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Avis Budget Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: CAR)
Q2 2018 Earnings Conference call
Aug. 8, 2018, 12:30 p.m. EDT

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Welcome. Good morning, and welcome to the Avis Budget Group Second-Quarter Earnings Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded. At this time for opening remarks and introductions. I would like to turn the meeting over to Mr. Neal Goldner, vice president of investor relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Neal H. Goldner -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Thank you Jill. Good morning everyone, and thank you for joining us. On the call with me are Larry De Shon, our chief executive officer, and Martyn Smith, our interim chief financial officer. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that the company will be discussing forward-looking information that involves risks, uncertainties, and assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from the forward-looking information.

Risks, assumptions, and other factors that could cause future results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements are identified in the company's earnings release and other periodic filings with the SEC, and can also be found on the Investor Relations section of our website. Except as required by law, the company undertakes no obligation to update or revise its forward-looking statements.

Our comments today will focus on our adjusted results. We believe that our financial performance is better demonstrated using these non-GAAP financial measures. All non-GAAP financial measures are reconciled from the GAAP numbers in our press release and in the Earnings Call presentation, which is available on our website. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Avis Budget Group's Chief Executive Officer Larry De Shon.

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Neal, and good morning. We had a strong second quarter highlighted by double-digit profit growth, further margin expansion, and exciting new business developments. Starting with some of our achievements, we delivered strong overall volume growth at a 1% increase in America's underlying pricing and constant currency, with leisure pricing up 2% despite the Easter shift. We drove a substantial reduction in per-unit fleet costs, our single largest expense, and improved utilization.

We launched an exciting new product across multiple U.S. airports, which is helping improve the trends and ancillary revenue. We invested in and expanded our new Demand-Fleet-Pricing system and a next-generation connected car mobility platform that will enable us to employ advanced analytics and data science to optimize all aspects of our fleet. We reached the 100,000 connected car level just last week, a significant milestone toward connecting our entire global fleet, and we announced new relationships with Amazon, Lyft, and Luxury Retreats.

So, let me start there. In July, we announced an exciting new program with Amazon, to reward their customers who rent an Avis car, enabling them to save money on the rental and receive an Amazon gift card. We've already seen strong demand from Amazon customers since the announcement and look forward to working closely with them in the future. We also began a new partnership with Luxury Retreats making Avis their exclusive vehicle rental partner. For those who don't know Luxury Retreats, it was acquired by Airbnb in early 2017 and has a full-service villa rental company with more than 5,000 properties and over 300 destinations worldwide.

The company is dedicated to creating authentic travel experiences for their customers and it's a great partner for our premium Avis brand. The agreement went live in late June, and we are already seeing nice demand from Luxury Retreats customers. I'm also excited about our deal with Lyft to add thousands of vehicles to the Lyft Express Drive program in cities across North America. The partnership will make it easier for people to drive with Lyft without the cost and burden of car ownership.

With a global fleet of 600,000 vehicles, we are well-positioned to take advantage of the continued growth and the right handling space by providing new and existing Lyft drivers with on-demand access to clean, safe, and well-maintained vehicles for those who are or want to become drivers for Lyft. As one of the world's largest fleet owners, we look forward to working with them as we expand our ability to address the growing demand for mobility services.

Moving now to a quick review of our second quarter, starting with profitable revenue growth. We made further progress toward having a global integrated Demand-Fleet-Pricing (DFP) yield management system, that can optimize our pricing and fleet decisions based on the available demand. By the end of the quarter, the fully optimized system that we call DFP was supporting half of our U.S. car rental revenue. In those locations were implemented, we continue to see an incremental 1% to 2% higher pricing on average compared to non-DFP markets. In June, we also completed the first phase of DFP, the pricing robotic, across all of our corporately owned international locations. This is the next step toward having our global business live by the end of 2020.

We grew America's prepaid reservations double digits in a quarter. Prepaid bookings represented nearly 40% of the reservations made on our own platform, a quarterly record, including greater than 45% at budget. We also drove more business through our proprietary lower-cost direct channels in the second quarter than ever before, with website conversion rates in the Americas growing another 55 basis points. And I believe we still have opportunity to drive more business through these channels, enabling us to better interact with our customers while also lowering our costs. As a result of the success we've had driving higher website conversion and the increased number of people booking on our mobile apps, more and more of our customers are bypassing the counter, making it necessary for us to learn how to better sell ancillaries online.

We began late last year by making the process of selecting ancillary products on our dot-com sites a lot easier, with better product placement and simplified language. We then launched an initiative to offer customers bundled products that is delivering positive results, with ancillary sales on avis.com growing 3% in the quarter. We also started promoting on budget.com, that the more ancillary products that customer takes, the more they can save, enabling us to grow our ancillary revenue an impressive 14% on the budget side. We retrained our counter sales agents to use a more personalized approach, making sure they're offering the right products to the right customers.

And we launched a new curbside delivery product in more than 40 locations that is proving very successful due to the time it saves and the convenience it provides.When a customer arrives at our return lots, we will drive them directly to the terminal for a fee. No taking luggage out of the car, no getting on the shuttle bus or airport tram and worrying about missing a flight. In May, we added this feature to the Avis app, enabling customers to add this product prior to arriving at the location, and also began notifying them about the service a few hours before they are due to return the vehicle. With curbside revenue growing double digits month over month since its launch, this product clearly has wide appeal.

Turning now to mobility, starting with Zipcar. In May, Zipcar announced a partnership with Volkswagen that will add 325 electric Golfs to its London offering. The first 100 of these are already in our fleet, with the balance scheduled to be delivered before year end. In North America, Zipcar in the city of New York announced two major initiatives that put more cars in more neighborhoods while reducing the need for personal vehicle ownership, awarding Zipcar more than 200 coveted on-street and municipal parking spots. Zipcar also signed a new partnership with the city of Columbus to bring Zipcars to a local resident, businesses, and visitors building on our success at The Ohio State University and Columbus International Airport.

Zipcar's commuter product continues to grow double digits, available in 11 major markets in North America. This affordable new mobility solution primarily appeals to members living in metropolitan markets to commute outside the city for work. By offering a range of vehicle types for exclusive use for Monday to Friday including parking, not only does the commuter offering expand Zipcar's mobility options to its members, it also offers an attractive alternative to car ownership. The growth of Zipcar Flex, which we launched only last year, has also been gratifying.

Recently expanded to its 10th borough, we are well on our way to achieving our goal of full coverage of inner London. As a reminder, Zipcar Flex allows members to pick up a car and then drop it off later in any approved parking space. Since its launch, members have completed more than 230,000 trips using Flex, and our current run-rate has been utilizing Flex more than 9,000 trips per week. We also reached a milestone on our connected car initiative. As you know, we have embarked on a journey to have our entire global fleet connected by the end of 2020, and we're well on our way.

As of last week, we had 100,000 connected cars in our fleet, more than doubling the number we had just a year ago. We spoken in the past about some of the benefits we're already getting from these cars, including increased revenue, lower maintenance costs, and faster vehicle recovery. I believe we've just scratched the surface. Our vision of a fully connected fleet includes greater utilization, lower fleet costs, and new adjacent business models. We'll have more to say about this in the future.

Moving to Waymo, it was a little more than a year ago that we announced our multiyear partnership to provide fleet management services to all of their self-driving vehicles in Phoenix. Since then, our relationship has grown and now includes providing services in other locations and our latest agreement allows our customers to utilize Waymo autonomous cars as a last-mile solution to get to and from select Avis locations in the Phoenix area. This is a natural extension to our partnership, and we look forward to working closely with them in the future.

Equally important, we continue to learn but it takes the support of fleet of self-driving cars, which will provide us with practical knowledge for when autonomous cars eventually become part of our rental fleet. To summarize, we had a very strong second quarter highlighted by 15% adjusted EBITDA growth and a 70 basis-point margin improvement. We also made good progress turning around ancillary revenue trends, with new products and new selling techniques gaining traction. We've made important investments in our core systems to not only improve our current operations, but also position us well for the future.

For example, we've invested in an integrated Demand Fleet Pricing system that now allows us to optimize rental profitability down to the channel and segment level that is already benefiting our pricing. We've implemented a new digital platform that has consolidated all of our brands and provides for enhanced personalization and customer experience, as well as giving us greater flexibility to merchandise and target our customers and products. This new digital platform is the foundation of our highly successful Avis self-service mobile app.

We're in the final stage of modernizing our core rental and reservation systems that will improve our agility to enhance our time to market as we expand into the broader mobility services industry while reducing our ongoing IT costs. We're also well under way in modernizing our finance processes and systems utilizing the latest cloud-based solution, that, as the project is implemented, will greatly improve our productivity and enhance our analytical capabilities.

We're in the process of building our next-generation connected car and mobility platform that will solidify our position as a leader in integrating with new mobility providers. This platform which currently supports our Kansas City mobility lab provides API integration with current and new partners including Lyft. We will be leveraging this platform as we scale our global fleet beyond the 100,000 cars we already have connected, using advanced analytics and data science to optimize all aspects of our fleet.

With all this investment, we also generated $70 million of free cash flow in the quarter and expect to again generate a significant amount of free cash flow for the year. Looking forward, we continue to pursue margin-enhancing opportunities by growing our direct business, expanding DFP to more locations, and selling more cars through alternative channels, which Martin will discuss. I'm very excited about our new and expanded relationships with Amazon, Lyft, and Luxury Retreats. With that, I will turn the call over to Martyn.

Martyn Smith -- Interim Chief Financial Officer

Thanks Larry and good morning everyone. I'm now going to discuss our second-quarter results together with our cash flow liquidity and outlook. My comments will focus on our adjusted results, which, as Neal mentioned, are reconciled from our GAAP numbers, both in our press release and earnings call presentation. Beginning with an overview, we had a strong second quarter, with overall volumes growing, underlying pricing in the Americas increasing, and fleet costs and utilization each improving.

As a strategy, we increased our overall fleet capacity by 2.8%, less than our rental day growth of 3.6%. We delivered a record $2.3 billion of revenue and a 15% year-over-year improvement and adjusted EBITDA in the quarter but the margin expanding by 70 basis points. Adjusted earnings per share increased 90% in the quarter, benefiting from the strong EBITDA performance, a lower tax rate, and reduced average share count.

Now turning to our Americas business. Revenue growth in the quarter was driven by 2% higher volumes with growth both on and off airport. Revenue per day, the new pricing metric we adopted at the start of the year, was lower by 1% in the quarter, partly due to a longer length of rental achieved and the roughly 50 basis-point impact from difficult markets in Brazil, but revenue per day did progressively improve during the quarter. Our pricing under our historical T&M per-day metric increased 1% in terms of currency despite the Easter shift. The difference between RPD and T&M was largely due to ancillary revenue per day being lower by 3%, as well as the change in customer loyalty accounting we adopted this year, which affected revenue per day by about 50 basis points in the quarter.

Ancillary revenue trends also improved in the second quarter compared to the first as a result of the initiatives we're working on, and that improvement has continued into the summer. We drove 5% higher leisure volume in the quarter, and this is overlapping the second quarter last year when we grew leisure volumes 6%. We increased associated T&M per day by 2%, with the pricing trend improving as the period progressed. 

Promotional volume was 1% lower in the quarter, with growth in the more profitable small business and international inbound subsegments being offset by lower large commercial account volumes.

We increased commercial length of rental 4% in the quarter, a result of our strategy to drive more, longer rental business, although it affected commercial T&M per day, which was lower by 2%. Moving now to Americas cost, starting with fleets. We reduced second-quarter per-unit fleet cost by 7%, in contrast to the 10% increase in quarter two last year, with the used car markets remaining strong through the quarter and into July.

We also further increased the proportion of cars sold through alternative channels, achieving a second-quarter record of 52% of risk-car disposals. By the end of the quarter, 65% of the cars we tend to sell this year in the U.S. have been sold, with 75% sold by the end of July, limiting our exposure to changes in the used car market for the balance of the year. While it's too early to give fleet cost guidance for next year, our negotiations for the U.S. model year '19 buy are now substantially complete, and we expect model year '19 purchase prices to be slightly lower again than the prior model year on a like-for-like basis.

Our strategy to increase our fleet, slower than the rate of volume growth, once again delivered positive results, with utilization improving 70 basis points in the second quarter and 90 basis points for the first half. Due largely to the effect of rising interest rates on our variable-rate conduit facility, vehicle interest expense increased $9 million the quarter. Volume performance, lower per-unit fleet costs, and improved utilization all helped our Americas business deliver an 11% increase in adjusted EBITDA in the quarter, with margin expanding by 60 basis points despite the higher interest costs.

Turning now to our international business, which represented more than 30% our revenues in a quarter. Revenue improved 4% in constant currency year over year. We grew rental days by 6%, largely driven by strong growth in France, Spain, and Italy. Revenue per day was 2% slower in constant currency, primarily due to a longer length of rental, particularly reflecting our strong growth in light commercial vehicles off-airport, and weaker market conditions in APAC. Pricing under our historical T&M per day metric was 1% lower. However, encouragingly, on-airport pricing was ahead in EMEA, breaking quite a long-term trend. We increased leisure volume by 2% in the quarter ,with strong growth seen in both France and Australia, and T&M per day was unchanged.

Commercial demand was very strong in the quarter, with rental days up 14% against prior year, with good growth achieved in U.K., Germany, and Australia. T&M per day was 3% slower due to the strong local market growth we achieved in the period, related to the commercial vehicles I mentioned earlier. Our strong volume performance and improved utilization were essentially offset by a higher airport concession fees, and greater maintenance and damage expenses, resulting in an adjusted EBITDA in our international business growing 20% in the quarter, but largely due to a $19 million benefit from currency exchange.

Moving now to our cash flow and funding position. Adjusted free cash flow was $70 million positive for the second quarter, and we continue to expect it to be between $325 million and $375 million for the full year. Year to date, we have invested $115 million on non-fleet CapEx, including connected cars, new Avis functionality for the app, DFP and accounting modernization, as well as completing the major multiyear upgrade of our global rental and reservation platform. For the full year, we are on track to invest around $225 million on nonfleet CapEx, some 14% higher than the previous year.

Our financial position remained strong, with approximately $2.4 billion of available liquidity. This comprised ending the quarter with $489 million of cash, having $476 million of unused capacity of our revolving credit facility, plus $1.5 billion of availability under our vehicle programs. In April, we issued $400 million of U.S. asset-backed notes due 2023 of an interest cost of 3.8%. In June, we increased the capacity of our European securitization program by around a $175 million to approximately two $2.1 billion, and extended its maturity to 2021, and at a slightly lower facility cost. On-net corporate leverage of 3.9 times improved year-end and was within our targeted range of three to four times. And for covenant purposes, we ended the quarter well below our maximum leverage ratio. As a reminder, none of our corporate debts mature until 2022.

On the acquisition front, we purchased our largest German licensee, which I already mentioned on our last call, as well as a small U.S. licensee during the quarter. In June, we purchased an incremental 20% interest on Greece licensee, bringing our total ownership now up to 40%, having bought an initial stake earlier in the year. In total, we invested $65 million on acquisitions and investments in the first half. In July, we acquired Morini, an independent car light commercial vehicle operator in Italy, for approximately $40 billion.

We bought back 1.6 million, or 2% of our shares outstanding in the second quarter at a cost of $67 million. Average weighted diluted shares were $81.5 million in the second quarter, 4% lower than a year ago. We repurchased a further $25 million of shares in July, and as you saw in our press release last night, our board of directors has increased our share authorization by an additional $250 million. Regarding our full-year 2018 expectations, we are updating our guidance as follows.

We now expect our overall revenue to grow between 2.5% and 5%, largely reflecting changes in foreign exchange rates. Americas volume growth is still expected to be between 1% and 3%, and international volume growth to be between 5% and 7%. We expect revenue per day for the Americas to be in the range of down 1% to up 1% versus prior year after a roughly 100 basis-point impact related to ancillary revenue, which as I mentioned, has already begun to improve, and the change in loyalty accounting.

The slightly lower pricing guidance in part reflects our success driving even more long length rentals, which tend to be lower priced but very profitable business. As well as the continuing difficult market in Brazil, which we now expect to impact revenue per day by about 50 basis points this year. International revenue per day in constant currency is now expected to be lower by between 1% and 3%. We now expect our per-unit fleet costs in the Americas to improve 1% to 3%. International per-unit fleet costs are expected to remain in the range of flat to up 2% in constant currency.

We continue to expect around $20 million higher vehicle interest expense due to rising U.S. benchmark interest rates. To confirm our U.S. fleet debt, 30th of June, being a seasonal high using a greater proportion of conduit funding, was approximately 70% fixed, 30% variable. Outside of the U.S., we are funded predominantly floating rate debt at approximately 20% fixed, 80% variable, again, at the seasonal high usage at the end of June.

We now expect net currency translations to contribute a $20 million to $30 million benefit to adjusted EBITDA, slightly lower than our prior guidance due to the strength of the U.S. dollar. We continue to expect our adjusted EBITDA to be between $740 million and $820 million. Our corporate debt at 30th of June of $3.6 billion was approximately 90% fixed, 10% variable. Therefore we do not expect presently any material expense impact from rising benchmark interest rates on our corporate debt. We now estimate nonvehicle D&A excluding acquisition-related amortization to be between approximately $200 million, and as a consequence adjusted pre-tax income is now expected to improve to between $340 and $420 million.

We still expect our effective tax rate to be in the range of 25% to 27% before any final adjustments to the provisional amounts we previously recorded related to the 2017 Tax Act. Finally, we now expect adjusted diluted earnings per share to be between $3 and $3.85 per share.

In summary, we saw a strong year-over-year improvement in the second quarter driven by robust overall volume growth, improved underlying pricing in the Americas, significantly lower per-unit fleet costs, and high utilization.

We are well funded with no corporate debt maturities until 2022. Our strategic initiatives to drive profitable revenue growth and reduce cost helped us improve our margin by nearly 70 basis points year over year. Midway through the year, we are certainly headed in the right direction, trying both top- and bottom-line growth and improved margins, overall continuing to transform our business into a modern technology-based organization. With that, we'd be happy to answer your questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you, sir. At this time we'll begin with our Q&A portion. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your touch-tone phone. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Our first question comes from Hamzah Mazari with Macquarie Capital. Sir, your line is open.

Hamzah Mazari -- Macquarie Capital -- Analyst

Good morning. Thank you. The first question I was hoping if you could just add a little more color and just frame sort of the strategy of going after longer length of rental in commercial, I guess. Maybe just walk us through where do you see sort of the trade-off between price and volume, are you showing traction in that this quarter? It seems like volume and pricing came in lower versus your largest competitor that's public; I know it's not apples-to-apples. You've talked about Brazil and loyalty accounting, et cetera, but maybe just flush out the strategy for us?

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes, I think one of the things that we learned when we started implementing DFP, DFP was built around trying to drive to profitability. So, it will make trade-offs based on the volume demand, based on the fleet that we have, it will make trade-offs around different decisions as it relates trying to drive the ultimate profitability solution. So, we know that when we drive longer length of rental those are more profitable transactions for us. We drive up our revenue per transaction and we don't have to touch the car and handle the car as many times for the number of days that you get on the longer length, but as you drive longer length it has a negative impact or an effect, if you will, on rate per day.

It's the right profit solution. Instead of taking a lot of one-day and two-day businesses if you can get four days, five days, six days, seven-day businesses or monthly business, that's a better profit solution over time even though the rate per day is going to be less than if you did a one-day or two-day. So, DFP is allowing us to push for longer length earlier in the process in an effort to try to get more of your fleet on longer-length rentals. So, we've been pushing hard on that, pushing hard on monthlies and we're seeing our length of rental grow fairly significantly, particularly with the commercial book of business. Although the effect is going to have a lower length -- a lower rate per day, the overall revenue per transaction improves fairly significantly And overall, that improves profitability.

Hamzah Mazari -- Macquarie Capital -- Analyst

Okay, great. Then just a follow-up question on Brazil. Could you remind us how big that business is for you today and sort of the impact that you saw in Q2 versus Q1 in terms of just deterioration?

Martyn Smith -- Interim Chief Financial Officer

Hamzah, we don't disclose market details, but the deterioration kind of worsened in quarter 2, and we're expecting it to be broadly similar for the balance of year.

Hamzah Mazari -- Macquarie Capital -- Analyst

Okay, great. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you Mr. Mazari. Our next question is from John Healy with Northcoast Research. Your line is open, Mr. Healy.

John Healy -- Northcoast Research Partners LLC -- Analyst

Thank you. Larry, I wanted to see if you could give us a little bit more color on the outlook for July and August. You had provided some pretty powerful numbers on how their July looked, and, qualitatively, some confidence in August. I know you guys have kind of talked to an improving trend throughout 2Q and there's some optimism, but I was just wondering if you could maybe provide us maybe some more parameters regarding how successful July was for you guys and how you feel about summer 2018 ultimately shaking out.

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Sure. In the Americas I would say leisure rates were pretty strong in July, and we're expecting that to continue at least for the first two or three weeks of August. Once again, we really pushed for a longer length of rental in July, which we got. Once again, the effect of that, it will bring rate per day down, but we got very strong revenue per transaction growth in the month. So, I'm very pleased on how DFP is performing and how the other initiatives we have are impacting our length of rental. It's proving to be extremely strong just month after month after month.

But then you still have to balance that with the loyalty impact in the month of July, the loyalty program and, of course, the Brazil effect that Martin has talked about. But I would say leisure rates were strong, length of rental very strong, revenue per transaction is strong. And we expect that to continue this month until we get kind of the fourth week of August and things start to slow down, then you head into the September kind of -- the typical kind of valley of the -- after the summer.

John Healy -- Northcoast Research Partners LLC -- Analyst

Great. Just to provide a little bit of a reminder about 2017, I know there is a little bit of benefit the industry got from some of the eclipses, I think, out West, and then the storms in Texas and Florida. is there a way to think about what kind of hurdle that might be for you guys as we think about September and just kind of, I know it's normally a shoulder period for you guys, but is it a material headwind that we should be thinking about as we calibrate our models. Or is it more modest?

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Well, I think the eclipse is a headwind because, obviously, it drove a lot of volume and good rates through the whole eclipse channel across the country, so you won't have a repeat of that. Not that we're not looking good in those markets for a normal summer period; we are. But you did have this kind of nice bump last year. The hurricane effects, we'll just have to see as it plays out. Obviously, it helped us on some residual values as we sold cars in October and November. But it also took out some business, obviously, in September and October, particularly in Florida where we didn't have bookings for like a solid week as it led up to the hurricanes. So, you expect those volumes to return back to normal versus last year. So, I think there are some opportunities and there's some headwinds on residual values that we have to deal with as we go through. So we just have to move through the quarter and see how all the impacts shake out.

John Healy -- Northcoast Research Partners LLC -- Analyst

Okay great, thank you guys on a strong first half.

Operator

Thank you Mr. Healy. Our next question comes from Chris Woronka with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open, sir.

Chris J. Woronka -- Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. -- Analyst

Hey, good morning guys. Larry, I was hoping you could talk a little bit more about the Lyft partnership, just in terms of how and when you expect to kind of ramp up on volume, and then what kind of impact you think it could have on things like fleet cost and margins?

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes, we're really excited about this. As you know, we didn't jump into this right away, we've been really taking our time working with the car-hailing companies, and Lyft has been a tremendous partner to sit down and really work through this with. We finally got to a solution that we think really works well for them and their drivers and works well for us. We won't start actually rolling fleet over to them until toward the end of this year, but we have said it'll be in the thousands of cars making available for them. Obviously with the size of our fleet, that's fairly easy to do this. This demand is going to be scattered across a number of different locations across the United States, which we'll be able to support pretty well.

We have a lot to learn in this as we go through. We've had some experience with it on the Zipcar side, but we need to gain more experience on the rental car side. We're going to be probably a bit conservative on our fleet cost  approach to this until we learn kind of the level of mileage and so forth that will be put on these cars. We will have our eyes on each car every month, at least every month. These are weekly rentals, and they can renew the weekly rental over again and over again, but every month we have to see the car. So, we'll use our data analytics team to really look at how the cars are accumulating miles and use the data that they have been able to put together, all the internal data and all the external data that we now have access to, to run models to see when is the absolutely right time to sell the cars. Since we'll have our eyes on these cars fairly often and many of these cars will be connected, so we'll also be accumulating mileage information as they go.

We'll have good insight to how they're creating miles, and then we can take a decision of whether we need to get that car sold earlier than what we had originally planned and put the driver into another car, or we can let that car rent to a 100,000 miles, for example, and sell it at the end of its life then. So, we've got a lot of flexibility, a lot of data analytics, and a lot of data coming in that will help us manage the fleet in a way that we feel pretty comfortable with as we go forward. So, as I said, we'll be conservative upfront on the fleet costs and our depreciation levels. And then as we learn, we can make adjustments as we go from there.

Chris J. Woronka -- Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. -- Analyst

Okay. Very helpful. Then I realize you guys don't provide quarterly guidance, but maybe if we could look back on second quarter, do that unfold generally in line with your expectations? Just trying to get a sense, you still have a wide range out there for the full year. How would you characterize second quarter versus your kind of internal budgets?

Martyn Smith -- Interim Chief Financial Officer

Hi, Chris, this is Martyn. It came in very close expectation for a little bit of movement within the month, but they came in very close to what we expected, so we're on track.

Chris J. Woronka -- Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. -- Analyst

Great. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you Mr. Woronka. Our next question is from Michael Millman with Millman Research Associates. Your line is open, sir.

Michael Millman -- Millman Research -- Analyst

Thank you. Could you talk about concessions? Some of the airports supposedly have spread their concessions to the ride-hailing. Some of the people in the industry say it's not working, some say maybe it is. So, I'll be interested to hear your take on it. Secondly, on your strategic initiatives, I think when you talked about them publicly, you were spending -- expensing about $50 million a year. Is that expensing continue? Is that likely to be permanent expensing change in one way or another? Thank you.

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Michael, on the concessions, I think every airport is trying to deal with the impact of ride-hailing and the volume of cars that that's putting onto the airport's cabs. We don't get in the middle of those disputes really. So, some airports have taken the stance to add certain taxes or concession fees to ride-hailing companies. And I think they're all kind of different in form and amounts and so forth. That's up to the airports, and the ride-hailing industry is not something that we're really actively getting involved in.

Martyn Smith -- Interim Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Michael. Just on the $50 million, we're -- I think it's materially the same, as you heard, which I think we talked about several years ago, so predominantly through OpEx and some through CapEx as well. But we're pretty much in a similar position to what you're recalling.

Michael Millman -- Millman Research -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you Mr. Millman. Our next question is from David Tamberrino with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open, sir.

David Tamberrino -- Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC -- Analyst

Great, thank you. Larry, it sounds like very well thought through, slow approach strategy to onboarding some longer-life vehicles and putting them into the Lyft network. I'm curious if you could communicate what's you are targeting from, a margin perspective and a returns perspective for that business relative to your base, leisure and commercial rental.

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. We're not really going to discuss expectations around margin of that at this point. We've run our own models and run some pro formas on what we think it will be. Not ready to really discuss that publicly yet, but you're right at the beginning of your comments that we're going to take a steady approach to this. The way the rollout works with Lyft, it does actually support just a steady approach in learning as we go in multiple markets going at the same time. And it's a perfect timing because it's a time we'll be de-fleeting a number of cars after the Christmas season. We'll be doing a little bit before Christmas, but most of it will come really in the first quarter, second quarter of next year. So, that works out well from a timing perspective, and, as I said, we've got -- our fleet optimization folks are just -- we have so much more skill set and data, external data that allows us to have a lot more granularity, a lot more understanding and visibility into residual values than we've ever had before. Every year it gets stronger and stronger and stronger.

We know that not every -- not all the cars should be sold at the exact same time. Not every car should be sold at 100,000 miles or 110,000 miles. It really makes sense -- makes a difference depending on the make and model, where you're selling it, the trim levels that are on it, the mileage that's on it and so forth to make sure that you really optimize the opportunity of when you're going to sell them. So, we will be using our fleet team to really help us understand that as we roll these cars in and out. As I said, we're renting them on a weekly basis, and most of them will be connected, so we will be getting data. And we'll have our hands on the car physically every single month. So, it limits any sort of -- it limits any downside to a car accreting mileage too fast. We can get our hands on it and rectify it. So, we felt confident after many discussions with Lyft on how we're going to manage through this, and they've been really terrific, sharing that data with us to really help us understand how this works. We're -- we feel good about where we are with this agreement, but we're going to have to grow and learn with it as we go.

David Tamberrino -- Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC -- Analyst

Yes, yes. I think that's fair. I think you know, and the industry knows, that one of the larger competitors was in a similar business, and the maintenance costs ended up being larger than anticipated. And they ultimately discontinued it. So it could, potentially with your data out coming off the vehicles, and that kind of shrewd management of the maintenance expenses in the vehicles should help you, but that's more just a comment. My second question or follow-up is just on the pricing dynamic from a leisure perspective, I think the slide deck said that it was plus 2% year over year in the second quarter. Believe that's a sequential deceleration from plus 4% in 1Q. Is that all just because of within the Americas segment, what happened in Brazil, or is there anything else going on in addition to that incremental length of haul or length of rental, in that duration?

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

I think the impact really is Easter moving into the first quarter, which benefited the first quarter, but also obviously hurt pricing in April. So, that had a fairly large impact for pricing in the month of April and overall impact for the quarter. So, when you have April, when you have Easter that early on April 1, the number of yieldable opportunities between April 1 and the end of June is quite a bit less than it was in the first quarter. Other than Memorial Day weekend, there aren't as many kind of peak opportunities as you're going through the second quarter. In the first quarter, you're building fleet kind of month after -- because you've done the de-fleet after Christmas, and then you start building fleet up for Easter and you kind of build it month by month. And it just so happens volume is kind of improving month after month after month to kind of help soak up those cars you're bringing in.

When Easter is that early, you're bringing cars and in the second quarter for the buildup for summer, and there's not the buildup of the volume at the same time to kind of absorb the cars. I think the whole industry would probably love a second quarter like this one to bring the cars all in on June 15. But that's not obviously how the industry works. So, you're bringing cars on throughout the quarter, and the yieldable opportunities just aren't as many in that kind of quarter as [they] would've been the year before when you had a good strong Easter toward the end of April and a -- towards the end of April and the Memorial Day weekend, and so forth. As we also said Brazil is also been an impact as leisure's has been really really tough in Brazil this year.

David Tamberrino -- Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC -- Analyst

Understood, its very helpful. Thank you Larry.

Operator

Thank you Mr. Tamberrino. Our next question comes from Brian Johnson with Barclays. Your line is open.

Brian A. Johnson -- Barclays Capital, Inc. -- Analyst

Yes. Good morning. I want to ask you about the evolution of your U.S. fleet from sedans, which, of course, are out of favor in the showrooms with weak residuals toward CUVs. Is that -- and it certainly shows up in the auto fleet data in terms of rental car fleet purchases, which were up this year? Is that something you're participating in? Can you give us any metrics on percent of fleet in sedans versus CUVs, and how that's evolved? And is there enough of a pricing boost you get on that, to offset the higher fleet costs if there, in fact, are any?

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Brian you didn't come through really clearly, but I'll try to address the question as I think you asked it, I couldn't hear all of it. But, I think it starts with our view of what customer demand is. Before we go into the buying year, we sit down and really take a look at what customers are looking for in rental car. We don't buy cars outside of what the customer demand is, by make and model. So, we really try to focus putting the right fleet in place that's going to meet the needs of the customers. As the customers' own purchasing habits have changed more to crossovers and SUVs, so has rental demand has matched that. People like to rent what they like to drive.

So, we always keep that in sync as we go forward. So, we have shifted out of some sedans into SUVs and crossovers, and some into larger SUVs. And yes, we can get a higher rate per day on some of the bigger SUVs and what we call our noncore fleet. Even though the cap cost of those cars are more expensive, the residual values have also been stronger. So, net-net, when we take a look at those acquisitions, our fleet optimization team and our fleet acquisition team look at, take all that into consideration starting with the most important thing. And that is, make sure you've got cars that customers want by marketplace and then get -- use the data analytics to get the right makes and models with the right trim levels and the right colors, and the right market to maximize your residual value on the other end. Then take the advantage of what those noncore cars can help you with rate per day.

So, we haven't seen any issues. We haven't seen any kind of misalignment as we've made transitions to some of the richer fleet that we did in the last half of last year. Yes, this puts a little pressure on fleet cost and, obviously, the comparable of this year over last year. But it's the right thing to do because that's what customers want. And the residual values will be there to support it on the other rental when we go to sell them.

Brian A. Johnson -- Barclays Capital, Inc. -- Analyst

Do you have a rough percent of where sedans are as percent of your fleet?

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

I think it's about 24%, somewhere around there.

Neal H. Goldner -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Hi, Brian, it's Neal. So, in the U.S. our fleet plan for the U.S. this year for all of our cars; mid, small, and large, are going to be a little less than 50% of our fleet this year. That's the -- kind of what we'll call the -- typically the car core.

Brian A. Johnson -- Barclays Capital, Inc. -- Analyst

Okay. Then second question. As airports roll out the centralized renting facilities, we're in the process of that at O'Hare, as you know. Do you see any difference in just price sensitivity competing against TNCs and others who are still picking up at the curb? As you kind of look at that, is that a trend that is at all affecting your business, or is it just that you move from one type of lot to a central lot?

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

I'm sorry Brian. Can you just repeat? Repeat the question. If you could just speak a little higher.

Brian A. Johnson -- Barclays Capital, Inc. -- Analyst

If you look at a city that's moved from central -- to a centralized pickup lot from the older system of buses going to individual locks, do you see any material difference in the rates you can get, the volumes you're getting? There certainly is a bear thesis out there that when you go to a big central facility like Miami or Houston, the small B budget brands are on equal footing with the larger brands, and hence it's harder to maintain price differentiation. Secondly, the hassle of getting to those central lots may slip some travelers over into TNCs or other forms of transport.

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. I think as you take a look at how things have evolved over the years or the number of walk-ups that you used to get, you don't get near the number of walk-ups, where people just walking up to the counters without reservations. With the advancements of apps -- mobile apps, and we're seeing a huge growth on our mobile app, most people are arriving to the airport already booked.

Through things like mobile apps, they're they're actually booking, and not -- not only booking, but they're also selecting their car in advance and so forth before they even get to the airport. So, having a consolidated rental facility versus nonconsolidated rental facility doesn't really make much difference at this point. I think most people have already thought through it, booked their reservation, and selected their rental car company.

I think as it relates to airports where it is more -- where it's a lengthier transaction to get from the airport over to the rental facility, yes, of course that can impact convenience. Which is why things like dropping customers off, the new product that we're offering, has some real appeal, that people are willing to pay a fee for us just to drive them directly to the curb and not have to go through, perhaps a long tram ride or congested bus ride or so forth.

So when the rental car facility is right across the street from the airport, sure that makes a difference. When it's a tram ride away, yeah, you can feel it. And that's why coming up with products that make it more convenient, providing more technology, more ability for people to transact online and use their apps, and select their cars on the app and do everything that they need to do on the app, makes it a lot easier for customers to be able to get to their car and have a more enjoyable experience. So, that's why we're focused on those types of new product offerings. It's just that it saves some time for consumers and make[s] it more convenient.

Brian A. Johnson -- Barclays Capital, Inc. -- Analyst

Okay, thank you.

Operator

Thank you Mr. Johnson. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your touch-tone phone, please record your name when prompted to be introduced. Please remember you're allowed one question and one follow-up. Our next question is from Wayne Cooperman with Cobalt Capital.

Wayne Manning Cooperman -- Cobalt Capital Management, Inc. -- Analyst

Hey, now. Questionis, first, the expenses in the quarter operating expenses grew 6% SG&A grew 10%, if you could talk about that. And I thought I heard you say depreciation and amortization will be $200 million for the year, which seems low since you've been run-rating like $65 million a quarter for quite some time. So if you could elaborate on those two things.

Martyn Smith -- Interim Chief Financial Officer

Yes, it's Martyn, Wayne. Just on operating expenses and SG&A, they're both -- probably it's currency translation is making them look higher. plus we also, and I think we talked about this as we presented last time, we reset our comp schemes, which largely didn't pay out in 2017, so we have to reset those for 2018 at target. And there's a bit of further channel commission cost because of the growth of leisure that Larry and I were discussing earlier. It tends to bring in some more channel-related fees into SG&A as well. So in summary, it's translations and expense, channel costs and expense ,plus resetting the computation schemes. On the depreciation, some of this currency and some of this timing as well. Just when the [stuff] is falling within the quarters, but the depreciation number, that's what we're expecting for this year -- for the nonacquisition-related.

Wayne Manning Cooperman -- Cobalt Capital Management, Inc. -- Analyst

Yes, that's a big step down.

Martyn Smith -- Interim Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, it's a bit. But it's got -- probably timing in the quarter, just the way it kind of falls.

Operator

Thank you Mr. Cooperman. Our last question at this time is from James Albertine with Consumer Edge. Your line is open, sir.

James J. Albertine -- Consumer Edge Research LLC -- Analyst

Great, thank you, and good morning everybody. Wanted to ask again -- to follow on here with this narrative around future mobility and connected vehicles. Can you help us better frame -- you're providing how many vehicles are connected in your fleet. We appreciate that, saying it's higher revenue lower cost and we appreciate that. But can you help us frame the economics here? And is this something that we need to track more closely? With respect to -- as a percentage of your overall fleet adjusted for seasonality, what this number should look like over time? And is this going to be -- net more costs than benefits here in the short term, or is it already a positive sort of margin situation?

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes, the revenue generation that we're getting from connected cars right now is really focused around gas collection, so we're collecting more gas revenue on every connected car transaction than a nonconnected car transaction because they're going to read gas down to one-tenth of one gallon. It also will refund gas to a consumer if they brought it back with more gas than they had it and when they took the car out, because it's calculating that as well. So even net that, we generate more revenue per transaction on gas collections, and that more than offsets the cost of the technology altogether.

What we're really focused on now, through the Kansas City mobility lab, is looking at ways of how we use the connectivity to manage the fleet -- and so there's tighter control around the asset, since we know pretty much where the car is at all times. So, we've developed a number of reports that managers are now using that keeps track of exactly where the cars are at all times, whether they're on rent, how they actually show on the system versus what we actually see them doing, making sure that we get our cars back and on rent, serviced and on rent, faster than not by -- than nonconnected cars.

Also, we're using the technology to get ahead of maintenance concerns on the car by being able to read the diagnostic codes on the car. One of the first ones we launched was the ability to actually know that there's going to be a tire inflation problem before a customer sees that red light go off on the dashboard that causes some concern during the rentals. That allows us to quickly be able to know exactly what tire we need to inflate before that light goes off, the customer never has to experience, they never had to call roadside assistance, we don't have that follow-up expense and so forth.

So, when you think about all the different processes as the car goes through, all the places the car ends up at maintenance facility or sometimes an impound lot. Wherever the car may go, we have tighter control because we know exactly where the car is. We recover our cars faster when they do end up in situations like an impound yard being towed somewhere. We get them back several days faster with less damage on them; that allows us put the car back on rent not really lose those days. There are literally hundreds of ways in which the car can be tightly controlled through the connectivity.

Then, down line as we collect data, we're already discussing with different partners data that they may be interested in purchasing from us. Not customer-related data; we don't collect anything about the customer but just the car itself, where the car actually went as far as traffic patterns and so forth that other companies may be interested in knowing.

So, there is a lot of potential for this as we continue to explore data-as-a-service, fleet management-as-a-service, and our mobility-as-a-service product offerings. And having that connectivity and having it integrated into our systems allows us to not only collect the data, but actually do something with the data. So, my example earlier with Lyft, with the next-generation platform around mobility that we're building, we will be able to collect the data, collect the mileage.

It'll make determinations around what that car should be doing, the life it should have with us, when we should be exiting that car, where we should be exiting it to maximize residual values, and actually have a system that can manage that process for 600,000 cars versus trying to have people manually try to manage that, which would be impossible. So the connectivity just -- it brings -- it just is a whole new dawn for us. It's a whole new opportunity to have us look at all of our processes, how we manage fleet in a very different way that allows us to use data analytics in a way that can really drive asset utilization and security of our assets and protect mileage, balance miles across the fleet, things that we could never do in the past.

James J. Albertine -- Consumer Edge Research LLC -- Analyst

Very good. Thank you and best of luck in the third quarter.

Operator

Thank you, Mr. Albertine. For closing remarks, I will turn the call back over to Mr. Larry De Shon. Please go ahead, sir.

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you very much. Before we close, I think it's important to reiterate the key takeaways from today's call. We had a strong second quarter, with volume, underlying pricing, and fleet costs improving. Our work to improve our profitability was evident this quarter, with margins increasing 70 basis points. We reached a significant milestone towards our goal of having a fully connected global fleet, and we announced exciting new relationships with Amazon, Lyft, and Luxury Retreats.

We have a full calendar of investor relations activities planned again this quarter, including events in New York, Boston, and California, and we hope to see many of you during our travels. With that, I want to thank you for your time and your interest in our company.

Operator

Thank you. That does conclude today's conference call; you may disconnect at this time.

Duration: 56 minutes

Call participants:

Neal H. Goldner -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Larry D. De Shon -- Chief Executive Officer

Martyn Smith -- Interim Chief Financial Officer

Hamzah Mazari -- Macquarie Capital -- Analyst

John Healy -- Northcoast Research Partners LLC -- Analyst

Chris J. Woronka -- Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. -- Analyst

Michael Millman -- Millman Research -- Analyst

David Tamberrino -- Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC -- Analyst

Brian A. Johnson -- Barclays Capital, Inc. -- Analyst

Wayne Manning Cooperman -- Cobalt Capital Management, Inc. -- Analyst

James J. Albertine -- Consumer Edge Research LLC -- Analyst

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