parts and service side, it allows us to kind of hold the customer throughout the whole process and really provide a better customer experience. There is some tremendous upside for us as we roll this out to our stores.

One thing we'll have to do just in next quarter, just for transparency, is we're gonna have to be able to show you guys, you know, dealership operations, TCA operations, and then the consolidated operations and make sure we kind of, you know, present that to you guys in a way that you can really see the impact. You'll see that coming next quarter when we have a full quarter of operations with TCA. We'll hopefully be able to give you guys the transparency to kind of see the benefits of that, operations.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

One quick comment on top of that. TCA is an extremely mature insurance company that's been in business over 30 years and is A.M. Best rated. It's woven into the fabric and DNA of the Miller organization and their stores. For that benefit, they have increased penetrations in product sales compared to the legacy Asbury stores. We feel confident as that gets rolled into Asbury, we will see the benefit as well in future improved product sales.

John Murphy
Managing Director, Bank of America

That functions as offshore self-insurance. Is that essentially kind of what's going on there with TCA?

Michael Welch
SVP and CFO, Asbury Automotive Group

It's onshore. It's just the underwriter behind the F&I products like vehicle service contracts, maintenance contracts, things like that on the F&I side.

John Murphy
Managing Director, Bank of America

Okay. All right. Thank you very much.

Michael Welch
SVP and CFO, Asbury Automotive Group

Thank you, John.

Operator

We'll take our next question from the line of Rajat Gupta with JP Morgan. Please go ahead, your line is now open.

Rajat Gupta
Equity Derivatives Structuring, JP Morgan

Oh, hi. Thanks for taking the question. I was just hoping maybe, you know, you could provide us a quick preview of what to expect, you know, during the first quarter print, you know, with regard to the long-term plan. Clearly acquisitions are well ahead of plan. You know, overall cumulative cash generation is gonna be much higher than what you had in mind, when you put out those targets. David Hult talked about, you know, a number of horizontal vertical adjacencies. You already have TCA and Salty. You know, is captive finance next on the cards? You know, maybe any color on what could be that extra use of that cash. You obviously have the buyback. Could that be a more consistent and bigger portion of the capital allocation mix going forward?

I have a follow-up. Thanks.

Michael Welch
SVP and CFO, Asbury Automotive Group

I'll just hit on the capital allocation portion. You know, I think with the share price, we always look at share buybacks and acquisitions in terms of the best return for the shareholder. You know, of course, at these share prices, share buybacks look pretty attractive. We have that kind of built into the five year model too, but it's, you know, it's hard to say, you know, where the share price is gonna trade and where the acquisitions are gonna price at, you know, three, four years into the future. It's the same capital deployment we've always looked at in terms of what's the share price versus what's acquisitions at. No changes there, just, you know, more, like you said, more cash flow to put into both those buckets.

On the five-year plan, on the update, you know, the key there is we did more acquisitions than we originally anticipated upfront. That will of course give us a larger base to do same store off of in Clicklane. I don't see a bunch of changes in terms of the path we're looking to go down. It's just the numbers will get updated with the larger base.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Your comment regarding the finance company, I would say, you know, we're in the really early stages of investigating and looking at it and see if that's something that makes sense for us or not. It's too early to tell at this point. We're clearly gonna generate a lot more cash this year. We will pay down mortgages and some debt that we have available, and whether it's through acquisitions or buybacks, really depending upon what the market gives us and what acquisitions are out there. We've seen a lot of opportunities for acquisitions already this year, and we've passed on them, just because it doesn't fit our threshold and our disciplined look at finding stores that are accretive to our company.

Operator

We'll take our next question from the line of Stephanie Moore with Truist. Please go ahead, your line is now open.

Stephanie Moore
Director Equity Research, Truist Securities

Hi, good morning.

Michael Welch
SVP and CFO, Asbury Automotive Group

Morning.

Stephanie Moore
Director Equity Research, Truist Securities

I wanted to touch on Clicklane and what your expectations are for marketing and advertising in 2022, and just increasing awareness for the platform.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Yeah, this is David. Stephanie, I would tell you know, we started off 2021 thinking we're gonna spend a chunk of money marketing Clicklane, and we quickly canceled all of that because it didn't make sense with the lack of inventory that we have. We constantly look at the tools that are out there. We still believe we have the best tool in the market, and it's a fully transactional tool. The benefit to that is the consumer experience. The downside to that is integrating that into new stores takes a little bit longer than if it was simply a lead generator and overlaying it into a website. It's gonna take us a little time to integrate the rest. I would tell you the marketing dollars won't pick up until the inventory levels are there.

You know, the software right now, because we don't wanna ruin the experience for the consumer, you could go on a website in one of our stores and see some stores has the Clicklane on the vehicle display page and some don't. The reason that is, it's really availability of the product. We don't wanna ruin the experience and have someone purchase a car that isn't available. While you have seasoned professional salespeople in the stores that can see inventory come in a month ahead of time, they're pre-selling into the pipeline, which is really shrinking the inventory availability for Clicklane. It's just not prudent to spend the money right now to market it. We'll wait for inventory to catch up.

Stephanie Moore
Director Equity Research, Truist Securities

Understood. Then changing gears, I think we're all pretty aware that majority of the OEMs are exploring pretty aggressive, you know, EV expansion goals and as well as a lot of kind of new exciting models. Maybe you could talk a little bit about the conversations you're having with the OEMs about, you know, new models, particularly around EVs, new selling methods, you know, direct to consumer, and just kind of in general, you know, how you're preparing yourself as dealers, you know, to meet this, a lot of these new models and kind of the years ahead. Thanks.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Sure. You know, we started about almost four years ago now, you know, to install charging stations at our facilities and so on, and getting up to speed on training as new product has come out. You know, a few years ago, there was some concern about the consumer adoption to EV. You can really feel the wave now coming where the consumers are being far more accepting of EVs, and we're excited about the opportunity to sell some of these products. We believe some of the electric cars that are coming out from some of the legacy OEMs, their quality and fit and finish to us is superior than some of the startups that we've seen to date and insofar as their products. So we're adapting and we're healthy, and we're ready to go.

We're still of the belief that as far as the supply chain goes from the legacy OEMs and the franchise dealer is the best model for the consumer. These cars are complex, and they need people locally that they can count on to help them when issues arise. On a quarterly basis, we track in our service departments, combustion engine dollars spent per repair order, hybrid, and then fully electric. It's still consistently the same. Right now, the highest dollar spent per repair order on the fully electric cars. You'd expect that with the new technology that's coming out. That'll improve over time as well.

We think by having a tool like Clicklane, that is a complete transactional tool, not a lead generator that's gonna get back to you, that really negates the need to sell direct to consumer from some of these electric car companies. As inventory becomes available and car companies have to compete with one another, the differentiator they have is the people on the ground selling the product. We like our position. We believe as long as we take care of our consumers and we offer them a high level of service, that the franchise model makes a lot of sense.

Stephanie Moore
Director Equity Research, Truist Securities

Great. No, that's all very helpful. Thank you so much.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Absolutely.

Operator

We'll now take our next question from the line of Bret Jordan with Jefferies. Please go ahead, your line is now open.

Bret Jordan
Managing Director, Jefferies

Hey, good morning, guys.

Dan Clara
SVP of Operations, Asbury Automotive Group

Good morning.

Bret Jordan
Managing Director, Jefferies

How should we think about used vehicle valuations as the year progresses? Is it just sort of an inverse as new supply comes up, used comes down? Or do you think used can soften before that? The follow-through on that is sort of as in the Clicklane mix, as you're selling 53% used, is it a different profile of car than what you would be selling on average? You say the FICO score is higher. Is this a younger, higher value used car?

Dan Clara
SVP of Operations, Asbury Automotive Group

Bret, good morning. This is Dan. I'll address the first question regarding the values. You know, it's hard to tell, but we see the values starting in November, December have adjusted, meaning that they're not growing exponentially as they were before. Until the inventory levels for new cars somewhat stabilize, the used car valuation is gonna remain where it is right now. We don't believe that when there's a correction that it'll be an immediate correction. It's gonna be a gradual correction. We do believe that that is gonna be dependent on the new DSI, new car DSI.

On the second question, as far as Clicklane sales, you know, we're selling a low cost of sale car under, you know, call it $10,000, $8,000, and we're selling the high cost of sales certified pre-owned luxury vehicle in our Clicklane tool. So no different than what we're selling in our stores, just a much better experience and a much faster transaction.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

I would add, the down payments are higher on Clicklane, the credit scores are higher for this simple reason, Brett. It's consumers that have the ability and aren't worried about financing, but they value their time. They realize that it's a full transactional tool that they can get the purchase done in a 15-minute span, and they move on. We certainly have a seven day buyback, no questions asked, which probably gives them some level of comfort. I think at the end of the day, it's clearly about convenience, which is what's driving the higher credit scores.

Bret Jordan
Managing Director, Jefferies

Okay. You called out a $4,400+ GPU on the Clicklane used. Was that just the used cars you were selling that you'd taken on trade via Clicklane as well, so you built really sort of well-sourced inventory?

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

That was a consumer who purchased a new vehicle on Clicklane, traded a car, and we took that trade, reconditioned and sold it.

Bret Jordan
Managing Director, Jefferies

Okay, great. Thank you.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Yep.

Operator

We'll take our next question from the line of David Whiston with Morningstar. Please go ahead, your line is open.

David Whiston
Senior Analyst, Morningstar

Thanks, good morning. On the M&A front, have you noticed so far this year any difference in seller asking prices compared to 2021?

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

It's a great question, David. I would say it really depending upon the brand and the location of where it's at. In what I would call some markets that are not growing at some rate as others and weaker brands, they're bringing lower multiples for sure. In those highly desirable markets and big stores, they're still bringing a premium at this point in time.

David Whiston
Senior Analyst, Morningstar

Do you see a lot of selling sellers being unreasonable, though, thinking, well, you know, look at the margins now, I should be able to assume that into perpetuity and you're having to push back?

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

I think, you know, when anyone's selling anything and then you have a buyer, everyone's gonna take their position, and the seller certainly wants to assume that. I think you also have some people maybe that aren't fully sellers. They're just testing the waters in the markets to see what valuations are and what they could possibly get. We don't spend a lot of time looking at a lot of deals. We say no pretty fast, and we really only spend time on the deals that we think make sense for us. It's hard to really say. I could tell you the activity we've seen in the last 60 days has been every bit as great as it has been for the last 12 months.

David Whiston
Senior Analyst, Morningstar

Okay. On the TCA restricted cash, I was just curious if there ever is a really bad crisis like when the pandemic first hit or Lehman collapsing, is there any way you could access that cash for general liquidity if you needed to?

Dan Clara
SVP of Operations, Asbury Automotive Group

On TCA cash?

Michael Welch
SVP and CFO, Asbury Automotive Group

Yeah.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

No, the TCA cash, most of that cash is for investments that have to be there for insurance purposes to cover future claims. We do pull the cash from TCA. The excess cash gets pulled from TCA and pulled over to Asbury used for general corporate purposes, as it earns out. Every month, we're pulling kind of the excess cash out of the business. What's left there is just investments that are needed for future claims.

David Whiston
Senior Analyst, Morningstar

Finally, the special item in the quarter on the bridge commitment fee, was that for GAAP booked in interest expense?

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Yes. That was, I think I may have misspoke when I read it. I think I said $289 million. It's $28.9 million if I misspoke that one. Yeah, that is an interest expense for GAAP.

David Whiston
Senior Analyst, Morningstar

Okay, thank you.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Thank you, David.

Operator

Once again, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star one. We'll take our next question from the line of Rajat Gupta with JPMorgan. Please go ahead, your line is now open.

Rajat Gupta
Equity Derivatives Structuring, JP Morgan

All right. Great. Thanks for getting me back in the queue. I was accidentally on mute before my follow-up, the previous question. I just had a question on the used vehicle business. Clearly, you know, a nice execution there. You know, things have started to improve, you know, in terms of the overall same-store performance, you know, after some mixed quarters in the past. What would you attribute that to, you know, anything company specific, you know, that is driving that turnaround? And just how do you view the sustainability of that going forward? Thanks. Is Clicklane also like a major part of it, or not? Thanks.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

I'll start and then Dan can finish this out. You know, your point was obvious. We had lower comp numbers, so that certainly helped. There has been a gain focus at our stores. I'll tell you, we're more of a conservative than an aggressive group. What I mean by that, you know, 36 years in automotive for me, the pricing valuation right now is hard to get my head around because I haven't seen numbers like this before. We try and stay disciplined at a 30-day supply or 30-35-day supply. Could we have a 45-, 50-, 60-day supply of used cars? Sure. If the market swings, that would put us in a tougher position. We really like that discipline of having a lower day supply.

I think it'll continue in the acquisitions that we have or are coming on. I made the comment earlier, they're more accretive to our company. One of the big areas of opportunity that they have, their used to new ratios are lower than the core legacy Asbury stores. So there's an opportunity to grow used car sales there, but your behavior doesn't change overnight. It's gonna take some time to work on that with them and get the potential out of those stores with pre-owned.

Dan Clara
SVP of Operations, Asbury Automotive Group

Raj, I would add to, you know, the. It's been a main focus of us as an entire team, but more importantly, the operators at the store level, getting behind our vision, and executing. What I mean by that is anything from a used car perspective is really about having the right car at the right store where it turns the fastest, and for the highest margin. We have the tools to, and the historical that shows that, and we maximize it on a month-to-month basis to put the cars where they belong and turn them at a faster pace. So very pleased with what the operators have done. I cannot thank them enough, but we got plenty of room to continue improving.

Rajat Gupta
Equity Derivatives Structuring, JP Morgan

Got it. Great. Thanks for that color, and good luck.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

Thank you.

Dan Clara
SVP of Operations, Asbury Automotive Group

Thank you.

David Hult
President and CEO, Asbury Automotive Group

This concludes our discussion today. We appreciate your participation and look forward to discussing our first quarter results in April. Have a great day.

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