Morning from our London office, where I'm joined, as usual, by Michael Pratt and Will Shaw. Today's update will cover another record performance in the quarter and half, and add current detail to our end markets in terms of activity and forecast. We continue to deliver on each of the five actionable components of our strategic growth plan, Sunbelt 3.0. The results of which will have delivered a remarkable three years of expansion, revenue, and profit growth, while importantly forming a foundation for our next growth plan, which we'll be launching April 30th during our Capital Markets event in Atlanta. Before getting into these items, I'll begin by addressing our Sunbelt team members listening in today. Beginning with a thank you. A thank you for engaging in our recent safety week with a level of enthusiasm, professionalism, and buy-in that I thought could not be topped in 2022.
Throughout the first week of October, each of you practiced the very spirit of Engage for Life by taking in the topics and lessons learned from your team members from across our business, then spending time discussing the takeaways and applying them to your individual branch and market, market circumstances. For me, personally, it was a highlight of the year, seeing firsthand our teams in action, and the results that followed added affirmation of the very principles of Engage for Life, as we recorded one of our best ever months from a safety statistics standpoint. So thank you for your efforts and commitment, and please keep leading positively and safely out there. Now, let's begin with the highlights on Slide 3. We delivered strong performance in the Q2 , contributing to another record quarter and half.
This performance was driven by strength in our North American end markets, the ongoing momentum and execution in our business as we follow our Sunbelt 3.0 playbook, and the very clear structural progression being realized in our industry. For the half, group revenue and rental revenues increased 16% and 13%, respectively, while the US revenue improved by 18% and rental revenue by fourteen. Group EBITDA improved 15% to $2.583 billion, while adjusted PBT was $1.312 billion, growing 5%, leading to EPS of $2.26. From a capital allocation standpoint, and in accordance with our priorities, we invested $2.5 billion in CapEx, which fueled our existing locations and greenfield additions with new rental fleet and delivery vehicles.
We expanded our North America footprint by 74 locations, 45 through greenfield openings and 29 via bolt-on. Further investing $705 million on 16 bolt-on acquisitions in the half, and returned $411 million to shareholders through dividends and buybacks, and announced today an interim dividend of $0.1575, a 5% increase. Following these investments, our net debt to EBITDA leverage is 1.8 times, comfortably within our long-term range of 1.5-2. These activities demonstrate our confidence in the ongoing health of our end markets and the fundamental strength in our cash-generating growth model. Let's move on to our outlook. Slide 4 details our full year guidance for rental revenue, CapEx, and free cash flow.
Consistent with our November 20 trading update, we're guiding to revenue growth of 11%-13% in the US, 14%-16% in Canada, 6%-9% in the UK, combining for 11%-13% at the group level. As detailed on the 20th, these adjustments reflect the specific year-over-year effects of extreme weather events, prolonged writers and actors strikes, and slightly lower fleet utilization than planned. However, still at historically strong levels, indicating strength and demand, and further supported by healthy end market activity levels and forecast. Consequently, our CapEx guidance is unchanged, and the detailed CapEx slide can be found in the appendix. As a result of the somewhat lower revenue growth and impact to EBITDA and increased interest costs, we now anticipate free cash flow of circa $150 million.
On that note, I'll hand it over to Michael, who will cover the financials in more detail. Michael?
Thanks, Brendan, and good morning. The group's results for the six months are shown on Slide 6. Robust end markets in North America have enabled the group to increase rental revenue 13% in the six months on a constant currency basis. This growth was delivered with strong margins and EBITDA margin of 46% and an operating profit margin of 28%, delivering an operating profit 12% higher than last year. After an interest expense of $251 million, 64% higher than this time last year, which reflects both higher absolute debt levels and the significantly higher interest rate environment, adjusted pre-tax profit increased 5% to $1.3 billion. Adjusted earnings per share were $2.26 for the period. Turning now to the businesses. Slide 7 shows the performance in the US.
Rental revenue for the six months grew by 14% over last year, which was on top of growth of 28% last year. This has been driven by a combination of volume and rate improvement in strong end markets. The rate piece continues to be an important part of the equation, given the increased costs we face, whether the interest costs, as you saw on the previous slide, or the impact of inflation on our rental fleet and operating cost base. The total revenue increase of 18% reflects higher levels of used equipment sales than last year.... As we've discussed before, fleet landings have become more predictable, enabling us to reduce physical utilization from the record levels we have seen over the last couple of years, although as Brendan commented earlier, it's lower than we anticipated.
We've used the opportunity this provides to take advantage of strong secondhand markets to accelerate the disposal of some of our older fleet planned for later in the year. This lower level of utilization is a principal explanation for the depreciation charge increasing at a faster rate than rental revenue. This factor, combined with the increased level of used equipment sales, is a drag on margins in the near term. Excluding the impact from lower margin used equipment sales, EBITDA margins increased slightly year-over-year. In line with our 3.0 strategy, we opened 42 greenfields and added a further 22 locations through bolt-on acquisitions, which also affect margins.
All these factors contributed to drop through for six months of 53% and an EBITDA margin of 49%, while operating profit was $1.5 billion at a 31% margin, and ROI was a healthy 26%. Looking forward, our revised revenue guidance will result in a lower level of drop through in the second half, particularly the Q3 . As a result, we now expect drop through in the high 40s rather than low 50s for the full year. Turning now to Canada on Slide 8. Rental revenue was 12% higher than a year ago at $382 million. The major part of our Canadian business is performing well as it takes advantage of its increasing scale and breadth of product offering as we expand our specialty businesses and look to build out our clusters in that market.
In contrast, our film and TV business has been impacted significantly by the strikes in the North American film and TV industry, which have persisted for longer than we anticipated. This has also had some impact on the rest of the Canadian business, given our success in cross-selling our more traditional rental product into the film and TV space. There has been a similar knock-on impact in our US and UK markets. The disconnect between rental revenue increase and the increased depreciation charge is exaggerated by the film and TV impact, but out in the US, physical utilization is lower than we had anticipated. Despite these challenges, Canada delivered an EBITDA margin of 43% and generated an operating profit of $80 million at an 18% margin, while ROI is 14%. Turning now to Slide 9.
UK rental revenue was 3% higher than a year ago, at GBP 301 million. Excluding the prior year impact of the demobilization of the Department of Health work, rental revenue was up 12% as we take market share. While we continue to make progress on rental rates, this has not kept pace with the inflation environment in the UK, which is impacting margins. As a result, the UK business delivered an EBITDA margin of 28% and generated an operating profit of GBP 33 million at a 9% margin, and ROI was 7%. Slide 10 sets out the group's cash flows for the six months and the last twelve months.
This emphasizes the strong cash generation capability of the business, and this cash has been deployed in accordance with our capital allocation policy, with capital expenditure of $2.5 billion, funding principally fleet replacement and growth, and $676 million invested in bolt-ons. The significant increase in capital expenditure results in a free cash outflow for the six months of $355 million. Slide 11 updates our debt and leverage position at the end of October. Our overall debt level increased in the six months. In addition to capital expenditure and bolt-ons, we returned $368 million to shareholders through our final dividend for 2023, and $43 million through buybacks. As a result, leverage was 1.8 times, excluding the impact of IFRS 16, in the middle of our target range.
Our expectation continues to be that we'll operate within our target leverage range of 1.5-2 times net debt to EBITDA, but most likely in the lower half of that range, as we continue to deploy capital in accordance with our capital allocation policy. Our debt services are committed for an average of 6 years at a weighted average cost of 5%. With that, I'll hand back to Brendan.
Thanks, Michael. We'll now move on to some operational color, beginning with the US on Slide 13. The US business delivered strong rental revenue growth in the quarter, with general tool and specialty growing 13% and 14%, respectively. This growth is on top of very strong growth last year in the quarter of 24%. More specifically, underlying growth in specialty for the quarter, when accounting for lower storm-related revenues in October, was 16%. Frankly, either measure is strong when considering it's lapping last year's 31% growth in the same quarter. The strength of this performance remains very broad, extending through virtually all geographic regions and specialty business lines. Consistent with what we said in our Q1 update, and others in the industry have been noting, time utilization is below the record levels we experienced last year, albeit, as I've noted, still historically strong.
This reflects a couple of things. First, improvement in supply chain constraints in the sense that OEMs are now making deliveries in line with commitments in terms of timing and quantity. And second, the nature or profile of mega projects, which are making up an increasing portion of the non-res, non-building construction landscape. With mega projects, there tends to be a longer early phase, when utilization is relatively low and can be many months before the projects ramp up to a longer crest than, say, traditional commercial construction, where at that stage, the dynamics improve. At the moment, we have a high proportion of these projects in their earlier phases. This is not to be confused with a changing construction market forecast. These remain as they were, which I'll cover in just a moment.
A very important thing to understand is that rental rates continued to grow year-on-year throughout Q1 and Q2. Doing so, despite the utilization movement I've just covered, reflecting the ongoing positive rate dynamics in the industry, specifically the discipline and structural progress, attributes that we firmly believe are here to stay. Moving on to Slide 14, we'll cover the non-construction end markets. Our specialty and general tool businesses service an incredibly large and high demand, non-construction end market, where there continues to be vast opportunities to drive rental penetration from a low base and increase our addressable market breadth and depth.
We commonly refer to a large component of this non-construction end market as MRO, the maintenance, repair, and operations of the geographic markets we serve, such as facility maintenance, clearly defined as a market in which $hundreds of billions are spent annually, running and maintaining facilities that make up the 100 billion sq ft under roof and growing of US commercial space. The scale and growing revenue opportunities for our business within this space are immense. The rental of our broad range of specialty and general tool products will increase in what is very much a structural growth arena in the very early stages of a long runway for growth. With other non-construction examples being live events, emergency response, and municipal spend, these incredibly large addressable markets make up much of our collective specialty business revenues.
However, increasingly also benefit our general tool business as our cross-selling prowess and capabilities continue to improve. Now that we've touched on non-construction markets, let's turn to Slide 15 and cover the latest construction market trends and forecasts. With another three months of construction starts and project continuations, and despite macroeconomic concerns and the pressures that come with inflationary and interest rate realities, you will see construction activity has proven to be incredibly resilient, and the forecasts have been notably accurate. We've set out our usual lineup of construction history and forecast, and starts, and put in place data. These are consistent with those updates shared in conjunction with our full year and Q1 results. There are some puts and takes between non-resi, non-building, and resi. However, the year-to-year construction growth trajectory remains virtually identical to the last print.
It's worth noting that the more recently updated starts, which are slightly higher than those shared along with our Q1 results, as illustrated in the top left chart and the second bullet point below, have yet to translate into these put in place data figures on the top right. So these put in place figures will improve directionally in line with the starts. These starts and ongoing projects have been fueled by the clear momentum behind reshoring or US de-globalization, and federal government spending acts, all contributing to the rise of an era of mega projects. Let's explore the drivers behind these private and public sector investments on Slide 16. We introduced this slide in June, which now makes for a third print, and considering the level of influence, we thought it would be useful to cover it again.
The drivers behind a significant portion of the recent levels of starts and forecasts fall into three main categories, with many projects being driven by more than just one. To understand the current era of construction in the US, it's very important to put into context these drivers in terms of both scale of circumstance and the very likely long duration they exist. I'll spare you the detail we covered in June, and rather ask you to think of the material construction consequence of each. First, reversing a multi-generation globalization of US manufacturing and production to domestic onshoring and reshoring. Second, the role technology now plays in society, business, and manufacturing, and by relation, making up a larger portion of the US construction landscape. And third, legislative acts, three of them, injecting $2 trillion of direct funding or stimulus, amounting to a once-in-a-lifetime trifecta of acts.
Let's now detail one of the outputs of this group of drivers, mega projects, on Slide 17. Illustrated here is the updated US mega project landscape, which will give you an appreciation for just how significant this market opportunity is. As a reminder, our internal definition of a mega project is one that has a cost of $400 million and above. We've included all projects meeting this definition, where construction is either underway or planned to start by April of 2024. When viewed on a map, you can't help but realize the geographic breadth and the sector depth of these projects. There are 499 projects underway or soon to begin, ranging in size from $400 million to $12 billion, totaling $620 billion of projects funded by private and public sector....
As we've covered and demonstrated consistently, projects of this scale and sophistication require suppliers with relatable scale, but also the expertise, experience, breadth of products and services, and the financial strength to meet the needs of the customer. Make no mistake, Sunbelt is performing well in this sea of mega projects and will continue to do so. As we've indicated previously, we've signaled our confidence in doubling our overall market share on these projects and presently exceeding this with an estimated 30% share of the total combined projects currently underway. Let's now turn to our business units outside of the US, and we'll begin with Canada on Slide 18. Our business in Canada continues to deliver strong growth and expansion as customers recognize the growing breadth of products and services that we offer.
This growth is coming from existing general tool and specialty businesses, complemented by well-placed additions of greenfield openings and bolt-on acquisitions. The market conditions are not dissimilar to the US in terms of activity and demand, while also demonstrating ongoing strength and discipline in rental rate improvement. Contributing to the growth this year and position us for further success is the June acquisition of Loue Froid, a leading provider of power and HVAC rental solutions, with four locations across Canada and a base in Montreal. With six months now in the fold, I'm happy to report a strong integration into the broader Sunbelt Rentals business and demonstrating thus far the cross-selling opportunities inherent in this deal, and of course, the start of something more meaningful in Quebec.
With what appears to finally be the end to the writers and actors strike, which took a prolonged toll on the business, we can finally look forward to a rebound in that end market, which we're now anticipating giving us benefit in our Q4 . Turning to the UK on Slide 19, you'll see the business delivered strong first half rental-only revenue growth of 11%. This is driven by market share gains in an end market composition, which favors our unique positioning through the industry's broadest offering of general tool and specialty products, which are unmatched. The challenge, as Michael would have touched on, has been passing through the necessary rate increases and charges for the services we provide at a level adequately making up for the inflationary costs in the business.
Although the business has made progress better than prior years as it relates to rental rates and charges, we have a way to go. The team is focused on this now and will be going forward. Turning to Slide 20, you'll see our normal Sunbelt 3.0 scorecard. We've covered the primary points on growth, expansion, and capital allocation throughout today's update. But I'll briefly draw your attention to the point summarizing our progress in advancing technology. We organize our technology ecosystem advancement into domains, of which we fully delivered on e-commerce and dynamic pricing, and are presently in later stage pilots or early rollout phases of the remaining critical domain, domains, specifically sales, logistics, service, point of sale, and connected.
The completion of this advanced technology actionable component will deliver a more robust ecosystem to enhance order capture and deliver an even higher level of customer experience, while in conjunction, adding efficiencies to the business, which we believe is a key ingredient to progressing margins as we enter Sunbelt 4.0 and throughout. We'll be showcasing these as part of our April CMD. So to conclude, let's turn to Slide 21. This has been another record period of profitable growth, location expansion, and momentum in our business. We're experiencing strong demand for our products and services and gaining improved clarity to the strength of our end markets in 2024 and beyond, driven in part by the recent realities of US onshoring, technology and manufacturing modernization, and federal legislative acts.
These actualities add to what was already a strong underlying level of end-market activity, flush with day-to-day MRO, small to mid-size projects, and the very present and growing mega-project landscape. Beyond the detail within a month, quarter, or half year, what one should take away from this and prior years of results is that the structural progression in our industry is demonstrably clear. In the sense that, 1, rental will continue to grow versus ownership now that there is a more reliable alternative. And 2, the big will get bigger through leveraging the significant scale advantages, technology, breadth of offering, financial might, consistency in offering, winning on the career front in this skilled trade scarcity reality that we're in, and customer experience. Barriers to enter this business are higher than ever, and they're growing.
Further, the output of this undeniable structural progress is a business, and indeed industry, which has progressed secularly and has the hallmarks of larger TAMs, less cyclicality, and pricing discipline. We are positioned to win in the near, medium, and long term as we both influence and benefit from this structural advancement and secular outcome for our business and industry. So for these reasons, and coming from a position of ongoing strength and positive outlook, we look to the future with confidence and look forward to sharing more detail on our future plans come April 2024 during our capital markets event in Atlanta. So with that, operator, we'll open up the line for questions.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, if you would like to ask a question on today's call, please press star one on your telephone keypad. That is star one for your questions today. Our first question comes from Lush Mahendrar ajah of JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Hi. Morning, guys. Thanks for taking my questions.
Yeah.
The first is on, I guess, exit rates, particularly in US specialty and Canada, because I guess some of that drop-off was mostly happened in October. So if you could just sort of help us with maybe what you've seen in November, and I guess how to think about the sort of Q3 run rate, I guess, before it picks up in Q4.
Yeah, our exit rate in total, we don't really... It's, you know, 8-9% for the month. Obviously, there's an underlying impact of that that we've flagged. But in general, what you would have heard Michael talk to in terms of revenue and flow-through or fall-through for the full year, you know, it's really centered around Q3. You know, as it relates to the specialty and general tool business, it's kind of what we would have flagged there for the quarter overall. But the key to it really is what we would expect would be Q4 to look a lot more like Q2, both in terms of revenue growth, as we won't have that year-on-year comparison, so to speak.
So yeah, that's how we see the exit rates.
Okay. Thank you. And then in terms of sales of used equipment or to help explain the sort of detail there on the sort of pre-prepared comments, but if you look at the sort of year-on-year growth, that's a bit lower now than it was in Q1. Is that beginning to normalize now as we get into Q3, Q4, or are they still gonna be elevated for a while, do you think?
Well, it depends what you mean by elevated. We-- Oh, for the year as a whole, obviously, we will sell more than we sold a year ago just because we are replacing more fleet, full stop. So, but yes, in terms of, so the cadence, we did pull, you know, we, we pulled forward in both Q1 and Q2, but proportionally more was pulled forward into Q1 than into Q2. So yes, it sort of, it, it, it's sort of catching up, if that's the right phrase, 'cause it's all slowing down. The catch-up is slowing down, let's put it that way, because you pulled stuff forward.
Yeah. Yeah. Okay. And then just last one on, on the buyback, really. I guess in the first half, perhaps not as much as, as I expected being done. Are you still sort of confident that you'll sort of get through that program by the end of your financial year?
Well, if you remember, you, I think you've got to go back to our capital allocation, because our capital allocation policy is that waterfall, which says we spend on fleet growth, we spend on bolt-ons, we just spend on dividend, and buybacks are the balancing figure. You know, our program was up to $500 million over the full year, but it, it is the balancing figure. And as we've often said, we prefer the lower half of our leverage range, so 0.5-2, yes, but we prefer the lower half. So given we're at, you know, we had visibility on what was happening on CapEx, we had a good pipeline of bolt-on acquisitions. So by, you know, just through capital allocation, there's a lower emphasis on the buybacks.
Okay. Very helpful. Thank you.
Thank you. We now move on to a question from Annelies Vermeulen from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good morning. I have a couple of questions as well. So perhaps firstly, you know, thank you for the update on the mega project pipeline. Based on what you've seen today and that sort of 30% win rate that you've quantified, which fiscal financial years will we see the peak earnings contribution from the mega projects that you've already, you know, won or been awarded? And could this actually get, continue to get pushed further out as you win more of these projects, or, you know, how should we think about that trajectory? That's the first question.
Yeah, sure, Annelies. I, I think, well, first of all, those projects that were in the early phases of today, we would expect that peak or crest, as I referred to it, to last quite some time. So you're gonna see that in, you know, FY 25 and FY 26, because really, the crest of these projects is about a two-year timeframe in many cases. I think it's worth highlighting to a degree, just the state of those 499 projects that we talked about. Just to put in perspective, I think what's important is how early we really believe we are in this landscape of megaprojects.
So of the 499 that we would, we would have pointed out, actually only 336 of those are at underway, so they are in start or construct, as Dodge would calibrate it. Of course, we track every single one of these. So that leaves the balance of 163 that are in some form of pre-start. Now, that would indicate that 163 of those would start by April 2024. I can tell you confidently on the call, all 163 probably don't start by April. That doesn't mean in any way, shape, or form that they're being deferred or postponed, they're just working on, in progress, so to speak, of going. So yes, there will be another year, there's no question of....
another wave of early phase projects in which we'll win, and we'd like to increase that 30%. But nonetheless, we're doing well with that as it, as it is today. But we can see, I can't really answer the question, how long that will go on? Because we believe this is still early days, so I hope it's far beyond 2025 and 2026. And, you know, certainly when it comes to the construction forecast that you've seen, we've highlighted or updated on Slide 15 through 2028, it would indicate that that is very much the case.
That's helpful. Thank you. And actually, that leads quite nicely to my next question, which is on CapEx spend. I appreciate that your full year 2025 guidance is probably more of a conversation for the Q3 in March. But if you think about your CapEx spend this year, and obviously you're buying equipment for these projects, how should we think about your CapEx potential CapEx bill for full year 2025? You know, is, will it be dependent on the further win rate of these projects, or actually, given the $4 billion or so that you're spending this year, would, you know, could, would we expect to see CapEx taper slightly, given what you're taking on already this year?
Yeah, Annelies, you know, I mean, the short answer to that is we'll cover CapEx in March. Yeah, that being said, all of the points you made are part of the ingredients as we form our CapEx plans for next year. We'll take very much into consideration the progress we make on project wins between today and April, and we'll also look in terms of those early project bids. But also there's your key building blocks of just replacement CapEx and what we have for growth and demand in our existing brick-and-mortar network, and obviously for our expansion plans, as, as you'll see when we launch 4.0, in terms of our pace and rigor around greenfield additions, et cetera.
I think it's also worth maybe pointing out, as we've flagged, you know, utilization. I can't say this without saying, albeit still really strong. We're just trying to find equilibrium. So as we sit here today, we think there's probably just a touch of perhaps year-over-year upside from a time utilization standpoint. Now, that's not across all product categories. We still have very large product categories that are at record levels of, you know, highs. So I think when you—we have to put all those things together before we can give you any sort of real good guidance on next year.
That's understood. Thank you for the color that you did give. And then just lastly, I appreciate you. You're probably unwilling to comment on politics, but perhaps just based on the conversations you're having with your customers, particularly on some of these larger projects, are you sensing any concern from your customers around what a potential change in the US administration next year could mean? Or do you think that actually a lot of these projects are happening regardless of the federal funding they may or may not get, or if anything changes, as I said, under a new administration?
Yeah, well, look, I am far more experienced and in a better position to comment on US politics, certainly, than UK. politics. I'll stay off of fault lines, certainly, but I mean, in the end, I guess we're hearing nothing from customers around that. Now, if I maybe I'll be more specific to your question, perhaps it might be in a way what you're getting to. So what's at risk out there? And if we look at the federal piece, which I've got to point out, the vast majority of these mega projects are private funding. Sure, there's a degree of stimulus related to tax incentives, et cetera, particularly around some things like semiconductors and energy, but particularly renewables. So what's at risk? Is infrastructure at risk? Not a chance.
Now, that is my opinion, but you can take it for what it's worth. Is CHIPS and Science at risk? Not a chance. It was one of the fastest moving bipartisan pieces of legislation we saw go through Congress, compared to sort of COVID relief, if you will. The one that I would say there is a degree of risk to would be IRA. Now, it's not the entire act, but I think there is a degree of risk if there were to be a change from an administration standpoint, particularly when it comes to the energy support around renewables. But in reality, I think really it's a bit of a shell game.
So if that were to be the case, I think you'd find equal and offset around, let's just say, old-fashioned energy, if you will, and dare I quote, one particular, politician running for office, but, "Drill, baby, drill," I think is what was said last week alone. So whether it's in wind farms and solar, this is not my own personal preference or opinion, or it is in, a downstream, upstream, or LNG, I think you have to look at the breadth of this overall arena we're talking about. These mega projects, if you just take the top 20, you know, they are semiconductors, LNG, airports, ethane, rail, refinery, data centers. I mean, the top 20 are $157 billion. Not one of those I just mentioned would be, would be impacted by that IRA.
But anyway, it's a good one to pay attention to, and certainly, you know, we'll be doing our calculus as we move forward.
That's great. Thank you very much, Brendan.
Thanks, Annelies.
Thank you. And up next, we have Will Kirkness from Societe Generale. Please go ahead.
Morning, Will.
Morning, guys. I've got three, please. Firstly, just on CapEx, you've landed about 62%. Just wanted to check that's where you expect it to be. Secondly, just wanted to understand the second half guide for drop-through in the high 40s. So that's a pure rent revenue drop-through, so I guess the secondhand sales don't impact. Just wondered if the other moving parts like greenfields, whether that's an acceleration, just trying to sort of understand the moving parts. And the last question is just really on the building blocks for second half, and I suppose into fiscal 2025 in general terms. So I assume you're hoping for expecting some rate progression. And then mega projects, you know, look pretty material, whether that's more than 5%, less than 10%, then you've got greenfields and bolt-on activity.
So if we think about a rental revenue growth, you know, less than 10%, you know, whether that's the second half or next year, that, you know, that feels pretty, pretty comfortable, pretty well underpinned, unless there's a something moving against you that I'm not, not factoring in. Thanks very much.
Great. Thanks, Will. Yeah, the CapEx, 62%, as you point out, I would characterize it like this: so as we would have done last fiscal year, you know, we would have been, we would have been getting our arms around all the supply constraints, et cetera. And if we go back two years ago, let's just say OEMs were landing, you know, less than 60% on time, and quantity. Last year, they were landing more 75%-80% on average across the full year, improving toward the end, and this year they've been more 95% plus. So as a result of that, we would have anticipated perhaps not quite that good, so we, we would have landed a bit more than we would have anticipated in the first half.
However, for the full year, we're gonna be just where we would have thought we would have been. And as you can imagine, you know, we pull the small levers in terms of, you know, do we want products landing in February, or do we encourage them more towards March, April? But that's kind of the phenomenon, if you will, that we're in. When it comes to your point on fall through, as I said, it's, it's really just a Q3 effect. So, you know, Q1 and Q2, I think the important thing is that really reflects our ability, let's call it the early days of leveraging the SG&A, that we intentionally invested in throughout three point O.
We covered from the very beginning, from April 20, 2021, this is where we're gonna invest in this business, not just in terms of expansion, but also things like technology, et cetera, throughout 3.0, and we will see the progression and flow-through as we get to the third year. And that's what we demonstrated ordinarily, if you will, in Q1, Q2. Q3, we're gonna have this sort of, you know, lagging effect of all the things that we've mentioned, and that will be a disproportionately low flow-through, we expect, but we also expect Q4 to have an exit rate more like Q2. So when you just do the math of 53 and then, so 40s and you're at high 40s, whether that's 47, 48, 49, time will tell as we leave.
But I think the important thing, which leads into your next question around what next year looks like is, we would expect to further leverage. So our infrastructure, if you will, investment, will in many ways be complete for this phase, which sets us up for our Sunbelt 4.0. Sure, we'll still have greenfields and we'll have bolt-ons, and those are never, those are always a lag. However, we won't have sort of the comparators from prior years where they didn't exist. So we would fully expect, you can expect, a feature of Sunbelt 4.0, will be how we demonstrate to you a real progression in margin over the course of that next strategic growth plan. So your, your, your question about what is rate? I mean, we already had one question about what's CapEx, and we talk about that in Q3.
It's probably even a bit more premature to talk about what revenue growth is like next year, but I would not argue any of your points, Will, in terms of, you know, you know, something in that range that you described. Basically, I think would be totally reasonable.
Okay. Thanks very much.
Thanks, Will.
You. And from Bank of America, we have Arnaud Lehmann with our next question. Please go ahead.
Thank you very much. Good morning, gentlemen. My first question is on utilization. Obviously, it went down, you got more deliveries, and if I understood the comments, you're planning to keep going with the sale of equipment in the secondary market to improve that a little bit. In the meantime, you're giving us a fairly optimistic message on rental rates. They're still moving higher. Can you confirm that there are really, from your point of view, no real links between you and your peers selling more equipment in the secondary market and your outlook for rental rates for us too?
Sure. Yeah, I mean, utilization, again, I can't emphasize it enough. You know, I have a sheet of paper in front of me showing quarter-over-quarter utilization over the last 10 years. And whether we're looking at our general tool business or our specialty business, this current fiscal year is remarkably strong, with the exception of comparing it specifically to FY 2022 and FY 2023. And this is not some big gap between those two years, it's just enough, so to speak, overall. However, it's still one of our highest years ever in overall time utilization. Now, I think the key to your next question, though, is, yes, we do look forward incredibly bullish when it comes to our ability to progress rental rates with a very specific formula surrounding inflationary realities in the markets in which we serve.
So whether that be macro inflation, it be combined with wage inflation, it be taken into account for equipment inflation, and there should be some level of margin on that. Not to mention the benefit of scale we should get in terms of efficiencies, et cetera, in order to deliver. But if we've proven anything whatsoever over the last several years now is the actual break, if you will, in the elasticity between or correlation between specifically time utilization and rental rate progression. And that is, as I've said before, sort of a hallmark of a business services company, which is exactly what we are far more like than some, you know, wildly cyclical industrial.
So we think that that will stay intact, and we fully expect as part of our planning and ingredients, and therefore ultimately kind of as we goalpost what we think we grow like throughout 4.0, rates will play a primary feature.
That's helpful. Thank you for that. And my second question is more of a follow-up on the mega projects. You still sound very confident in terms of gaining meaningful share on those projects. How does your strategy of typically targeting smaller customers work relative to your larger peer, who is talking a lot more about national accounts, where you would think, okay, it's a very large projects, therefore, they're gonna hire very large contractors. These contractors would be considered national accounts for United Rentals. Are you still confident that you having this strategy of typically smaller customers, smaller contracts, you can still make your way through these mega projects?
We can very comfortably do both. We are very comfortably doing both. You know, you have to think about the size of North America. You know, SMEs are still thriving. They're very busy, and we're busy servicing them. You know, look, I appreciate you mentioning one of our peers, and they are really good at servicing mega projects, as we are. I mean, no customer wants to have only one choice. It's a bit like we don't only do banking with Bank of America, you know? We use one or two others.
Maybe you should.
And I know you know that. But there are lots of them that we just can't use because they're not capable. They don't have the breadth of products and services that Bank of America has. There are, frankly, two in the US that really, truly have scale and capabilities, and that's not me talking down about another or two, another two. They will find bits and pieces, and they'll do well, which is fine. There is a bountiful feast that is out there to be had. We're just saying remarkably confidently, we will get, as you've seen today, 30% share on these projects, and we will give brilliant services to our customers, and we will help them complete these projects profitably and successfully, safely, and on time, with all that we have to bring forward.
But that doesn't mean in any way, shape, or form, you have to choose that over taking care of the landscaper or the facility maintenance contractor that wants 10 one-ton air conditioners, or the contractor that wants 6 sweepers and scrubbers that Adam Camhi and our flooring team will deliver. We, we can do it all.
Very good. Obviously, Bank of America can do everything for you, but I appreciate.
Touche!
Thank you.
Thank you.
Up next, we have Allen Wells of Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning, Brendan. Just a couple of quick follow-ups from me. I just wanted to dig into the exit rates, the 8%-9% you talked about. Obviously, it marks kind of a 6-ish% reduction from the broader 2Q levels. You know, to get that explained by just emergency services and the film business, I'd basically need to assume that pretty much all of the $100 million drop-off in emergency and all of the film. So it feels like there's a little bit of a slowing elsewhere. Is this just the mega project phasing side that gets you down to the 8%-9%, or is it just something else in terms of timing? That's my first question.
And then, secondly, just on the drop-through, I think you kind of alluded to this already, but I just want to be clear, just so we don't get called out. If I just do the math on the kind of three Q versus four Q, it looks like three Q would be more like in the kind of high thirties, maybe 40%, if four Q is gonna be back up in the kind of two Q level. Just want to check that's right. Thank you.
Yeah, I'll answer your first one, or your second one first, which is, yeah, it could be, you know, high thirties, low forties, but you know, again, you'll see Q4 look more like, Q1, Q2. And when it comes to that, I mean, that is the way that it is. When it comes to Q3, you know, the effect of that, certainly is the majority of which is, Q3. There's a slight effect in October that we would have seen and accounted for, and then you just have a large number on a couple or few months that we'll see throughout the quarter. It's not, it's not something to do with the broader, demand levels that we're seeing.
Certainly, you know, we've touched on time utilization, which before we know, we will be sort of lapping some top comps that are more reasonable, if you will. I don't know if, Michael, you have any other color to add to that?
No, I think it's... No, it just reflects it. It's a run rate. You know, we saw, you know, which is what led to the trading update in November. We saw it sort of hitting the second half of October, but the majority of it falls into Q3, and that's, you know, that's what we anticipate, and that's how we see it falling.
Okay. Thanks, guys. Very clear.
Thanks, Al.
Thank you. We're moving on to James Rose of Barclays. Please go ahead.
... Morning, James.
Hi there. I've got two—Morning, hi. Two on a slightly different tack. The first one is on bolt-ons. I think by the year end, you will have added just under, I think, 15% of revenues over the plus three years. What changes are you having to make in those businesses? I mean, is there a lot of replacement CapEx involved or maybe having to take a rate more so than at your other incumbent branches? Just be interesting to see what you think there. And then secondly, on the facility maintenance market, that's $340 billion market you pull out. Do you have a sense of what the rental penetration is there versus as construction sites?
Sure. So James, when it comes to bolt-ons, I think the first thing I'd point to is just the integration. You know, that team, you know, Adam Raby, and a group of people, about 35 people, that not only kind of do turnkey greenfields, but also do that integration on these bolt-ons, have really gotten to the point where, you know, the day that we close, these bolt-on businesses are 100% on our systems. So then it really turns to, really, as we've called it, the power of Sunbelt. So how do we, first and foremost, bear hug those customers, bear hug the team in which we've brought on by way of bolt-on, and from there, you start to work on cross-selling.
Now, what you don't do with those customers, to your point there, is very few businesses that we buy, are they charging equal or more than what we're charging to our customers from a rental rate standpoint? So what you don't do is send them a letter and say, "Hey, great news. Sunbelt Rentals has now acquired, you know, A to Z in Phoenix, Arizona, and effective Monday, not only will we have a bright, green, shiny sign, but we're gonna increase our rental rates by 20%." So you do have to, you know, moderate that and just take that in nice little steps over time, which is just fine because we wanna make sure we retain those customers and then, of course, cross-sell the entire catalog to them, and that's really where we see the experience.
And that's why you do have the drag effect, because first and foremost, you're not buying them at near 50% EBITDA margin to begin with, and then you have to progress that over time. But to your point, we do have the track record of doing that.
You know, James, one of the factors that, you know, why their margins aren't the same as our margins, the fact invariably, these businesses are underinvested. They're lacking capital, so they don't have the access to capital. So your fleet point is, it's a bit of both. It's invariably, when we're looking at it, we're saying, well, we're gonna add X million of extra fleet to that location because it can take it, and then you'll end up refreshing the fleet in accordance with our normal replacement pattern. So there's a bit of replacement, but there's also invariably additional capital, which we have the ability to provide, which they haven't been able to do in the past.
Yeah. Your second question about the FM market, it's just... The short answer is, James, it's low. You know, when you are walking about in the US or in Canada, or frankly, even here in the UK, over the last week, you know, when you see a ladder in a building, it is most always owned. You know, when you do see an air conditioner, or a heater in the corner of a room, it's most usually owned. When you see a sweeper or scrubber in the lobby or in the square, it's most usually owned. When you see a power generator, a standby generator bolted to a piece of concrete outside of a building that is putting out emissions every single week, just exercising itself, it's always owned.
So the opportunity there is massive. It's super low rental penetration. It just takes time to move that curve. And with these specialty businesses and the cross-selling and collaboration that we have with General Tool, we'll move it. We'll move it over time. We're in no rush, frankly. We'll do that, and that just speaks to the longevity of the growth prospects for this business.
That's great. Thanks very much.
Thanks, James.
Thank you. And our next question comes from Mark Howson of Dowgate Capital. Please go ahead.
Good morning, gentlemen.
Hey, Mark. Good morning.
Just, just a couple of questions, one on the UK and a couple on the US Just looking at that 6.5% return on investment in the UK, and you mentioned rental rates progressed, but not enough. You took market share, but it didn't. Rates didn't keep pace with inflation. I mean, how confident are you, to be honest, that, you know, that rates is not what's gaining you market share? And how are your staff remunerated in terms of revenue gain versus return on invested capital in the UK business? So that's the first question, and I've got a couple on the US.
Yeah, so the UK. Yeah, of course. You look at that ROI, which we stare at, and I guess, first you say, well, it's a good thing, it's about 3% of your overall group operating profit. However-
Yes
... It should be more than that. You know, our position is this: We are comfortable having a smaller but more profitable UK business, and if that's the output of us increasing pricing to the level in which we need to, which I do believe we will be able to, because, you know, in a way, we can do that. We don't have to have a business that's 15% larger next year in order to have a business that has a great level of service to our customers with the breadth of products that we're talking about, and builds what we ought to. And frankly, I think the rest of the industry, at some point in time, wakes up a bit and recognizes what has to progress.
This is a business that I am confident will be able to deliver an acceptable level of returns, and that's very much part of the incentive. So rates are very much part of the incentive for the whole of the sales force, and return on investment is also part of the incentive for the broader management team, as is free cash flow. So, you know, there's a bit of anomalies here going on, just given all the NHS work. I know it seems like ages ago, but they're still lapping of that in the year. So let's get on the next year in a more ordinary year and see what those returns look like, but we're comfortable that we can progress those to double digits.
Okay, and secondly, on the US, can you just give us a feel for where we are in terms of equipment supply pressures? Have they eased, and where are we with regards to secondhand prices and US auctions? Thanks.
Yeah. So secondhand pricing is historically strong. You know, it's a bit of the froth that would have been there, it, you know, is coming off as we all would have expected when there was just no product available. But it is still a perfectly liquid end market that's giving us great value secondhand, and that's a range, of course, between retail, wholesale, and auction. When it comes to where we are from a supply constraints, I would characterize it this way, as you've heard me say on the call. OEMs are doing really good today, meeting their commitments. The other part of it is just lead time. What we're not seeing yet is a return to pre-COVID levels of lead time.
So if we used to be able to order, you know, 1,000 Bobcats and get them in 90 days, today, if we want 1,000 Bobcats, we're probably talking, you know, 180-270 days in terms of foreshadowing that need. But part of that's also structural. As we do, as I've said, recognize the bigger getting bigger, the big, a handful of us, are telegraphing their product needs further out. So that also leads to a bit of that lead time piece because we occupy a far larger part of their overall manufacturing, and that's got a knock-on effect for your ability to sort of, you know, just, you know, add on, if you will, like it was kind of pre-pandemic. So that's how we would characterize supply constraints today.
Thank you.
Thank you.
We're moving on to Karl Green of RBC. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks very much. Just a couple of clarity questions from me. Just back to the Q3 drop-through guidance. Just so I understand it correctly, I mean, you gave a number of different dynamics there, but has the lower than expected emergency response and storm activity been a material driver of that lower expected drop-through? I guess the question behind that is the extent to which you'll see a corresponding rebound in a normal emergency response or storm year, like next year.
Then the second question, just unrelatedly, just in terms of the utilization impacts of the growth in mega projects, are you kind of learning about how best to deploy the equipment in and also out of the dedicated sites, just in terms of, you know, how you would anticipate the efficiency of the mega projects roll out, ramp up, actually improving over time? Thanks.
Yeah. On the drop-through point, you're exactly right as to how it would work, because, you know, we've been, as Brendan referenced earlier, we've invested in the infrastructure of the business and the support for the business. So the cost base, you know, that investment has occurred. As we move forward, we wouldn't expect to see that increase significantly. The fact we've then got depressed levels of revenue compared with what we thought in Q3 negatively affects drop-through. If you add that revenue back on in a year's time, when you compare it against this period, inherently, you will have, just mathematically, you will have a stronger level of drop-through in a year's time.
You know, as Brendan touched on, we expect when year-over-year revenue growth is, you know, less affected by the comparisons in Q4, when that return to a more normalized level, then you'd expect drop-through to being sort of more akin to where we were in Q2 than where we are in Q3.
Okay. Thanks a lot, Michael. But I suppose just, just following up on that, I mean, is it fair to work on the basis that the emergency response work is in a given quarter, not necessarily through the year, but in a given quarter, it would be abnormally profitable?
That, that-
Super normally, I suppose, the word.
I tell you, I think the way you got to look at it is the fact that you've got a sort of relatively fixed cost base as you move through from quarter- to- quarter, and so the piece of that revenue is, you've got a lower revenue growth on that same cost base, which adversely affects drop-through. The nature of emergency response work, it goes both ways, and what I mean by that is some of it, there's a lot of transport involved with it, so you incur direct costs, so that you know, hinders sort of would give you a lower drop-through. Other stuff, you've got equipment that's out for longer periods of time, which aids drop-through. So it's probably slightly better than normal drop-through, but it's not fundamentally different.
It's the fact that you have a fixed level of cost, you've got lower revenue overall.
Great. Thanks.
Your second one on mega projects, the short answer is yes... We are learning how to navigate these better, but let me characterize, just add a bit of color, perhaps just for full understanding here, because this is not a bad thing at all when we talk about this, this timing issue. So whether it be, LNG plant in Sabine Pass, Texas, or, Blue Oval, which is, Ford's, EV and battery in Tennessee, or a semiconductor in Boise, Idaho, or a, EV, plant in, Georgia, outside of Savannah. It is not atypical, or I should say it this way, it is very typical for us in any of those examples, to deliver $20-$30 million worth of fleet, day one.
And in conjunction with that, we'll have, say, 8 or 9 team members who will be assigned to that project for the duration of 3+ years, and in some cases longer, which I'll come on to. So in the early days of that project, not much of that $30 million worth of fleet is on rent. Now, one could argue, "Well, why not just send 3?" Well, that's not exactly the way it works, 'cause when you're working with the general contractor and the subs, they're saying, "We're gonna need this at this point in time." They're always gonna say a bit earlier probably than what they really need it, but it's all okay, and here's why. So maybe it takes, I would've said, 4 or 5 quarters, but over that period of time... So day 1, you're low utilization. Day 60, let's just say you're 40% utilization.
Day 120, you're more like 60% utilization, but kinda Q4, Q5 , not only is your $30 million now $100 million, but in that Q4 , Q5 , your $100 million is at about 85%-90% time utilization, and that crest lasts for 2+ years. The 8 people that we first put there, we now have only 10, and we will only need 10 people for the duration of that project to give our customers brilliant service. Then your next question was, what do you do with all that fleet when that project's over? In many, many cases, that same general contractor or some of those same subs will be going on to another project, and it doesn't really matter where it is, we just move it.
But in as many instances, what we'll find is, and we'll feature this in the CMD in April, these projects are the big, huge plants, and beyond and around those are all the Tier 1 component parts, suppliers, et cetera. Very, very many times, I'll quote John Washburn here, one of our executive members of the business in the US. "We're gonna deliver so many assets to a zip code that is for a project, and that asset will spend its entire 7 or 8 years either on that project or one of the Tier 1 projects that follow, until such time we dispose it." So overall, we'll be utilized at a very high level and generate great returns over that period of time. So probably more color than what you're looking for, but that's how we're managing that.
Really helpful. Thanks, Brendan.
You got it. Thank you.
Thank you. Up next, we have Tom Burlton from BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Just got a couple. First one is just relating to CapEx. So you ever say what proportion of the growth CapEx is relating to mega projects? Apologies if I missed it, if it was mentioned earlier on. And then the second one, Brendan, just thinking about your characterization of the secondhand market, with some of the froth kinda coming out of that and used values coming off versus last year. Just thinking, compared to sort of rental market remaining so strong, rental rates remaining so strong and holding the line on rental rates. Are you seeing anywhere across your business any increased customer appetite to start substituting back in or out towards sort of used equipment?
Appreciate it's a, it's a different product and it's different services in, in the rental proposition, but just wondering whether you're seeing any, any sort of substitution and we should sort of see any, any transmission effects between that market and, and rental?
Sure. The first one, we don't, we don't break down growth CapEx that goes between megas and greenfields existing locations. I don't have it top of mind. If I had some general color, I would give that to you, but I'm afraid-
Well, well, so it's just, it's impossible in reality, because you... There's not all megaprojects are born equal. So some megaprojects, Brendan just referenced Blue Oval, that would have an on-site, but you also have megaprojects, which are in an urban area and don't have an on-site, and so they some of that rental will come from local locations, stores, et cetera. So it's spread around the piece, so you've got different growth rates, so you just cannot segregate it in that manner.
When it comes to secondhand market, first, I think it's important to make clear. The primary driver and the stickiest driver, despite what some may think when it comes to secondhand values, and I would even put it... You know, I mean, certainly there is supply and demand, we all know that, but, the primary driver is really: what does it cost to buy a new one? So although we've experienced this inflation when it comes to new rental assets or new owned assets, therefore, to part of your question, that's really what has been the permanent step change that we've realized. So the froth that was above that was really just that, you know, circumstance of having very, very little available in that secondhand channel.
So I don't wanna mischaracterize it by saying that, yes, that froth bit's gone, but what's not gone is that step change when for anyone to go buy something new, they would be paying materially more. So therefore, that 7-, 8-, 9-, or 6-year-old asset is gonna be significantly more expensive. In terms of us seeing evidence that customers are choosing to supplant rental with 7- or 8-year-old assets that are so sold, we're not seeing any evidence of that. What you see is, one, you see a large level of export, whether that be by way of wholesale or it be by way of auction, and then you have a very broad range otherwise of buyers. And then from time to time, you will get...
Given the barriers to entry I would have mentioned, you know, you'll get some Tier 2 rental houses out there who will buy some used gear, and as far as we're concerned, that's perfectly fine, and then-
And the other dynamic that just sort of, you know, reality goes the other way, if you think of this increasing proportion of larger projects, they're almost totally rental. There's, you know... And then for that type of project and, you know, what that customer wants, what their end customer wants, then they're not going and buying secondhand fleet, they're buying, they're renting, you know, good quality fleet.
That's very clear. Thank you.
Thanks, Tom.
Thank you. As there are currently no further questions in the queue, I'd like to hand the call back over to you, Brendan, for any additional or closing remarks.
Great. Thank you all for taking the time this morning to join, and we look forward to speaking, of course, at Q3, but more in particular, seeing many of you, in Atlanta in April for our next capital markets event.
Thank you for joining today's call. Ladies and gentlemen, you may now disconnect.