Good day, everyone, and welcome to the Copart Incorporated Q1 Fiscal twenty thirteen Earnings Call. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. For opening remarks and introductions, I would like to turn the call over to Mr. Jay Adair, Chief Executive Officer of Copart Incorporated. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you, Jennifer. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the Q1 call for Copart. We've got some updates that we'll give you this morning. I'm going to pass it over to Will first for a financial update, and then I'll go through some of the operational things happening within Copart.
Will? Thank you, Jay, and good morning, everyone. Before we begin our comments, I'd like to remind everyone on the call that our remarks will contain forward looking statements, including statements concerning our views of trends in our business. These statements are neither promises nor guarantees and are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause the final results to differ substantially from those projected or implied by our statements and comments. E risks include trends in average selling prices for cars and other factors that can affect our gross margins.
For a more complete discussion of the risks that could affect our business, please review the management's discussion and analysis and the risk factors contained in our 10 Q, 10 ks and other SEC filings. With that, I'll now provide a few brief comments about our financial performance for our Q1 of our 2013 fiscal year. The growth was primarily driven by increased unit volume in North America, which was driven by the The growth was primarily driven by increased unit volume in North America. Volume in the U. K.
Remained relatively flat despite the impact of the continuing recession, which is leading to fewer accidents and a higher likelihood that cars involved in accidents will be repaired rather than salvaged. The growth in North America continues to be broad based. We benefited from the additional volume provided by the exclusive contract we entered into with Nationwide in our Q3 last year. But we also saw growth in the insurance segment, excluding Nationwide, as well as the non insurance segments of our business. Volume from non insurance suppliers grew by almost 9 percent over the same quarter last year, but remained at 20% of our total volume due to the overall growth in our insurance volume.
By the end of the quarter, we saw the volume from the Nationwide contract reach its full run rate. Same store sales on consolidated basis and expressed in units was up 5.5%. In North America, same store sales in units was up 6.2%. The increase was driven by continued growth in our market share for salvage cars from insurance companies and our continued expansion into the domestic used car redistribution market. On a consolidated basis, revenue per car was relatively flat as the detrimental impact of lower used car pricing and commodity pricing on a year over basis was offset by beneficial mix of products sold and supplier contracts.
Yard operations expense remained flat on a year over year basis at $88,000,000 despite the growth in volume as we continue to reduce cost and to spend more efficiently, particularly in the operations of our non insurance segments. Our gross margin grew from $95,200,000 to $105,400,000 or almost 11%. And our gross margin percentage grew by 190 basis points, illustrating operational leverage in our business. General and administrative costs were $27,300,000 compared to $26,000,000 for the same quarter last year. The growth was due to increased costs associated with expanded international operations and incremental costs associated with the rollout of our new ERP system.
We expect to incur incremental costs associated with the rollout of the ERP system throughout fiscal 2013 and the 1st part of 2014. These costs will fluctuate from period to period depending on the phase of the rollout. We expect to be fully integrated by the end of calendar 'thirteen, at which time these costs should decline. Our operating income increased from $65,400,000 $74,400,000 or almost 14 percent, and our operating margin percentage grew by 2 10 basis points. Our tax rate for the quarter was approximately 36%.
We expect 36% to be the approximate rate for the entire year, excluding discrete tax event. The increase in our estimated tax rate is due to the change in our international structure, our revised expectations regarding the ultimate settlement of certain state tax issues and our uncertainty of the continuation of certain federal tax incentives. We ended the quarter with over $131,000,000 in cash. On a sequential basis, accounts receivable increased as we grew inventory and income taxes payable grew as we make no estimated tax payments in our 1st fiscal quarter. During the quarter, we generated $75,300,000 in operating cash flow as net income and non cash expenses generated approximately $63,900,000 in cash, while movement of the balance sheet, primarily growth in taxes and accounts payable, generated another $11,400,000 We expended $48,100,000 for the acquisition of businesses and other capital assets, including $17,200,000 for lease buyouts and $20,100,000 for the purchase of land.
We currently own approximately 75% of all of our land. Finally, during the quarter, we expended $13,900,000 for the repurchase of 500,000 shares of our own stock. That concludes my comments. I'll now turn the call over to Jay Adeha, our CEO, for further remarks on the quarter.
Thank you, Will. Again, good morning, everyone. I wanted to start the conversation with Hurricane Sandy and give you an update on that the impact of that super storm. We have mobilized for the storm in a bigger way than I've ever seen historically. The biggest event that I've seen prior to this would have been Hurricane Katrina.
So I want to start by giving you some comparisons to show you difference between the storm that affected the Northeast and the storm that hit Louisiana and Mississippi in 2,005. For 1, the size of the storm, while smaller in the Northeast as opposed to the intensity of the storm in Katrina that hit the South. While the storm is not as or was not as high on the scale in terms of degree of intensity, the population density of the 2 markets are night and day. The population density of obviously of the Northeast is so much higher than the South. So I'll give you some statistics here that I think will play that out.
The second thing that I would say is that what we saw in Katrina was massive flooding of a city that stayed underwater until the water was pumped off. What we saw in the Northeast was a storm surge that came in and left. And so the ability to know whether or not there is a claim came much quicker. And the ability to know whether we had claims in Hurricane Katrina took much longer to find out. A, B, the cars had been sitting in water for days in Hurricane Katrina.
In Hurricane Sandy, it was simply an increase in type and level of water and then a decrease and it was out. So these vehicles have not been sitting in water for days, which means the quality of the vehicles is much higher. So here are some stats that I think you'll find interesting. Hurricane Katrina, after 3 days, we received 3 59 assignments. In Hurricane Sandy, after 3 days, we received over 6,000 assignments.
Hurricane Katrina after 7 days, just over 1,000 assignments came into Copart. Hurricane Sandy after 7 days, over 17,000 assignments. After 14 days, Hurricane Katrina, over 4,000 assignments. Hurricane Sandy after 14 days, over 40,000 assignments. So where we sit right now, we're just over 25 days of real impact on the storm.
And if you look at the 21 day mark for Katrina, we were just under 10,000 assignments. The 21 day mark for Sandy is over 50,000 assignments. So to say that it's 5 times larger using those numbers right now, I don't think is an overstatement. This is an unbelievable experience. I flew into Jersey and Philly last week and hit all of our locations in that market, went into New York this week and got back last night and hit all of our locations in that market.
In Hurricane Katrina, we were dealing with 8 locations that were impacted and we created 2 sub lots to hold additional cars because we didn't have room. In Hurricane Sandy, we have 19 locations that are affected and we have 11 additional sub lots that we have added to bring in business. We've already picked up and this is a phenomenal number. We've already picked up over 30,000 vehicles associated with the super storm. Again, at this point in Hurricane Katrina, we just had over 10,000 assignments.
We've actually picked those vehicles up. We have over 60,000 vehicles that have been assigned to us at this point. So we work through the holidays, through Thanksgiving, all of our yards were staffed. We have been running full speed since. I mean these are 24 hour operations.
The trucks are running at nighttime to tow out of New York City because the traffic is too heavy during the day. We've got trucks running in the day. We've got trucks running at night. So it's just a phenomenal experience to see it, to see locations that have 10,000 cars on the ground, unbelievable. And the quality of the cars is very high.
As I said in the very early part of these opening remarks, these are vehicles that have been flooded, but they've got a lot of usable panels and parts. And so we expect the returns to be strong on these vehicles. We've seen that already in the initial sales that we've had. These vehicles are bringing far more than Hurricane Katrina because they haven't sat in water for well over a week. So we've got our teams working every single day right now on picking these vehicles up.
We are picking up unheard of numbers of cars on a daily basis, 2,000 cars a day in the affected area, which is just a phenomenal number. So we are on it. I get asked often if there's what's the profitability. This was one of the questions that came up 7 years ago in Hurricane Katrina. We're not focused on trying to make a profit right now.
We are shipping in or have shipped in loaders. We have gone out and bought entire dealerships out of all their trailers, their travel trailers, so that we have places for drivers to live. We have gone in and rocked and developed entire yards and spent over $1,000,000 rocking a facility. So we are right now focused on making sure that we exceed our customers' expectations. I've never seen a storm like this in my life, but this is where Copart shines.
This is what we do well and this is one of the reasons a lot of our customers do business with us on a regular basis is because every 7 to 10 years when one of these super storms hit, this is when we step up to the plate. And the logistical work that's happening right now to see to think that cars come in 2 at a time on a truck and to walk into a facility with 10,000 cars and realize that 5,000 truckloads had to come in and be unloaded with loaders and placed in row locations and inventory is a phenomenal effort. It's unbelievable. I really can't I can't express how impressed we are with the team and their effort and the work that everybody is doing and how appreciative we are of everyone who's been working night and day to get this done for our customers. So it's a big deal.
We'll be selling off some of this inventory in the quarter that we're in. We're starting to hold 1,000 car sales now in New York. And primarily, just if you're wondering, the vast majority of the volume came out of New York. New Jersey is probably 20% of the volume and New York is closer to 80% of the volume that we've been handling. So really impressed with that and we'll be selling off a small amount of those vehicles in the current quarter Q2.
We'll be selling off the majority of those vehicles in Q3 and then there'll be a tail of vehicles that will sold off in Q4. And that should conclude all of the impact of Hurricane Sandy. I don't think there will be too much being sold off in the new fiscal year. So I want to give you that update on Sandy. I also want to talk about CapEx in Q1.
We spent approximately $48,000,000 $13,000,000 of that was comprised of 1 major lease buyout that was done on a facility that we've had for over a decade. The rest of that was a new location. That facility that the police buyout was in California. The rest of the locations we acquired a new location in Chicago that will be coming online in the future, a new location in Kentucky that will be coming online. We did a lease buyout in Columbus and we did a lease buyout and an additional expansion in Tennessee.
So that's CapEx for the quarter on stores, new stores and buyouts. As far as companies and new locations that we opened up, we acquired a company in the United Arab Emirates in Dubai. That's our first expansion into the Gulf Cooperation Council or as you'll refer hear us refer to it on the call as the GCC. That includes the UAE, but also some other countries including Saudi Arabia and we believe that market to be over 100,000 vehicles in size. So that will be expansion there.
We also announced recently that we have acquired a large company in Brazil. That gives us 5 locations in that market as we start to expand across Brazil. And we announced that we expanded in Germany. Both the GCC and the Brazil acquisition are traditional businesses like Copart has in Canada, the UK and the U. S.
The acquisition that we made in Germany is an online only platform and that basically opens us up to that market, gets us into the market where we can start to interact with clients and show them the options that are in front of them. We believe that market to be in excess of 600,000 vehicles. So that is it for my prepared remarks and I'll go ahead and turn it over for questions at this time, if you would, Jennifer. Thank you. Thank
We'll go to John Lovallo with Merrill Lynch.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the call. Jay, I'll start with you, if you don't mind. Just another question on Katrina. I think if sorry, on the Sandy, if we look back at Katrina, I think one of the challenges that Cobalt faced was that you had to relocate a lot of employees to help with the processing of these vehicles.
I mean, are you seeing the same type of efforts put in place now? Or do you have facilities that are kind of closer to where the impact was?
No, I mean, you cannot you can't have it up of your team on-site in a cat situation like this. So I was in Long Island yesterday, and we had folks from Albuquerque, Sacramento, Andrew was from Boston. I mean, I just think off the top of my head, we had people from Portland all over the country. So we have shipped people in that are working in I mean, our facilities aren't big enough for the amount of people that we send in. So we've got modular office space that we bring in, that's being powered off generators and we've got a cap trailer that's hooked up that's satellite linked to the company.
So I mean it's that kind of degree. And in addition to that, all of our facilities are open on the weekends company wide to help clear cars. So you're trying to get a hold of insurance to find out where the vehicles are and a lot of these cars are they think the car is in one location and now the car has been impounded or the car got washed down the street and isn't in the same spot that it was supposed to be in. So the degree of complexity that exists in a cat situation like this is just unheard of. And I can tell you that Katrina was the biggest I'd ever seen.
I mean before that I would say it was Andrew in 92. And this is far and away bigger, no comparison. You can't even begin to compare the 2. It is that much bigger event. So it is an all on effort.
Even the U. K. Is helping us out in the process. So we've got every single resource in the company being utilized. We're shipping in loaders from around the country.
We're shipping in loader operators to move vehicles from around the country. So it's a full on effort.
That's very helpful. And then just one last one on Katrina. I think excuse me, Katrina, on Sandy. During Katrina, I believe that there was some delay in title transfer because I think of backlogs in some of the state agencies. I mean, just given some of your comments earlier, it seems like this may not be the case.
I mean, would you comment on that?
That's a great question because one of the things that's nice about New York is it's a state that's easy to they have a 907 process, so it will be transferred very quickly. So we'll be able to move the iron. Like I said, we're already seeing 1,000 car sale today in Long Island. We'll have an 1100 car sale tomorrow at Newburgh. So the nice thing about New York is that the vehicles are going to move very quickly.
They'll be a little slower to move in Jersey, but thankfully there's not near as many vehicles. So we're going to see the process of these vehicles being moved very quickly compared to Katrina, which is a good thing because the volume so far are far and away higher. I don't know. People have asked me how many units you're going to get. We're well over 60 now.
I don't know where the number is going to come in at, but I will report on that in the next quarter.
Okay. Thanks very much guys.
Thanks John.
We'll take our next question from Bob Labick with CJS Securities. Good morning.
Good morning.
Hi. Very exciting stuff on the international expansion, and thank you for some of that color there. I was hoping you could maybe tell us a little bit more maybe in terms of the when we should start seeing revenues and maybe roughly the total revenues and you probably don't want to break it out by country, but maybe in aggregate of the 3 and this is agency versus purchased and with the U. K. It took a couple of years to ramp to material profit contribution.
What are your expectations for these markets?
Yes. So Brazil is not a purchase scenario. So we are processing vehicles on a fee. Very similar to the market we have with the U. S, there's a lot of work to be done.
This is a high growth market. So this is a market that we're seeing an emerging middle class that's getting insurance. And because of that, you've got this really high growth rate when it comes to insurance. So the biggest challenge we have right now is facility space. We've got 5 locations.
We just bought a facility in the quarter we're in now, which is just literally a piece of dirt that we're greenfielding because the 5 facilities we bought are already full and don't really have room for future growth. The biggest challenge we have in Brazil right now is the market is growing so fast that we have to have room to store the vehicles. So we've got revenue down there. We'll be talking about that in future quarters. But right now, I'm not really thinking about that so much as we're thinking internally about how to get those vehicles switched over to more of our model.
So right now, it's not on VB2. We'd like to introduce VB2 to that market like we did in the U. K. We'd like to make sure that we have the logistics handled for storage because that's a huge challenge right now, but just a huge opportunity. In Germany, it's an online platform.
So there's really it's very simple. It's very easy. You don't have the logistics issues that you have in the rest of the markets that we do business. So I don't see a whole lot of difficulty with our current platform in Germany. Really what we want to do is build relationships there and then start to introduce those customers to looking at data from the UK, from the U.
S. And seeing if there's a possibility to do business the way we do it in other markets and see if that makes sense to do it that way in Germany. That's really the opportunity that exists there.
Okay, great. That's very helpful color. And then just quickly in the U. S, the same store sales, so the unit volume was very strong and obviously even excluding Nationwide. There have been some anecdotal evidence out there that claims may be flat to down this year, but you guys obviously have very strong insurance volume gains.
Can you maybe talk a little bit about what you're seeing out there and how you're getting the pet strength?
Yes. Was that for me or was that for
Will? Either one. Okay.
Yes, I would say that up until Hurricane Sandy hit, yes, claims volumes have been flat to down. Now it's kind of a you get kind of a dual effect going forward because not only do we have all the claims that are going through associated with Sandy that we've got to process, but it puts a strain on us as an industry. It puts a strain on the insurance industry. And so we usually see even more total losses going forward because of that. I think that will be the case.
Historically, claims have been relatively flat to down. There's a number of factors that we could discuss on that. We're up because we've had market share gains in the past 2 years and that's been the reasons for that growth. Why the market share gains? I think Hurricane Sandy is a prime example.
There's one of many reasons I could talk about VB2 and the returns and I could talk about a number of other areas, Bob. But Hurricane Sandy is just a prime example. Putting the full force of Copart to work in a cat situation like this is really a big deal. And these cats, they just seem to be getting I mean, I feel like we think we've got it figured out and we have a cat like this and we go, wow, there's somewhere. We start the Monday morning quarterbacking process and talking about how we could do the next cat even better and how we could improve it.
So it's getting to be where they're so big that I think it's going to end up having a division of our company that literally is waiting for the next Superstorm to go ahead and launch in these things, because it really brings the full bear of our whole company to play. All of us are involved in it. But yes, it's just been in the past, it's been market share gains. If we look forward into Q2, Q3, Q4, this is going to be obviously a big year for us. I would imagine it will be a big year for the industry just because this cat, not only is it significant volume already, it's continuing to come in.
We haven't seen it drop off that much. I mean, we've had over 1,000 car assignment day just in the affected area this week. So as long as we keep seeing that kind of volume come in, it's going to be a big, big year associated with the cat. It's going to be a big year around the country because you're putting strain on the industry as a whole for resources. And so if you're borderline fixing total, you're probably going to total the vehicle.
So there's really the effect of both those going forward.
Okay, great. Thanks very much.
We'll go next to Bret Jordan with BB and T Capital Markets.
Good morning. A couple of quick questions. And one just sort of how to think about the cost associated with Sandy. You made a comment about not focusing so much on making money on this recovery volume so far, but it sounds as if you've got tremendous assets deployed and the volume sell through comes in the Q3. Is it margin dilutive, I guess, from an overhead standpoint, just bring all these cars in, in the current quarter?
We sort of think about this as a real driver on Q3 but maybe a detractor from current.
Yes. It could it should have some negative impact in the current quarter that we're in right now. I would expect that simply because we are deploying so many resources and we're towing vehicles at enormously high tow rates. Tow rates will triple and quadruple in a cat situation like this. That's very common.
Another one question on the GCC volume, you're talking about 100,000 unit market. Is that sort of is there a window to think about sort of in time to reach that type of volume? Is that a 3 to 5 year? Is it longer term? Or where do you see the growth rate there?
No, 3% to 5% makes sense. That's how we look at the market.
We'll go next to Bill Armstrong with C. L. King and Associates.
Good morning, Jay and Will. Most of mine have been answered, but just on Brazil, I was wondering if you could give us maybe a sense of the size of that market down there. And what sort of managerial or operational challenges that might present to you, managing something that's so far away?
Well, we're in Sao Paulo now. That's the largest market for us, Bill. And we're not even in Rio yet. So it's a large market. It's based on our estimates around 200,000 vehicles currently, but it's a high growth market.
It's growing at low double digit growth every year right now due to insurance company, insurance coverage that's coming into play. And as the market gets more and more familiar, And again, this is something we've seen in the past as we've introduced VB2 and we see returns go up, it actually causes the total loss ratio to go up. So it's a high growth market. It could be 5 years from now, we could be looking at a market that's 300000 to 400000 units, something like that. So it's going to be a play for us, kind of like the question that Brett asked earlier.
It's a 3 to 5 year play for us and it's going to be somewhere in 10 to 15 locations to properly cover the market. And when we've done that, then you're looking at similar volumes to the U. K. Would be like, yes, that we end up handling.
Okay. And I guess why Brazil compared to, I don't know, Mexico or some other types of markets?
Sure. Well, Brazil
What's the attraction of Brazil out of all the markets you kind of have available to you?
Yes. Well, Mexico is a high population, low insurance market. Most people are driving around without insurance. Brazil is a high population with a much higher insurance penetration. And so you want to pick a market where you're going to have a chance to process vehicles.
You don't want to pick a market where people drive cars and don't have insurance. And in Brazil, not only do they have a lot of insured vehicles so that we have a market we can immediately jump into, but it's a high growth market. And so it's very attractive to us. Makes sense. Okay.
Thanks for that color.
Thank you.
Thank you. We'll go next to Gary Prestopino with Barrington Research.
Hi, good morning. Good morning, Gary.
Hey, Jay. Well, just looking at what you guys did in the U. K, it looks like you had a pretty significant expansion in the gross margin there, actually the difference between the revenue and the cost of vehicle sales. Is that more or less just a function of the currency impact with the pound getting stronger versus the dollar?
There was very little FX impact on these financials.
So you're just getting a better yield on the car as you're selling it?
No. Actually, the absolute contribution on the purchase car remains about the same. It's just a lower selling price, which increases your contribution percentage. Okay.
And then, in terms of Brazil, as well as Germany, Jay, is there right now significant competition in both of those markets? Is it a fragmented market each of them where you'd have an opportunity to continue to buy other companies similar like you did in the U. K?
Well, Brazil is like the U. K. And the U. S. It's the same model.
And yes, it's highly fragmented. So you know how that goes. With respect to Germany, the model doesn't exist. Right now, vehicles are sold online and they go directly from shops to end user. And so there's a number of reasons why we think that there's issues with that model.
A number of reasons why we think there's an opportunity to improve returns from the logistics that take play to having absolute sales where the buyer knows that they end up buying the vehicle as opposed to bidding and maybe getting the vehicle 1 in a 100 times. So what we've done is we entered the market through the platform that is being utilized out there today. We have another large competitor in that market. And what we'll be doing is looking at that market to see if there's an opportunity to introduce some new ways of selling vehicles in Germany.
Is your platform in Germany just exclusively used to sell vehicles?
Yes, our platform right now, yes, it's used exclusively to sell vehicles, yes.
Okay. Thanks. You're welcome.
We'll go to Paul Lewis with Wade Bossett Research and Management.
Hi. Just interested looking at the international expansion, which you've done rather cautiously before starting with the UK, but now Germany, Dubai and Brazil. Does this mark is our confidence higher and we're ready to go after more foreign markets? Or is this enough for now? No, we're going to continue to expand into foreign markets.
We had to have systems in place and so part of that reservation in the past was getting some of the process and the system in place and we've got more of that today. So I'm not saying look forward to 3 more markets expanding in the next quarter, but I'm saying we're going to continue to grow in these markets and then we'll be looking at other markets as well. Anything in particular in mind? Sure. I'd be happy to tell you on the call.
No, we won't be disclosing that on the call today. Thanks. Couldn't help but wonder. Sure. I understand.
Thank you. Thanks.
At this time, I'd like to turn the call back over to Mr. Jay Adair.
Thank you, Jennifer. Well, again, we appreciate everybody coming on the call. And again, as we said in some of the remarks, we look forward to reporting on total units for Hurricane Sandy and total impact. And we'll just keep working on that for the next month in making sure we pick up all those vehicles and get that processed for our customers. So at this time, again, I want to thank you for coming on the call and we look forward to reporting on the next quarterly call.
Thank you.