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REPUBLIC SERVICES, INC. — Call Transcript 2026
May 7, 2026
Good afternoon, and welcome to the Republic Services first quarter 2026 investor conference call. Republic Services is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol RSG. I would now like to turn the conference over to Aaron Evans, Vice President of Investor Relations. Good afternoon. I would like to welcome everyone to Republic Services first quarter 2026 conference call. Jon Vander Ark, our CEO, and Brian DelGhiaccio, our CFO, are on the call today to discuss our performance. I'd like to remind everyone that some information discussed on today's call contains forward-looking statements, including forward-looking financial information, which involve risks and uncertainties and may be materially different from actual results. Our SEC filings discuss factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. The material that we discuss today is time-sensitive. If, in the future, you listen to a rebroadcast or recording of this conference call, you should be sensitive to the date of the original call, which is May 7, 2026. Please note that this call is the property of Republic Services Inc. Any redistribution, retransmission, or rebroadcast of this call in any form without the express written consent of Republic Services is strictly prohibited. Our SEC filings, earnings press release, which includes GAAP reconciliation tables and a discussion of business activities, along with a recording of this call, are available on our website at republicservices.com. In addition, Republic's management team routinely participates in investor conferences. When events are scheduled, the dates, times, and presentations are posted on our investor website. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Jon. Thanks, Aaron. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. We are pleased with our first quarter results, which position us well to achieve the full year guidance that we provided in February. We delivered strong earnings growth and expanded margins. All while overcoming lower commodity prices and the impact of higher fuel prices during the quarter. Our results reflect our disciplined pricing execution, effective cost management, and the value created from ongoing investments in the business. During the quarter, we achieved revenue growth of 2.6%, generated adjusted EBITDA growth of 4.3%, expanded adjusted EBITDA margin by fifty basis points, delivered adjusted earnings per share of $1.70, and produced $984 million of adjusted free cash flow. We continue to secure new growth opportunities by leveraging our differentiating capabilities, customer zeal, digital, and sustainability. With respect to customer zeal, our customer retention rate remained high at 94%. Our net promoter score remains strong, reflecting our team's commitment to delivering exceptional customer value. First quarter organic revenue growth was driven by solid pricing across the business. Average yield on related revenue was 4.1%, and average yield on total revenue was 3.4%. Organic volume decreased related revenue by 1% or total revenue by 80 basis points. Volume performance improved sequentially, most notably in the landfill, large container, and small container verticals. Importantly, we delivered year-over-year revenue growth in the temporary large container business this quarter for the first time in over two years. Combined average yield and volume growth grew 1.2%. Organic revenue in the environmental solutions business decreased total revenue by 1.3% in the first quarter, which was in line with our expectations. More than 1/3 of this decrease in the environmental solutions business related to an emergency response job in 2025 that did not repeat. Our environmental solution sales pipeline continues to build with increased activity across multiple end markets. We expect year-over-year revenue growth in this business in the second half of the year. Turning to digital. Our ongoing investments in technology and AI are strengthening how we operate and compete. Over time, these capabilities are expected to drive additional growth, expand margins, and support continued operating leverage. We are actively deploying AI-based predictive technology that supports optimized pricing decisions across markets with varying customer and competitive dynamics. This approach is expected to reinforce price retention and reduce customer attrition over time. Enhancements to our RISE digital platform are progressing with initial deployment focused on the large container business. The integration of AI and advanced routing algorithms is expected to improve safety outcomes, strengthen service execution, and increase route efficiency. Activation of digital tools in our call centers are enhancing the customer experience and unlocking value in our business by optimizing the 11 million inbound calls we receive each year. We believe that these investments in digital will deliver at least $100 billion of annual benefit by 2028. Within sustainability, we continue to believe that our sustainability innovation investments in the plastic circularity and decarbonization position us for growth and long-term value creation. Production volume has increased across our polymer center network as we optimize processing operations. Customer demand for our domestic post-consumer plastic remains strong. We continue to advance renewable natural gas projects with our partners. We brought nine projects online throughout 2025. We expect four additional RNG projects to begin operations in 2026, which would bring our total landfill gas to energy portfolio to 82 projects. We continue to execute against our industry-leading commitment to fleet electrification. We had more than 200 electric collection vehicles in operation at the end of the first quarter. We expect to exit this year with more than 300 EV collection trucks in our fleet to support the continued growth of this differentiated service offering. We recently celebrated with the City of San Pablo, who partnered with us to become the first city in California to operate an all-electric recycling and waste collection fleet. As part of our commitment to sustainability, we strive to be the employer where the best people want to work. Our employee engagement score consistently exceeds national benchmarks, and we continue to experience record low turnover rates. Our comprehensive sustainability performance continues to be widely recognized as Republic Services was named to Fortune's World's Most Admired Companies list and Ethisphere's World's Most Ethical Companies list. Regarding capital allocation, we've invested more than $700 million in value-creating acquisitions to date, which includes $433 million of investment in the first quarter. Our acquisition pipeline remains supportive of continued activity in both the recycling and waste and environmental solutions businesses. We expect to exceed at $1 billion of acquisition investment this year. As part of our balanced approach to capital allocation, we returned $507 million to shareholders in the quarter, including $314 million of share repurchases. I will now turn the call over to Brian, who will provide additional details on the quarter. Thanks, Jon. Core price on total revenue was 5.7%. Core price on related revenue was 6.8%, which included open market pricing of 8.4% and restricted pricing of 4.4%. The components of core price on related revenue included small container of 8.2%, large container of 7.1%, and residential of 6.5%. Average yield on total revenue was 3.4%, and average yield on related revenue was 4.1%. First quarter volume decreased total revenue by 80 basis points and related revenue by 1%. Volume results on related revenue included a decrease in large container of 2.5%. This represents a sequential improvement of 130 basis points compared to our fourth quarter performance. Volume results also includes a decrease in residential of 5.2%. The sequential change in residential volume was primarily due to known contract losses, which was contemplated in our full year guidance. Landfill volumes improved during the quarter as MSW volumes increased 1.4% and special waste revenue increased 9.9%. We estimate severe weather negatively impacted volume performance by approximately $30 million during the quarter, which was reflected in our full-year revenue guidance provided in February. Moving on to recycling. Commodity prices were $120 per ton during the first quarter. This compared to $155 per ton in the prior year. Recycling, processing, and commodity sales were flat compared to the prior year. Increased volumes at our polymer centers offset the revenue impact of lower recycled commodity prices. Current commodity prices are approximately $125 per ton. Total company adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 50 basis points to 32.1%. Margin performance during the quarter included margin expansion in the underlying business of 90 basis points and a net benefit of 20 basis points from non-recurring items, primarily due to a favorable legal settlement. This was partially offset by a 20 basis point decrease from net fuel, a 20 basis point decrease from recycled commodity prices, and a 20 basis point decrease from acquisitions. The sharp increase in diesel prices in March negatively impacted EBITDA performance by $8 million in the first quarter. Our fuel recovery fee tends to lag changes in fuel expense by approximately one month. We expect fuel recovery fees to offset higher fuel costs beginning in the second quarter. With respect to environmental solutions, first quarter revenue decreased $44 million compared to the prior year. Approximately $15 million of this decrease related to an emergency response job in 2025 that did not repeat. Adjusted EBITDA margin in the environmental solutions business was 19.2%. Adjusted free cash flow of $984 million, an increase of more than 35% compared to the prior year. This increase was driven by EBITDA growth in the business and the timing of working capital and capital expenditures. Year-to-date capital expenditures of $249 million represents 12% of our projected full-year spend. Total debt was $14 billion, and total liquidity was $1.8 billion. Our leverage ratio at the end of the quarter was approximately 2.6x. With respect to taxes, our combined tax rate and impact from equity investments in renewable energy resulted in an equivalent tax impact of 24.9% during the first quarter. With that, operator, I would like to open the call to questions. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. In the interest of time, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up question today. If your question has been answered and you would like to withdraw your request, you may do so by pressing star. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. Our first question comes from Noah Kaye. Yep. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Hope you all are well. You all can hear me? Yep. Okay, great. Thank you. You know, AI and digital productivity, definitely a strong theme for the sector and for you this quarter. You called out you expect 100 million, I think, of annual benefits from investments by 2028. I guess first, can you sort of benchmark where that benefit might be penciling out for 2026 and how to think about it flowing, you know, in a couple of years? Maybe just to unpack a little bit, you know, the buckets of benefit that you're getting here. Yeah. We mentioned on the latter part of your question, we mentioned three areas of the benefit: routing, the RISE pricing, and then customer service. I would list those in terms of the priority of the impact or the scale of the impact over time. Pricing will come first, and we'll see some benefit in 2026, and that'll build over 2027, 2028. We're gonna see very little, probably no benefit of that in 2026 on RISE, just because we're doing all the work, and that will scale. You'll start to see that benefit come in 2027, and then that will really scale in 2028, and that, again, will be the largest impact. On the customer service, I think you'll see ratable improvement across the three years. Right now, that's the smallest of the three categories I mentioned. Those aren't the only three. I mean, we're looking at AI in every area of the business, back office, legal, HR, all kinds of places. These are the three where we see the most immediate benefit to scale, but it will have profound impact across the business. That's very helpful, Jon. Maybe we could talk a little bit about the price cost performance this quarter. To get 90 basis points underlying margin expansion when you had the headwinds from weather rather, and you know, some of the cost pressures, it's impressive. Maybe you can talk a little bit about, you know, what you've seen so far on price retention. Was that better than you expected? Did you maybe get a little bit better operating leverage off of, you know, cost savings initiatives? Just help us understand, you know, the quarter and, you know, how you see it trending as we look at margin profile for the next couple of quarters. Yeah. I'd lead with cost. Our cost performance has been really strong for a number of years now. Inflation has come down, but we've done a lot of self-help there. With the underlying RISE benefits, you're seeing that through labor productivity. You're seeing MPower and our maintenance costs be very, very strong on that. We're doing a good job of, you know, balancing pricing, again, primarily playing a long game. We want to understand, even in a volume-challenged environment, to retain customers over time. We've had to find our place in different markets, both to retain and to compete for new work, just given the challenging macro, and the team's doing a great job of finding that right mix to still get that online margin expansion. Our next question comes from Bryan Burgmeier with Citi. Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Brian, can you maybe just provide some details on how you're thinking about, you know, 2Q? I just wanna be mindful, you know, of the wildfire comps, you know, the fuel impacts, M&A integration. You know, conversely, you'd have some seasonal step-up, recycled commodities are doing a little better. I mean, we were thinking margins, you know, would still probably be down kind of slightly year-over-year, but, you know, any details you can add on that would be helpful. That's still, you know, what we're expecting for the second quarter. I would say starting with from a margin perspective, somewhat flat to slightly down on a year-over-year basis, largely due to some of the project-related landfill volumes that you mentioned. That's the biggest driver of that. Except that, we would've, you know, anticipated margin expansion. Margin expansion in the underlying business, excluding the impact of those volumes. Overall, it's obviously gonna have an impact on the top line as well when you think that's gonna have a negative impact on volume performance, which is exactly what we thought when we entered the year, negative in both Q2 and Q3, flipping to positive then in the fourth quarter. Largely the same as what we thought when we provided the guidance in February. You know, again, nothing's really changed, you know, based on our performance in the first quarter. Got it. Got it. Thanks for that detail. That's really helpful. One just quick follow-on for me, and I'll turn it over. Just a kind of point of clarification. Are you expecting or forecasting any impact to EBITDA in 2Q from fuel? You know, can you just help us frame maybe the margin impact as you know, pursue the surcharges and, you know, pricing associated with that? Thanks a lot. As I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we tend to lag from a fuel recovery fee perspective, the increased cost of fuel expense. As prices have been rising, right, we've been chasing that month on month. Now we expect that fuel recovery fee to start kicking in in the second quarter. Our overall objective is to sit there and recover the cash impact, the full cash impact of those rising fuel prices. There's both direct impacts as well as indirect. The sensitivity that we provide in our disclosures is more of a direct type concept. There are gonna be other impacts like potentially increased transportation expenses. There's increased CapEx as well that goes along with that. Again, if we achieve that recovery from a holistic or comprehensive cash perspective, that is the overall objective. Our next question comes from Adam Bubes with Goldman Sachs. Just had first one on the volume line. I think you called out weather as a $30 million headwind in the quarter, and then you were lapping maybe $12 million of event-related volume. If I have it right, I think it implies, you know, volumes are tracking flattish year-over-year, underlying volumes. How'd that compare with your initial expectations, and can you just talk about, you know, what you're seeing in volumes in March and April and expected cadence throughout the year? Yeah, I think we're starting to see some underlying momentum, and I wouldn't put a word of caution on that given the macro uncertainty we're facing around two wars and oil prices and all the other things that you guys see and read. I'd say some green shoots are starting to emerge in terms of the underlying demand signal. Special waste has been particularly strong, and we're seeing some momentum month-over-month in the first quarter. We're gonna look for that to build. Again, at what rate that builds, we'll talk more about in the next quarter. I'd say versus the three months ago, I'd say we're slightly more positive on where the macro is looking. I think the spread between core price and yield was a little wider this quarter at 2.7% versus, I think, 2% last year. Is that just a mix impact or what's driving that? Can you talk about how you think about that spread going forward as you continue to leverage AI to implement more surgical pricing tools? It predominantly is mix. You're spot on there. In part, I would say it's driven by the relatively better performance we're seeing in the temporary large container business, which is predominantly construction-related activity. Sequentially, the volume performance improved 500 basis points. That's where you tend to see that impact because we don't capture price on a temporary unit. You'll see it in that churn mix and other, which is the difference between the core price and the average yield. The good news is that as those units return, right, you're getting that incremental volume, but it's what it ultimately leads to. It's that permanent unit of service. It's the, you know, temporary units leading to that household formation, which ultimately leads to that small business formation, which is extraordinarily important to us. Our next question comes from Kevin Chiang with CIBC. Kevin? Kevin, you may be on mute. You are right. I'm on mute. Thanks for that. I apologize if I, if I missed this. You called out the $12 million or $15 million headwind in ES in terms of a year-over-year comp. Did weather impact ES as well? Maybe if I think of sequential margin performance, if it did, you know, would we expect to see a more outsized margin cadence from Q1 into Q2 within ES, just given it dipped below 20% in the first quarter here? Yeah, I'd say weather was a factor. I wouldn't say it was the dominant factor, more the year-over-year comp we talked about. Okay. Weather was certainly a factor. I think we talked about this last quarter. I think the first couple quarters here we're in, you know, finding the bottom, which we have, and we're building off of that. You know, we have a tough comp in Q2 as well. You'll see in the back half kinda momentum both from the top line and margin expansion into the business. We feel really good about what momentum that team has. I think we talked about probably missing the market a bit as volume declined, right? We were still pretty aggressive on price, and I think we found our footing there on a price volume standpoint. that can be a little longer sales cycle, so a lot of the great activities we see won't show up into the P&L until the second half. Well, that's great color. Just my second question, just wondering, given where virgin plastic pricing is, just does that impact the economics of the polymer centers or the Blue Polymers JV? Yeah, a lot of moving pieces right now on plastics. We've had some pre-Iran war, certainly some global challenges with a glut of virgin PET out of Asia flooding the U.S. market, some of which is coming in as rPET and working with our industry stakeholders and the government to address that issue. The war itself has been helpful in that because we're starting to see that production go down as they've had to ration oil supply and get it to primary use versus secondary use like plastics. The net impact is we're seeing our spreads increase both in the polymer centers and the Blue Polymers JV, and feel really good about the demand profile there and the momentum we have in that business. Our next question comes from Jerry Revich with Wells Fargo. Yes, hi. Good afternoon. I'm wondering if we could talk about the electric collection of vehicles. As you folks are ramping up towards 300, can you just talk about where you're deploying them, what the unit profitability looks like compared to conventional trucks on an all-in basis? As we look at what proportion of your footprint could you ultimately see EVs operating in, how meaningful part of the fleet could it be in terms of where there's actual availability of power and economics? Thanks. Yeah, we feel good about the deployment and the rollout. We've had really good partners in that space, and it's concentrated in markets that you would expect that have local and state environments that are supportive, right? Places, municipalities that are willing to pay, states that might have incentives to support that because it is a different OpEx, CapEx trade-off. The truck is gonna be more expensive, but then cheaper to operate. We're beating our assumptions in the pro forma on that so far. Again, still, we'll, you know, learn more every year that we drive those trucks, but feel good about the operational performance. You're gonna see us deploy. Now, we did lose a little bit in terms of federal incentive with the administration change, and so that's probably slowed the rollout modestly. You know, in residential, this is continuing to be where we're focused on, buying the trucks, and we're moving to small container next. I don't think large containers in the short term, but this will end up being a meaningful portion of our buy here as we approach the end of the decade. Yeah. Super. Then I ask on RNG? Thank you for the update on the facility counts. Can you talk about the operating performance on the facilities? Are you expecting an equity income contribution this year? What's the profitability cadences they ramp up? If you could comment on expected royalty contributions this year versus plan, I would appreciate it. Yeah, Jerry, the total contribution that we're expecting from the RNG portfolio is $10 million of incremental revenue, $10 million of EBITDA this year, which is consistent with what we thought in the beginning of the year as well. That is going to, you know, ramp up as we move forward. It kind of is, you know, $10 million in 2027, $15 million in 2028, $15 million in 2029, and ultimately $20 million by 2020. That's how that ramps up to that $100 million of incremental revenue by the end of the decade. Our next question comes from Trevor Romeo with William Blair. Hi, good afternoon. Thank you for taking the questions. I couple quick ones here. First one, I wanted to ask on your organics processing business. I think there was some press lately around a couple of new facilities you opened up in California and Colorado recently. Maybe would love if you could speak to kind of how you're thinking about investing in the organics business, what you're seeing from a regulatory perspective, and maybe the overall growth opportunity there. That ends up being very regional or state specific. Where there's support, either from a state regulation or a community willingness to pay, we are, you know, investors and operators, both on the collection side and then the processing on the back end. You know, the price of that technology needs to come down on the processing side overall, to make that more scalable. Longer term, it's gonna be a growth driver. You know, 25% of what goes to our landfill is organic in some capacity that ultimately could come out and be processed a different way. We continue to pursue opportunities, and again, as the regulatory environment evolves, you'll see that business scale. Okay. Thank you for that. Maybe just going back to ES. I think you talked about the sales pipeline building. I was just wondering if you could give maybe an update on your cross-selling initiatives there. It's something maybe you talked about more a few years ago, but just what are you seeing in terms of customer demand for kind of the broader set of solutions across your two segments and how you're executing on that opportunity? Our most profitable customers want an integrated offering, and we're uniquely positioned given that we can offer them our suite of services, recycling, waste, special waste, and then all the various services that are underneath environmental solutions. To unlock the opportunity further, we're really working on some of the IT and sales opportunities to get the information in the right hands of the sellers so that in a local market with customers, we can unlock exactly what we offer, including things as tactical as a single contract, a single bill, ways to make it really easy for our customers to do business with us, and we're making great progress on that. You'll see that build over the next 18 to 24 months as some of those initiatives get fully deployed. Our next question comes from Seth Weber with BNP Paribas. Great. Thank you, and good afternoon. I'm wondering if you could just give us your updated thoughts on, you know, the cadence for the shedding of, and the residential contracts, just, you know, how we should think about that potentially moderating through the balance of the year. Thank you. Yeah. I think you'll see it pretty consistent across the year. The big driver there in residential was three larger contracts that we lost. Regrettable in the sense that we'd love to have those contracts and serve those communities at the right price and cost, but we're gonna be very returns-focused. As we deploy capital and have our people do work in communities, we need to get a fair price for the work that we do, and still seeing more challenges in that vertical than we are in the other verticals in the market of people willing to do work for very, very low returns. You'll see those numbers pretty consistent across the year. Slight improvement in the second half, and then I think a different outlook in 2027. Got it. Okay. Thank you. Just on your comment around M&A, it sounds like you're now talking about, you know, $1+ billion, which I think is a little bit stronger than what you mentioned last quarter. Is that a function of you feel better about your free cash flow outlook or just more deals kind of presenting themselves to you, or just any nuances there as to why you're taking that number up at this point? Yeah. It's just the opportunities of both what we've already closed and what we have in the pipeline. We're rarely financially constrained. It's always opportunity constrained. A deal has got to meet two screens for us. One, it has to have the right financial returns, and then it's got to be the right strategic fit. We've got to be the owner for it and be able to take that asset and do something more productive with it. We just have a really positive year in terms of, again, what we've already locked up and closed and then what we see coming forward in the next six to nine months. Our next question comes from Toni Kaplan with Morgan Stanley. Thank you. I wanted to start out on free cash flow. Really strong quarter. It sounded like maybe it was because of CapEx timing. You talked about it being roughly 12% of the full year CapEx spend in the first quarter. I was wondering if there was sort of a reason like why CapEx was lower this quarter and you know what was lower and what you're planning to spend it on for the rest of the year. Yeah, actually, most of it from a timing perspective is really within working capital. Right? You can see that. Much of it has to do with just the number of AP, you know, payments that were made as well as payroll, payments. That's something that'll flip over the balance of the year. We called out that timing piece. The CapEx, that's not abnormal for us to sit there and spend below, 25% of our full year spend in the first quarter. You can go back over several years, and that's the case. We do expect to spend that full year CapEx that we guided to in the beginning of the year. Yeah. Okay. Got it. One other question on M&A. I just wanted to attack a little bit differently. I guess, are there $700 million to date, I believe. You know, were you trying to strengthen current markets that you're already in, entering new ones? Just trying to understand what opportunities you were able to find and how you're thinking about sort of what targets you're approaching. Thanks. Yes and yes. We look in recycling and waste, both the markets that we're already in to strengthen those, and that's the bread and butter, I'd say, what we do acquisition-wise. Expanding geographies is also an opportunity for us, and those become great platforms for further tuck-in acquisitions over time. As well as environmental solutions, right? Same opportunities there. Strengthening markets we're already in and expanding into new markets. The balance of the spend so far this year of what's already closed and what's signed and going to close has really been 90% plus recycling and waste. That balance will probably rotate just a little throughout the rest of the year, but pretty strong on both ends. Our next question comes from Tami Zakaria with JPMorgan. Hey, good morning. Sorry, good afternoon or evening. Thanks for the time. Question on CPI. The March reading accelerated sequentially. Just wondering if you could remind us how much of your portfolio is indexed to the CPI, should it continue to go higher, and what's the typical lag? Our portfolio of contracts that we call restricted, which have some sort of pricing restriction embedded in the contract itself, just shy of 20% are directly linked to headline CPI. 35% are linked to some sort of alternative index, you know, water, sewer, trash, garbage trash. With the balance, about 45%, some sort of fixed rate, that's embedded in the contract itself or a rate review. The lag tends to be, you know, 12 months, call it, on average. There's a look-back period, and then the implementation period tends to be about 12 months after the fact. That's very helpful. Wanted to double-click on residential volumes. I know you're not speaking to 2027 specifically, but are we, do you expect residential volumes to turn positive at some point next year? Oh, no. I think the rate of decrease will certainly improve. Right? Whether that is flat next year or not, probably still declines, just given some of the rollover effect of those larger contracts that we lost, some of which started on January first and some of which are mid-year conventions on that front. Listen, we're gonna continue to put upward pressure on price and be returns-focused and get paid for the work we do. To the extent that customers are not willing to pay, then we'll put our resources into other verticals and other opportunities. Our next question comes from Konark Gupta with Scotia Capital. Thanks. Just following up on the residential business. I understand the volumes are declining and why, but if you can talk about the underlying business, how is it performing from profitability and return standpoint? Yeah. No profitability in that business is improving. Again, I think for a couple reasons. One, you know, when you have a contract that's underperforming and you look to get it to an acceptable level of return, and if you don't retain that because someone is willing to take that at that relatively lower price, you're gonna improve your overall performance. Coupled with the fact that you look at the remainder of the portfolio and you look at the level of price that we've had in the residential system itself, very strong and well in excess of our cost inflation. The combination of the two have driven margin expansion in that business. When we bid these residential contracts, we never bid them to lose money. We bid them with the assumptions of profitability, but then things change over the course of a five-year term of the contract, which is maybe we didn't have a good pricing escalator on the contract and our costs inflated faster. Maybe our assumptions in terms of number of trucks we needed to cover the community wasn't quite right, and it turned out to be a little more expensive to deliver or operate that truck. We're being very disciplined across each one of those contracts to make sure that we are returns driven and pricing that accordingly when the contract comes up. Thanks. If we can follow up on the employee turnover side of things. Are you seeing any implications whatsoever, direct or indirect, from the CDL regulations that are going through in the U.S. right now? I mean, I understand your drivers may not be CDL necessarily, but some of them. Do you see any impact of the shortage of drivers that's going on in the industry? Yeah, our drivers do have CDLs, and I'd say the impact has been de minimis. There's been a few individual cases, but overall, as we set the turnover record two years in a row, and we may break it again for a third year, the team's doing a great job of finding talented technicians and drivers and customer service agents and all of our other frontline colleagues and retaining those colleagues at an increasingly high rate. Our next question comes from Shlomo Rosenbaum with Stifel. Hi. Thank you very much for taking my questions. You mentioned that you're starting to see some green shoots, you know, in the solid waste business, and I'm wondering if you're seeing similar type of green shoots in the ES business as well. Are you seeing, you know, maybe some of the turnarounds happen a little bit faster? You know, what signs are you seeing over there in that business? Yeah. I'd certainly say it's improving, maybe not improving quite as quickly, as we're seeing on the special waste or side of the business in the recycling and waste business. You know, you got some moving pieces. Listen, as oil prices spiking and people are kinda trying to blow out demand, right? That's delaying some of the underlying project work to work, which can't be delayed forever, but can be suspended for three to six months. There's puts and takes there, but the trend line is definitely up, and we'll see what kind of momentum we build here in the second quarter. Okay, thank you. What was driving the volumes down in the C&D business? Was that a tough comp issue over there with you know, some of the stuff that you were talking about, or it just kind of stood out over there? Yeah, it was, it was more of a comp issue. In the prior year, we had some hurricane cleanup efforts in the southeast. Our next question comes from Tobey Sommer with Truist. Thank you. Tobey, is your line muted? No. Can you hear me? Yeah. Yeah, we can hear you. Okay, great. I just wanted to ask a question about volume in environmental services. How do you expect the cadence of that to change throughout the balance of the year? Well, there, we don't report on a specific volume metric just because there's so many different product and service lines there that it'd be really, really tough with a mix standpoint. As I mentioned earlier, right? We see momentum really building in the second half of the year. Right? I think you'll see incremental progress quarter-to-quarter. Right? The year-over-year comp is tougher in the second quarter, but the second half you'll definitely see the volume picture build. Thank you. With respect to your acquisition program, are you seeing opportunities on the ES side as readily as you are on the municipal solid waste side? Plenty of opportunities. I'd say there's a little more momentum right now in recycling and waste, not because of activity on our side, but just timing of market. We know that these things ebb and flow. Lots of opportunities we have on the recycling and waste side. We've had discussions with the sellers for over a decade, and it's really timing and event driven on their side that drives the sale. Environmental solutions, obviously, we don't have the relationship profile that is that long, but still some of the same things. We maintain a significant dialogue. For every acquisition we close, that we've probably had seven fall out of the system at some point in the pipeline. We're very discriminating in terms of who we actually buy, but the activity, the level there is very strong as well. Our next question comes from Stephanie Moore with Jefferies. Great. Good afternoon. Thank you. I wanted to circle back on some of the commentary that you provided on your RISE digital platform. You know, I think some of your peers have talked about leveraging technology for more dynamic pricing discussions, and I wanted to see if that's an area that you guys have tackled as of late. At the same time, I think you've, you know, talked in the past about some opportunity with AI and, you know, algo-based routing. Wanted to get an update there as well. Thank you. Yes, on both sides. Pricing today, you know, we're using dozens of variables, through AI to build bespoke prices to existing customers when we send them our annual price increase. We're trying to get that as surgical as possible to give them a price that maximizes both what they'll pay and incents them to stay over a long period of time. Again, that is a game of inches in terms of dialing that in, but small basis points across individual customers adds up quickly across the system and feel really encouraged, and that will just continue to get better and better over time. It kind of builds in a more linear fashion. Where the routing, there's a lot of upfront work, particularly around data and data accuracy and data management that you need to have in place so that when you start routing dynamic, building dynamic routes through AI and then routing dynamically through the day, you get it right. What we won't do is sacrifice customer service to pursue short-term gains. We're gonna get it right with the customer first, and then drive all of the operational efficiency through the system while improving customer service. That's why you'll start to see some of that benefit in the second half of next year, but that's really 2028 when we think we scale. That's it for me, guys. Thank you. Our next question comes from David Manthey with Baird. Thank you. Good afternoon. How much of the environmental solutions weakness is that self-inflicted pricing that you mentioned as opposed to end market softness? If some of it is market related, what exposures by service or customer type lead you to your view of an improvement in the second half of 2026, just so we can sort of track that? Yeah. To, you know, to answer the last part of your question, we see the sales pipeline and just understand the activities both on our side and then work that is contracted and slated to begin. You know, some of those are longer term things that happen over the course of many months, and some of those could be shorter, but we know the start date happens, you know, later in the second quarter or into the third quarter on that front. The split between what is market and what is our own activity is hard to identify. I'd say certainly it was more self-inflicted in the second half of last year. I'd say as we increasingly go forward, it's we're more market driven, which is we figure, we think we got market pricing very dialed in here. We're not gonna get it perfect every time, but much improved on that dimension. Some of this is things like ER, which is hard to predict. We've just had a soft kinda 18 to 24 months on emergency response other than a single job. You know, going forward, we would expect that to resume to normal levels, but we'll see where that progresses. There's a mixed picture on the underlying verticals. I mentioned petrochemical and that being a little slower, or we're seeing some of the biotech being a little slower, where some of the other verticals are moving a little quicker. Given that you have visibility on these projects as they're coming down, we should assume these are what? Turnarounds, remediation, hazardous C&D? How should we think about what types of work that is? Yeah, it's a full mix. It can be both recurring things where we've won the opportunity to take all of the integrated waste out of a plant. A plant produces recycling, solid waste, special waste, and hazardous liquids, hazardous water. We can handle all of that. It could be events where we know we're projected to do a big remediation and opportunity. Again, that could produce special waste and hazardous waste solids, and that event could be as short as two weeks or could last as long as eight or nine months. At this time, there appear to be no further questions. Mr. Vander Ark, I'll turn the call back over to you for closing remarks. Thank you, Kim. I wanna thank the Republic Services team for the great start to the year. Their continued focus on safety, sustainability, and exceeding customer expectations positions us for success and another year of strong results. Have a good evening and be safe. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes the conference call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.
Speaker 10: Good afternoon, and welcome to the Republic Services first quarter 2026 investor conference call. Republic Services is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol RSG. I would now like to turn the conference over to Aaron Evans, Vice President of Investor Relations. Good afternoon, and welcome to the Republic Services first quarter 2026 investor conference call. good afternoon and welcome to the republic services first quarter 2026 investor conference call Republic Services is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol RSG. republic services is traded on the new york stock exchange under the symbol rsg I would now like to turn the conference over to Aaron Evans, Vice President of Investor Relations. i would now like to turn the conference over to aaron evans vice president of investor relations
Speaker 1: Good afternoon. I would like to welcome everyone to Republic Services first quarter 2026 conference call. Jon Vander Ark, our CEO, and Brian DelGhiaccio, our CFO, are on the call today to discuss our performance. I'd like to remind everyone that some information discussed on today's call contains forward-looking statements, including forward-looking financial information, which involve risks and uncertainties and may be materially different from actual results. Our SEC filings discuss factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. The material that we discuss today is time-sensitive. If, in the future, you listen to a rebroadcast or recording of this conference call, you should be sensitive to the date of the original call, which is May 7, 2026. Please note that this call is the property of Republic Services Inc. Good afternoon. good afternoon I would like to welcome everyone to Republic Services first quarter 2026 conference call. i would like to welcome everyone to republic services first quarter 2026 conference call Jon Vander Ark, our CEO, and Brian DelGhiaccio, our CFO, are on the call today to discuss our performance. jon vander ark our ceo and brian delghiaccio our cfo are on the call today to discuss our performance I'd like to remind everyone that some information discussed on today's call contains forward-looking statements, including forward-looking financial information, which involve risks and uncertainties and may be materially different from actual results. i'd like to remind everyone that some information discussed on today's call contains forward-looking statements including forward-looking financial information which involve risks and uncertainties and may be materially different from actual results Our SEC filings discuss factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. our sec filings discuss factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations The material that we discuss today is time-sensitive. the material that we discuss today is time-sensitive If, in the future, you listen to a rebroadcast or recording of this conference call, you should be sensitive to the date of the original call, which is May 7, 2026. if in the future you listen to a rebroadcast or recording of this conference call you should be sensitive to the date of the original call which is may 7 2026 Please note that this call is the property of Republic Services Inc. please note that this call is the property of republic services inc Any redistribution, retransmission, or rebroadcast of this call in any form without the express written consent of Republic Services is strictly prohibited. Our SEC filings, earnings press release, which includes GAAP reconciliation tables and a discussion of business activities, along with a recording of this call, are available on our website at republicservices.com. In addition, Republic's management team routinely participates in investor conferences. When events are scheduled, the dates, times, and presentations are posted on our investor website. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Jon. Any redistribution, retransmission, or rebroadcast of this call in any form without the express written consent of Republic Services is strictly prohibited. any redistribution retransmission or rebroadcast of this call in any form without the express written consent of republic services is strictly prohibited Our SEC filings, earnings press release, which includes GAAP reconciliation tables and a discussion of business activities, along with a recording of this call, are available on our website at republicservices.com. our sec filings earnings press release which includes gaap reconciliation tables and a discussion of business activities along with a recording of this call are available on our website at republicservices.com In addition, Republic's management team routinely participates in investor conferences. in addition republic's management team routinely participates in investor conferences When events are scheduled, the dates, times, and presentations are posted on our investor website. when events are scheduled the dates times and presentations are posted on our investor website With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Jon. with that i'd like to turn the call over to jon
Speaker 7: Thanks, Aaron. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. We are pleased with our first quarter results, which position us well to achieve the full year guidance that we provided in February. We delivered strong earnings growth and expanded margins. All while overcoming lower commodity prices and the impact of higher fuel prices during the quarter. Our results reflect our disciplined pricing execution, effective cost management, and the value created from ongoing investments in the business. During the quarter, we achieved revenue growth of 2.6%, generated adjusted EBITDA growth of 4.3%, expanded adjusted EBITDA margin by fifty basis points, delivered adjusted earnings per share of $1.70, and produced $984 million of adjusted free cash flow. We continue to secure new growth opportunities by leveraging our differentiating capabilities, customer zeal, digital, and sustainability. Thanks, Aaron. thanks aaron Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. good afternoon everyone and thank you for joining us We are pleased with our first quarter results, which position us well to achieve the full year guidance that we provided in February. we are pleased with our first quarter results which position us well to achieve the full year guidance that we provided in february We delivered strong earnings growth and expanded margins. we delivered strong earnings growth and expanded margins All while overcoming lower commodity prices and the impact of higher fuel prices during the quarter. all while overcoming lower commodity prices and the impact of higher fuel prices during the quarter Our results reflect our disciplined pricing execution, effective cost management, and the value created from ongoing investments in the business. our results reflect our disciplined pricing execution effective cost management and the value created from ongoing investments in the business During the quarter, we achieved revenue growth of 2.6%, generated adjusted EBITDA growth of 4.3%, expanded adjusted EBITDA margin by fifty basis points, delivered adjusted earnings per share of $1.70, and produced $984 million of adjusted free cash flow. during the quarter we achieved revenue growth of 2.6% generated adjusted ebitda growth of 4.3% expanded adjusted ebitda margin by fifty basis points delivered adjusted earnings per share of $1.70 and produced $984 million of adjusted free cash flow We continue to secure new growth opportunities by leveraging our differentiating capabilities, customer zeal, digital, and sustainability. we continue to secure new growth opportunities by leveraging our differentiating capabilities customer zeal digital and sustainability With respect to customer zeal, our customer retention rate remained high at 94%. Our net promoter score remains strong, reflecting our team's commitment to delivering exceptional customer value. First quarter organic revenue growth was driven by solid pricing across the business. Average yield on related revenue was 4.1%, and average yield on total revenue was 3.4%. Organic volume decreased related revenue by 1% or total revenue by 80 basis points. Volume performance improved sequentially, most notably in the landfill, large container, and small container verticals. Importantly, we delivered year-over-year revenue growth in the temporary large container business this quarter for the first time in over two years. Combined average yield and volume growth grew 1.2%. With respect to customer zeal, our customer retention rate remained high at 94%. with respect to customer zeal our customer retention rate remained high at 94% Our net promoter score remains strong, reflecting our team's commitment to delivering exceptional customer value. our net promoter score remains strong reflecting our team's commitment to delivering exceptional customer value First quarter organic revenue growth was driven by solid pricing across the business. first quarter organic revenue growth was driven by solid pricing across the business Average yield on related revenue was 4.1%, and average yield on total revenue was 3.4%. average yield on related revenue was 4.1% and average yield on total revenue was 3.4% Organic volume decreased related revenue by 1% or total revenue by 80 basis points. organic volume decreased related revenue by 1% or total revenue by 80 basis points Volume performance improved sequentially, most notably in the landfill, large container, and small container verticals. volume performance improved sequentially most notably in the landfill large container and small container verticals Importantly, we delivered year-over-year revenue growth in the temporary large container business this quarter for the first time in over two years. importantly we delivered year-over-year revenue growth in the temporary large container business this quarter for the first time in over two years Combined average yield and volume growth grew 1.2%. combined average yield and volume growth grew 1.2% Organic revenue in the environmental solutions business decreased total revenue by 1.3% in the first quarter, which was in line with our expectations. More than 1/3 of this decrease in the environmental solutions business related to an emergency response job in 2025 that did not repeat. Our environmental solution sales pipeline continues to build with increased activity across multiple end markets. We expect year-over-year revenue growth in this business in the second half of the year. Turning to digital. Our ongoing investments in technology and AI are strengthening how we operate and compete. Over time, these capabilities are expected to drive additional growth, expand margins, and support continued operating leverage. We are actively deploying AI-based predictive technology that supports optimized pricing decisions across markets with varying customer and competitive dynamics. This approach is expected to reinforce price retention and reduce customer attrition over time. Organic revenue in the environmental solutions business decreased total revenue by 1.3% in the first quarter, which was in line with our expectations. organic revenue in the environmental solutions business decreased total revenue by 1.3% in the first quarter which was in line with our expectations More than 1/3 of this decrease in the environmental solutions business related to an emergency response job in 2025 that did not repeat. more than 1/3 of this decrease in the environmental solutions business related to an emergency response job in 2025 that did not repeat Our environmental solution sales pipeline continues to build with increased activity across multiple end markets. our environmental solution sales pipeline continues to build with increased activity across multiple end markets We expect year-over-year revenue growth in this business in the second half of the year. we expect year-over-year revenue growth in this business in the second half of the year Turning to digital. turning to digital Our ongoing investments in technology and AI are strengthening how we operate and compete. our ongoing investments in technology and ai are strengthening how we operate and compete Over time, these capabilities are expected to drive additional growth, expand margins, and support continued operating leverage. over time these capabilities are expected to drive additional growth expand margins and support continued operating leverage We are actively deploying AI-based predictive technology that supports optimized pricing decisions across markets with varying customer and competitive dynamics. we are actively deploying ai-based predictive technology that supports optimized pricing decisions across markets with varying customer and competitive dynamics This approach is expected to reinforce price retention and reduce customer attrition over time. this approach is expected to reinforce price retention and reduce customer attrition over time Enhancements to our RISE digital platform are progressing with initial deployment focused on the large container business. The integration of AI and advanced routing algorithms is expected to improve safety outcomes, strengthen service execution, and increase route efficiency. Activation of digital tools in our call centers are enhancing the customer experience and unlocking value in our business by optimizing the 11 million inbound calls we receive each year. We believe that these investments in digital will deliver at least $100 billion of annual benefit by 2028. Within sustainability, we continue to believe that our sustainability innovation investments in the plastic circularity and decarbonization position us for growth and long-term value creation. Production volume has increased across our polymer center network as we optimize processing operations. Customer demand for our domestic post-consumer plastic remains strong. We continue to advance renewable natural gas projects with our partners. Enhancements to our RISE digital platform are progressing with initial deployment focused on the large container business. enhancements to our rise digital platform are progressing with initial deployment focused on the large container business The integration of AI and advanced routing algorithms is expected to improve safety outcomes, strengthen service execution, and increase route efficiency. the integration of ai and advanced routing algorithms is expected to improve safety outcomes strengthen service execution and increase route efficiency Activation of digital tools in our call centers are enhancing the customer experience and unlocking value in our business by optimizing the 11 million inbound calls we receive each year. activation of digital tools in our call centers are enhancing the customer experience and unlocking value in our business by optimizing the 11 million inbound calls we receive each year We believe that these investments in digital will deliver at least $100 billion of annual benefit by 2028. we believe that these investments in digital will deliver at least $100 billion of annual benefit by 2028 Within sustainability, we continue to believe that our sustainability innovation investments in the plastic circularity and decarbonization position us for growth and long-term value creation. Production volume has increased across our polymer center network as we optimize processing operations. within sustainability we continue to believe that our sustainability innovation investments in the plastic circularity and decarbonization position us for growth and long-term value creation. production volume has increased across our polymer center network as we optimize processing operations Customer demand for our domestic post-consumer plastic remains strong. customer demand for our domestic post-consumer plastic remains strong We continue to advance renewable natural gas projects with our partners. we continue to advance renewable natural gas projects with our partners We brought nine projects online throughout 2025. We expect four additional RNG projects to begin operations in 2026, which would bring our total landfill gas to energy portfolio to 82 projects. We continue to execute against our industry-leading commitment to fleet electrification. We had more than 200 electric collection vehicles in operation at the end of the first quarter. We expect to exit this year with more than 300 EV collection trucks in our fleet to support the continued growth of this differentiated service offering. We recently celebrated with the City of San Pablo, who partnered with us to become the first city in California to operate an all-electric recycling and waste collection fleet. As part of our commitment to sustainability, we strive to be the employer where the best people want to work. We brought nine projects online throughout 2025. we brought nine projects online throughout 2025 We expect four additional RNG projects to begin operations in 2026, which would bring our total landfill gas to energy portfolio to 82 projects. we expect four additional rng projects to begin operations in 2026 which would bring our total landfill gas to energy portfolio to 82 projects We continue to execute against our industry-leading commitment to fleet electrification. we continue to execute against our industry-leading commitment to fleet electrification We had more than 200 electric collection vehicles in operation at the end of the first quarter. we had more than 200 electric collection vehicles in operation at the end of the first quarter We expect to exit this year with more than 300 EV collection trucks in our fleet to support the continued growth of this differentiated service offering. we expect to exit this year with more than 300 ev collection trucks in our fleet to support the continued growth of this differentiated service offering We recently celebrated with the City of San Pablo, who partnered with us to become the first city in California to operate an all-electric recycling and waste collection fleet. we recently celebrated with the city of san pablo who partnered with us to become the first city in california to operate an all-electric recycling and waste collection fleet As part of our commitment to sustainability, we strive to be the employer where the best people want to work. as part of our commitment to sustainability we strive to be the employer where the best people want to work Our employee engagement score consistently exceeds national benchmarks, and we continue to experience record low turnover rates. Our comprehensive sustainability performance continues to be widely recognized as Republic Services was named to Fortune's World's Most Admired Companies list and Ethisphere's World's Most Ethical Companies list. Regarding capital allocation, we've invested more than $700 million in value-creating acquisitions to date, which includes $433 million of investment in the first quarter. Our acquisition pipeline remains supportive of continued activity in both the recycling and waste and environmental solutions businesses. We expect to exceed at $1 billion of acquisition investment this year. As part of our balanced approach to capital allocation, we returned $507 million to shareholders in the quarter, including $314 million of share repurchases. Our employee engagement score consistently exceeds national benchmarks, and we continue to experience record low turnover rates. our employee engagement score consistently exceeds national benchmarks and we continue to experience record low turnover rates Our comprehensive sustainability performance continues to be widely recognized as Republic Services was named to Fortune's World's Most Admired Companies list and Ethisphere's World's Most Ethical Companies list. our comprehensive sustainability performance continues to be widely recognized as republic services was named to fortune's world's most admired companies list and ethisphere's world's most ethical companies list Regarding capital allocation, we've invested more than $700 million in value-creating acquisitions to date, which includes $433 million of investment in the first quarter. regarding capital allocation we've invested more than $700 million in value-creating acquisitions to date which includes $433 million of investment in the first quarter Our acquisition pipeline remains supportive of continued activity in both the recycling and waste and environmental solutions businesses. our acquisition pipeline remains supportive of continued activity in both the recycling and waste and environmental solutions businesses We expect to exceed at $1 billion of acquisition investment this year. we expect to exceed at $1 billion of acquisition investment this year As part of our balanced approach to capital allocation, we returned $507 million to shareholders in the quarter, including $314 million of share repurchases. as part of our balanced approach to capital allocation we returned $507 million to shareholders in the quarter including $314 million of share repurchases I will now turn the call over to Brian, who will provide additional details on the quarter. I will now turn the call over to Brian, who will provide additional details on the quarter. i will now turn the call over to brian who will provide additional details on the quarter
Speaker 3: Thanks, Jon. Core price on total revenue was 5.7%. Core price on related revenue was 6.8%, which included open market pricing of 8.4% and restricted pricing of 4.4%. The components of core price on related revenue included small container of 8.2%, large container of 7.1%, and residential of 6.5%. Average yield on total revenue was 3.4%, and average yield on related revenue was 4.1%. First quarter volume decreased total revenue by 80 basis points and related revenue by 1%. Volume results on related revenue included a decrease in large container of 2.5%. This represents a sequential improvement of 130 basis points compared to our fourth quarter performance. Thanks, Jon. thanks jon Core price on total revenue was 5.7%. core price on total revenue was 5.7% Core price on related revenue was 6.8%, which included open market pricing of 8.4% and restricted pricing of 4.4%. core price on related revenue was 6.8% which included open market pricing of 8.4% and restricted pricing of 4.4% The components of core price on related revenue included small container of 8.2%, large container of 7.1%, and residential of 6.5%. the components of core price on related revenue included small container of 8.2% large container of 7.1% and residential of 6.5% Average yield on total revenue was 3.4%, and average yield on related revenue was 4.1%. average yield on total revenue was 3.4% and average yield on related revenue was 4.1% First quarter volume decreased total revenue by 80 basis points and related revenue by 1%. first quarter volume decreased total revenue by 80 basis points and related revenue by 1% Volume results on related revenue included a decrease in large container of 2.5%. volume results on related revenue included a decrease in large container of 2.5% This represents a sequential improvement of 130 basis points compared to our fourth quarter performance. this represents a sequential improvement of 130 basis points compared to our fourth quarter performance Volume results also includes a decrease in residential of 5.2%. The sequential change in residential volume was primarily due to known contract losses, which was contemplated in our full year guidance. Landfill volumes improved during the quarter as MSW volumes increased 1.4% and special waste revenue increased 9.9%. We estimate severe weather negatively impacted volume performance by approximately $30 million during the quarter, which was reflected in our full-year revenue guidance provided in February. Moving on to recycling. Commodity prices were $120 per ton during the first quarter. This compared to $155 per ton in the prior year. Recycling, processing, and commodity sales were flat compared to the prior year. Increased volumes at our polymer centers offset the revenue impact of lower recycled commodity prices. Volume results also includes a decrease in residential of 5.2%. volume results also includes a decrease in residential of 5.2% The sequential change in residential volume was primarily due to known contract losses, which was contemplated in our full year guidance. the sequential change in residential volume was primarily due to known contract losses which was contemplated in our full year guidance Landfill volumes improved during the quarter as MSW volumes increased 1.4% and special waste revenue increased 9.9%. landfill volumes improved during the quarter as msw volumes increased 1.4% and special waste revenue increased 9.9% We estimate severe weather negatively impacted volume performance by approximately $30 million during the quarter, which was reflected in our full-year revenue guidance provided in February. we estimate severe weather negatively impacted volume performance by approximately $30 million during the quarter which was reflected in our full-year revenue guidance provided in february Moving on to recycling. moving on to recycling Commodity prices were $120 per ton during the first quarter. commodity prices were $120 per ton during the first quarter This compared to $155 per ton in the prior year. this compared to $155 per ton in the prior year Recycling, processing, and commodity sales were flat compared to the prior year. recycling processing and commodity sales were flat compared to the prior year Increased volumes at our polymer centers offset the revenue impact of lower recycled commodity prices. increased volumes at our polymer centers offset the revenue impact of lower recycled commodity prices Current commodity prices are approximately $125 per ton. Total company adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 50 basis points to 32.1%. Margin performance during the quarter included margin expansion in the underlying business of 90 basis points and a net benefit of 20 basis points from non-recurring items, primarily due to a favorable legal settlement. This was partially offset by a 20 basis point decrease from net fuel, a 20 basis point decrease from recycled commodity prices, and a 20 basis point decrease from acquisitions. The sharp increase in diesel prices in March negatively impacted EBITDA performance by $8 million in the first quarter. Our fuel recovery fee tends to lag changes in fuel expense by approximately one month. We expect fuel recovery fees to offset higher fuel costs beginning in the second quarter. Current commodity prices are approximately $125 per ton. current commodity prices are approximately $125 per ton Total company adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 50 basis points to 32.1%. total company adjusted ebitda margin expanded 50 basis points to 32.1% Margin performance during the quarter included margin expansion in the underlying business of 90 basis points and a net benefit of 20 basis points from non-recurring items, primarily due to a favorable legal settlement. margin performance during the quarter included margin expansion in the underlying business of 90 basis points and a net benefit of 20 basis points from non-recurring items primarily due to a favorable legal settlement This was partially offset by a 20 basis point decrease from net fuel, a 20 basis point decrease from recycled commodity prices, and a 20 basis point decrease from acquisitions. this was partially offset by a 20 basis point decrease from net fuel a 20 basis point decrease from recycled commodity prices and a 20 basis point decrease from acquisitions The sharp increase in diesel prices in March negatively impacted EBITDA performance by $8 million in the first quarter. the sharp increase in diesel prices in march negatively impacted ebitda performance by $8 million in the first quarter Our fuel recovery fee tends to lag changes in fuel expense by approximately one month. our fuel recovery fee tends to lag changes in fuel expense by approximately one month We expect fuel recovery fees to offset higher fuel costs beginning in the second quarter. we expect fuel recovery fees to offset higher fuel costs beginning in the second quarter With respect to environmental solutions, first quarter revenue decreased $44 million compared to the prior year. Approximately $15 million of this decrease related to an emergency response job in 2025 that did not repeat. Adjusted EBITDA margin in the environmental solutions business was 19.2%. Adjusted free cash flow of $984 million, an increase of more than 35% compared to the prior year. This increase was driven by EBITDA growth in the business and the timing of working capital and capital expenditures. Year-to-date capital expenditures of $249 million represents 12% of our projected full-year spend. Total debt was $14 billion, and total liquidity was $1.8 billion. Our leverage ratio at the end of the quarter was approximately 2.6x. With respect to environmental solutions, first quarter revenue decreased $44 million compared to the prior year. with respect to environmental solutions first quarter revenue decreased $44 million compared to the prior year Approximately $15 million of this decrease related to an emergency response job in 2025 that did not repeat. approximately $15 million of this decrease related to an emergency response job in 2025 that did not repeat Adjusted EBITDA margin in the environmental solutions business was 19.2%. adjusted ebitda margin in the environmental solutions business was 19.2% Adjusted free cash flow of $984 million, an increase of more than 35% compared to the prior year. adjusted free cash flow of $984 million an increase of more than 35% compared to the prior year This increase was driven by EBITDA growth in the business and the timing of working capital and capital expenditures. this increase was driven by ebitda growth in the business and the timing of working capital and capital expenditures Year-to-date capital expenditures of $249 million represents 12% of our projected full-year spend. year-to-date capital expenditures of $249 million represents 12% of our projected full-year spend Total debt was $14 billion, and total liquidity was $1.8 billion. total debt was $14 billion and total liquidity was $1.8 billion Our leverage ratio at the end of the quarter was approximately 2.6 x. our leverage ratio at the end of the quarter was approximately 2.6 x With respect to taxes, our combined tax rate and impact from equity investments in renewable energy resulted in an equivalent tax impact of 24.9% during the first quarter. With that, operator, I would like to open the call to questions. With respect to taxes, our combined tax rate and impact from equity investments in renewable energy resulted in an equivalent tax impact of 24.9% during the first quarter. with respect to taxes our combined tax rate and impact from equity investments in renewable energy resulted in an equivalent tax impact of 24.9% during the first quarter With that, operator, I would like to open the call to questions. with that operator i would like to open the call to questions
Speaker 10: We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. In the interest of time, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up question today. If your question has been answered and you would like to withdraw your request, you may do so by pressing star. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. Our first question comes from Noah Kaye. We will now begin the question and answer session. we will now begin the question and answer session To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. to ask a question you may press star then one on your touchtone phone In the interest of time, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up question today. in the interest of time we ask that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up question today If your question has been answered and you would like to withdraw your request, you may do so by pressing star. if your question has been answered and you would like to withdraw your request you may do so by pressing star If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. if you are using a speakerphone please pick up your handset before pressing the keys Our first question comes from Noah Kaye. our first question comes from noah kaye
Speaker 18: Yep. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Hope you all are well. You all can hear me? Yep. yep Good afternoon. good afternoon Thanks for taking the question. thanks for taking the question Hope you all are well. hope you all are well You all can hear me? you all can hear me
Speaker 7: Yep. Yep. yep
Speaker 18: Okay, great. Thank you. You know, AI and digital productivity, definitely a strong theme for the sector and for you this quarter. You called out you expect 100 million, I think, of annual benefits from investments by 2028. I guess first, can you sort of benchmark where that benefit might be penciling out for 2026 and how to think about it flowing, you know, in a couple of years? Maybe just to unpack a little bit, you know, the buckets of benefit that you're getting here. Okay, great. okay great Thank you. thank you You know, AI and digital productivity, definitely a strong theme for the sector and for you this quarter. you know ai and digital productivity definitely a strong theme for the sector and for you this quarter You called out you expect 100 million, I think, of annual benefits from investments by 2028. you called out you expect 100 million i think of annual benefits from investments by 2028 I guess first, can you sort of benchmark where that benefit might be penciling out for 2026 and how to think about it flowing, you know, in a couple of years? i guess first can you sort of benchmark where that benefit might be penciling out for 2026 and how to think about it flowing you know in a couple of years Maybe just to unpack a little bit, you know, the buckets of benefit that you're getting here. maybe just to unpack a little bit you know the buckets of benefit that you're getting here
Speaker 7: Yeah. We mentioned on the latter part of your question, we mentioned three areas of the benefit: routing, the RISE pricing, and then customer service. I would list those in terms of the priority of the impact or the scale of the impact over time. Pricing will come first, and we'll see some benefit in 2026, and that'll build over 2027, 2028. We're gonna see very little, probably no benefit of that in 2026 on RISE, just because we're doing all the work, and that will scale. You'll start to see that benefit come in 2027, and then that will really scale in 2028, and that, again, will be the largest impact. On the customer service, I think you'll see ratable improvement across the three years. Right now, that's the smallest of the three categories I mentioned. Those aren't the only three. Yeah. yeah We mentioned on the latter part of your question, we mentioned three areas of the benefit: routing, the RISE pricing, and then customer service. we mentioned on the latter part of your question we mentioned three areas of the benefit routing the rise pricing and then customer service I would list those in terms of the priority of the impact or the scale of the impact over time. i would list those in terms of the priority of the impact or the scale of the impact over time Pricing will come first, and we'll see some benefit in 2026, and that'll build over 2027, 2028. pricing will come first and we'll see some benefit in 2026 and that'll build over 2027 2028 We're gonna see very little, probably no benefit of that in 2026 on RISE, just because we're doing all the work, and that will scale. we're gonna see very little probably no benefit of that in 2026 on rise just because we're doing all the work and that will scale You'll start to see that benefit come in 2027, and then that will really scale in 2028, and that, again, will be the largest impact. you'll start to see that benefit come in 2027 and then that will really scale in 2028 and that again will be the largest impact On the customer service, I think you'll see ratable improvement across the three years. on the customer service i think you'll see ratable improvement across the three years Right now, that's the smallest of the three categories I mentioned. right now that's the smallest of the three categories i mentioned Those aren't the only three. those aren't the only three I mean, we're looking at AI in every area of the business, back office, legal, HR, all kinds of places. These are the three where we see the most immediate benefit to scale, but it will have profound impact across the business. I mean, we're looking at AI in every area of the business, back office, legal, HR, all kinds of places. i mean we're looking at ai in every area of the business back office legal hr all kinds of places These are the three where we see the most immediate benefit to scale, but it will have profound impact across the business. these are the three where we see the most immediate benefit to scale but it will have profound impact across the business
Speaker 18: That's very helpful, Jon. Maybe we could talk a little bit about the price cost performance this quarter. To get 90 basis points underlying margin expansion when you had the headwinds from weather rather, and you know, some of the cost pressures, it's impressive. Maybe you can talk a little bit about, you know, what you've seen so far on price retention. Was that better than you expected? Did you maybe get a little bit better operating leverage off of, you know, cost savings initiatives? Just help us understand, you know, the quarter and, you know, how you see it trending as we look at margin profile for the next couple of quarters. That's very helpful, Jon. that's very helpful jon Maybe we could talk a little bit about the price cost performance this quarter. maybe we could talk a little bit about the price cost performance this quarter To get 90 basis points underlying margin expansion when you had the headwinds from weather rather, and you know, some of the cost pressures, it's impressive. to get 90 basis points underlying margin expansion when you had the headwinds from weather rather and you know some of the cost pressures it's impressive Maybe you can talk a little bit about, you know, what you've seen so far on price retention. maybe you can talk a little bit about you know what you've seen so far on price retention Was that better than you expected? was that better than you expected Did you maybe get a little bit better operating leverage off of, you know, cost savings initiatives? did you maybe get a little bit better operating leverage off of you know cost savings initiatives Just help us understand, you know, the quarter and, you know, how you see it trending as we look at margin profile for the next couple of quarters. just help us understand you know the quarter and you know how you see it trending as we look at margin profile for the next couple of quarters
Speaker 7: Yeah. I'd lead with cost. Our cost performance has been really strong for a number of years now. Inflation has come down, but we've done a lot of self-help there. With the underlying RISE benefits, you're seeing that through labor productivity. You're seeing MPower and our maintenance costs be very, very strong on that. We're doing a good job of, you know, balancing pricing, again, primarily playing a long game. We want to understand, even in a volume-challenged environment, to retain customers over time. We've had to find our place in different markets, both to retain and to compete for new work, just given the challenging macro, and the team's doing a great job of finding that right mix to still get that online margin expansion. Yeah. yeah I'd lead with cost. i'd lead with cost Our cost performance has been really strong for a number of years now. our cost performance has been really strong for a number of years now Inflation has come down, but we've done a lot of self-help there. inflation has come down but we've done a lot of self-help there With the underlying RISE benefits, you're seeing that through labor productivity. with the underlying rise benefits you're seeing that through labor productivity You're seeing MPower and our maintenance costs be very, very strong on that. you're seeing mpower and our maintenance costs be very very strong on that We're doing a good job of, you know, balancing pricing, again, primarily playing a long game. we're doing a good job of you know balancing pricing again primarily playing a long game We want to understand, even in a volume-challenged environment, to retain customers over time. we want to understand even in a volume-challenged environment to retain customers over time We've had to find our place in different markets, both to retain and to compete for new work, just given the challenging macro, and the team's doing a great job of finding that right mix to still get that online margin expansion. we've had to find our place in different markets both to retain and to compete for new work just given the challenging macro and the team's doing a great job of finding that right mix to still get that online margin expansion
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Bryan Burgmeier with Citi. Our next question comes from Bryan Burgmeier with Citi. our next question comes from bryan burgmeier with citi
Speaker 4: Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Brian, can you maybe just provide some details on how you're thinking about, you know, 2Q? I just wanna be mindful, you know, of the wildfire comps, you know, the fuel impacts, M&A integration. You know, conversely, you'd have some seasonal step-up, recycled commodities are doing a little better. I mean, we were thinking margins, you know, would still probably be down kind of slightly year-over-year, but, you know, any details you can add on that would be helpful. Hi, good afternoon. hi good afternoon Thanks for taking the question. thanks for taking the question Brian, can you maybe just provide some details on how you're thinking about, you know, 2Q? brian can you maybe just provide some details on how you're thinking about you know 2q I just wanna be mindful, you know, of the wildfire comps, you know, the fuel impacts, M&A integration. i just wanna be mindful you know of the wildfire comps you know the fuel impacts m&a integration You know, conversely, you'd have some seasonal step-up, recycled commodities are doing a little better. you know conversely you'd have some seasonal step-up recycled commodities are doing a little better I mean, we were thinking margins, you know, would still probably be down kind of slightly year-over-year, but, you know, any details you can add on that would be helpful. i mean we were thinking margins you know would still probably be down kind of slightly year-over-year but you know any details you can add on that would be helpful
Speaker 3: That's still, you know, what we're expecting for the second quarter. I would say starting with from a margin perspective, somewhat flat to slightly down on a year-over-year basis, largely due to some of the project-related landfill volumes that you mentioned. That's the biggest driver of that. Except that, we would've, you know, anticipated margin expansion. Margin expansion in the underlying business, excluding the impact of those volumes. Overall, it's obviously gonna have an impact on the top line as well when you think that's gonna have a negative impact on volume performance, which is exactly what we thought when we entered the year, negative in both Q2 and Q3, flipping to positive then in the fourth quarter. Largely the same as what we thought when we provided the guidance in February. That's still, you know, what we're expecting for the second quarter. that's still you know what we're expecting for the second quarter I would say starting with from a margin perspective, somewhat flat to slightly down on a year-over-year basis, largely due to some of the project-related landfill volumes that you mentioned. i would say starting with from a margin perspective somewhat flat to slightly down on a year-over-year basis largely due to some of the project-related landfill volumes that you mentioned That's the biggest driver of that. that's the biggest driver of that Except that, we would've, you know, anticipated margin expansion. except that we would've you know anticipated margin expansion Margin expansion in the underlying business, excluding the impact of those volumes. margin expansion in the underlying business excluding the impact of those volumes Overall, it's obviously gonna have an impact on the top line as well when you think that's gonna have a negative impact on volume performance, which is exactly what we thought when we entered the year, negative in both Q2 and Q3, flipping to positive then in the fourth quarter. overall it's obviously gonna have an impact on the top line as well when you think that's gonna have a negative impact on volume performance which is exactly what we thought when we entered the year negative in both q2 and q3 flipping to positive then in the fourth quarter Largely the same as what we thought when we provided the guidance in February. largely the same as what we thought when we provided the guidance in february You know, again, nothing's really changed, you know, based on our performance in the first quarter. You know, again, nothing's really changed, you know, based on our performance in the first quarter. you know again nothing's really changed you know based on our performance in the first quarter
Speaker 4: Got it. Got it. Thanks for that detail. That's really helpful. One just quick follow-on for me, and I'll turn it over. Just a kind of point of clarification. Are you expecting or forecasting any impact to EBITDA in 2Q from fuel? You know, can you just help us frame maybe the margin impact as you know, pursue the surcharges and, you know, pricing associated with that? Thanks a lot. Got it. got it Got it. got it Thanks for that detail. thanks for that detail That's really helpful. that's really helpful One just quick follow-on for me, and I'll turn it over. one just quick follow-on for me and i'll turn it over Just a kind of point of clarification. just a kind of point of clarification Are you expecting or forecasting any impact to EBITDA in 2Q from fuel? are you expecting or forecasting any impact to ebitda in 2q from fuel You know, can you just help us frame maybe the margin impact as you know, pursue the surcharges and, you know, pricing associated with that? you know can you just help us frame maybe the margin impact as you know pursue the surcharges and you know pricing associated with that Thanks a lot. thanks a lot
Speaker 3: As I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we tend to lag from a fuel recovery fee perspective, the increased cost of fuel expense. As prices have been rising, right, we've been chasing that month on month. Now we expect that fuel recovery fee to start kicking in in the second quarter. Our overall objective is to sit there and recover the cash impact, the full cash impact of those rising fuel prices. There's both direct impacts as well as indirect. The sensitivity that we provide in our disclosures is more of a direct type concept. There are gonna be other impacts like potentially increased transportation expenses. There's increased CapEx as well that goes along with that. Again, if we achieve that recovery from a holistic or comprehensive cash perspective, that is the overall objective. As I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we tend to lag from a fuel recovery fee perspective, the increased cost of fuel expense. as i mentioned in the prepared remarks we tend to lag from a fuel recovery fee perspective the increased cost of fuel expense As prices have been rising, right, we've been chasing that month on month. as prices have been rising right we've been chasing that month on month Now we expect that fuel recovery fee to start kicking in in the second quarter. now we expect that fuel recovery fee to start kicking in in the second quarter Our overall objective is to sit there and recover the cash impact, the full cash impact of those rising fuel prices. our overall objective is to sit there and recover the cash impact the full cash impact of those rising fuel prices There's both direct impacts as well as indirect. there's both direct impacts as well as indirect The sensitivity that we provide in our disclosures is more of a direct type concept. the sensitivity that we provide in our disclosures is more of a direct type concept There are gonna be other impacts like potentially increased transportation expenses. there are gonna be other impacts like potentially increased transportation expenses There's increased CapEx as well that goes along with that. there's increased capex as well that goes along with that Again, if we achieve that recovery from a holistic or comprehensive cash perspective, that is the overall objective. again if we achieve that recovery from a holistic or comprehensive cash perspective that is the overall objective
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Adam Bubes with Goldman Sachs. Our next question comes from Adam Bubes with Goldman Sachs. our next question comes from adam bubes with goldman sachs
Speaker 2: Just had first one on the volume line. I think you called out weather as a $30 million headwind in the quarter, and then you were lapping maybe $12 million of event-related volume. If I have it right, I think it implies, you know, volumes are tracking flattish year-over-year, underlying volumes. How'd that compare with your initial expectations, and can you just talk about, you know, what you're seeing in volumes in March and April and expected cadence throughout the year? Just had first one on the volume line. just had first one on the volume line I think you called out weather as a $30 million headwind in the quarter, and then you were lapping maybe $12 million of event-related volume. i think you called out weather as a $30 million headwind in the quarter and then you were lapping maybe $12 million of event-related volume If I have it right, I think it implies, you know, volumes are tracking flattish year-over-year, underlying volumes. if i have it right i think it implies you know volumes are tracking flattish year-over-year underlying volumes How'd that compare with your initial expectations, and can you just talk about, you know, what you're seeing in volumes in March and April and expected cadence throughout the year? how'd that compare with your initial expectations and can you just talk about you know what you're seeing in volumes in march and april and expected cadence throughout the year
Speaker 7: Yeah, I think we're starting to see some underlying momentum, and I wouldn't put a word of caution on that given the macro uncertainty we're facing around two wars and oil prices and all the other things that you guys see and read. I'd say some green shoots are starting to emerge in terms of the underlying demand signal. Special waste has been particularly strong, and we're seeing some momentum month-over-month in the first quarter. We're gonna look for that to build. Again, at what rate that builds, we'll talk more about in the next quarter. I'd say versus the three months ago, I'd say we're slightly more positive on where the macro is looking. Yeah, I think we're starting to see some underlying momentum, and I wouldn't put a word of caution on that given the macro uncertainty we're facing around two wars and oil prices and all the other things that you guys see and read. yeah i think we're starting to see some underlying momentum and i wouldn't put a word of caution on that given the macro uncertainty we're facing around two wars and oil prices and all the other things that you guys see and read I'd say some green shoots are starting to emerge in terms of the underlying demand signal. i'd say some green shoots are starting to emerge in terms of the underlying demand signal Special waste has been particularly strong, and we're seeing some momentum month-over-month in the first quarter. special waste has been particularly strong and we're seeing some momentum month-over-month in the first quarter We're gonna look for that to build. we're gonna look for that to build Again, at what rate that builds, we'll talk more about in the next quarter. again at what rate that builds we'll talk more about in the next quarter I'd say versus the three months ago, I'd say we're slightly more positive on where the macro is looking. i'd say versus the three months ago i'd say we're slightly more positive on where the macro is looking
Speaker 2: I think the spread between core price and yield was a little wider this quarter at 2.7% versus, I think, 2% last year. Is that just a mix impact or what's driving that? Can you talk about how you think about that spread going forward as you continue to leverage AI to implement more surgical pricing tools? I think the spread between core price and yield was a little wider this quarter at 2.7% versus, I think, 2% last year. i think the spread between core price and yield was a little wider this quarter at 2.7% versus i think 2% last year Is that just a mix impact or what's driving that? is that just a mix impact or what's driving that Can you talk about how you think about that spread going forward as you continue to leverage AI to implement more surgical pricing tools? can you talk about how you think about that spread going forward as you continue to leverage ai to implement more surgical pricing tools
Speaker 3: It predominantly is mix. You're spot on there. In part, I would say it's driven by the relatively better performance we're seeing in the temporary large container business, which is predominantly construction-related activity. Sequentially, the volume performance improved 500 basis points. That's where you tend to see that impact because we don't capture price on a temporary unit. You'll see it in that churn mix and other, which is the difference between the core price and the average yield. The good news is that as those units return, right, you're getting that incremental volume, but it's what it ultimately leads to. It's that permanent unit of service. It's the, you know, temporary units leading to that household formation, which ultimately leads to that small business formation, which is extraordinarily important to us. It predominantly is mix. it predominantly is mix You're spot on there. you're spot on there In part, I would say it's driven by the relatively better performance we're seeing in the temporary large container business, which is predominantly construction-related activity. in part i would say it's driven by the relatively better performance we're seeing in the temporary large container business which is predominantly construction-related activity Sequentially, the volume performance improved 500 basis points. sequentially the volume performance improved 500 basis points That's where you tend to see that impact because we don't capture price on a temporary unit. that's where you tend to see that impact because we don't capture price on a temporary unit You'll see it in that churn mix and other, which is the difference between the core price and the average yield. you'll see it in that churn mix and other which is the difference between the core price and the average yield The good news is that as those units return, right, you're getting that incremental volume, but it's what it ultimately leads to. the good news is that as those units return right you're getting that incremental volume but it's what it ultimately leads to It's that permanent unit of service. it's that permanent unit of service It's the, you know, temporary units leading to that household formation, which ultimately leads to that small business formation, which is extraordinarily important to us. it's the you know temporary units leading to that household formation which ultimately leads to that small business formation which is extraordinarily important to us
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Kevin Chiang with CIBC. Kevin? Kevin, you may be on mute. Our next question comes from Kevin Chiang with CIBC. our next question comes from kevin chiang with cibc Kevin? kevin Kevin, you may be on mute. kevin you may be on mute
Speaker 8: You are right. I'm on mute. Thanks for that. I apologize if I, if I missed this. You called out the $12 million or $15 million headwind in ES in terms of a year-over-year comp. Did weather impact ES as well? Maybe if I think of sequential margin performance, if it did, you know, would we expect to see a more outsized margin cadence from Q1 into Q2 within ES, just given it dipped below 20% in the first quarter here? You are right. you are right I'm on mute. i'm on mute Thanks for that. thanks for that I apologize if I, if I missed this. i apologize if i if i missed this You called out the $12 million or $15 million headwind in ES in terms of a year-over-year comp. you called out the $12 million or $15 million headwind in es in terms of a year-over-year comp Did weather impact ES as well? did weather impact es as well Maybe if I think of sequential margin performance, if it did, you know, would we expect to see a more outsized margin cadence from Q1 into Q2 within ES, just given it dipped below 20% in the first quarter here? maybe if i think of sequential margin performance if it did you know would we expect to see a more outsized margin cadence from q1 into q2 within es just given it dipped below 20% in the first quarter here
Speaker 7: Yeah, I'd say weather was a factor. I wouldn't say it was the dominant factor, more the year-over-year comp we talked about. Yeah, I'd say weather was a factor. yeah i'd say weather was a factor I wouldn't say it was the dominant factor, more the year-over-year comp we talked about. i wouldn't say it was the dominant factor more the year-over-year comp we talked about
Speaker 8: Okay. Okay. okay
Speaker 7: Weather was certainly a factor. I think we talked about this last quarter. I think the first couple quarters here we're in, you know, finding the bottom, which we have, and we're building off of that. Weather was certainly a factor. weather was certainly a factor I think we talked about this last quarter. i think we talked about this last quarter I think the first couple quarters here we're in, you know, finding the bottom, which we have, and we're building off of that. i think the first couple quarters here we're in you know finding the bottom which we have and we're building off of that You know, we have a tough comp in Q2 as well. You'll see in the back half kinda momentum both from the top line and margin expansion into the business. We feel really good about what momentum that team has. I think we talked about probably missing the market a bit as volume declined, right? We were still pretty aggressive on price, and I think we found our footing there on a price volume standpoint. that can be a little longer sales cycle, so a lot of the great activities we see won't show up into the P&L until the second half. You know, we have a tough comp in Q2 as well. you know we have a tough comp in q2 as well You'll see in the back half kinda momentum both from the top line and margin expansion into the business. you'll see in the back half kinda momentum both from the top line and margin expansion into the business We feel really good about what momentum that team has. we feel really good about what momentum that team has I think we talked about probably missing the market a bit as volume declined, right? i think we talked about probably missing the market a bit as volume declined right We were still pretty aggressive on price, and I think we found our footing there on a price volume standpoint. that can be a little longer sales cycle, so a lot of the great activities we see won't show up into the P&L until the second half. we were still pretty aggressive on price and i think we found our footing there on a price volume standpoint that can be a little longer sales cycle so a lot of the great activities we see won't show up into the p&l until the second half
Speaker 8: Well, that's great color. Just my second question, just wondering, given where virgin plastic pricing is, just does that impact the economics of the polymer centers or the Blue Polymers JV? Well, that's great color. well that's great color Just my second question, just wondering, given where virgin plastic pricing is, just does that impact the economics of the polymer centers or the Blue Polymers JV? just my second question just wondering given where virgin plastic pricing is just does that impact the economics of the polymer centers or the blue polymers jv
Speaker 7: Yeah, a lot of moving pieces right now on plastics. We've had some pre-Iran war, certainly some global challenges with a glut of virgin PET out of Asia flooding the U.S. market, some of which is coming in as rPET and working with our industry stakeholders and the government to address that issue. The war itself has been helpful in that because we're starting to see that production go down as they've had to ration oil supply and get it to primary use versus secondary use like plastics. The net impact is we're seeing our spreads increase both in the polymer centers and the Blue Polymers JV, and feel really good about the demand profile there and the momentum we have in that business. Yeah, a lot of moving pieces right now on plastics. yeah a lot of moving pieces right now on plastics We've had some pre-Iran war, certainly some global challenges with a glut of virgin PET out of Asia flooding the U.S. market, some of which is coming in as rPET and working with our industry stakeholders and the government to address that issue. we've had some pre-iran war certainly some global challenges with a glut of virgin pet out of asia flooding the u.s market some of which is coming in as rpet and working with our industry stakeholders and the government to address that issue The war itself has been helpful in that because we're starting to see that production go down as they've had to ration oil supply and get it to primary use versus secondary use like plastics. the war itself has been helpful in that because we're starting to see that production go down as they've had to ration oil supply and get it to primary use versus secondary use like plastics The net impact is we're seeing our spreads increase both in the polymer centers and the Blue Polymers JV, and feel really good about the demand profile there and the momentum we have in that business. the net impact is we're seeing our spreads increase both in the polymer centers and the blue polymers jv and feel really good about the demand profile there and the momentum we have in that business
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Jerry Revich with Wells Fargo. Our next question comes from Jerry Revich with Wells Fargo. our next question comes from jerry revich with wells fargo
Speaker 6: Yes, hi. Good afternoon. I'm wondering if we could talk about the electric collection of vehicles. As you folks are ramping up towards 300, can you just talk about where you're deploying them, what the unit profitability looks like compared to conventional trucks on an all-in basis? As we look at what proportion of your footprint could you ultimately see EVs operating in, how meaningful part of the fleet could it be in terms of where there's actual availability of power and economics? Thanks. Yes, hi. yes hi Good afternoon. good afternoon I'm wondering if we could talk about the electric collection of vehicles. i'm wondering if we could talk about the electric collection of vehicles As you folks are ramping up towards 300, can you just talk about where you're deploying them, what the unit profitability looks like compared to conventional trucks on an all-in basis? as you folks are ramping up towards 300 can you just talk about where you're deploying them what the unit profitability looks like compared to conventional trucks on an all-in basis As we look at what proportion of your footprint could you ultimately see EVs operating in, how meaningful part of the fleet could it be in terms of where there's actual availability of power and economics? as we look at what proportion of your footprint could you ultimately see evs operating in how meaningful part of the fleet could it be in terms of where there's actual availability of power and economics Thanks. thanks
Speaker 7: Yeah, we feel good about the deployment and the rollout. We've had really good partners in that space, and it's concentrated in markets that you would expect that have local and state environments that are supportive, right? Places, municipalities that are willing to pay, states that might have incentives to support that because it is a different OpEx, CapEx trade-off. The truck is gonna be more expensive, but then cheaper to operate. We're beating our assumptions in the pro forma on that so far. Again, still, we'll, you know, learn more every year that we drive those trucks, but feel good about the operational performance. You're gonna see us deploy. Now, we did lose a little bit in terms of federal incentive with the administration change, and so that's probably slowed the rollout modestly. Yeah, we feel good about the deployment and the rollout. yeah we feel good about the deployment and the rollout We've had really good partners in that space, and it's concentrated in markets that you would expect that have local and state environments that are supportive, right? we've had really good partners in that space and it's concentrated in markets that you would expect that have local and state environments that are supportive right Places, municipalities that are willing to pay, states that might have incentives to support that because it is a different OpEx, CapEx trade-off. places municipalities that are willing to pay states that might have incentives to support that because it is a different opex capex trade-off The truck is gonna be more expensive, but then cheaper to operate. the truck is gonna be more expensive but then cheaper to operate We're beating our assumptions in the pro forma on that so far. we're beating our assumptions in the pro forma on that so far Again, still, we'll, you know, learn more every year that we drive those trucks, but feel good about the operational performance. again still we'll you know learn more every year that we drive those trucks but feel good about the operational performance You're gonna see us deploy. you're gonna see us deploy Now, we did lose a little bit in terms of federal incentive with the administration change, and so that's probably slowed the rollout modestly. now we did lose a little bit in terms of federal incentive with the administration change and so that's probably slowed the rollout modestly You know, in residential, this is continuing to be where we're focused on, buying the trucks, and we're moving to small container next. I don't think large containers in the short term, but this will end up being a meaningful portion of our buy here as we approach the end of the decade. You know, in residential, this is continuing to be where we're focused on, buying the trucks, and we're moving to small container next. you know in residential this is continuing to be where we're focused on buying the trucks and we're moving to small container next I don't think large containers in the short term, but this will end up being a meaningful portion of our buy here as we approach the end of the decade. i don't think large containers in the short term but this will end up being a meaningful portion of our buy here as we approach the end of the decade
Speaker 6: Yeah. Super. Then I ask on RNG? Thank you for the update on the facility counts. Can you talk about the operating performance on the facilities? Are you expecting an equity income contribution this year? What's the profitability cadences they ramp up? If you could comment on expected royalty contributions this year versus plan, I would appreciate it. Yeah. yeah Super. super Then I ask on RNG? then i ask on rng Thank you for the update on the facility counts. thank you for the update on the facility counts Can you talk about the operating performance on the facilities? can you talk about the operating performance on the facilities Are you expecting an equity income contribution this year? are you expecting an equity income contribution this year What's the profitability cadences they ramp up? what's the profitability cadences they ramp up If you could comment on expected royalty contributions this year versus plan, I would appreciate it. if you could comment on expected royalty contributions this year versus plan i would appreciate it
Speaker 3: Yeah, Jerry, the total contribution that we're expecting from the RNG portfolio is $10 million of incremental revenue, $10 million of EBITDA this year, which is consistent with what we thought in the beginning of the year as well. That is going to, you know, ramp up as we move forward. It kind of is, you know, $10 million in 2027, $15 million in 2028, $15 million in 2029, and ultimately $20 million by 2020. That's how that ramps up to that $100 million of incremental revenue by the end of the decade. Yeah, Jerry, the total contribution that we're expecting from the RNG portfolio is $10 million of incremental revenue, $10 million of EBITDA this year, which is consistent with what we thought in the beginning of the year as well. yeah jerry the total contribution that we're expecting from the rng portfolio is $10 million of incremental revenue $10 million of ebitda this year which is consistent with what we thought in the beginning of the year as well That is going to, you know, ramp up as we move forward. that is going to you know ramp up as we move forward It kind of is, you know, $10 million in 2027, $15 million in 2028, $15 million in 2029, and ultimately $20 million by 2020. it kind of is you know $10 million in 2027 $15 million in 2028 $15 million in 2029 and ultimately $20 million by 2020 That's how that ramps up to that $100 million of incremental revenue by the end of the decade. that's how that ramps up to that $100 million of incremental revenue by the end of the decade
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Trevor Romeo with William Blair. Our next question comes from Trevor Romeo with William Blair. our next question comes from trevor romeo with william blair
Speaker 17: Hi, good afternoon. Thank you for taking the questions. I couple quick ones here. First one, I wanted to ask on your organics processing business. I think there was some press lately around a couple of new facilities you opened up in California and Colorado recently. Maybe would love if you could speak to kind of how you're thinking about investing in the organics business, what you're seeing from a regulatory perspective, and maybe the overall growth opportunity there. Hi, good afternoon. hi good afternoon Thank you for taking the questions. thank you for taking the questions I couple quick ones here. i couple quick ones here First one, I wanted to ask on your organics processing business. first one i wanted to ask on your organics processing business I think there was some press lately around a couple of new facilities you opened up in California and Colorado recently. i think there was some press lately around a couple of new facilities you opened up in california and colorado recently Maybe would love if you could speak to kind of how you're thinking about investing in the organics business, what you're seeing from a regulatory perspective, and maybe the overall growth opportunity there. maybe would love if you could speak to kind of how you're thinking about investing in the organics business what you're seeing from a regulatory perspective and maybe the overall growth opportunity there
Speaker 7: That ends up being very regional or state specific. Where there's support, either from a state regulation or a community willingness to pay, we are, you know, investors and operators, both on the collection side and then the processing on the back end. You know, the price of that technology needs to come down on the processing side overall, to make that more scalable. Longer term, it's gonna be a growth driver. You know, 25% of what goes to our landfill is organic in some capacity that ultimately could come out and be processed a different way. We continue to pursue opportunities, and again, as the regulatory environment evolves, you'll see that business scale. That ends up being very regional or state specific. that ends up being very regional or state specific Where there's support, either from a state regulation or a community willingness to pay, we are, you know, investors and operators, both on the collection side and then the processing on the back end. where there's support either from a state regulation or a community willingness to pay we are you know investors and operators both on the collection side and then the processing on the back end You know, the price of that technology needs to come down on the processing side overall, to make that more scalable. you know the price of that technology needs to come down on the processing side overall to make that more scalable Longer term, it's gonna be a growth driver. longer term it's gonna be a growth driver You know, 25% of what goes to our landfill is organic in some capacity that ultimately could come out and be processed a different way. you know 25% of what goes to our landfill is organic in some capacity that ultimately could come out and be processed a different way We continue to pursue opportunities, and again, as the regulatory environment evolves, you'll see that business scale. we continue to pursue opportunities and again as the regulatory environment evolves you'll see that business scale
Speaker 17: Okay. Thank you for that. Maybe just going back to ES. I think you talked about the sales pipeline building. I was just wondering if you could give maybe an update on your cross-selling initiatives there. It's something maybe you talked about more a few years ago, but just what are you seeing in terms of customer demand for kind of the broader set of solutions across your two segments and how you're executing on that opportunity? Okay. okay Thank you for that. thank you for that Maybe just going back to ES. maybe just going back to es I think you talked about the sales pipeline building. i think you talked about the sales pipeline building I was just wondering if you could give maybe an update on your cross-selling initiatives there. i was just wondering if you could give maybe an update on your cross-selling initiatives there It's something maybe you talked about more a few years ago, but just what are you seeing in terms of customer demand for kind of the broader set of solutions across your two segments and how you're executing on that opportunity? it's something maybe you talked about more a few years ago but just what are you seeing in terms of customer demand for kind of the broader set of solutions across your two segments and how you're executing on that opportunity
Speaker 7: Our most profitable customers want an integrated offering, and we're uniquely positioned given that we can offer them our suite of services, recycling, waste, special waste, and then all the various services that are underneath environmental solutions. To unlock the opportunity further, we're really working on some of the IT and sales opportunities to get the information in the right hands of the sellers so that in a local market with customers, we can unlock exactly what we offer, including things as tactical as a single contract, a single bill, ways to make it really easy for our customers to do business with us, and we're making great progress on that. You'll see that build over the next 18 to 24 months as some of those initiatives get fully deployed. Our most profitable customers want an integrated offering, and we're uniquely positioned given that we can offer them our suite of services, recycling, waste, special waste, and then all the various services that are underneath environmental solutions. our most profitable customers want an integrated offering and we're uniquely positioned given that we can offer them our suite of services recycling waste special waste and then all the various services that are underneath environmental solutions To unlock the opportunity further, we're really working on some of the IT and sales opportunities to get the information in the right hands of the sellers so that in a local market with customers, we can unlock exactly what we offer, including things as tactical as a single contract, a single bill, ways to make it really easy for our customers to do business with us, and we're making great progress on that. to unlock the opportunity further we're really working on some of the it and sales opportunities to get the information in the right hands of the sellers so that in a local market with customers we can unlock exactly what we offer including things as tactical as a single contract a single bill ways to make it really easy for our customers to do business with us and we're making great progress on that You'll see that build over the next 18 to 24 months as some of those initiatives get fully deployed. you'll see that build over the next 18 to 24 months as some of those initiatives get fully deployed
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Seth Weber with BNP Paribas. Our next question comes from Seth Weber with BNP Paribas. our next question comes from seth weber with bnp paribas
Speaker 11: Great. Thank you, and good afternoon. I'm wondering if you could just give us your updated thoughts on, you know, the cadence for the shedding of, and the residential contracts, just, you know, how we should think about that potentially moderating through the balance of the year. Thank you. Great. great Thank you, and good afternoon. thank you and good afternoon I'm wondering if you could just give us your updated thoughts on, you know, the cadence for the shedding of, and the residential contracts, just, you know, how we should think about that potentially moderating through the balance of the year. i'm wondering if you could just give us your updated thoughts on you know the cadence for the shedding of and the residential contracts just you know how we should think about that potentially moderating through the balance of the year Thank you. thank you
Speaker 7: Yeah. I think you'll see it pretty consistent across the year. The big driver there in residential was three larger contracts that we lost. Regrettable in the sense that we'd love to have those contracts and serve those communities at the right price and cost, but we're gonna be very returns-focused. As we deploy capital and have our people do work in communities, we need to get a fair price for the work that we do, and still seeing more challenges in that vertical than we are in the other verticals in the market of people willing to do work for very, very low returns. You'll see those numbers pretty consistent across the year. Slight improvement in the second half, and then I think a different outlook in 2027. Yeah. yeah I think you'll see it pretty consistent across the year. i think you'll see it pretty consistent across the year The big driver there in residential was three larger contracts that we lost. the big driver there in residential was three larger contracts that we lost Regrettable in the sense that we'd love to have those contracts and serve those communities at the right price and cost, but we're gonna be very returns-focused. regrettable in the sense that we'd love to have those contracts and serve those communities at the right price and cost but we're gonna be very returns-focused As we deploy capital and have our people do work in communities, we need to get a fair price for the work that we do, and still seeing more challenges in that vertical than we are in the other verticals in the market of people willing to do work for very, very low returns. as we deploy capital and have our people do work in communities we need to get a fair price for the work that we do and still seeing more challenges in that vertical than we are in the other verticals in the market of people willing to do work for very very low returns You'll see those numbers pretty consistent across the year. you'll see those numbers pretty consistent across the year Slight improvement in the second half, and then I think a different outlook in 2027. slight improvement in the second half and then i think a different outlook in 2027
Speaker 11: Got it. Okay. Thank you. Just on your comment around M&A, it sounds like you're now talking about, you know, $1+ billion, which I think is a little bit stronger than what you mentioned last quarter. Is that a function of you feel better about your free cash flow outlook or just more deals kind of presenting themselves to you, or just any nuances there as to why you're taking that number up at this point? Got it. got it Okay. okay Thank you. thank you Just on your comment around M&A, it sounds like you're now talking about, you know, $1+ billion , which I think is a little bit stronger than what you mentioned last quarter. just on your comment around m&a it sounds like you're now talking about you know $1+ billion which i think is a little bit stronger than what you mentioned last quarter Is that a function of you feel better about your free cash flow outlook or just more deals kind of presenting themselves to you, or just any nuances there as to why you're taking that number up at this point? is that a function of you feel better about your free cash flow outlook or just more deals kind of presenting themselves to you or just any nuances there as to why you're taking that number up at this point
Speaker 7: Yeah. It's just the opportunities of both what we've already closed and what we have in the pipeline. We're rarely financially constrained. It's always opportunity constrained. A deal has got to meet two screens for us. One, it has to have the right financial returns, and then it's got to be the right strategic fit. We've got to be the owner for it and be able to take that asset and do something more productive with it. We just have a really positive year in terms of, again, what we've already locked up and closed and then what we see coming forward in the next six to nine months. Yeah. yeah It's just the opportunities of both what we've already closed and what we have in the pipeline. it's just the opportunities of both what we've already closed and what we have in the pipeline We're rarely financially constrained. we're rarely financially constrained It's always opportunity constrained. it's always opportunity constrained A deal has got to meet two screens for us. a deal has got to meet two screens for us One, it has to have the right financial returns, and then it's got to be the right strategic fit. one it has to have the right financial returns and then it's got to be the right strategic fit We've got to be the owner for it and be able to take that asset and do something more productive with it. we've got to be the owner for it and be able to take that asset and do something more productive with it We just have a really positive year in terms of, again, what we've already locked up and closed and then what we see coming forward in the next six to nine months. we just have a really positive year in terms of again what we've already locked up and closed and then what we see coming forward in the next six to nine months
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Toni Kaplan with Morgan Stanley. Our next question comes from Toni Kaplan with Morgan Stanley. our next question comes from toni kaplan with morgan stanley
Speaker 16: Thank you. I wanted to start out on free cash flow. Really strong quarter. It sounded like maybe it was because of CapEx timing. You talked about it being roughly 12% of the full year CapEx spend in the first quarter. I was wondering if there was sort of a reason like why CapEx was lower this quarter and you know what was lower and what you're planning to spend it on for the rest of the year. Thank you. thank you I wanted to start out on free cash flow. i wanted to start out on free cash flow Really strong quarter. really strong quarter It sounded like maybe it was because of CapEx timing. it sounded like maybe it was because of capex timing You talked about it being roughly 12% of the full year CapEx spend in the first quarter. you talked about it being roughly 12% of the full year capex spend in the first quarter I was wondering if there was sort of a reason like why CapEx was lower this quarter and you know what was lower and what you're planning to spend it on for the rest of the year. i was wondering if there was sort of a reason like why capex was lower this quarter and you know what was lower and what you're planning to spend it on for the rest of the year
Speaker 3: Yeah, actually, most of it from a timing perspective is really within working capital. Right? You can see that. Much of it has to do with just the number of AP, you know, payments that were made as well as payroll, payments. That's something that'll flip over the balance of the year. We called out that timing piece. The CapEx, that's not abnormal for us to sit there and spend below, 25% of our full year spend in the first quarter. You can go back over several years, and that's the case. We do expect to spend that full year CapEx that we guided to in the beginning of the year. Yeah, actually, most of it from a timing perspective is really within working capital. yeah actually most of it from a timing perspective is really within working capital Right? right You can see that. you can see that Much of it has to do with just the number of AP, you know, payments that were made as well as payroll, payments. much of it has to do with just the number of ap you know payments that were made as well as payroll payments That's something that'll flip over the balance of the year. that's something that'll flip over the balance of the year We called out that timing piece. we called out that timing piece The CapEx, that's not abnormal for us to sit there and spend below, 25% of our full year spend in the first quarter. the capex that's not abnormal for us to sit there and spend below 25% of our full year spend in the first quarter You can go back over several years, and that's the case. you can go back over several years and that's the case We do expect to spend that full year CapEx that we guided to in the beginning of the year. we do expect to spend that full year capex that we guided to in the beginning of the year
Speaker 16: Yeah. Okay. Got it. One other question on M&A. I just wanted to attack a little bit differently. I guess, are there $700 million to date, I believe. You know, were you trying to strengthen current markets that you're already in, entering new ones? Just trying to understand what opportunities you were able to find and how you're thinking about sort of what targets you're approaching. Thanks. Yeah. yeah Okay. okay Got it. got it One other question on M&A. one other question on m&a I just wanted to attack a little bit differently. i just wanted to attack a little bit differently I guess, are there $700 million to date, I believe. i guess are there $700 million to date i believe You know, were you trying to strengthen current markets that you're already in, entering new ones? you know were you trying to strengthen current markets that you're already in entering new ones Just trying to understand what opportunities you were able to find and how you're thinking about sort of what targets you're approaching. just trying to understand what opportunities you were able to find and how you're thinking about sort of what targets you're approaching Thanks. thanks
Speaker 7: Yes and yes. We look in recycling and waste, both the markets that we're already in to strengthen those, and that's the bread and butter, I'd say, what we do acquisition-wise. Expanding geographies is also an opportunity for us, and those become great platforms for further tuck-in acquisitions over time. As well as environmental solutions, right? Same opportunities there. Strengthening markets we're already in and expanding into new markets. The balance of the spend so far this year of what's already closed and what's signed and going to close has really been 90% plus recycling and waste. That balance will probably rotate just a little throughout the rest of the year, but pretty strong on both ends. Yes and yes. yes and yes We look in recycling and waste, both the markets that we're already in to strengthen those, and that's the bread and butter, I'd say, what we do acquisition-wise. we look in recycling and waste both the markets that we're already in to strengthen those and that's the bread and butter i'd say what we do acquisition-wise Expanding geographies is also an opportunity for us, and those become great platforms for further tuck-in acquisitions over time. expanding geographies is also an opportunity for us and those become great platforms for further tuck-in acquisitions over time As well as environmental solutions, right? as well as environmental solutions right Same opportunities there. same opportunities there Strengthening markets we're already in and expanding into new markets. strengthening markets we're already in and expanding into new markets The balance of the spend so far this year of what's already closed and what's signed and going to close has really been 90% plus recycling and waste. the balance of the spend so far this year of what's already closed and what's signed and going to close has really been 90% plus recycling and waste That balance will probably rotate just a little throughout the rest of the year, but pretty strong on both ends. that balance will probably rotate just a little throughout the rest of the year but pretty strong on both ends
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Tami Zakaria with JPMorgan. Our next question comes from Tami Zakaria with JPMorgan. our next question comes from tami zakaria with jpmorgan
Speaker 14: Hey, good morning. Sorry, good afternoon or evening. Thanks for the time. Question on CPI. The March reading accelerated sequentially. Just wondering if you could remind us how much of your portfolio is indexed to the CPI, should it continue to go higher, and what's the typical lag? Hey, good morning. hey good morning Sorry, good afternoon or evening. sorry good afternoon or evening Thanks for the time. thanks for the time Question on CPI. question on cpi The March reading accelerated sequentially. the march reading accelerated sequentially Just wondering if you could remind us how much of your portfolio is indexed to the CPI, should it continue to go higher, and what's the typical lag? just wondering if you could remind us how much of your portfolio is indexed to the cpi should it continue to go higher and what's the typical lag
Speaker 7: Our portfolio of contracts that we call restricted, which have some sort of pricing restriction embedded in the contract itself, just shy of 20% are directly linked to headline CPI. 35% are linked to some sort of alternative index, you know, water, sewer, trash, garbage trash. With the balance, about 45%, some sort of fixed rate, that's embedded in the contract itself or a rate review. The lag tends to be, you know, 12 months, call it, on average. There's a look-back period, and then the implementation period tends to be about 12 months after the fact. Our portfolio of contracts that we call restricted, which have some sort of pricing restriction embedded in the contract itself, just shy of 20% are directly linked to headline CPI. 35% are linked to some sort of alternative index, you know, water, sewer, trash, garbage trash. our portfolio of contracts that we call restricted which have some sort of pricing restriction embedded in the contract itself just shy of 20% are directly linked to headline cpi 35% are linked to some sort of alternative index you know water sewer trash garbage trash With the balance, about 45%, some sort of fixed rate, that's embedded in the contract itself or a rate review. with the balance about 45% some sort of fixed rate that's embedded in the contract itself or a rate review The lag tends to be, you know, 12 months, call it, on average. the lag tends to be you know 12 months call it on average There's a look-back period, and then the implementation period tends to be about 12 months after the fact. there's a look-back period and then the implementation period tends to be about 12 months after the fact
Speaker 14: That's very helpful. Wanted to double-click on residential volumes. I know you're not speaking to 2027 specifically, but are we, do you expect residential volumes to turn positive at some point next year? That's very helpful. that's very helpful Wanted to double-click on residential volumes. wanted to double-click on residential volumes I know you're not speaking to 2027 specifically, but are we, do you expect residential volumes to turn positive at some point next year? i know you're not speaking to 2027 specifically but are we do you expect residential volumes to turn positive at some point next year
Speaker 3: Oh, no. I think the rate of decrease will certainly improve. Right? Whether that is flat next year or not, probably still declines, just given some of the rollover effect of those larger contracts that we lost, some of which started on January first and some of which are mid-year conventions on that front. Listen, we're gonna continue to put upward pressure on price and be returns-focused and get paid for the work we do. To the extent that customers are not willing to pay, then we'll put our resources into other verticals and other opportunities. Oh, no. oh no I think the rate of decrease will certainly improve. i think the rate of decrease will certainly improve Right? right Whether that is flat next year or not, probably still declines, just given some of the rollover effect of those larger contracts that we lost, some of which started on January first and some of which are mid-year conventions on that front. whether that is flat next year or not probably still declines just given some of the rollover effect of those larger contracts that we lost some of which started on january first and some of which are mid-year conventions on that front Listen, we're gonna continue to put upward pressure on price and be returns-focused and get paid for the work we do. listen we're gonna continue to put upward pressure on price and be returns-focused and get paid for the work we do To the extent that customers are not willing to pay, then we'll put our resources into other verticals and other opportunities. to the extent that customers are not willing to pay then we'll put our resources into other verticals and other opportunities
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Konark Gupta with Scotia Capital. Our next question comes from Konark Gupta with Scotia Capital. our next question comes from konark gupta with scotia capital
Speaker 9: Thanks. Just following up on the residential business. I understand the volumes are declining and why, but if you can talk about the underlying business, how is it performing from profitability and return standpoint? Thanks. thanks Just following up on the residential business. just following up on the residential business I understand the volumes are declining and why, but if you can talk about the underlying business, how is it performing from profitability and return standpoint? i understand the volumes are declining and why but if you can talk about the underlying business how is it performing from profitability and return standpoint
Speaker 7: Yeah. No profitability in that business is improving. Again, I think for a couple reasons. One, you know, when you have a contract that's underperforming and you look to get it to an acceptable level of return, and if you don't retain that because someone is willing to take that at that relatively lower price, you're gonna improve your overall performance. Coupled with the fact that you look at the remainder of the portfolio and you look at the level of price that we've had in the residential system itself, very strong and well in excess of our cost inflation. The combination of the two have driven margin expansion in that business. When we bid these residential contracts, we never bid them to lose money. Yeah. yeah No profitability in that business is improving. no profitability in that business is improving Again, I think for a couple reasons. again i think for a couple reasons One, you know, when you have a contract that's underperforming and you look to get it to an acceptable level of return, and if you don't retain that because someone is willing to take that at that relatively lower price, you're gonna improve your overall performance. one you know when you have a contract that's underperforming and you look to get it to an acceptable level of return and if you don't retain that because someone is willing to take that at that relatively lower price you're gonna improve your overall performance Coupled with the fact that you look at the remainder of the portfolio and you look at the level of price that we've had in the residential system itself, very strong and well in excess of our cost inflation. coupled with the fact that you look at the remainder of the portfolio and you look at the level of price that we've had in the residential system itself very strong and well in excess of our cost inflation The combination of the two have driven margin expansion in that business. the combination of the two have driven margin expansion in that business When we bid these residential contracts, we never bid them to lose money. when we bid these residential contracts we never bid them to lose money We bid them with the assumptions of profitability, but then things change over the course of a five-year term of the contract, which is maybe we didn't have a good pricing escalator on the contract and our costs inflated faster. Maybe our assumptions in terms of number of trucks we needed to cover the community wasn't quite right, and it turned out to be a little more expensive to deliver or operate that truck. We're being very disciplined across each one of those contracts to make sure that we are returns driven and pricing that accordingly when the contract comes up. We bid them with the assumptions of profitability, but then things change over the course of a five-year term of the contract, which is maybe we didn't have a good pricing escalator on the contract and our costs inflated faster. we bid them with the assumptions of profitability but then things change over the course of a five-year term of the contract which is maybe we didn't have a good pricing escalator on the contract and our costs inflated faster Maybe our assumptions in terms of number of trucks we needed to cover the community wasn't quite right, and it turned out to be a little more expensive to deliver or operate that truck. maybe our assumptions in terms of number of trucks we needed to cover the community wasn't quite right and it turned out to be a little more expensive to deliver or operate that truck We're being very disciplined across each one of those contracts to make sure that we are returns driven and pricing that accordingly when the contract comes up. we're being very disciplined across each one of those contracts to make sure that we are returns driven and pricing that accordingly when the contract comes up
Speaker 9: Thanks. If we can follow up on the employee turnover side of things. Are you seeing any implications whatsoever, direct or indirect, from the CDL regulations that are going through in the U.S. right now? I mean, I understand your drivers may not be CDL necessarily, but some of them. Do you see any impact of the shortage of drivers that's going on in the industry? Thanks. thanks If we can follow up on the employee turnover side of things. if we can follow up on the employee turnover side of things Are you seeing any implications whatsoever, direct or indirect, from the CDL regulations that are going through in the U.S. right now? are you seeing any implications whatsoever direct or indirect from the cdl regulations that are going through in the u.s right now I mean, I understand your drivers may not be CDL necessarily, but some of them. i mean i understand your drivers may not be cdl necessarily but some of them Do you see any impact of the shortage of drivers that's going on in the industry? do you see any impact of the shortage of drivers that's going on in the industry
Speaker 7: Yeah, our drivers do have CDLs, and I'd say the impact has been de minimis. There's been a few individual cases, but overall, as we set the turnover record two years in a row, and we may break it again for a third year, the team's doing a great job of finding talented technicians and drivers and customer service agents and all of our other frontline colleagues and retaining those colleagues at an increasingly high rate. Yeah, our drivers do have CDLs, and I'd say the impact has been de minimis. yeah our drivers do have cdls and i'd say the impact has been de minimis There's been a few individual cases, but overall, as we set the turnover record two years in a row, and we may break it again for a third year, the team's doing a great job of finding talented technicians and drivers and customer service agents and all of our other frontline colleagues and retaining those colleagues at an increasingly high rate. there's been a few individual cases but overall as we set the turnover record two years in a row and we may break it again for a third year the team's doing a great job of finding talented technicians and drivers and customer service agents and all of our other frontline colleagues and retaining those colleagues at an increasingly high rate
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Shlomo Rosenbaum with Stifel. Our next question comes from Shlomo Rosenbaum with Stifel. our next question comes from shlomo rosenbaum with stifel
Speaker 12: Hi. Thank you very much for taking my questions. You mentioned that you're starting to see some green shoots, you know, in the solid waste business, and I'm wondering if you're seeing similar type of green shoots in the ES business as well. Are you seeing, you know, maybe some of the turnarounds happen a little bit faster? You know, what signs are you seeing over there in that business? Hi. hi Thank you very much for taking my questions. thank you very much for taking my questions You mentioned that you're starting to see some green shoots, you know, in the solid waste business, and I'm wondering if you're seeing similar type of green shoots in the ES business as well. you mentioned that you're starting to see some green shoots you know in the solid waste business and i'm wondering if you're seeing similar type of green shoots in the es business as well Are you seeing, you know, maybe some of the turnarounds happen a little bit faster? are you seeing you know maybe some of the turnarounds happen a little bit faster You know, what signs are you seeing over there in that business? you know what signs are you seeing over there in that business
Speaker 7: Yeah. I'd certainly say it's improving, maybe not improving quite as quickly, as we're seeing on the special waste or side of the business in the recycling and waste business. You know, you got some moving pieces. Listen, as oil prices spiking and people are kinda trying to blow out demand, right? That's delaying some of the underlying project work to work, which can't be delayed forever, but can be suspended for three to six months. There's puts and takes there, but the trend line is definitely up, and we'll see what kind of momentum we build here in the second quarter. Yeah. yeah I'd certainly say it's improving, maybe not improving quite as quickly, as we're seeing on the special waste or side of the business in the recycling and waste business. i'd certainly say it's improving maybe not improving quite as quickly as we're seeing on the special waste or side of the business in the recycling and waste business You know, you got some moving pieces. you know you got some moving pieces Listen, as oil prices spiking and people are kinda trying to blow out demand, right? listen as oil prices spiking and people are kinda trying to blow out demand right That's delaying some of the underlying project work to work, which can't be delayed forever, but can be suspended for three to six months. that's delaying some of the underlying project work to work which can't be delayed forever but can be suspended for three to six months There's puts and takes there, but the trend line is definitely up, and we'll see what kind of momentum we build here in the second quarter. there's puts and takes there but the trend line is definitely up and we'll see what kind of momentum we build here in the second quarter
Speaker 12: Okay, thank you. What was driving the volumes down in the C&D business? Was that a tough comp issue over there with you know, some of the stuff that you were talking about, or it just kind of stood out over there? Okay, thank you. okay thank you What was driving the volumes down in the C&D business? what was driving the volumes down in the c&d business Was that a tough comp issue over there with you know, some of the stuff that you were talking about, or it just kind of stood out over there? was that a tough comp issue over there with you know some of the stuff that you were talking about or it just kind of stood out over there
Speaker 7: Yeah, it was, it was more of a comp issue. In the prior year, we had some hurricane cleanup efforts in the southeast. Yeah, it was, it was more of a comp issue. yeah it was it was more of a comp issue In the prior year, we had some hurricane cleanup efforts in the southeast. in the prior year we had some hurricane cleanup efforts in the southeast
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Tobey Sommer with Truist. Our next question comes from Tobey Sommer with Truist. our next question comes from tobey sommer with truist
Speaker 15: Thank you. Thank you. thank you
Speaker 10: Tobey, is your line muted? Tobey, is your line muted? tobey is your line muted
Speaker 15: No. Can you hear me? No. no Can you hear me? can you hear me
Speaker 7: Yeah. Yeah, we can hear you. Yeah. yeah Yeah, we can hear you. yeah we can hear you
Speaker 15: Okay, great. I just wanted to ask a question about volume in environmental services. How do you expect the cadence of that to change throughout the balance of the year? Okay, great. okay great I just wanted to ask a question about volume in environmental services. i just wanted to ask a question about volume in environmental services How do you expect the cadence of that to change throughout the balance of the year? how do you expect the cadence of that to change throughout the balance of the year
Speaker 7: Well, there, we don't report on a specific volume metric just because there's so many different product and service lines there that it'd be really, really tough with a mix standpoint. As I mentioned earlier, right? We see momentum really building in the second half of the year. Right? I think you'll see incremental progress quarter-to-quarter. Right? The year-over-year comp is tougher in the second quarter, but the second half you'll definitely see the volume picture build. Well, there, we don't report on a specific volume metric just because there's so many different product and service lines there that it'd be really, really tough with a mix standpoint. well there we don't report on a specific volume metric just because there's so many different product and service lines there that it'd be really really tough with a mix standpoint As I mentioned earlier, right? as i mentioned earlier right We see momentum really building in the second half of the year. we see momentum really building in the second half of the year Right? right I think you'll see incremental progress quarter-to-quarter. i think you'll see incremental progress quarter-to-quarter Right? right The year-over-year comp is tougher in the second quarter, but the second half you'll definitely see the volume picture build. the year-over-year comp is tougher in the second quarter but the second half you'll definitely see the volume picture build
Speaker 15: Thank you. With respect to your acquisition program, are you seeing opportunities on the ES side as readily as you are on the municipal solid waste side? Thank you. thank you With respect to your acquisition program, are you seeing opportunities on the ES side as readily as you are on the municipal solid waste side? with respect to your acquisition program are you seeing opportunities on the es side as readily as you are on the municipal solid waste side
Speaker 7: Plenty of opportunities. I'd say there's a little more momentum right now in recycling and waste, not because of activity on our side, but just timing of market. We know that these things ebb and flow. Lots of opportunities we have on the recycling and waste side. We've had discussions with the sellers for over a decade, and it's really timing and event driven on their side that drives the sale. Environmental solutions, obviously, we don't have the relationship profile that is that long, but still some of the same things. We maintain a significant dialogue. For every acquisition we close, that we've probably had seven fall out of the system at some point in the pipeline. We're very discriminating in terms of who we actually buy, but the activity, the level there is very strong as well. Plenty of opportunities. plenty of opportunities I'd say there's a little more momentum right now in recycling and waste, not because of activity on our side, but just timing of market. i'd say there's a little more momentum right now in recycling and waste not because of activity on our side but just timing of market We know that these things ebb and flow. we know that these things ebb and flow Lots of opportunities we have on the recycling and waste side. lots of opportunities we have on the recycling and waste side We've had discussions with the sellers for over a decade, and it's really timing and event driven on their side that drives the sale. we've had discussions with the sellers for over a decade and it's really timing and event driven on their side that drives the sale Environmental solutions, obviously, we don't have the relationship profile that is that long, but still some of the same things. environmental solutions obviously we don't have the relationship profile that is that long but still some of the same things We maintain a significant dialogue. we maintain a significant dialogue For every acquisition we close, that we've probably had seven fall out of the system at some point in the pipeline. for every acquisition we close that we've probably had seven fall out of the system at some point in the pipeline We're very discriminating in terms of who we actually buy, but the activity, the level there is very strong as well. we're very discriminating in terms of who we actually buy but the activity the level there is very strong as well
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from Stephanie Moore with Jefferies. Our next question comes from Stephanie Moore with Jefferies. our next question comes from stephanie moore with jefferies
Speaker 13: Great. Good afternoon. Thank you. I wanted to circle back on some of the commentary that you provided on your RISE digital platform. You know, I think some of your peers have talked about leveraging technology for more dynamic pricing discussions, and I wanted to see if that's an area that you guys have tackled as of late. At the same time, I think you've, you know, talked in the past about some opportunity with AI and, you know, algo-based routing. Wanted to get an update there as well. Thank you. Great. great Good afternoon. good afternoon Thank you. thank you I wanted to circle back on some of the commentary that you provided on your RISE digital platform. i wanted to circle back on some of the commentary that you provided on your rise digital platform You know, I think some of your peers have talked about leveraging technology for more dynamic pricing discussions, and I wanted to see if that's an area that you guys have tackled as of late. you know i think some of your peers have talked about leveraging technology for more dynamic pricing discussions and i wanted to see if that's an area that you guys have tackled as of late At the same time, I think you've, you know, talked in the past about some opportunity with AI and, you know, algo-based routing. at the same time i think you've you know talked in the past about some opportunity with ai and you know algo-based routing Wanted to get an update there as well. wanted to get an update there as well Thank you. thank you
Speaker 7: Yes, on both sides. Pricing today, you know, we're using dozens of variables, through AI to build bespoke prices to existing customers when we send them our annual price increase. We're trying to get that as surgical as possible to give them a price that maximizes both what they'll pay and incents them to stay over a long period of time. Again, that is a game of inches in terms of dialing that in, but small basis points across individual customers adds up quickly across the system and feel really encouraged, and that will just continue to get better and better over time. It kind of builds in a more linear fashion. Yes, on both sides. yes on both sides Pricing today, you know, we're using dozens of variables, through AI to build bespoke prices to existing customers when we send them our annual price increase. pricing today you know we're using dozens of variables through ai to build bespoke prices to existing customers when we send them our annual price increase We're trying to get that as surgical as possible to give them a price that maximizes both what they'll pay and incents them to stay over a long period of time. we're trying to get that as surgical as possible to give them a price that maximizes both what they'll pay and incents them to stay over a long period of time Again, that is a game of inches in terms of dialing that in, but small basis points across individual customers adds up quickly across the system and feel really encouraged, and that will just continue to get better and better over time. again that is a game of inches in terms of dialing that in but small basis points across individual customers adds up quickly across the system and feel really encouraged and that will just continue to get better and better over time It kind of builds in a more linear fashion. it kind of builds in a more linear fashion Where the routing, there's a lot of upfront work, particularly around data and data accuracy and data management that you need to have in place so that when you start routing dynamic, building dynamic routes through AI and then routing dynamically through the day, you get it right. What we won't do is sacrifice customer service to pursue short-term gains. We're gonna get it right with the customer first, and then drive all of the operational efficiency through the system while improving customer service. That's why you'll start to see some of that benefit in the second half of next year, but that's really 2028 when we think we scale. Where the routing, there's a lot of upfront work, particularly around data and data accuracy and data management that you need to have in place so that when you start routing dynamic, building dynamic routes through AI and then routing dynamically through the day, you get it right. where the routing there's a lot of upfront work particularly around data and data accuracy and data management that you need to have in place so that when you start routing dynamic building dynamic routes through ai and then routing dynamically through the day you get it right What we won't do is sacrifice customer service to pursue short-term gains. what we won't do is sacrifice customer service to pursue short-term gains We're gonna get it right with the customer first, and then drive all of the operational efficiency through the system while improving customer service. we're gonna get it right with the customer first and then drive all of the operational efficiency through the system while improving customer service That's why you'll start to see some of that benefit in the second half of next year, but that's really 2028 when we think we scale. that's why you'll start to see some of that benefit in the second half of next year but that's really 2028 when we think we scale
Speaker 13: That's it for me, guys. Thank you. That's it for me, guys. that's it for me guys Thank you. thank you
Speaker 10: Our next question comes from David Manthey with Baird. Our next question comes from David Manthey with Baird. our next question comes from david manthey with baird
Speaker 5: Thank you. Good afternoon. How much of the environmental solutions weakness is that self-inflicted pricing that you mentioned as opposed to end market softness? If some of it is market related, what exposures by service or customer type lead you to your view of an improvement in the second half of 2026, just so we can sort of track that? Thank you. thank you Good afternoon. good afternoon How much of the environmental solutions weakness is that self-inflicted pricing that you mentioned as opposed to end market softness? how much of the environmental solutions weakness is that self-inflicted pricing that you mentioned as opposed to end market softness If some of it is market related, what exposures by service or customer type lead you to your view of an improvement in the second half of 2026, just so we can sort of track that? if some of it is market related what exposures by service or customer type lead you to your view of an improvement in the second half of 2026 just so we can sort of track that
Speaker 7: Yeah. To, you know, to answer the last part of your question, we see the sales pipeline and just understand the activities both on our side and then work that is contracted and slated to begin. You know, some of those are longer term things that happen over the course of many months, and some of those could be shorter, but we know the start date happens, you know, later in the second quarter or into the third quarter on that front. The split between what is market and what is our own activity is hard to identify. I'd say certainly it was more self-inflicted in the second half of last year. I'd say as we increasingly go forward, it's we're more market driven, which is we figure, we think we got market pricing very dialed in here. Yeah. yeah To, you know, to answer the last part of your question, we see the sales pipeline and just understand the activities both on our side and then work that is contracted and slated to begin. to you know to answer the last part of your question we see the sales pipeline and just understand the activities both on our side and then work that is contracted and slated to begin You know, some of those are longer term things that happen over the course of many months, and some of those could be shorter, but we know the start date happens, you know, later in the second quarter or into the third quarter on that front. you know some of those are longer term things that happen over the course of many months and some of those could be shorter but we know the start date happens you know later in the second quarter or into the third quarter on that front The split between what is market and what is our own activity is hard to identify. the split between what is market and what is our own activity is hard to identify I'd say certainly it was more self-inflicted in the second half of last year. i'd say certainly it was more self-inflicted in the second half of last year I'd say as we increasingly go forward, it's we're more market driven, which is we figure, we think we got market pricing very dialed in here. i'd say as we increasingly go forward it's we're more market driven which is we figure we think we got market pricing very dialed in here We're not gonna get it perfect every time, but much improved on that dimension. Some of this is things like ER, which is hard to predict. We've just had a soft kinda 18 to 24 months on emergency response other than a single job. You know, going forward, we would expect that to resume to normal levels, but we'll see where that progresses. There's a mixed picture on the underlying verticals. I mentioned petrochemical and that being a little slower, or we're seeing some of the biotech being a little slower, where some of the other verticals are moving a little quicker. We're not gonna get it perfect every time, but much improved on that dimension. we're not gonna get it perfect every time but much improved on that dimension Some of this is things like ER, which is hard to predict. some of this is things like er which is hard to predict We've just had a soft kinda 18 to 24 months on emergency response other than a single job. we've just had a soft kinda 18 to 24 months on emergency response other than a single job You know, going forward, we would expect that to resume to normal levels, but we'll see where that progresses. you know going forward we would expect that to resume to normal levels but we'll see where that progresses There's a mixed picture on the underlying verticals. there's a mixed picture on the underlying verticals I mentioned petrochemical and that being a little slower, or we're seeing some of the biotech being a little slower, where some of the other verticals are moving a little quicker. i mentioned petrochemical and that being a little slower or we're seeing some of the biotech being a little slower where some of the other verticals are moving a little quicker
Speaker 5: Given that you have visibility on these projects as they're coming down, we should assume these are what? Turnarounds, remediation, hazardous C&D? How should we think about what types of work that is? Given that you have visibility on these projects as they're coming down, we should assume these are what? given that you have visibility on these projects as they're coming down we should assume these are what Turnarounds, remediation, hazardous C&D? turnarounds remediation hazardous c&d How should we think about what types of work that is? how should we think about what types of work that is
Speaker 7: Yeah, it's a full mix. It can be both recurring things where we've won the opportunity to take all of the integrated waste out of a plant. A plant produces recycling, solid waste, special waste, and hazardous liquids, hazardous water. We can handle all of that. It could be events where we know we're projected to do a big remediation and opportunity. Again, that could produce special waste and hazardous waste solids, and that event could be as short as two weeks or could last as long as eight or nine months. Yeah, it's a full mix. yeah it's a full mix It can be both recurring things where we've won the opportunity to take all of the integrated waste out of a plant. it can be both recurring things where we've won the opportunity to take all of the integrated waste out of a plant A plant produces recycling, solid waste, special waste, and hazardous liquids, hazardous water. a plant produces recycling solid waste special waste and hazardous liquids hazardous water We can handle all of that. we can handle all of that It could be events where we know we're projected to do a big remediation and opportunity. it could be events where we know we're projected to do a big remediation and opportunity Again, that could produce special waste and hazardous waste solids, and that event could be as short as two weeks or could last as long as eight or nine months. again that could produce special waste and hazardous waste solids and that event could be as short as two weeks or could last as long as eight or nine months
Speaker 10: At this time, there appear to be no further questions. Mr. Vander Ark, I'll turn the call back over to you for closing remarks. At this time, there appear to be no further questions. at this time there appear to be no further questions Mr. Vander Ark, I'll turn the call back over to you for closing remarks. mr vander ark i'll turn the call back over to you for closing remarks
Speaker 7: Thank you, Kim. I wanna thank the Republic Services team for the great start to the year. Their continued focus on safety, sustainability, and exceeding customer expectations positions us for success and another year of strong results. Have a good evening and be safe. Thank you, Kim. thank you kim I wanna thank the Republic Services team for the great start to the year. i wanna thank the republic services team for the great start to the year Their continued focus on safety, sustainability, and exceeding customer expectations positions us for success and another year of strong results. their continued focus on safety sustainability and exceeding customer expectations positions us for success and another year of strong results Have a good evening and be safe. have a good evening and be safe
Speaker 10: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes the conference call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes the conference call. ladies and gentlemen this concludes the conference call Thank you for attending. thank you for attending You may now disconnect. you may now disconnect