Good day everyone, and welcome to the Cintas investor call. Today's call is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Mr. Jared Mattingly, Vice President, Treasurer & Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you, Ross, and good morning everyone. This call and the Q&A session that follows will contain forward-looking statements. Actual results could differ materially from projected or estimated results. In particular, forward-looking financial information for the post-closing combined company is inherently uncertain due to a number of factors outside of Cintas' and UniFirst control. Information regarding factors that could cause differences in actual results is available in today's press release and presentation and in Cintas' and UniFirst SEC filings. The information presented and discussed on this call is representative of today only. Cintas and UniFirst assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements. This call is copyrighted and may not be used without written permission from Cintas and UniFirst. Here with me today are Todd Schneider, Cintas' President and Chief Executive Officer, and Scott Garula, the company's Chief Financial Officer.
Jim Rozakis, Cintas' Chief Operating Officer, will also be available during the Q&A portion of the call. This morning, we announced that Cintas has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire UniFirst. The transaction is subject to the completion of customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals and approval by UniFirst shareholders. We have made today's presentation deck available on the investor relations section of our website. You can access it now and follow along throughout the call. While this call will be mainly focused on the transaction, we appreciate that many of you will also be interested in our upcoming financial results. Todd will briefly touch on some top-line performance figures from our most recent quarter, which were included in the press release that we issued this morning. Beyond that, we will not be sharing any further details until our third quarter earnings call, scheduled for March 25th.
Before we begin, please review the forward-looking statements and non-GAAP disclosures in the presentation and in our press release. I will now turn the call over to Cintas' President and Chief Executive Officer, Todd Schneider. Todd.
Thank you, Jared, and good morning everyone. We appreciate you all joining us on short notice. Earlier today, Cintas announced it has agreed to acquire UniFirst in a cash and stock transaction that values UniFirst at $5.5 billion. Given the strategic and financial value this unlocks for Cintas, UniFirst, and our customers, reaching this point has been an important priority for us. The extensive courting process with UniFirst leadership team, the board, and the Crotty family has only served to reinforce our view that our two companies are a great fit. Scott and I will now share details about the transaction, and then we'll open it up to questions. At its core, the transaction is all about combining the complementary capabilities of Cintas and UniFirst to enhance our ability to deliver customer workday solutions across North America.
Both companies have a rich heritage of putting our customers first, and this transaction will advance our ability to serve them. By doing so, we are delivering on our commitments and promises to customers while while simultaneously creating value for our shareholders. We operate in a highly competitive market that is serviced by a broad range of diverse and well-resourced companies. With UniFirst, we will enhance our capabilities to compete in this marketplace and deliver greater efficiency to customers, which will ultimately benefit workers with more reliable, cost-effective garment and facility service and first aid and safety programs backed by continued innovation. The transaction also amplifies and accelerates the benefits of our ongoing investments in technology, including route optimization, digital platforms, and automation. We're pleased with the technological advancements that we have made as a standalone company.
We will have a more enhanced approach to our technological advancements by combining with UniFirst. Finally, we're confident that the combination will create compelling financial benefits, including operating cost synergies that will enable benefits to customers and create long-term value for shareholders. When you combine all these strategic points, this is about building a more efficient business that's better equipped to compete in a dynamic and evolving industry. When we think about acquisitions at Cintas, it really comes down to two things, customers and employees to serve those customers. I have followed UniFirst for 35 years. I know the kind of business they run and the employees they attract, and I have a deep respect for both. Their customer base, geographic footprint, and operational model complement ours, so this is truly an ideal strategic fit.
We firmly believe this transaction will help us become more efficient and better equipped to compete in a dynamic, evolving industry, which will enhance the long-term value for customers and shareholders alike. In order to deliver on those objectives, we'll need the team partners from UniFirst. We'll be adding 300,000 customers, and we simply can't service them without a team. That's why we look forward to welcoming the overwhelming majority of the UniFirst team to Cintas once the deal closes. Our two companies share so much in common, rooted in our shared commitment to customer service, which adds to my confidence the combination will lead to even better results for our customers and our shareholders. Let me expand on three ways that combining our capabilities will enhance our ability to serve customers and workers.
First, by combining our complementary product and service capabilities, we will be able to meet a wider array of customer needs and help them simplify vendor management. We will also be able to offer more customized solutions to address our customers' specific diverse needs. Second, we will be able to deliver enhanced operational efficiency and reliability. Our increased reach means we will be able to bring more services to more customers in more locations, while at the same time, our technology investments will make it easier for those customers to adopt and manage those services. This means that some Cintas and UniFirst customers will be able to add new products and services from the combined business, which will make our offering more competitive in a dynamic, evolving industry. Finally, we will unlock greater innovation and further enhance our customer value proposition.
By bringing our brands and our workforces together, we will ensure even greater consistency in delivering high-quality products and services to meet our customers' safety, cleanliness, and compliance needs. We will quickly develop and deploy innovative solutions. Both Cintas and UniFirst have invested considerably in technology to support our customers and enable our employees to operate more efficiently. The benefits of those investments will continue and expand post-transaction. Investments in digital infrastructure, route optimization, ERP systems, CRM platforms, analytics, and automation are expected to bring greater consistency, lower service costs, and shorter delivery times. In addition, we will be able to provide more data-driven insights to our customers, enabling them to optimize their services. Finally, we will deliver an even more seamless experience across customers. All this translates into our ability to spend more time with customers to better understand their needs and help them operate more efficiently.
As we have demonstrated throughout our history, that translates into better customer outcomes and improved growth and value for Cintas. We wanted to highlight that even with an expanded customer base, we continue to have considerable growth potential and runway ahead of us for a combined company. The combined technology platform will help Cintas be a more competitive player in last-mile logistics in the highly fragmented North American markets we serve, as well as against other procurement options, including direct purchase, direct managed programs, and hybrid approaches. There are over 16 million businesses and more than 180 million workers in this area, and less than 8 million workers currently wearing garments from Cintas or UniFirst. At closing, the combined company will serve approximately 1.5 million customer locations, so the runway for growth remains significant.
With that, I'll now turn it over to Scott to discuss the financial profile and transaction details. Scott?
Thanks, Todd, and good morning, everyone. First, I want to express my excitement for the transaction as well as my appreciation to our respective transaction teams that completed a tremendous amount of work to help get us to this point. Now let me briefly outline some of the notable financials in connection with the transaction. We have identified approximately $375 million in operating cost synergies expected to be realized within four years. These synergies come from three primary areas. First, operational efficiencies, which reflect procurement and sourcing ability, SG&A integration, and best practice sharing across service, logistics, and plant operations. Second is technology integration, including the acceleration of digital route optimization and fleet efficiency tools, integrated ERP and customer management platforms, and expanded data analytics.
Finally, improved customer service with greater route density, improving service consistency and cost efficiency, supply chain resilience, and broader product portfolios. Importantly, these are operating cost synergies only and do not factor any top-line benefits into the model. That said, we expect the transaction to be accretive to Cintas earnings per share by the end of the second full year after closing. Under the terms of the agreement, UniFirst shareholders will receive $310 for each share of UniFirst common stock and UniFirst Class B common stock they own, comprising $155 in cash and 0.772 shares of Cintas stock based on a Cintas share price of $200.77.
As Todd mentioned, the transaction represents approximately $5.5 billion in enterprise value and an implied multiple of approximately 8x trailing twelve months EBITDA, including synergies. The acquisition will be financed with cash on hand, committed lines of credit, and/or other available sources of financing. Cintas has also secured fully committed bridge financing for the transaction. Pro forma leverage at closing is expected to be approximately 1.5x debt to EBITDA. This maintains our strong investment grade profile and preserves capital allocation flexibility. Importantly, we expect earnings per share accretion by the end of the second full year after closing, no change to our dividend philosophy, and continued commitment to disciplined capital allocation. We believe this structure balances immediate value to UniFirst shareholders while preserving long-term value creation for Cintas shareholders. Before I turn it back to Todd for some closing remarks, a note on timing.
We expect the deal to close in the second half of calendar year 2026. The Croatti family affiliates have agreed to vote in favor of the transaction, which is subject to UniFirst shareholder approval and other customary closing conditions. With that, I will turn it back to Todd.
Thank you, Scott. As you can probably tell, we are genuinely excited about this transaction. Before we wrap up our prepared remarks, I'd like to briefly touch on our preliminary third quarter results. As Jared mentioned, we'll be hosting our third quarter earnings call on March 25th, but we did want to provide some top-line consolidated figures for you. Third quarter total revenue grew a strong 8.9% to $2.84 billion. The organic growth rate, which adjusts for the impacts of acquisitions and foreign currency exchange rate fluctuation, was 8.2%. We look forward to getting back together with you in a couple of weeks to discuss the quarter in more detail. Turning back to UniFirst, let me close by highlighting a few key points. First, the combination meaningfully advances our long-term strategy.
It enhances our ability to better serve customers across North America. Second, the transaction reflects our disciplined approach to capital allocation. We are acquiring a high-quality asset with clear, actionable cost synergies and a compelling value accretion. Third, we believe we can seamlessly integrate UniFirst into our business post-closing. Cintas has successfully completed and integrated many acquisitions over the years, including the G&K transaction back in 2017. We will apply that same integration discipline here. We recognize this is a significant transaction and firmly believe that we will be successful in the long run based on our previous M&A and integration experience, as well as what I alluded to earlier, in that both companies are squarely focused on providing the best possible customer service experience. We are confident that together, we will build a more competitive, more resilient, more innovative company.
Again, until the transaction closes, both companies will operate independently. Before we open the line for questions, I'd like to take a moment to recognize the incredible employee partners at Cintas and the team partners at UniFirst. Their collective dedication, professionalism, and commitment to service excellence are what enable us to deliver essential workday solutions to businesses and workers across North America every day. We are deeply grateful for their hard work. We are excited about what this next chapter will bring as we move forward together. With that, I'll turn it back to Jared.
Thank you, Todd. As you can imagine, we have a number of things in the works at Cintas as we roll out this news across all of our stakeholders today, but we do want to answer your questions. Remember, we'll be back in a couple of weeks to discuss Q3 earnings, so please keep your questions focused on the transaction. With that, Ross, please open it up for questions.
If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad now. Please be prepared to ask your question when prompted. You'll also be allowed to ask one follow-up question. Once again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your phone now. Our first question comes from Manav Patnaik from Barclays. Please go ahead, Manav.
Thank you. Good morning, gentlemen, and congratulations on finally getting to this point. My first question is, you know, you've done, you know, I guess, deals of proportionate size with G&K, and even before that you had a few. I guess my question is, you know, is there any reason to believe the, you know, upside from execution you had from those deals, you know, can they be repeated here? Kind of tied to that, you know, your management bandwidth to handle the execution of the size of this deal.
Good morning, Manav. Thanks for your question. We're highly confident in our position in preparing to integrate. We have, as you referred to, a significant repetition with G&K in 2017. That muscle memory is alive and well. One of the great things benefits that we have is that a significant portion of the management team at Cintas was here and was highly involved in that transaction back in 2017. We didn't even really have to dust off the materials. We know the playbook and the team is ready to execute.
They're leveraging their experiences and learnings from the last experience. Regarding the bandwidth, you know, we have a high degree of respect for UniFirst team, the leadership team, all the team partners. As I mentioned, you know, we expect that the overwhelming majority of those team partners will be joining Cintas. When we think about transactions, we think about that you get a lot of resources with M&A. The two most important are the customers and the people that serve those customers. We'll be focused on putting together a great plan to make sure that we retain both so that we can be highly successful.
Got it. If I could just follow up. You know, Scott, I think you mentioned that there were no revenue synergies included in the numbers you gave out, which makes sense. Maybe just some you know, help on you know, where those could come from, 'cause presumably that would be the expectation.
Hey, Manav. Good morning. This is Jim. I'll take that question on the operational synergies. I think you could think of those from really four major cost categories. First being our material cost, as we've spoken many times about our sourcing capabilities, and we expect to continue to be able to drive down expenses there to improve sourcing. Second would be in that material cost bucket, in addition, would be stock room optimization. As we've discussed in the past, we have deployed technology for garment sharing, and we believe we can employ that technology across the UniFirst network. That'll allow us to improve the speed of getting products to customers, so increasing overall customer satisfaction, while being able to reduce cost.
The second bucket that we would think about would really come from production. We would be able to go ahead and implement our operational excellence process throughout the UniFirst network there, which we would be able to continue to deploy automation. Both of those will allow us to operate more efficiently and improve capacity utilization across that network. The third bucket would be delivery expense, where we would be able to implement our Smart Truck technology, which will improve overall routing efficiency and again, improve that capacity utilization. The final bucket to think about would be G&A, where we'd be able to remove duplicate costs.
As we think about revenue synergies, and these have not been contemplated in our model here, but we certainly do have a long-standing history of making M&A. While it'd be hard to speak about this one at this point in the transaction, we can speak to what we've seen historically as we've made other acquisitions across the board. That is, we have typically, we're able to show up with a larger, more broad and complete product line offering. Over time, the customers of our newly acquired companies, they're able to see the value in enhancing and expanding the relationship with Cintas. Through our cross-sell efforts, we've been successful in creating that value and being able to expand the relationship. We expect that this will look the same.
Fair enough. Thank you, guys.
Thank you, Manav.
Our next question comes from Tim Mulrooney from William Blair. Please go ahead, Tim.
Hey, this is Sam Kusswurm for Tim. Thanks for taking our question here. I guess I wanted to first ask about more of the regulatory angles we think about the larger workwear industry. Are there any end markets or applications where a uniform rental program is just clearly the preferred option? I guess what I'm asking is, are there certain instances where it'll be difficult for regulators to make the case that there are good alternatives to a uniform rental program, such as a direct sales program?
Sam, thanks for the question. First off, we're highly confident in the regulatory process. We're going to work together with the two companies to make sure that we have a clear, straightforward, and strategic approach. As you mentioned, you know, there's a large market that we compete with all kinds of different companies. You know, even the largest of users, and even those who get more soiled, we have many examples where they buy and others clean for them. They may have a managed program where they will buy and tell their employees to clean them.
They may have a program where they buy and they have a company, an outsourcing company just clean them, which virtually any company can do that. They may have a hybrid program. We don't see any end markets that are a concern whatsoever as a result of our analysis that we've completed on this and our experience with these and competing with these all these different companies that can offer these programs.
Got it. That's helpful. Maybe just trying to be thoughtful here, but, you know, what are some of the top execution risks in your mind that, you know, could delay the cost synergies you outlined, you know, be it IT, labor, customer retention, or even route redesign?
Yeah. Well, certainly, when we think about the transaction, I mentioned, you know, employee partners, team partners, and customers. That's where our focus is. You know, we will be able to deliver on synergies, we say over 4 years because, you know, those take time. With that, you know, technology is always, you know, we're not a technology company, but every business is a technology company now because every business either is in the business of creating it or using it. We think about that, and we are well down the path of preparing for that to make sure that we have a seamless integration for not only our customers but for all of our employee partners.
That's certainly a focus because we want to make it easier for our people to do their roles. To do their jobs, and we want to make it easier for our customers to do business with us. We'll be focused on that. There's plenty of planning that has gone into this, and we feel incredibly well prepared to handle this. As I mentioned in the earlier response, we have a lot of repetitions here, and we have great muscle memory and tenure that allows for us to be highly prepared to execute and mitigate any risk whatsoever.
Great. Thanks, guys.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Jasper Bibb from Truist Securities. Please go ahead, Jasper.
Morning, guys. Maybe following up on an earlier question, I'm wondering how you're thinking about the potential initial revenue turn at close, maybe using the experience of G&K as a benchmark. I think that deal was maybe, like, 9 or 10% new G&K customers. Hard to say at this point, I know, but do you think that benchmark will be any different in this deal?
Good morning, Jasper. Thanks for the question. It's quite frankly, we just announced and we haven't closed, so I'd say it's just too early to get into those levels of details. You can certainly anticipate we will be prepared to do so, as we get down further the line.
Makes sense. I know it's a bigger deal. Could you maybe compare for us how this integration looks maybe compared to the G&K integration from a complexity, from an integration standpoint, or maybe the product lines are a little bit different. Just any detail there on how you're applying the learnings from the G&K deal to UniFirst would be helpful.
Yeah. It's certainly a larger scale, but the concepts are identical. As I mentioned, the team is in place and has the playbook and is ready to go. Once we get our transaction closed, we will execute and do what we have historically done, which is execute at a very high level, and we're prepared to do that.
Got it. Thanks for taking the question, guys.
Our next question comes from Jason Haas from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead, Jason.
Hey, good morning, and thanks for taking my question. I'm curious if you could talk about how the UniFirst, I guess, board and family thought about the deal, just because we know there's been a history where you guys were interested in the acquisition. It seems like they had held out for a while. I guess why now, what got them to the table, and then why is now the right time? Thanks.
Jason, it's a good question. You know, I'd say start with this. I've learned over the years, it can take time. Working through these deals, you know, they're usually complex. You have to recall, this is a family controlled asset, and it took time for us to make the case. It is a real positive for the UniFirst team members and the customers of UniFirst. I believe the deal structure played a role in it as well, meaning the mix of consideration from all cash to a mix of stock and cash is certainly a benefit, and it better aligns the interest among all parties with mutual benefits to both sides.
If you don't mind, I'll take a moment to just describe some benefits of the deal structure, meaning the 50% cash and 50% stock. First is we get to leverage the strength of our premium market valuation. The strength of our market premium with Cintas provides an attractive currency for us to use for the acquisition of companies with lower valuation. As you have done the math, the dilution is minimal. It also preserves our capital allocation flexibility, meaning we're going to have very little leverage. By using a portion of the proceeds of stock, we will complete the transaction with an expected leverage of 1.5 times debt to EBITDA.
This flexibility for future capital allocation deployment is really important to us and allows us to maintain our current strong investment-grade credit ratings. It also, with using 50% cash and 50% stock, allows us to avoid almost $140 million a year of interest expense. Significant. It also provides upside opportunity for UniFirst shareholders on the future success of the merger. Meaning, keep in mind, 82% of the common shareholders at UniFirst also own Cintas stock, so they won twice.
That applies for all those common shareholders who are going to benefit from the immediate premium that they get, but they also get to enjoy the benefits of the Cintas execution and the ride along the way. That will apply to everyone who is a shareholder of UniFirst and at close will be a shareholder of Cintas. Lastly, it does provide some tax benefits to the sellers. I think all those came together to make this a really good deal for all parties involved.
Got it. That certainly makes sense. As a follow-up, I assume that UniFirst is going to be brought into the Cintas brand and the go-to-market will be all you know in one motion together. It's not necessarily my question. Correct me if that's wrong, but I assume that's the case. I guess my question is: What sort of costs are there to do this integration? Are there investments needed in facilities or anything like that that we should be aware of? Thank you.
Yeah, good morning. This is Scott. I would just say that, you know, given where we're at in the deal, the fact that we just announced today, it's a little early. But just think about it generally expect these to be in line on a proportional basis with what we experienced with G&K. I know there was an earlier question about modeling, but I would say in this area, think about it the same way that we experienced with G&K. You know, some of the one-time expenses that I would think about is, you know, severance, retention, lease termination, and you know, those type of expenses.
As we get closer to, you know, the closing the deal, we'll certainly be able to give some more color on that topic.
Got it. I don't know if I'm able to squeeze in one more, but if I can, just to follow up on that, do you plan to have adjustments? Like, will those be added back to get to adjusted EPS? 'Cause I know you typically don't use those too heavily, but given the size of the deal, I was curious if that's the case here.
Yes. Good question. Yes, just like you saw with G&K, we will report on, you know, adjusted EPS as well as GAAP EPS, you know, after closing.
Okay. Perfect. Thank you very much. Appreciate it.
Our next question comes from Stephanie Moore from Jefferies. Please go ahead, Stephanie. Stephanie, is your line muted?
Sorry, this is Harold. Sorry, this is Harold on for Stephanie Moore. I guess just on the regulatory approval side, given the strong overlap, do you think do you guys expect any future divestitures across any regions? How are you guys thinking about that as you progress through the regulatory approval process?
Good morning, Harold. We do not anticipate any divestitures, and we don't think there's any need to whatsoever. As I mentioned, the combined entity is going to serve 1.5 million customer locations in a market that has more than 60 million businesses. Those companies that we compete with retail, e-commerce, other outsourced solutions, hybrid programs, and traditional competitors as well. We don't see any need whatsoever for that. As I mentioned, we'll have less than 8 million wearers in an area that has 180 million people that go to work every day, that are all wearing apparel that we can provide.
It is a massive market with very large and sophisticated competitors. We believe that this deal will help us and position us to better compete in that, which we think is going to be really good for businesses, customers, and workers.
Got it. Thank you. That's all for me.
Our next question comes from Shlomo Rosenbaum from Stifel Nicolaus. Please go ahead, Shlomo.
Hi. Thank you very much for taking my questions, and my congratulations to you guys getting to this point. As I look at the announcement this morning versus what you guys were talking about a little over a year ago, it looks like the deal price is higher, the structure is 50/50 versus all cash. What I wanted to understand is, when you sat there, you know, with the Croatti family, what were the sticking points that got you over this point? I mean, there's a lot of focus that you guys had in terms of overwhelming majority of employees are going to be retained.
Is that something that was an issue for them that they were so concerned about? Is that something that, you know, in any way changed the expectation that you had in terms of synergies that you could get that are beyond the baseline? I guess my question is: Is there any concessions that you had to make that would limit the upside that you could get over several years versus what you would have thought a year ago in the way that the deal was coming and what you were offering at that point?
Good morning, Shlomo. Thanks for the question. It's, you know, as I mentioned earlier, it's these deals take time. You know, there's when you have a family asset like this, you know, it's an emotional deal. Sometimes it just takes time for these things to make their course. We have made no commitments that would limit our ability to benefit from everything we plan with the transaction. You know, so what got them over the top?
Yeah, it's a question better posed to them, but I mentioned deal structure, and I think their confidence in our ability to make sure that this transaction goes really well. You know, it's going to be a big portion for them, the shareholders. So it'll be very important to them. You know, the more time we spent with them, I think they feel quite good about our ability to integrate and extract out the synergies that we need and to have a long successful course together. Now, at Cintas, we make decisions based upon our principal objective.
Our principal objective focuses on a lot of things, but it focuses on the long term, and it focuses on our three key constituents, which are our shareholders, our customers, and our employee partners. This deal checks the box for all three, and as well as the long-term success of our organization. We feel really good about it, and I believe the Perotti family and all UniFirst shareholders should feel the same.
Okay. I wanna go back to just one question that was asked before, like you haven't talked about revenue synergies. But, you know, and obviously we appreciate you keeping it conservative. But if we were to think about it and to just start what if-ing, what are some of the obvious items that you will be able to bring to the UniFirst customers in a more complete offering that they're not offering right now in terms of a high-level thing that might be, you know, "Hey, we do this really well, and we offer it, and they just don't do that, or they're not really a presence in the market for that"?
Yeah, Shlomo, I think Jim referred to it as we have a really broad suite of products and services. When we almost every time we make an acquisition, we are able to bring that broad suite of products and services to that new customer base. We don't do it immediately, we do it over time. That is one of our competitive advantages in the marketplace. We see that as an important role. If history is any indication of the future, we think that customer base will really enjoy learning about that and see opportunities to help them run a better business, to bring efficiencies to their business, allow them to focus on what makes them successful.
I'd say that's probably the way to think about it. We would sure hope we would get revenue synergies, but we're not modeling that as far as when we think about making the deal.
Okay. Thank you so much.
With that, this concludes the question and answer session. I'll turn the call back over to Jared for closing remarks.
All right. Thank you, Ross, and thank you all for joining us this morning. We appreciate your continued interest in Cintas, and we look forward to speaking with you soon when we share our third quarter results later this month. Thank you.
This now concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.