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Date

Thursday, May 7, 2026, at 9 a.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chief Executive Officer — Gil West
  • Chief Commercial Officer — Sandeep Dube
  • Chief Financial Officer — Scott Haralson

Takeaways

  • Revenue -- $2.0 billion, an 11% increase year over year and reported as Hertz Global Holdings (HTZ +0.49%)'s strongest year-over-year quarterly revenue growth in three years.
  • Adjusted corporate EBITDA -- Improved by $141 million year over year to negative $161 million, nearly a 50% improvement, with margin up by 860 basis points to negative 8%.
  • Net loss -- GAAP net loss of $333 million, with an adjusted net loss of $224 million, representing an adjusted improvement of approximately $105 million year over year.
  • GAAP diluted EPS -- Negative $1.06, with adjusted EPS of negative $0.72, a $0.35 improvement over the prior year.
  • Revenue per day (RPD) -- Up 5.5% year over year, with U.S. Airport RPD specifically up about 8% and marking the most significant year-over-year improvement since the second quarter of 2022.
  • Transaction days -- Increased approximately three percent year over year, partially offset by the impact from elevated recalls.
  • Fleet utilization -- Reported utilization was up 90 basis points over the first quarter of 2023 and 2024, and, when normalizing for recalls, utilization was 140 basis points higher for the comparable period.
  • Depreciation per unit (DPU) per month -- Gross DPU was $296, with net DPU at $312 due to $16 in losses on sale of vehicles; full-year net DPU expected to stay below $300 per month target.
  • Direct operating expense (DOE) per transaction day -- $38.43, an increase of 1.7% year over year, driven by higher RPD-related variable costs and increased real estate expense; normalized DOE per day improved by approximately 1.6%.
  • SG&A expense -- Increased modestly in dollar terms but decreased as a percentage of revenue to 11.6% from 12% year over year, reflecting improved operating leverage.
  • Liquidity -- Ended the quarter with $837 million in cash and available credit; secured an additional $200 million of liquidity via ABS financing in April, with expectations of ending the second quarter just under $1 billion, and year-end over $1.5 billion.
  • Oro mobility launch -- Oro launched out of stealth with expanded Uber partnership, managing over 1,000 drivers and operating in four major U.S. markets, partnered on both driver-led and autonomous vehicle fleets, joining Uber's autonomous robo taxi program.
  • Franchise and partnerships -- New strategic partnerships announced during the quarter, including collaborations with Amazon Autos, eBay, Cox Automotive, and loyalty integrations with American Express and Air Canada's Aeroplan.
  • Guidance update -- Full-year capacity guidance reduced: days now expected up mid-single digits (from previous mid-to-high), fleet growth forecast at low single digits (from prior mid-single digits); 2026 EBITDA margin guidance maintained at 3%-6%.
  • Second quarter outlook -- Transaction days expected down 2%-3%, fleet down 1%-2%, RPD improvement expected greater than the first quarter, net DPU forecast well below $300 per month, and EBITDA margin projected in the low to mid-single-digit range.
  • Net Promoter Score -- Achieved a 50% improvement last year, continued to rise in both U.S. and European markets, recognized as the only car rental company on USA Today's list of most trusted brands in 2026.
  • Value-added product sales -- Year-over-year gains in RPD and conversion rates attributed to value-added product strategies, further improving overall unit economics.
  • Car sales and F&I performance -- Best quarter for finance and insurance (F&I) revenue in three and a half years, supported by more favorable partner arrangements and enhanced omnichannel sales platforms.

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Risks

  • Scott Haralson said, "Recall activity was a headwind in [the first quarter], up almost 300% higher than a year ago," removing over 16,000 vehicles from service each month and impacting utilization and revenue by approximately $50 million.
  • Elevated recalls reduced utilization by about 200 basis points and transaction days by approximately 930,000, with estimated negative impact to adjusted EBITDA of over $25 million for the quarter.
  • Haralson cited "higher depreciation expense and pressured utilization and transaction days" as a result of carrying more fleet than planned due to elevated recalls.
  • Capacity guidance reduced, with expectations that transaction days and fleet will grow at lower rates than initially forecast, putting "some pressure on DOE per day."

Summary

Hertz Global Holdings (HTZ +0.49%) delivered double-digit revenue growth and a nearly 50% year-over-year improvement in adjusted EBITDA for the period, emphasizing ongoing structural operational changes and execution of its commercial strategy. The launch of Oro, its mobility platform, marks a significant expansion beyond traditional car rental, including deepening engagement with Uber for both human-driven and autonomous rideshare fleets. The company confirmed major partnerships—Amazon Autos, eBay, Air Canada's Aeroplan, and American Express—demonstrating broader efforts to diversify its marketplace exposure and improve monetization channels. Despite headwinds from a sharp increase in recalls, Hertz maintained progress on profitability metrics and liquidity targets, entering the second quarter with fortified cash reserves. Management reaffirmed its commitment to achieving $1 billion EBITDA by 2027, supported by disciplined capacity deployment and continued investment in both its core fleet and growth platforms.

  • Leadership stated, "Oro has the potential to be the most valuable asset in our platform," reflecting the company's intent to shift traditional valuation frameworks and pursue material sum-of-the-parts re-rating in the future.
  • The spread between RPD and DOE per day improved roughly 12% year over year, signaling enhanced profitability per transaction.
  • The sequential growth in RPD through each month of the quarter and the company's reporting of "the seventh consecutive major holiday where we have grown both utilization and RPD year-over-year" supports management's assertions of consistent execution and strong channel demand.
  • Fleet mix, which was a headwind for RPD in 2025, will be a tailwind through the remainder of the year.

Industry glossary

  • DPU (Depreciation per unit): Monthly average fleet depreciation expense per vehicle, key for evaluating asset efficiency.
  • RPU (Revenue per unit): Revenue generated per fleet vehicle per month; central in fleet productivity analysis.
  • RPD (Revenue per day): Average daily revenue per rental vehicle, serving as a core yield management metric.
  • DOE (Direct operating expense): Per-day direct costs tied to rental transactions, excluding SG&A and depreciation.
  • F&I (Finance and insurance revenue): Income from the sale of financial products and insurance in conjunction with vehicle sales.
  • Oro: Hertz's new vertically integrated mobility platform targeting rideshare and autonomous fleet operations in partnership with Uber.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Gil West, our Chief Executive Officer, who will discuss strategy, operational highlights and our fleet. Our Chief Commercial Officer, Sandeep Dube, will share insights into our commercial strategy. followed by Scott Haralson, our Chief Financial Officer, who will discuss our financial performance. I'll now turn the call over to Gil.

Wayne West: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I want to start by recognizing the Hertz team. The hard work, discipline and resilience they bring quarter after quarter is what makes results like Q1 possible. When we laid out our transformation strategy, we framed it around three financial North Star metrics. Fleet Management measured by DPU below $300 a revenue optimization measured by RPU over $1,500 and rigorous cost control measured by DOE per day in the low $30. These are our guidepost on a path to $1 billion EBITDA in 2027.

Over the last 2 years, we fundamentally turned fleet from a headwind to a tailwind through our Buy right, hold right sell right strategy with tangible sequential improvements that have compounded over time. We hit our DPU North Star target last year and are tracking to hit it again this year. Over the last few quarters, we have also been building steady momentum on revenue. and we're tracking to hit our North Star RPU target for full year 2026. This quarter, the results show that our strategy is working we set aggressive targets and we hit them. Adjusted corporate EBITDA was up $141 million year-over-year, a nearly 50% improvement. Revenue was up 11% year-over-year and both beat consensus.

It was, in fact, our strongest year-over-year revenue growth in 3 years. We delivered our strongest year-over-year Q1 RPD improvement since the travel recovery in Microchip driven spike in 2022, we saw sequential improvements in both RPU and RPD throughout the quarter. A clear sign that the Hertz unique commercial strategies are paying off, along with broader market stream. These results are especially meaningful given the environment we were operating in. The quarter brought headwinds, including elevated recalls, a partial government shutdown, higher TSA wait times and storm disruptions across key markets. Amidst this environment, our performance underscores that this transformation is driving structural improvements.

On fleet, while DPU is an annual North Star target, this quarter's gross DPU beat that metric while net DPU, which fluctuates based on net car sales gains and losses was in line with our expectations. And supported by continued disciplined fleet rotation. With our youngest fleet in nearly a decade, we are seeing our strategy translate directly into better economics. After a slow start to the year, the residual values improved significantly through the quarter. With all this, we expect full year net DPU to remain below our North Star target of $300 per month, even with an enriched fleet mix.

Adjusted DOE per transaction day increased approximately 2% year-over-year, driven primarily by revenue-related costs, which are EBITDA accretive and real estate sale-leaseback transactions executed last year. Normalizing for these impacts, core DOE per day continued to improve year-over-year. We still have work to do, and we need to continue to build scale to achieve our North Star target in the low 30s. The progress is there, and we have a variety of initiatives in flight. This quarter, recalls we're up nearly 300% temporarily shrinking our rentable fleet, that required us to carry more fleet than planned, impacting utilization by about 200 basis points year-over-year.

Our team is strategically managing through this, making progress by working proactively upstream we're undertaking numerous initiatives to mitigate the impact, including working with OEMs and government officials for both tactical and structural improvements. While normalizing for the higher recalls, utilization was 140 basis points higher for the same period, showcasing our team's achievements and asset efficiency. Even with hiring calls, reported utilization was 90 basis points above where we were in Q1 of '23 and 2024. On the customer front, we're raising the bar to build on last year's 50% improvement in Net Promoter Score to deliver a truly gold standard.

That work recently earned us a spot as the only rental car company on USA today's list of most trusted brands of 2026. We also saw the highest year-over-year improvement of any a car rental company on Business Travel News satisfaction survey. As we discussed last quarter, [ rent-a-car ] remains the foundation of our business today. But our transformation is about building more than 1 single value stream. We're running today's business with discipline while deliberately investing in the capabilities that will define Hertz future. That work is creating a more diversified platform, spanning rent-a-car, service, fleet and mobility. I'm pleased to share that we made progress across our highest priority areas this quarter.

In rent-a-car, we launched an advanced fleet planning engine, which leverages Navidea's decision optimization engine in Palantir's foundry data operating system. This system will enable us to deliver the right car to the right place at the right time more efficiently than ever before, delivering positive impacts across the business from utilization to customer experience. By continuing to improve our operations and strengthen our customer trust and loyalty in our brands, we're delivering greater value to our franchise partners. At the same time, we're sharpening our focus on franchise with new leadership and a fresh look at how to unlock additional value by expanding and optimizing our franchise footprint.

In fleet, Hertz car sales continues its evolution into a truly omnichannel business, building on our strengthened physical and digital channels, we're establishing a scalable sales model that expands the top of the funnel and drives volume through partnerships like Amazon Autos. This week, we also announced the new partnership with eBay, putting our near new certified inventory in front of more customers than ever before. And as more leads come down the funnel, our partnerships with Cox Automotive is helping drive conversion through AI-generated pricing, revamp digital tools and better upstream lead generation tools like Autotrader. In addition, we've continued to make great progress on finance and insurance.

As car sales volumes grow, F&I scales efficiently and enhances overall unit economics. This was our best quarter in 3.5 years for F&I revenue, and we're building on this progress with more favorable financing partner arrangements. And finally, the breakthrough this quarter was in mobility, where our platform really came to life. We said that for some time that Hertz has a role in the future of mobility. And over the last few quarters, we've been building the skills and capabilities to make it real. Now we're coming out of stealth mode. Last week, we announced Oro, our mobility business with an expanded Uber partnership. But here is the bigger picture.

AV technology has the potential to unlock a multitrillion dollar market. But as the industry transitions from personally owned vehicles to commercially operated fleet whether driver-led or autonomous, a critical layer has been missing. Tech providers are focused on autonomous software and hardware. OEMs are focused on vehicles. App-based platforms are focused on aggregating demand. What is missing is the operations and orchestration layer. That's where Oro comes in. Oro is purpose-built to fill the gap between autonomous technology, vehicles and demand platforms, managing and servicing fleets reliably, efficiently, safely and at scale. Backed by Hertz century of expertise and complex fleet management, Oro brings a distinct advantage to the market.

Hertz operates one of the world's largest rideshare rental fleets with over 40,000 vehicles and has deep experience with EVs and a management team with the direct AV operational experience. Once more, the company has a network of over 2,700 chargers over 11,000 service locations in car washes and thousands of maintenance technicians. Oro harnesses that scale with agility of an independent entity to deliver flexible, vertically integrated rideshare solutions for fleets of all sizes. Oro is partnering with Uber to provide rideshare fleet services across both driver and AV fleet delivering capabilities directly relevant for the transition to scaled autonomy.

Today, Oro owns, maintains and operates a fleet of vehicles, employing and managing over 1,000 drivers under a high-quality turnkey operating structure. Oro creates value by optimizing preplanned supply to meet growing rider demand on Uber's platform with an elevated customer experience and additional safety protocols. Oro is currently active on the Uber platform in Atlanta, Los Angeles and San Francisco and Northern New Jersey just launched this week. Our drivers have logged over 4 million miles to date. And with Uber's nearly 200 million monthly active platform consumers, there's plenty of room to scale. Oro has joined -- Oro has also joined Uber's autonomous robo taxi program. supporting lucid vehicles equipped with neuro AV technology.

Starting later this year, Oro will provide the program's orchestration and operation by leading charging maintenance, repairs, cleaning and depot staffing. By managing both driver led and driverless vehicles we're widening our scope and deepening our experience with more complex and dynamic fleets. Testing and refining economics, asset utilization and workforce models, so we'll be ready for the transition to scale autonomy at whatever pace that occurs. While it's still early innings, Oro represents or presents meaningful upside and reinforces the progress we've made thus far on our transformation. Marking the beginning of a new chapter for Hertz. We're strengthening our core business and innovating for the future, all while furthering our mission to advance the way the world moves.

With that, I'll turn it over to Sandeep.

Sandeep Dube: Thanks, Gil, and good morning, everyone. Last quarter, we saw tangible progress that underscore the positive momentum our commercial strategy was driving. And in our last earnings call, we said that revenue was off to a positive start in 2026. Q1 2026 full quarter results tell an even better story. We achieved Hertz's strongest year-over-year revenue growth in 3 years with revenue totaling $2 billion, an 11% increase from the year before. This was primarily driven by the structural improvements we have made to our commercial strategies, which resulted in meaningful gains in year-over-year RPU, RBD and days. Our view was up 4.5%.

We hit our North Star ARPU target in March, and we have line of sight to achieving our North Star RPU metric for full year 2026. Our Q1 RPU results showed positive momentum despite headwinds from elevated recalls and were primarily driven by our focus on delivering positive year-over-year RPD which was up 5%. This RPD performance marked our most significant year-over-year improvement since Q2 2022. U.S. Airport showed particular strong improvement with RPD up about 8%. These revenue headlines are the product of strength across the entire quarter. During this typical seasonal trough period for the industry and amidst headwinds, we delivered sequential improvement in year-over-year revenue and RPD through our January February and March.

This steady progress reflects Hertz's increasing commercial maturity as our playbook continues to yield results, we are executing with creative sophistication, leveraging the same drivers outlined in our Q3 and Q4 2025 earnings calls. Let me dive into the details. First, enhancing our customer experience. We are making systemic improvements across every customer touch point, leveraging deep research and insights to create a more consistent convenient and caring experience. We have redesigned our customer service training framework, and the results from our pilot were immediate. NPS scores grows. We have now rolled this out across our top 50 U.S. airports.

Importantly, the changes we are making are being delivered consistently across the business, with our European team achieving a record Net Promoter Score for the quarter. Second, generating greater durable demand from higher-margin channels. Direct website demand is showing strong growth. Our corporate business is gaining ground. We are continuing to strengthen our partnership segment with last week's launch of a new Hertz iStar status benefit for American Express Gold Card members, and yesterday's launch of a new strategic partnership with Air Canada's leading travel loyalty program, Aeroplan. We are now driving consistent growth in our off-airport business, and our rideshare rental business is growing strong.

Third, improving our pricing tactics and strategies, our multiphase approach continues to bring more precision to the way we price demand. And we remain focused on continuing to drive positive RPD for comparable asset classes. The new pricing metrics we spoke about in Q4 continues to contribute to RPD gains. We are seeing exciting results from an even newer version of our pricing metrics. Which we executed towards the end of Q1. Early signs indicate its ability to deliver improved revenue production. The positive effects of which will show up in revenue results for mid-Q2 and beyond. Fourth, improved monetization of our higher RPU assets.

Our new fleet management tools are helping advance our ability to get the right vehicle in the right location at the right time, enabling a more precise pricing approach. Fifth, better value-added product sales. We continue to drive sales of our value-added products with higher conversion and improved pricing sophistication. Q1 showed particular strength in year-over-year gains in RPD due to value-added product strategies. Finally, local level profitability and optimization. We continue to improve our ability to manage our business at a more granular level of profitability. Quarter-by-quarter, these initiatives are demonstrating their improved capability to enhance our revenue engine. Throughout April, our playbook drove strong performance for the month. particularly in total fleet utilization gains and mid-single-digit RPD gains.

In particular, Easter we can provide provided a clear example of our engine in action. Utilization reached its highest level for any Easter since 2017. And RPD increased 10% compared to last Easter, which occurred later in the month. Together these results drove a 16% year-over-year increase in RPU on our rentable fleet. Importantly, we generated more revenue over Easter weekend than we did last year with approximately 20,000 fewer rental bull vehicles. This marks the seventh consecutive major holiday where we have grown both utilization and RPD year-over-year, highlighting the consistency of our execution.

In summary, the revenue momentum, which has been building for the past few quarters through build-to-last structural improvements has now improved to a level where it is translating to positive year-over-year revenue RPD and days. Fleet mix, which was a headwind for RPD in 2025 will be a tailwind through the remainder of the year. Demand from our customers continues to look strong for the rest of Q2 and beyond. And we have line of sight to achieve our North Star RPU target in 2026. Primarily through a plan that delivers positive RPD. This quarter reinforces our commercial strategy is delivering. With that, I'll hand it over to Scott to walk through our financial performance.

Scott Haralson: Thanks, Sandeep. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining. The first quarter demonstrated continued progress across the business. Revenue momentum continues to build. Our unit economics are improving. And we are managing the business with discipline. While Q1 is seasonally our most challenging quarter, the better-than-expected results reinforced that the structural improvements we continue to make are translating into tangible financial outcomes. Before I get into the quarter, I want to briefly touch on the platform. You heard Gil talk about Oro, which we are excited to unveil, we obviously view this business as an important piece of the platform has the potential for high growth and good margins, and therefore, could have a sizable value accretion to the enterprise.

As we have said before, Oro has the potential to be the most valuable asset in our platform, especially when we unlock additional value streams within Oro that are not being discussed today. Plus there's more to the platform than Oro. We are diligently working on similar strategic unlocks for both the fleet and services side of the business that will be rolled out over time. In short, there is a lot more this business is capable of than just renting cars. Now let me walk you through the quarter in more detail. I'll also cover liquidity and our updated views on Q2 and the full year.

For Q1, we generated revenue of $2.0 billion, up 11% year-over-year, driven by continued strength in pricing with RPD up approximately 5.5% and transaction days up around 3%. GAAP net loss for the quarter was negative $333 million with an adjusted net loss of negative $224 million, an improvement of approximately $105 million year-over-year. GAAP diluted EPS was negative $1.06 and adjusted EPS was negative $0.72, which was an adjusted EPS improvement of $0.35 versus the first quarter of last year. Adjusted EBITDA was negative $161 million, representing a $141 million year-over-year improvement.

EBITDA margin improved by 860 basis points to negative 8% from negative 17% in the first quarter of last year and coming in better than our guidance expectations. Recall activity was a headwind in Q1, up almost 300% higher than a year ago, taking an average of over 16,000 vehicles out of service each month. While we expected an elevated number of recalls, the lack of fixes to prior recalled vehicles and additional new recalled models, drove a larger-than-expected number of sideline vehicles in the quarter. Partially offset to the impact, we carried more fleet than originally planned. This drove higher depreciation expense and pressured utilization and transaction days.

In total, elevated recalls reduced utilization by roughly 200 basis points, impacted transaction days by approximately $930,000 and resulted in a revenue impact of about $50 million. The total impact to adjusted EBITDA was more than $25 million. Despite that, we still produced EBITDA results that meet our expectations. Turning to cost. Adjusted DOE per transaction day was $38.43, representing a 1.7% increase year-over-year. DOE per day was impacted by higher RPD related variable costs that are EBITDA accretive and EBITDA-neutral damages costs that are recovered through revenue. The reported increase was also partially driven by higher real estate expense tied to sale-leaseback transactions executed after Q1 of last year.

When normalizing for these costs, DOE per day improved approximately 1.6% year-over-year, in line with what we would expect with an almost 3% increase in days. More importantly, our RPD to DOE per day spread an important indicator of profitability improved by approximately 12% year-over-year. SG&A increased modestly year-over-year, primarily driven by higher advertising spend as part of our strategy to invest during seasonal trough periods. Importantly, as a percentage of revenue, SG&A declined from 12% to 11.6%, reflecting improved operating leverage. Gross depreciation per unit per month for the quarter was $296. Losses on the sale of vehicles drove an additional DPU per month amount of $16, resulting in net DPU of $312.

We typically experience losses on sale of vehicles in Q1 with expected gains on sale in the second and third quarters. This puts our expectations for net DPU for the full year below our North Star target of $300 per unit per month. Turning to liquidity. We ended the quarter with $837 million, which includes cash and cash equivalents and the available capacity under our revolving credit facility. In April, we completed an additional ABS financing that added $200 million of liquidity in the second quarter. With other liquidity enhancements planned, we expect to end the second quarter with just under $1 billion and look to end the year at north of $1.5 billion.

Now before I talk about guidance for Q2 and the full year, let me talk about how our views on capacity growth for Q2 and the full year have migrated, particularly in relation to what our expectations were as we entered the year. We exited Q4 with positive pricing momentum and a desire to grow the different parts of our business. And new liquidity was going to be necessary to grow given the normal -- abnormal drains on liquidity that are occurring this year. Like the Wells Fargo litigation settlement and the reduction in our revolver size that occurs in June. Early in the year, the plan was to add liquidity to fuel our growth for the year.

We have since decided to limit capacity growth in the first half of the year and reevaluate it later for the second half of the year. One of the benefits of this business is that we can be nimble with supply. Unlike in other businesses that can't efficiently pivot capacity that quickly. While we believe the majority of the RPD improvements Hertz has seen to date are from our commercial strategies and tactics we do know that industry supply has been limited, and that obviously has played a role in pushing RPD to healthier levels across the industry. As with other businesses that have significant fixed costs like ours, there is constant tension between pricing, supply and unit cost.

We appreciate that there is a balance between limiting supply for pricing power and the pressure that it puts on unit cost. And we are constantly assessing the impact of all of these on profitability and the return on invested capital. We have North Star metrics that help guide broader, longer-term company initiatives that are particularly helpful in the transformation. But these are many times moving numerical targets, but they are grounded in the solid tactical strategies around revenue optimization, fleet efficiency and disciplined cost management. Those don't change, but as we have mentioned before, there are many ways to win in this business.

We still have our eyes set on growth in the right places at the right time, but also look to optimize the balance between capital deployment supply, unit revenues and unit costs that produce the desired EBITDA and return on invested capital outcomes in the short run. So with that preamble, let's talk guidance. For capacity, given the backdrop I just discussed, we're going to slightly reduce our outlook on days and fleet for the full year versus our original guidance expectations. Days are now likely up in the mid-single-digit range versus the mid- to high single-digit range we originally expected. Fleet is expected to be up low single digits year-over-year versus our original expectations of up mid-single digits.

Obviously, this puts some pressure on DOE per day, but we hope to keep that roughly flat year-over-year even with sizable pressure on revenue and related expenses. RPD showed, however, continue to improve for the year to the point that we think we can produce a level of total revenue for this year that gives us a similar expected EBITDA outcome. Just with higher RPD and lower days than originally expected. So in total, we are maintaining our EBITDA margin guidance in the 3% to 6% range for the full year.

As for Q2, we expect days to be down 2 to 3 percentage points year-over-year and fleet down about 1 to 2 percentage points as recalls continue to weigh on days production. With April RPD production strong, we expect the Q2 year-over-year improvement in RPD to be higher than Q1. We also expect net DPU will be well below $300 per month as we expect to take sizable gains on the sale of vehicles in the quarter. Altogether, we expect an EBITDA margin in the low to mid-single-digit range for the quarter. As for 2027, we still continue to target $1 billion of EBITDA for the year. With that, I'll turn it back to Gil for closing remarks.

Wayne West: Thank you, Scott. A big story this quarter, of course, is our progress on the commercial side, especially in our revenue growth. But the even bigger story is cementing our position in the future of mobility with Oro. We haven't just been executing a turnaround, though make no mistake, that alone has taken a tremendous effort. We've been building quietly deliberately and with real conviction about where this industry is going. Driving innovation at a century old company isn't easy, but we're proving it can be done. Oro is not a bad. It's the result of doing the hard work, finding the gap, selecting the right partners and putting our capabilities to work in new ways.

We're strengthening our core and building what comes next. That's the Hertz story right now, and I couldn't be more confident in where it's heading. With that, let's open it up for questions. Back to you, operator.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Chris Woronka of Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

Chris Woronka: So thinking through all this news Oro and some of your platform in and I guess just trying to kind of assess how much hurt is really worth today? I mean, it seems like given all the changes, maybe some of the traditional valuation framework or metrics that we typically look at are potentially becoming a little bit less relevant and maybe you can lead to a different approach in how we look at your company. I mean, how are you guys kind of internally thinking about valuation in light of some of these transformations and other business changes that you're making?

Wayne West: Yes. Thanks, Chris. Great question. I'll start, and then I imagine Scott, want to chime in, too. So it kind of sounds like you've been sitting in our meeting rooms and boardrooms. But I think, candidly, the valuation of our business today is tough. The problem with our current valuation is that it's almost entirely based on traditional rental car business, which is understandable. So that's a paradigm that's hard to overcome. It's hard for us just to say, hey, we are and we will be more than a traditional rental car business and expect people to immediately assign different valuations to our business.

And then I'd just point out, historically, the company's subordinated all parts of the Hertz platform to optimize the rental car business, which ironically might be the least valuable part of our platform. So we're shifting that paradigm to really look at all parts of our platform as interrelated stand-alone business is to manage and create value around. So to change the way Hertz is valued, I know we're going to have to provide evidence. And this we unveiled Oro in that business, if valued as a stand-alone could have a sizable valuation. And then our fleet business as it continues to develop, should also have a sizable valuation.

So as we think about it after the rental car transformation is largely complete. All these businesses together could have a real sum of the parts impact that could be material to the overall valuation of the company. In fact, I think one of the issues we got to deal with will be each of the pieces of the platform, as we talked about it, have different growth rates, right? So also different margin profiles, different capital requirements, and we'll probably attract different investor types and different valuation methodologies and probably even different multiples to the business. So that's how we're starting to look at.

Scott Haralson: Yes. Chris, this is Scott. Thanks for the question. I think Gil's last point. I think that's likely part of the disconnect between how the equity markets are beginning to view our stock versus maybe some of the price targets that the analysts on the call set that traditional view of rental car company valuations and multiples, we'll probably need to be reevaluated to take into account the different aspects of the platform Gill is talking about and the sum of the parts attributes. .

I might even urge each of you to potentially even take a different approach to how you think about it, appreciating the nuances between the transformational rental car and valuing what is really a top five used car dealership and really that has a competitive supply advantage. And then you have the mobility platform that provides what will be critical nuts and bolts infrastructure to ride share delivery, autonomous transportation. So I would just be curious how you guys view it after you take that sum of the parts of you.

But I will say in fairness, Chris, that I'll have to acknowledge that haven't made it easy for you guys to really value us correctly yet given the limited information we give you. So that's on us, we'll figure that out. Along with figuring out the strategy around how to create the value, we also got to figure out the best way to report it, honestly. I think in the end, we'll need to figure out things like how to structure the company, the businesses that unlocks the greatest shareholder value and even out of structure of the P&L and to report the businesses differently. We'll have to adapt the messaging into this changing landscape.

But I think more of these alterations over time, different viewpoints, I think, will definitely help people correctly value the business as we go forward.

Chris Woronka: Yes. Super helpful. I really appreciate the thoughts, guys. If I could get a quick follow-up. You kind of hit on this in the prepared remarks. the DPU -- or sorry, the DOE per day, understanding your North Star targets and I think DPU is pretty well understood at this point. But , do you envision a situation beyond '26, maybe it's '27 where you're not quite in that low 30s on BOE per transaction per day, but you're maybe higher RPE or RPU, whichever you like to look at.

Is that -- could that be kind of a as you mentioned, the same way to get to a different way to get to the same outcome of $1 billion next year. I wasn't sure if your comments about the being higher on RPD or RPU and higher on DOE exclusive to '26? Or could that be kind of a go-forward thing, too?

Scott Haralson: Yes. Yes, certainly, Chris, this is Scott. I'll start. I think you kind of hit on it. Obviously, the spread between RPD and DOE per day is the sort of critical one. There's different ways to move the business that would change RPD and DOE per day. And that spread is critical. Obviously, we have targets around unit cost and everything. And so there's components of this that will have a bit of a longer tail I would argue our cost management discipline is as much around long-term cost efficiency as it is just short-term cost cutting which is complex in a transformational rental car business setup.

And look, we got to return some scale back to the business that's been reduced over the last years. And we'll also look to grow other parts of the platform. I'll argue a bit that today, our DOE expenses are 70% driven by labor, facilities and maintenance and repair. We've done a good job on labor, workforce planning, collision repair has seen some increased volume, but we've done a good job with reducing rates the way we pay for repairs. But facilities is a sticker cost we probably have more footprint than we need, given the current size of the fleet, and these costs are not the easiest to reduce given the lease terms.

But over time, we'll continue to manage that. But -- but at the end of the day, we're going to need some scale. We've talked about this. But the good news is we don't need a ton of scale, right? There's a lot of leverage here. And in fact, I'd argue probably 10% to 15% more scale we'd have a sub-35 DOE per day number. So it's in front of us. I think it's just going to take a little time, but it's just something we're going to have to deal with as we think through all the parts.

Operator: Your next question comes from Chris Details of SIG. .

Christopher Stathoulopoulos: Scott or on the inflection here in RPU, if you could -- you called out a few things on the quarter, the partial shutdown storms recall. If you could perhaps break those out, just wanted to get a sense of how core is looking. And then your confidence around maintaining that positive growth through the year. I know you're pulling in your fleet guide to low single digits. Just wanted to understand if there's other areas that give you confidence around that? I typically think about your booking window as the shortest within my coverage to $0.30, $0.40 just want to understand your confidence around maintaining that growth through the balance of the year.

Sandeep Dube: 3 Yes, Chris, thanks for the question. This is Sandeep here. I'll talk about basically RPD and how we think about that, right? So the RPD improvement that we saw in Q1 and was primarily driven by Hertz's unique commercial strategies and supported by broader market strength. I'll touch upon both of those. First, let me briefly cover the broader market strength reference. You've seen more pricing discipline in the market, I'd say starting late Q4 and certainly more so all through Q1 and into Q2 so far, right? So the industry pricing has been positive, I'd say, and especially since mid-Feb and consistently so. So from an industry discipline context, it feels like we are now swimming downstream.

And it's a contrast from what we felt before. So that's definitely encouraging and that provides a good platform. But here's the main kicker, right? It basically Hertz's unique commercial strategies, which we detailed a bit in the script. And I would characterize those strategies as the follows. First, unique in terms of the positive impact it creates for us. second, largely durable and persistent in their accretive impact to our business. And this is largely irrespective of broader market conditions. And third, I'd say, growing and strength quarter-over-quarter. We first articulated these commercial strategies in Q1 2025. And you can see the sequential improvement in year-over-year revenue in RPD since then.

So 4 to 5 quarters of consistent year-over-year improvement -- and the positive impact of these has now cumulatively led to positive revenue RPD and days in Q1 2026. I think what excites us is the journey ahead. We have a clear commercial strategy an execution plan of initiatives over the next few quarters that will keep building momentum and a more motivated team. Chris, we are on a different and a more exciting trajectory commercially than what we have had in multiple years prior to that. So yes, this is fun now.

Wayne West: Yes, I would just add too, I think a big part of it is it all starts with demand, right? I mean when we talk about the sustainability of this, sustainable demand underpins everything on the pricing side. So I think the team has done a really good job structurally over the last couple of years building that demand. So whether it's direct demand through our dot-com type Hertz.com loyalty channels, that's been big through partnerships, through commercial agreements, corporates, all of that really has helped us develop the demand side of the equation that then the RM type strategies and initiatives can really resonate on. So I think Sandeep said it well.

I think if anything, we feel confident those -- all of that is going to help us sustain improvements and where we're at and build off that as we go forward in addition to whatever the broader market does on top of that as more of an amplifier.

Christopher Stathoulopoulos: Okay. And then it sounds like at some point, you're going to give us a little bit more disclosure on oral and our sales. But in the meanwhile, as we look at your North Star RPU above or more than 1,500 and the DOE low 30s. As we think about I guess, the back half in '27 and these segments start to grow. Any color you can kind of give us as we think about things like revenue and margin contribution until these segments are ultimately broken out.

Wayne West: Yes. I think a little bit on maybe Oro to talk about that 1 first. The -- I guess maybe in the materials you've seen it. But I'd just point out that we have -- within that construct, we have three different businesses there. all of them kind of a different maturity levels, different growth rates, et cetera. So we're not just starting from scratch. We have kind of a platform we're building on. So we should see growth really across all three of these, but at different rates.

So the first 1 I would describe is what would be the more traditional rideshare rental car business where we're renting cars to ride share drivers through the partnerships we've got with Uber and Lyft. We've been at that a couple of years, and now we're among the largest in the world. As I mentioned, I think, in the script, we've got over 40,000 vehicles combination EV and ICE vehicles, right? So that's kind of the existing platform. We continue to lean in and build off that. But then the other two businesses, that really are new in a sense, at least to the broader market. We've been working both of these for at least the last couple of years.

But the first one is where we've got Oro driven fleet where we've got this high-quality turnkey capacity we're providing to Uber. We've leaned in. We've leveraged technology to better manage the kind of driver life cycle productivity. We're also leveraging it to scale and then in our safety performance. So as we think about that, we're in a -- we're ramping through a measured market-by-market expansion, and we're scaling kind of proven programs now there's a clear line of sight to demand. This is a large addressable market. But as we move forward, we got to make sure the economics work at a market level.

We've got to make sure we got the operational controls in place and ultimately, we're scaling with discipline. So -- and we're gated by things like operational readiness, safety thresholds, the economic returns. We're just not after top line here. I want to emphasize that. So -- but we do think this is going to be more and more a meaningful contributor to the overall company's results. And then the third piece of this is AV operations, right? And there, of course, with the partnerships that we've announced over the last week, -- we know we're -- we've got the ability to be a major player in this space.

We've got unique capabilities that only a handful of companies can bring -- the pace of AV growth, I think, is going to be probably maybe a little longer tail, but potentially much higher ultimately. So we've got kind of a whole spectrum here of three businesses within mobility with different growth rates, all with good margins, it should be accretive to the company. But that windage, we'll have to give you more color as we move forward.

Scott Haralson: Yes. Chris, this is Scott. I'll add a little bit to that. Oro is obviously an important piece of it. But as you think about the near-term P&L '27, '28 in I mentioned the spread. So RPD definitely moving in the right direction. I mean you heard Sandeep's commentary mean U.S. airports were up 9% alone on RPD. So definitely positive RPD stuff. Oro is going to be great Also, too, I mean, we have grown our fleet car sales F&I income, which sits in the revenue line.

It's been the largest line we've had since in recent history, and there's a ton of room to grow that without corresponding DOE and expenses associated, plus the other piece is we've talked about growing franchise which has a direct revenue benefit with very little corresponding costs associated. So as we talk about growing revenue without cost, -- those are the things that are going to create that big spread going forward. So it's not just about rental car RPD and the costs associated. Those other pieces that will create that GAAP.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of John Healy of Northcoast Research. Please go ahead.

John Healy: We'd love to spend a little bit more time on the Oro opportunity. I love how you name it Oro. I think that means gold in a different language or a couple of different language -- Very cool move. But I would just love to get your thoughts about -- and I think, Scott, you mentioned we need to figure out how to monetize or get value for some of these pieces of the development that we haven't gone to market with. Can you get more granular with us on that I think with Oro, you guys are actually hiring drivers in certain markets to kind of go with the fleet you're providing.

So we just love to get your thoughts on just how some of these aspects of the operation might evolve from here?

Wayne West: Yes. Maybe around kind of the oral driven fleet piece. I'll talk just a little bit more about that. Scott, you may want to add some additional broader color on the valuation side. But I guess the first point I'd make here is that oral is not entering into just a generic human capital business. I'll just say that upfront. But really, what we're trying to do here is provide Think of it as turnkey rideshare capacity to Uber, okay, turnkey. And we're really just -- we're putting the pieces we already have out there in place here. None of this is really new. So what we're doing really is operating fleets end-to-end under a contracted capacity supply.

And we're employing drivers as part of that equation. Keep in mind, we've got thousands of people already driving our cars that are employees. And so we're well positioned. We have all the pieces. We're just putting together to fill a gap here And we already manage a really large distributed workforces across the operations. We own the fleet, we have the maintenance and logistics. And I'd just point out, I think the model is superior to the traditional gig structure since it provides really a more predictability and control along with higher quality in terms of the customer experience as well as safety performance. So there's value created around that.

And again, we're really deliberately scaling this and we're gated as I mentioned -- just mentioned about kind of the operational performance, safety thresholds, the economics, all those things. So the real focus is getting it right. And the other thing I've got to point out here is that this is a real stepping stone to running AVs that at scale, right? This is an operational cadence that's not normal for a rental car company, even though we have all the pieces. So as we're kind of building that rhythm, it's directly applicable to the AVs, it's just without the drivers at that point.

So kind of we're bridging really all the aspects of ride share, but it's got application and other businesses like delivery, other potential partners. So this is -- these are big markets. We've got all the pieces that we can play in it.

Sandeep Dube: Yes. No, I think that's right on. John. Look, I think we're not going to be able to talk a lot about the economics of the deal here. But I think what Gil pointed out is exactly right, which is the -- this plays into the strengths of what hurts does well. We're a big human capital provider. We employ thousands even those that drive cars today for us. And this is an extension of that plays into the real estate footprint that we have today, the maintenance capabilities, the fleet management control. All of these things are most of things that we do today with a slight twist.

But as Gil said, it's a massive bridge to tomorrow's AV world. So this is a very nice extension of what we do today that will provide near-term benefit to the P&L while also setting us up for longer-term AV infrastructure capabilities.

John Healy: That's great. And Scott, just 1 follow-up question on the expectations for -- did I hear you right, you said that you're expecting global days to be down, but for the year, we're going to be up mid-single digits. I was just hoping you could just run that ask this again. Yes, that is right, John. We'll be down in Q2, which would imply up in Q3 and Q4. And obviously, there's some year-over-year nuances as days were probably a little smaller in Q4 last year. So there will be some year-over-year nuance of the math.

But yes, we won't be as big in Q2 as we would have liked. -- given the macro demand economics, but that will recover a bit in Q3 and Q4.

Operator: We have reached the end of the Q&A session. This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.